Michael William Enbody
First Lieutenant
CRIP PLT, HHC, 2ND BN, 27TH INFANTRY, 25TH INF DIV, USARV Army of the United States Canoga Park, California July 25, 1947 to February 12, 1968 MICHAEL W ENBODY is on the Wall at Panel 39E, Line 4 |
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1LT MICHAEL WILLIAM ENBODY
1LT MICHAEL WILLIAM ENBODY
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12 Feb 2004It was the greatest honor for me and the men of CRIP to know you and to serve with you. You and the 9 other men will live in our hearts forever and you will never be forgotten. We love you and we miss you. Thank you for being our brother. We will always remember the "MIGHTY 10". Wolfhounds Forever!8 Feb 2005The courage, strength, valor, and love for your fellow soldiers displayed by you on the battle field that day that our Lord called you to your heavenly home will be embedded in our hearts eternally. Our memories of you will always be in our minds and hearts each and and every day. You are truely loved and missed. Your "CRIP" BrothersWOLFHOUNDS FOREVER !!! From a CRIP Platoon Brother, Len Brooks 1 Feb 2007It has been 39 years since that horrible day on the battlefield when you gallantly fought by our sides and paid the ultimate price of giving you life which allowed many of your fellow platoon members to survive. Your courage will be remembered by us for the rest of our days. We all have the greatest of love, respect,and admiration for you and the other men of The Mighty 10. You are the shining light in each of our hearts every day. We salute you, miss you, and never will forget you. Wolfhounds Forever !!! Your Brothers of CRIP |
Tay Ninh was an un-secured region, according to Army Intelligence, for a staging and resupplying of NVA (North Vietnamese Army) and VC (Vietcong) guerrilla fighters. In the spring of 1967, the 2nd Battalion of the 27th Infantry, 25th Infantry Division formed a group of specialized soldiers hand selected by key intelligence officers. They renamed the Reconnaisance Platoon of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, to become the Combined Reconnaissance and Intelligence Platoon (CRIP). Read more about the "Mighty 10" here and at another site here. Ten men from the Combined Recon and Intelligence Platoon (CRIP), 2nd Battalion, 27th Infantry, were listed by the Army as having died in action on 12 Feb 1968 - they were:
Local Area papers in February and March 1968 Canoga Park: Studio City Men Killed in Vietnam War Army Second Lt Michael W. Enbody of Canoga Park and Specialist Four Mark Samuel Kaye of Studio City have been killed in action in Vietnam. Parents of the two soldiers had been notified today by the Pentagon. Lt. Enbody, age 20, a ranger and paratrooper, was killed in action Feb. 12 at Khiein Cuong. Vietnam, near the Cambodian border. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice W. Enbody, Jr of 7021 Penfield Ave., Canoga Park. Enbody enlisted in the Army in November 1965 and was graduated from officer candidate school in April 19S6. He was attached to HHC/2/27 infantry reconnaissance platoon. He was graduated from Reseda High School and attended Valley College before entering the Army. Besides his parents, Enbody is survived by two brothers, Steven, who is in the Navy, and Richard, age 16, who is attending High School in Canoga Park.
1LT Michael William Enbody is buried in Oakwood Memorial Park, Chatsworth, California. Feb. 13, 1993, Various Newspapers in US and Overseas Stars & Stripes SHREVEPORT, LA. SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) - A quarter-century after 23-year-old Gene Youngblood died in Vietnam, a stranger came forward to tell his parents the details. Gordon and Emma Lou Youngblood learned that their son died in an ambush a day earlier than they had believed, after they found a memorial to him on the obituary page of The Times in Shreveport. It read: ''Charles E. Youngblood. Nov. 1944-11 Feb. 1968. ''It has been 25 years since that day that you and the other nine men courageously fought by our sides and were called to the service of our Lord. You will live forever in our hearts and we will always love you. All the men of 'C.R.I.P.' 2nd Bn. 27th Inf. (Wolfhounds) 25th Inf. Div.'' The Youngbloods found that Leonard N. Brooks, 46, of Austin, Texas, placed the ad. He was the medic of the Combined Reconnaissance Intelligence Platoon when it lost more than one-third of its 28 soldiers outside a hamlet called Boa Trai. Brooks, a security officer at Austin Community College, said he also placed his memorial in seven other newspapers. ''I wanted someone out there, some of the folks who knew them to give a thought of them,'' he said. He said his unit was based at Chu Chi and worked with a similar Vietnamese unit. Twenty-eight Americans and two Vietnamese went to Bao Trai to check out a report that a few Viet Cong were collecting taxes there. They found themselves facing about 200 enemy soldiers. ''They were probably passing through the area and our paths crossed,'' Brooks said. ''We got hit from the front and the left and right.'' After several hours, helicopter gunships showed up, but it wasn't until after dark when another unit arrived that they were rescued, he said. The combined force was able to secure the area and get the bodies on Feb. 12, Brooks said, adding that that may have caused part of the confusion about the day Youngblood and the others died. ''We didn't know until now how they got killed,'' Gordon Youngblood said. ''He told us they were a select group of soldiers.'' Read more about the "Mighty 10" here and at another site here. Map of Location of the Village of Bao Thai
Near the 'Dog's Head' (west) between South Vietnam and Cambodia - a 'hot spot' throughout the war. |
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