PERSONAL DATA:
Home of Record Wister, OK
Date of birth: 11/09/1941
MILITARY DATA:
Service: Army of the United States
Grade at loss: E7
Rank: Sergeant First Class
ID No: 445384726
MOS: 11D40: Armor Reconnaissance Specialist
Length Service: **
Unit: E TROOP, 2ND SQUADRON, 11TH ARMORED CAVALRY, USARV
CASUALTY DATA:
Start Tour: 10/25/1970
Incident Date: 12/31/1970
Casualty Date: 12/31/1970
Age at Loss: 29
Location: Binh Thuy Province, South Vietnam
ON THE WALL: Panel W5 Line 16
www.11thcavnam.com
WIFE: LUCILLE M DODD
FATHER: GUY S DODD
MOTHER: ARLIE DODD
Final Mission of PSG Richard E. Dodd
PFC Roy L. Chaney, PSG Richard E. Dodd, SGT Alfredo Salazar, and SGT Dennis W. Webster were members of E Troop, 2nd Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalry. E Troop was based out of Di An in Binh Thuy Province, RVN. Their unit routinely conducted missions consisting of M113 armored personnel carriers and tanks which would form up in a perimeter while away from their base. From these formations daytime dismounted patrols would be launched several thousand meters into the surrounding jungle. The purpose of these patrols was to ambush NVA and Viet Cong operating in the area. The ambushes usually consisted of three Claymore mines "daisy chained" together with a trip-wire detonator. These would be left in place overnight while the patrol returned to their laager. After a night or two, a patrol would go back to the ambush site to assess damage inflicted on the enemy or retrieve the Claymores. On December 31, 1970, PFC Chaney, PSG Dodd, SGT Salazar, and SGT Webster were part of a patrol sent out to recover the ambush devices. A short time after leaving, the patrol radioed that they themselves had been ambushed. Evidently, the enemy detected the American's Claymores and turned them against the patrol. The results were devastating. All four soldiers suffered fatal fragmentation wounds. Four other troopers behind them were spared when the steel balls fired by the mine went over their heads as they crossed through a depression in the ground. A medivac was requested, and the dead were removed from the field by helicopter. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and information provided by Wayne Meece (October 2017)]
Contributor: Raymond Brown (49251058)
PERSONAL DATA:
Home of Record Wister, OK
Date of birth: 11/09/1941
MILITARY DATA:
Service: Army of the United States
Grade at loss: E7
Rank: Sergeant First Class
ID No: 445384726
MOS: 11D40: Armor Reconnaissance Specialist
Length Service: **
Unit: E TROOP, 2ND SQUADRON, 11TH ARMORED CAVALRY, USARV
CASUALTY DATA:
Start Tour: 10/25/1970
Incident Date: 12/31/1970
Casualty Date: 12/31/1970
Age at Loss: 29
Location: Binh Thuy Province, South Vietnam
ON THE WALL: Panel W5 Line 16
www.11thcavnam.com
WIFE: LUCILLE M DODD
FATHER: GUY S DODD
MOTHER: ARLIE DODD
Final Mission of PSG Richard E. Dodd
PFC Roy L. Chaney, PSG Richard E. Dodd, SGT Alfredo Salazar, and SGT Dennis W. Webster were members of E Troop, 2nd Squadron, 11th Armored Cavalry. E Troop was based out of Di An in Binh Thuy Province, RVN. Their unit routinely conducted missions consisting of M113 armored personnel carriers and tanks which would form up in a perimeter while away from their base. From these formations daytime dismounted patrols would be launched several thousand meters into the surrounding jungle. The purpose of these patrols was to ambush NVA and Viet Cong operating in the area. The ambushes usually consisted of three Claymore mines "daisy chained" together with a trip-wire detonator. These would be left in place overnight while the patrol returned to their laager. After a night or two, a patrol would go back to the ambush site to assess damage inflicted on the enemy or retrieve the Claymores. On December 31, 1970, PFC Chaney, PSG Dodd, SGT Salazar, and SGT Webster were part of a patrol sent out to recover the ambush devices. A short time after leaving, the patrol radioed that they themselves had been ambushed. Evidently, the enemy detected the American's Claymores and turned them against the patrol. The results were devastating. All four soldiers suffered fatal fragmentation wounds. Four other troopers behind them were spared when the steel balls fired by the mine went over their heads as they crossed through a depression in the ground. A medivac was requested, and the dead were removed from the field by helicopter. [Taken from coffeltdatabase.org and information provided by Wayne Meece (October 2017)]
Contributor: Raymond Brown (49251058)
Inscription
OKLAHOMA / PSG TRP E 11 ARMD CAV REGT / KIA VIETNAM BSM-PH
Family Members
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Guy Sephere Dodd
1902–1947
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Arlie Mae Roper Dodd
1906–1989
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William Pleas Dodd
1924–2013
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Guy Dodd
1929–2005
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Martha Helen Dodd McKerley
1931–2018
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Doyle Mac Dodd
1934–1971
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Anna Faye Dodd Mount
1938–2018
Flowers
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