EBERHARDT, WILLIAM ★ 28 OCT 41 - 1 SEP 65 HALEY, JOHN ★ 15 SEP 47 - 1 SEP 67 BRUNNOW, RICHARD ★ 15 APR 49 - 2 SEP 68 HEROLD, RICHARD ★ 3 DEC 44 - 2 SEP 72 MORROW, EDWARD ★ 3 MAR 49 - 2 SEP 70 SZCZEPANCZYK, GEORGE ★ 7 FEB 48 - 2 SEP 68 BIGHAM, CHARLES ★ 6 APR 46 - 2 SEP 67 ORTIZ, ROBERT ★ 20 JAN 52 - 2 SEP 70 ATKINS, DAVID ★ 21 DEC 48 - 2 SEP 69 LEEDS, CLYDE ★ 14 JUL 36 - 3 SEP 66 EPIFANIO, NEAL ★ 8 OCT 50 - 3 SEP 69 MELNICK, STEWART ★ 14 AUG 46 - 3 SEP 68 HEATHCOTE, CLIFFORD ★ 29 APR 35 - 3 SEP 66 ACKERMAN, THOMAS ★ 26 OCT 47 - 4 SEP 68 LYONS, WILLIAM ★ 1 AUG 46 - 4 SEP 69 CONSTANTINO, CLIFFORD ★ 13 JUL 50 - 4 SEP 69 GOCZAL, FREDERICK ★ 4 NOV 48 - 5 SEP 68 ALBERT, DAVID ★ 2 JUN 49 - 5 SEP 69 YOUNG, STEPHEN ★ 20 DEC 45 - 6 SEP 69 SYLVIA, JERRY ★ 31 MAY 50 - 6 SEP 69 PFROMMER, STANLEY ★ 13 JUL 44 - 6 SEP 66 GILRAY, ROBERT ★ 27 MAR 45 - 7 SEP 68 DE HAAS, PETER ★ 27 SEP 47 - 7 SEP 68 LAWSON, ALBERT ★ 3 OCT 46 - 7 SEP 67 MARSHALL, DONALD ★ 25 DEC 46 - 8 SEP 67 DE RIGGI, ANTHONY ★ 27 APR 42 - 8 SEP 66 SERVICE, JOHN ★ 15 JUL 42 - 8 SEP 71 GARRISON, RUSSELL ★ 16 DEC 45 - 8 SEP 67 MCBRIDE, PATRICK ★ 17 MAR 47 - 10 SEP 67 IVAN, ANDREW ★ 23 SEP 44 - 10 SEP 71 BRYANT, DAVID ★ 29 JAN 47 - 10 SEP 67 MATHEWS, HAROLD ★ 23 JAN 47 - 11 SEP 68 SPINA, FRED ★ 6 AUG 49 - 11 SEP 68 BULLWINKEL, ALDEN ★ 31 JAN 49 - 11 SEP 69 JOYNES, FRANK ★ 31 JUL 48 - 12 SEP 69 KANE, RICHARD ★ 15 DEC 42 - 12 SEP 67 LANG, CHARLES ★ 28 JUN 41 - 12 SEP 70 BALDWIN, MICHAEL ★ 19 JUL 47 - 12 SEP 68 FRANCIS, THOMAS ★ 23 NOV 46 - 12 SEP 67 DOTY, WESLEY ★ 9 SEP 48 - 12 SEP 68 SAWRAN, RICHARD ★ 10 MAR 48 - 12 SEP 69 BELCHER, FRED ★ 14 NOV 48 - 13 SEP 68 FEELEY, EUGENE ★ 11 JUN 42 - 13 SEP 68 ELLIS, CHARLES ★ 17 JUN 46 - 13 SEP 66 GALLAGHER, JOHN ★ 13 JUN 47 - 14 SEP 67 HUYLER, WILLIAM ★ 21 MAR 44 - 14 SEP 67 STEPHANAC, MARK ★ 28 JUL 47 - 14 SEP 69 ROUGHGARDEN, RICHARD ★ 19 AUG 43 - 14 SEP 69 HALLADAY, JOHN ★ 24 AUG 46 - 14 SEP 69 COFRANCESCO, LOUIS ★ 8 JUN 48 - 15 SEP 68 RILK, HARLAN ★ 15 OCT 45 - 16 SEP 67 PYPNIOWSKI, LARRY ★ 24 OCT 48 - 16 SEP 69 ATTARIAN, ALAN ★ 29 JUL 48 - 16 SEP 69 DAWSON, STEVEN ★ 11 MAR 48 - 17 SEP 68 ROCKY, ROBERT ★ 11 NOV 39 - 17 SEP 66 HUTTON, WALTER ★ 9 NOV 51 - 17 SEP 70 STYBEL, CONRAD ★ 19 JUN 42 - 17 SEP 67 BATES, RICHARD ★ 31 OCT 46 - 17 SEP 66 ZIBURA, MICHAEL ★ 2 MAY 47 - 18 SEP 68 JANOWITZ, ROBERT ★ 27 SEP 44 - 18 SEP 68 BEATTIE, DAVID ★ 6 MAY 45 - 18 SEP 66 GEOGHEGAN, GERALD ★ 24 NOV 42 - 18 SEP 66 HICKS, LEROY ★ 11 MAY 44 - 18 SEP 65 CLARKEN, THOMAS ★ 19 JUL 45 - 19 SEP 68 FREED, DAVID ★ 18 NOV 48 - 19 SEP 68 RHOADES, FRANCIS ★ 19 JAN 50 - 19 SEP 68 BIBER, JOSEPH ★ 29 JUN 46 - 19 SEP 68 GLOVER, MANZIE ★ 19 JAN 45 - 19 SEP 66 MILLER, GEORGE ★ 18 JAN 45 - 19 SEP 66 NEGRON, VICTOR ★ 1 MAR 45 - 19 SEP 67 DIANI, FRANCO ★ 10 AUG 49 - 20 SEP 70 HARRIS, WALTER ★ 12 JUN 47 - 20 SEP 66 ORTIZ-CORREDOR, LUIS ★ 24 OCT 44 - 21 SEP 67 CLARKE, CLIFFORD ★ 22 NOV 50 - 22 SEP 71 GRAHAM, DAVID ★ 2 MAY 44 - 22 SEP 65 GUARINO, SALVATORE ★ 30 SEP 42 - 23 SEP 66 SIPE, ROBERT ★ 9 MAY 41 - 23 SEP 67 ROMAN-AGUILAR, CARMELO ★ 4 MAR 45 - 23 SEP 66 HIGH, LARRY ★ 26 OCT 45 - 23 SEP 67 HAUSER, ROBERT ★ 7 MAY 45 - 24 SEP 66 ROBERTS, GARY ★ 31 JUL 49 - 24 SEP 67 WOLFF, RICHARD ★ 7 APR 48 - 24 SEP 68 BRYANT, SOLOMON ★ 22 FEB 27 - 24 SEP 69 LUPU, JOHN ★ 17 OCT 47 - 25 SEP 69 HUTTING, ROY ★ 16 DEC 46 - 25 SEP 66 PERRELLI, KEITH ★ 8 JAN 47 - 25 SEP 67 CONE, REGINALD ★ 11 JUL 46 - 26 SEP 66 LOWDEN, THOMAS ★ 23 APR 38 - 27 SEP 66 MERSCHROD, LAWRENCE ★ 29 NOV 47 - 27 SEP 68 SPILMAN, DYKE ★ 15 JUL 41 - 27 SEP 66 BURNS, CHARLES ★ 26 JAN 41 - 28 SEP 66 MAGUIRE, WILLIAM ★ 16 JUN 49 - 28 SEP 69 SLATER, JERALD ★ 23 JUL 47 - 28 SEP 67 KELLER, JOSEPH ★ 14 SEP 47 - 29 SEP 67 CHWAN, MICHAEL ★ 26 OCT 38 - 30 SEP 65 SHAUGER, HARRISON ★ 8 SEP 47 - 30 SEP 68 BOND, RONALD ★ 14 DEC 47 - 30 SEP 71 DALTON, JOHN ★ 4 AUG 47 - 30 SEP 68 MCCLAIN, RICHARD ★ 28 JUN 48 - 30 SEP 68 EBERHARDT, WILLIAM ★ 28 OCT 41 - 1 SEP 65 HALEY, JOHN ★ 15 SEP 47 - 1 SEP 67 BRUNNOW, RICHARD ★ 15 APR 49 - 2 SEP 68 HEROLD, RICHARD ★ 3 DEC 44 - 2 SEP 72 MORROW, EDWARD ★ 3 MAR 49 - 2 SEP 70 SZCZEPANCZYK, GEORGE ★ 7 FEB 48 - 2 SEP 68 BIGHAM, CHARLES ★ 6 APR 46 - 2 SEP 67 ORTIZ, ROBERT ★ 20 JAN 52 - 2 SEP 70 ATKINS, DAVID ★ 21 DEC 48 - 2 SEP 69 LEEDS, CLYDE ★ 14 JUL 36 - 3 SEP 66 EPIFANIO, NEAL ★ 8 OCT 50 - 3 SEP 69 MELNICK, STEWART ★ 14 AUG 46 - 3 SEP 68 HEATHCOTE, CLIFFORD ★ 29 APR 35 - 3 SEP 66 ACKERMAN, THOMAS ★ 26 OCT 47 - 4 SEP 68 LYONS, WILLIAM ★ 1 AUG 46 - 4 SEP 69 CONSTANTINO, CLIFFORD ★ 13 JUL 50 - 4 SEP 69 GOCZAL, FREDERICK ★ 4 NOV 48 - 5 SEP 68 ALBERT, DAVID ★ 2 JUN 49 - 5 SEP 69 YOUNG, STEPHEN ★ 20 DEC 45 - 6 SEP 69 SYLVIA, JERRY ★ 31 MAY 50 - 6 SEP 69 PFROMMER, STANLEY ★ 13 JUL 44 - 6 SEP 66 GILRAY, ROBERT ★ 27 MAR 45 - 7 SEP 68 DE HAAS, PETER ★ 27 SEP 47 - 7 SEP 68 LAWSON, ALBERT ★ 3 OCT 46 - 7 SEP 67 MARSHALL, DONALD ★ 25 DEC 46 - 8 SEP 67 DE RIGGI, ANTHONY ★ 27 APR 42 - 8 SEP 66 SERVICE, JOHN ★ 15 JUL 42 - 8 SEP 71 GARRISON, RUSSELL ★ 16 DEC 45 - 8 SEP 67 MCBRIDE, PATRICK ★ 17 MAR 47 - 10 SEP 67 IVAN, ANDREW ★ 23 SEP 44 - 10 SEP 71 BRYANT, DAVID ★ 29 JAN 47 - 10 SEP 67 MATHEWS, HAROLD ★ 23 JAN 47 - 11 SEP 68 SPINA, FRED ★ 6 AUG 49 - 11 SEP 68 BULLWINKEL, ALDEN ★ 31 JAN 49 - 11 SEP 69 JOYNES, FRANK ★ 31 JUL 48 - 12 SEP 69 KANE, RICHARD ★ 15 DEC 42 - 12 SEP 67 LANG, CHARLES ★ 28 JUN 41 - 12 SEP 70 BALDWIN, MICHAEL ★ 19 JUL 47 - 12 SEP 68 FRANCIS, THOMAS ★ 23 NOV 46 - 12 SEP 67 DOTY, WESLEY ★ 9 SEP 48 - 12 SEP 68 SAWRAN, RICHARD ★ 10 MAR 48 - 12 SEP 69 BELCHER, FRED ★ 14 NOV 48 - 13 SEP 68 FEELEY, EUGENE ★ 11 JUN 42 - 13 SEP 68 ELLIS, CHARLES ★ 17 JUN 46 - 13 SEP 66 GALLAGHER, JOHN ★ 13 JUN 47 - 14 SEP 67 HUYLER, WILLIAM ★ 21 MAR 44 - 14 SEP 67 STEPHANAC, MARK ★ 28 JUL 47 - 14 SEP 69 ROUGHGARDEN, RICHARD ★ 19 AUG 43 - 14 SEP 69 HALLADAY, JOHN ★ 24 AUG 46 - 14 SEP 69 COFRANCESCO, LOUIS ★ 8 JUN 48 - 15 SEP 68 RILK, HARLAN ★ 15 OCT 45 - 16 SEP 67 PYPNIOWSKI, LARRY ★ 24 OCT 48 - 16 SEP 69 ATTARIAN, ALAN ★ 29 JUL 48 - 16 SEP 69 DAWSON, STEVEN ★ 11 MAR 48 - 17 SEP 68 ROCKY, ROBERT ★ 11 NOV 39 - 17 SEP 66 HUTTON, WALTER ★ 9 NOV 51 - 17 SEP 70 STYBEL, CONRAD ★ 19 JUN 42 - 17 SEP 67 BATES, RICHARD ★ 31 OCT 46 - 17 SEP 66 ZIBURA, MICHAEL ★ 2 MAY 47 - 18 SEP 68 JANOWITZ, ROBERT ★ 27 SEP 44 - 18 SEP 68 BEATTIE, DAVID ★ 6 MAY 45 - 18 SEP 66 GEOGHEGAN, GERALD ★ 24 NOV 42 - 18 SEP 66 HICKS, LEROY ★ 11 MAY 44 - 18 SEP 65 CLARKEN, THOMAS ★ 19 JUL 45 - 19 SEP 68 FREED, DAVID ★ 18 NOV 48 - 19 SEP 68 RHOADES, FRANCIS ★ 19 JAN 50 - 19 SEP 68 BIBER, JOSEPH ★ 29 JUN 46 - 19 SEP 68 GLOVER, MANZIE ★ 19 JAN 45 - 19 SEP 66 MILLER, GEORGE ★ 18 JAN 45 - 19 SEP 66 NEGRON, VICTOR ★ 1 MAR 45 - 19 SEP 67 DIANI, FRANCO ★ 10 AUG 49 - 20 SEP 70 HARRIS, WALTER ★ 12 JUN 47 - 20 SEP 66 ORTIZ-CORREDOR, LUIS ★ 24 OCT 44 - 21 SEP 67 CLARKE, CLIFFORD ★ 22 NOV 50 - 22 SEP 71 GRAHAM, DAVID ★ 2 MAY 44 - 22 SEP 65 GUARINO, SALVATORE ★ 30 SEP 42 - 23 SEP 66 SIPE, ROBERT ★ 9 MAY 41 - 23 SEP 67 ROMAN-AGUILAR, CARMELO ★ 4 MAR 45 - 23 SEP 66 HIGH, LARRY ★ 26 OCT 45 - 23 SEP 67 HAUSER, ROBERT ★ 7 MAY 45 - 24 SEP 66 ROBERTS, GARY ★ 31 JUL 49 - 24 SEP 67 WOLFF, RICHARD ★ 7 APR 48 - 24 SEP 68 BRYANT, SOLOMON ★ 22 FEB 27 - 24 SEP 69 LUPU, JOHN ★ 17 OCT 47 - 25 SEP 69 HUTTING, ROY ★ 16 DEC 46 - 25 SEP 66 PERRELLI, KEITH ★ 8 JAN 47 - 25 SEP 67 CONE, REGINALD ★ 11 JUL 46 - 26 SEP 66 LOWDEN, THOMAS ★ 23 APR 38 - 27 SEP 66 MERSCHROD, LAWRENCE ★ 29 NOV 47 - 27 SEP 68 SPILMAN, DYKE ★ 15 JUL 41 - 27 SEP 66 BURNS, CHARLES ★ 26 JAN 41 - 28 SEP 66 MAGUIRE, WILLIAM ★ 16 JUN 49 - 28 SEP 69 SLATER, JERALD ★ 23 JUL 47 - 28 SEP 67 KELLER, JOSEPH ★ 14 SEP 47 - 29 SEP 67 CHWAN, MICHAEL ★ 26 OCT 38 - 30 SEP 65 SHAUGER, HARRISON ★ 8 SEP 47 - 30 SEP 68 BOND, RONALD ★ 14 DEC 47 - 30 SEP 71 DALTON, JOHN ★ 4 AUG 47 - 30 SEP 68 MCCLAIN, RICHARD ★ 28 JUN 48 - 30 SEP 68

Alvin Hinson - SSGT

Hometown:
Westville
D.O.B.:
March 3, 1936
County:
Gloucester
Rank:
SSGT
Branch:
Army
Date of Casualty:

May 12, 1969

Casualty Status:
Killed In Action
Country of Incident:
South Vietnam

Alvin C. Hinson was born on March 3, 1936. His home of record is Westville, NJ.

He served in the US Army and attained the rank of Staff Sergeant (SSGT).

Hinson was killed in action on May 12, 1969 in Vietnam.

Al

March 3, 1936-May 12, 1969 SSG, Army Woodbury, NJ

As his platoon moved through unsecured territory, it came under intense hostile fire, sustained several serious casualties and became pinned down. Seeing that the wounded personnel were without aid, Sergeant Hinson, with complete disregard for his own safety, courageously moved through the hail of rounds, across open terrain to aid the injured soldiers. While giving aid to one of his men, Sergeant Hinson was mortally wounded.

On the 12th of May in 1969, Alvin Hinson forever became a hero of Headquarters Company, 2nd Battalion, 47th Infantry, 9th Infantry Division. He had only been in Vietnam five weeks. He was doing what he did best; taking care of his men. After all, he was married to them, to the Army and to his country. For his actions under fire, Hinson was posthumously was awarded the Silver Star.
His ex-wife, Katherine Hinson (nee Finsel), whose marriage to him lasted just under ten years, had two daughters with him but knew more than anyone that Alvin’s first and only true love was the Army.
“We had a great marriage while it lasted,” she says. “He was a good friend besides being a good husband and a good father. He was good to us when he was home but, I always felt he would have rather been on an operation with his troops somewhere. He was a soldier, period. Everything else came in a distant second.”
Alvin Hinson was born and raised in Lancaster, South Carolina, situated between Columbia, SC and Charlotte, NC. He left school in the tenth grade and enlisted into the Army in 1953. He stood 5’ 8” and weighed about 160 pounds, had brown hair and hazel eyes. His service record indicates two reductions in rank for being AWOL in 1964 while stationed in Fort Lewis, Washington. It took about three years for him to reach the rank of Sergeant again. His duty stations included Japan, Korea and Germany. He spent two years as a civilian in Deptford and Woodbury, NJ.
“Al and I met in January of 1955, while he was still in the service,” Katherine says. “He wanted to settle down and start a family. We were married in September of that year and he got out of the Army in December of 1956.”
“He went to work at the National Gas Company plant in Gloucester,” she continues. “And later, he went to New York shipyard as a welder on board the USS Kittyhawk. Our first child, Elizabeth, was born in August of 1956. Our second, Peggy Sue, was born in March of 1958, three weeks before Elizabeth died in open heart surgery. It was really a tough time for us but we survived. I would not have if Al had not been around.”
“Al was meticulous about everything he did,” Katherine recalls. “He cleaned the floors in our apartment once, and actually spit-shined them when he was through. He had a lot of energy and worked hard at whatever he was doing. He loved western movies, especially John Wayne, and liked to go to Atco Raceway for the stock car races. He served on the election board in Deptford Township and loved to go roller skating. He even got his GED in the service. We were members of St. John’s Lutheran Church in Woodbury and had many friends, both civilian and military.”
“I remember very well when we first got married and living two doors from the firehouse in north Woodbury. When the alarm would go off in the middle of the night, Al would jump out of bed thinking it was an alert at the base. We had a wonderful neighbor downstairs who would stop Al before he got to the street.”
“A friend of his once tried to commit suicide. His wife called us and within fifteen minutes, Al had him at the hospital. His wife stayed with us for the two weeks Al’s friend was in the hospital. Al then insisted they stay with us for a week when he got out. He always had to help people anyway he could.”
By May of 1965, their marriage had disintegrated and they divorced. Katherine and Peggy Sue stayed in Woodbury, and Alvin went off to his assignment in Germany.
She will never forget the day four years later when the notification officers arrived at their apartment. They were there to notify Peggy Sue of her father’s death, but not Katherine, who was Peggy Sue’s legal guardian, but no longer his wife.
“I thought it had to be a mistake,” Katherine says. “The last we heard from him, he was in Germany. The officers assured us there was no mistake.”
The tragic news became worse as the days after wore on. Katherine had long since become estranged from Alvin’s family in South Carolina, and there had been little communication between them. Peggy Sue became an innocent victim.
“She was only eleven,” Katherine says. “It was terrible for her, me and my mother. And since Peggy Sue was a minor, we had no say on the burial arrangements. Al’s mother had his body shipped to South Carolina. She made no contact at all and we never found out when the funeral was. My daughter later tried to get the flag that covered his coffin but Al’s mother said she wanted it. I really regret we had not been there to say goodbye. Maybe then I could accept that he really is gone. At least I found out that he had volunteered for Vietnam, so he must have believed in what we were doing there.”
“He served his country proudly,” Katherine remembers. “There are many good stories I could tell. We did a lot of wonderful things as a couple and as a family. But I would want him remembered as a soldier who gave his life for his country and his men.”
The Silver Star citation continues:

Sergeant Hinson’s extraordinary heroism in close combat with an armed hostile force was in keeping with the highest traditions of the military service and reflects great credit upon himself, the 9th Infantry Division and the United States Army.

Excerpt from They Were Ours: Gloucester County’s Loss in Vietnam
by John Campbell
Used with permission of author

Sources: John Campbell and NJVVMF.
12/17/2024

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