Lary Fogle, Lawrenceburg, Indiana was the first Dearborn County resident to lose his life in the Vietnam War. He had turned 18 years old just 4 days before his death. He was in combat at age 17 though a major controversy led to a rules change requiring someone to be 18 to fight, said Lawrenceburg Consolidated High School (LCHS) friend and classmate, P.G. Gentrup, Rising Sun. He had dodged the bullet once before when a .30 caliber round struck him in the chest but was deflected by a saber tooth he was wearing and only wounded him," said Gentrup. Fogle was killed by fragments of a mortar shell while serving as a paratrooper in the U.S. Army. He was awarded the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. " Lary had a happy-go-lucky attitude and always was smiling. He could always get you to laugh and it was always a good time if he was around," said Gentrup. There is a copy of a letter he wrote home engraved on the Vietnam Memorial in Indianapolis, Indiana and it says, FORT GORDON, Georgia 1965 " Dear Dad, Pop, if I do go into combat I intend on doing my job to the best of my ability. However, I don't intend on being a HERO. I might be wrong but in my way of thinking, the only heroes there are, are the men who get killed in the process of doing their job." Love always, Lary. As of April 8, 2009 his mom, Esther, is still living and is in Shady Nook Nursing Home in Lawrenceburg, Indiana.∼Look under the bio for LARY D. FOGLE. His name is spelled as Lary with one R on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
Lary Fogle, Lawrenceburg, Indiana was the first Dearborn County resident to lose his life in the Vietnam War. He had turned 18 years old just 4 days before his death. He was in combat at age 17 though a major controversy led to a rules change requiring someone to be 18 to fight, said Lawrenceburg Consolidated High School (LCHS) friend and classmate, P.G. Gentrup, Rising Sun. He had dodged the bullet once before when a .30 caliber round struck him in the chest but was deflected by a saber tooth he was wearing and only wounded him," said Gentrup. Fogle was killed by fragments of a mortar shell while serving as a paratrooper in the U.S. Army. He was awarded the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. " Lary had a happy-go-lucky attitude and always was smiling. He could always get you to laugh and it was always a good time if he was around," said Gentrup. There is a copy of a letter he wrote home engraved on the Vietnam Memorial in Indianapolis, Indiana and it says, FORT GORDON, Georgia 1965 " Dear Dad, Pop, if I do go into combat I intend on doing my job to the best of my ability. However, I don't intend on being a HERO. I might be wrong but in my way of thinking, the only heroes there are, are the men who get killed in the process of doing their job." Love always, Lary. As of April 8, 2009 his mom, Esther, is still living and is in Shady Nook Nursing Home in Lawrenceburg, Indiana.∼Look under the bio for LARY D. FOGLE. His name is spelled as Lary with one R on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
Gravesite Details
Burial in Section K, row 3
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