Norman Earl Baldwin
Captain
DET B-20 (2ND MSFC), B CO, 5TH SF GROUP, USARV Army of the United States Fort Lauderdale, Florida January 06, 1947 to August 25, 1968 NORMAN E BALDWIN is on the Wall at Panel W46, Line 28 |
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The WallMany years ago I answered a callTo show that freedom will not fall.
I saw many of my friends fall and die
Many of my brothers are still in a foreign land
They fought, they cried, and they bled
I served gladly, and my head was held high
My friends and I served our country well
If you pay a visit to the Wall
These names are the ones that the price of their life.
When you see the names who answered their country's call,
Becky Webb
From a teacher and friend of Vietnam Vets who grieves for Norman. |
I knew Norm as a teenager. Later we went to boot camp at Fort Gordon at the same time. He was bright and a born leader. I know Norm is in a better place, set aside for heros.
From a friend. |
Killed while commanding 201st MIKE Force company breaking the NVA siege at Duc Lap (home to USSF Det A-239). The 201st was one of 5 B-20 MIKE Force companies sent to Duc Lap. SSG Les Brucker, the Team Medic, was KIA trying to get to Norm. SP5 Paul Severson was KIA while directing his platoon to fire on the trenches that had Norm pinned down. Baldwin was wearing 1LT's insignia at the time. 25 Aug 68 was his scheduled promotion date.
From a friend. |
A Note from The Virtual WallThe Duc Lap Special Forces Camp (Det A-239, commanded by 1LT William A. Harp) was situated on two hilltops linked by a saddle southwest of Ban Me Thout. Shortly after midnight on 23 August 1968 the 95th North Vietnamese Regiment struck both the SF camp and the district headquarters compound some four miles away and by dawn had surrounded the camp. During the 23rd two Mobile Strike Force (MSF) companies from Pleiku had been airlifted into the area but were unable to make headway against the now-entrenched NVA. After nightfall the NVA assaulted and captured the smaller northern hilltop, using captured weapons and munitions to increase the fire being brought to bear on the southern hilltop. On the 24th, three MSF companies were engaged in a battle on the camp's runway; two were turned back, but the 202nd MSF Company was able to make it into the camp perimeter. Shortly afterwards, a B-40 rocket hit just outside the tactical operations center, killing one SF soldier (SFC Harold F. Kline, Frederick, MD) and a Montagnard artilleryman as well as severely wounding the senior SF officer present and several others. Just before dawn on the 25th the NVA staged another assault, breaching the outer perimeter and occupying bunkers there; the assault was halted at the inner wire line. By midmorning several of the captured bunkers had been destroyed, but the situation was grim: the ammunition supply was depleted, the partially trained Montagnards were panicked, and the US and Australian advisors were uncertain if the camp could be held.Conditions improved when Air Force C-7 CARIBOU transports made low-level ammunition drops into the camp perimeter, and more radically when four MSF companies were able to get into the camp itself. By early afternoon the defenders had organized themselves and planned a counter-assault. The 513th MSF Company assaulted the remaining captured bunkers in the saddle while the 522nd Company assaulted the NVA-held northern hilltop. The initial assaults were successful and additional MSF troops were put into what became a five-hour bloody battle for the hilltop. By mid-evening the hill was in friendly hands - but at high cost to both sides. Five US Special Forces soldiers had died in the fighting on 25 August:
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