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PFC Michael Frederick Walker

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PFC Michael Frederick Walker Veteran

Birth
California, USA
Death
6 Jan 1968 (aged 20)
Tây Ninh, Tây Ninh, Vietnam
Burial
Chico, Butte County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec 30 Row 7 gr 930
Memorial ID
View Source
MICHAEL F WALKER is on the Wall in Washington DC, at Panel 33E, Line 61. May his sacrifice not be forgotten.

Pfc. Michael Frederick Walker
Sept. 10, 1947 - Jan. 6, 1968

Another local man with a young child, Mike Walker, was killed in the early days of the Tet Offensive.

A 1965 graduate of Chico High School, Walker worked two years in the mountains for a surveying company before he was drafted in July 1967. The young man was married and fathered a child the same year.

Five months after his induction, in December 1967, Walker was slinging an M-16 in the jungles of Vietnam with the 9th Infantry.

His posthumous Silver Star citation documented his final minutes: Walker and his company, after completing a search and destroy mission against a North Vietnamese base camp, hiked back to the landing zone to be evacuated.

Two helicopters landed safely, but when the third was coming in, the enemy opened fire on it with mortars, small arms, and rocket propelled grenades. The chopper couldn't land, leaving Walker's platoon stranded.

Then "a human wave assault of North Vietnamese" attacked the G.l.s. "With complete disregard for his safety, Walker maneuvered other members of his platoon to face them. He personally inflicted heavy losses on the enemy despite suffering several wounds." Walker "fought valiantly and effectively." Chico News & Review, May 26, 1988.
MICHAEL F WALKER is on the Wall in Washington DC, at Panel 33E, Line 61. May his sacrifice not be forgotten.

Pfc. Michael Frederick Walker
Sept. 10, 1947 - Jan. 6, 1968

Another local man with a young child, Mike Walker, was killed in the early days of the Tet Offensive.

A 1965 graduate of Chico High School, Walker worked two years in the mountains for a surveying company before he was drafted in July 1967. The young man was married and fathered a child the same year.

Five months after his induction, in December 1967, Walker was slinging an M-16 in the jungles of Vietnam with the 9th Infantry.

His posthumous Silver Star citation documented his final minutes: Walker and his company, after completing a search and destroy mission against a North Vietnamese base camp, hiked back to the landing zone to be evacuated.

Two helicopters landed safely, but when the third was coming in, the enemy opened fire on it with mortars, small arms, and rocket propelled grenades. The chopper couldn't land, leaving Walker's platoon stranded.

Then "a human wave assault of North Vietnamese" attacked the G.l.s. "With complete disregard for his safety, Walker maneuvered other members of his platoon to face them. He personally inflicted heavy losses on the enemy despite suffering several wounds." Walker "fought valiantly and effectively." Chico News & Review, May 26, 1988.

Inscription

California
PFC Co B 9 Inf 25 Inf Div
Vietnam PH



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