Until You Come Home
Name:  Gregory Rea Benton, Jr.
Rank/Branch:  E2/US Marine corps
Unit:  Company D, 1st Battalion, 9th Marines, 3rd Marine Division
Date of Birth:  18 April 1950
Home City of Record:  Vallejo CA
Date of Loss:  23 May 1969
Coountry of Loss:  South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates:  160700N 107200E
Status (in 1973):  Missing in Action Category 3
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground:  Ground
Other Personnel in Incident:  (none missing)
Source  Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 March 1991 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.  Updated by  the P.O.W NETWORK in 2000.
SYNOPSIS:
Greg Benton is an American Indian (the USG shows Benton as Caucasian) and above all he wanted to do his part for his country.  He has a pin in his leg as a result of a car accident while delivering newspapers as a boy.  Because of the pin, Greg had to fight to get into the Marine Corps ans had a difficult time in boot camp because of it.  But he badly wanted to become a Marine.  When PFC Benton went to Vietnam, he was assigned to Company d, 1st Battalion, 9th Marines in Vietnam.  Like other soldiers in Vietnam, Benton was overwhelmed by the death of his comrades.  In a letter home he wrote: "Death is slowly catching up with me, and I cannot avoid it much longer.  I dilike having my life end in this hole, but there is little I can do to prevent it.  Though my body may be weak and soft my spirit is strong and bold."  On May 23, 1969, Benton was part of a secuity force evacuating casualties at Quang Tri when his helicopter landing zone was overrun.  A firefight ensued, and when it was over, search efforts were conducted of the area.  All personnel were accounted for except Benton.  No trace was found.  It was not known whether he had been injured, captured, or killed.  Benton was classified Missing in Action.  When U.S. involvement in the war ended in 1975, thousands of refugees fled Vietnam to escape the communist regime, bringing with them stories of Americans still in their country.  Since then, over 10,000 such reports have accumulated in U.S. agency files.  Many experts, after reviewing the information, believe hundreds may still be alive toda, still prisoners.  It is not known if Benton survived the attack on the landing zone on May 23. 1969 or if he if one of those said to be still alive.  If he is still alive, he surely remembers and has lived by the Marine Corps slogan, "Semper Fideles".  He knows the impotance his fellow Marines placed on recovering even the dead from the battlefield.  If he is alive, he must wonder why his country has broken faith faith with him and why he has been abandoned.  It's time we brought our men home.

7 5% of Native Americans serve in the Armed Forces, more than any other ethnic group.  Native Americans are the smallest ethinc group in the United States.



EMAIL
Graphics provided by silverhawk creations
ojcring.jpg

This site is owned by Cynthia Bailey

[Next] [Previous] [Random] [List] [Info] [Join]