1st Battalion 22nd Infantry
SGT Matthew Carter
Silver Star Awarded 44 Years Later
Florida National Guard Assistant
Adjutant General for Army Maj. Gen. James Tyre (left) presents a
posthumous Silver Star award
for Sgt. Matthew Carter to Carter's family during a ceremony at
the Doubletree hotel in Tampa, Oct. 27, 2012.
Also pictured are unit members John McHenry (right) and Fred
Golladay.
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
Through the efforts of B Company
veterans of 1/22 Infantry, led by former Lieutenant John McHenry,
the family of a B Company Soldier was presented with the Silver
Star Medal and Purple Heart Medal,
during the B Company reunion in Tampa, Florida, in October 2012.
The following is the official Army press release of the story.
Silver Star awarded
after 44 years
Family of Vietnam veteran accepts posthumous medal
By Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
Florida National Guard Public Affairs
TAMPA, Fla. (Nov. 1, 2012) - On
the ink-black night of June 13, 1968, the highlands around Dak
Pek in western Vietnam
erupted in artillery and rocket fire.
The U.S. Army Special Forces
camp, just a few miles from the Laotian border, had been under
sporadic siege for days.
Situated near the infamous Ho Chi Minh trail and supporting an
airstrip, this spot was a prime target by the enemy troops in the
area.
It was a night of close combat with causalities on both sides,
but it was also the night a young American Soldier from
Tallahassee
named Matthew Carter would earn a Silver Star - an award that
would take more than 44 years for him to receive.
On Oct. 27 the Florida National
Guard presented the long-lost medal, as well as a Purple Heart,
to the family of Sgt. Matthew Carter
during a reunion of B Company, 1/22nd Regiment, 4th Infantry
Division. Carter, who passed away in 1996, never knew
he had earned the prestigious medal for his gallantry in 1968.
Lieutenant John McHenry Platoon Leader of SGT Matthew Carter Photo from the 1969 1st Battalion yearbook |
Carter's platoon leader John
McHenry, remembered the mission that took his unit to the camp at
Dak Pek and would net
Silver Stars for two of his men in Bravo Company. He said his
unit was ordered to the besieged Special Forces camp a few days
before the attack, and instructed to patrol around a nearby
hilltop. The North Vietnamese Army (NVA) soldiers who had been
peppering the camp with direct and indirect fire could "see
everything we did," McHenry explained.
In the early morning hours on
the day of the attack another member of Bravo Company - Sgt.
Frank Spink - warned 1st Lt. McHenry
that enemy soldiers were approaching their position.
"The first part of the
attack was a star cluster over the TOC - tactical operations
center - right where our (commanding officer) was,"
McHenry said. "I'll never forget - it was like a white star
cluster. I thought they were firecrackers at first and thought
'Who the hell would do that?'"
The white stars tinkling down
over the camp were marking the spot for the enemy to concentrate
its fire and attack. At that point
Bravo Company started taking direct rocket fire from two
companies of NVA Regulars.
During the barrage, which
included rocket and grenade fire, Spink lost his right arm and
attempted to shoot at the enemy
with his left hand until he lost consciousness.
SGT Frank Spink |
Carter, who was also in Spink's
squad, was wounded by an enemy rocket while he was laying down a
suppressive barrage of fire
with an M-60 machine gun. Despite his wounds, Carter refused to
leave his position and continued to shoot until an enemy grenade
struck his position; he was wounded again, but now had a jammed
machine gun.
Disregarding the pain, Carter
repaired his weapon and continued to help repel the attack until
he passed out from the wounds.
With the help of Air Force aircraft circling overhead, the enemy
was eventually driven back and the wounded were evacuated.
"It was a heavy attack," McHenry said, recollecting the violent night that brought casualties on both sides.
More than 40 years later McHenry
began searching through the National Archives and found that
Spink and Carter had been awarded
Silver Stars, but through an apparent error in paperwork their
medals had never reached them. With McHenry's assistance,
Spink finally received his Silver Star during a ceremony in
Indianapolis in August.
Sergeant Matthew Carter Photo from the Carter Family |
Although Carter died in 1996,
McHenry and alumni from B Company, 1/22nd Regiment, 4th Infantry
Division, managed
to track down Carter's family and invited them to the unit's
annual reunion in Tampa.
The Florida National Guard's
Assistant Adjutant General for Army, Maj. Gen. James Tyre,
presented the framed awards
to Carter's widow Lorine and her family while about 50 former
members of the unit stood at attention.
"The actions of Sgt. Carter
on June 13, 1968, define gallantry in action," Tyre told the
gathered Vietnam veterans.
"They embodied the actions of the true selfless-leader and
Soldier that he was."
Tyre said that an estimated
150,000 Silver Stars have been awarded since World War I, but
when compared with the fact
that about 30 million service men and women have served "our
great nation during that same time period, the Silver Star
is truly an extraordinary award. It is bestowed on less than one
half of one percent of the military who have served our
nation."
Fighting back tears, Lorine
Carter accepted the awards. She said her husband would "be
smiling in his grave to know
that finally somebody is recognizing (him). "He would be
very proud to know that although it has taken all this time
it is finally coming," she added.
Article from:
Florida Guard
Online
The Official Site of the Florida National Guard
The family of Army Sgt. Matthew Carter
poses with a photo of Carter in his Army uniform, in Tampa, Oct.
27, 2012. Carter, who died in 1996,
served with B Company, 1/22nd Regiment, 4th Infantry Division,
during the Vietnam War, and earned the Silver Star for heroic
action
near the Laotian border in June of 1968. According to former
members of Carter's unit, the original paperwork for the citation
was misplaced,
and recently found. The award was presented at the annual reunion
for B Company.
Pictured are: son Quinton Carter, wife Lorine Carter, and son
Matthew Carter.
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
Major General James Tyre presents the Silver Star to Quinton Carter and Lorine Carter
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
The Silver Star and Combat Infantryman Badge
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
MG Tyre presents the Purple Heart to
Lorine Carter
On the right John McHenry and far right Fred Golladay
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
MG James Tyre and Lorine Carter, wife of SGT Matthew Carter
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
The Purple Heart Medal
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
Silver Star cake at the presentation
Photo by Bill Hodder
MG Tyre speaks with Lorine Carter, wife
of SGT Matthew Carter,
with John McHenry and Fred Golladay in observance
Photo by Master Sgt. Thomas Kielbasa
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