PFC Paul Melvin Beddoe was a member of Company B, 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion. PFC Beddoe died Jan. 21, 1968, in a Da Nang hospital, one day after he received fragment wounds from an explosive device while on patrol in the vicinity of Khe Sanh (Hill 881S). He was my dad’s 1st cousin. As long as he is remembered, he will never be forgotten! ~Cpl. Beddoe
Bob (PJ) Pagano was with Paul when he was hit. The following is PJ’s first-hand account as written to me.
Hi Wally,
I didn’t know Paul that long. He was a “new guy” compared to the handful of us that were left from when the company moved up to Khe Sanh. At the time Paul came to the company, I had pulled twenty-something patrols and was pretty crazy compared to those who were just coming on board. Crazy in the way you had to be to survive so many missions in the densely jungled and incredibly rough terrain at Khe Sanh, which held at least 20,000 fresh NVA soldiers. All that combined to give Bravo Company the highest casualty rate of any Recon Company in the war for that period – by far. I became, let’s say, “focused” on being in the bush, and my social skills kind of dropped away as did all the more refined behavioral features of my personality. I didn’t really get to know the new guys well because they were, well, new, and I didn’t like getting to know them and then see them get killed or wounded. If I stayed kind of aloof, I wouldn’t get emotionally invested, and losing them would be easier, or so I thought anyway (it didn’t really work, but one grabs at anything to try to blunt the blow). The new guys, in turn, were a little standoffish with us older guys (keep in mind that chronological age is irrelevant; it was time in the bush that determined if you were “old” or “new”). They saw us as kind of wild and strange – and we were.
I pulled a couple of patrols with Paul before Barkwood. He had a good sense of humor and was of upright character. New guys were sent out with experienced teams to get “snapped in,” as they say. They then either stayed with that team or were assigned to another team as needed. Barkwood was a brand new team having just been formed and consisted mostly of new guys that, like Paul, had already been “snapped in.” The exceptions were Lionel Guerra and Ron Parr, both of whom had a fair amount of experience. However, Barkwood didn’t have an experienced radio operator, so when I approached the team leader, Corporal “Bill” Bryan, and asked if I could join the team, he walked me right over to the XO and got it approved. As you know from having read the stuff on the website about the Warriors of Hill 881S, we (Team Barkwood) choppered up to Hill 881S on January 19th, 1968. India Company of 3/26 occupied the hill under the command of Captain William Dabney, and he was to take most of India Company the following day and patrol up to Hill 881N, where they were to look for the lost radio from Recon Team Dockleaf that had been hit there on the 17th and lost two men. (I had been in the bush on the 17th and remember monitoring the firefight on my radio and telling our team leader, Julian Kalama, that Cpl. Healy and Lt.Yeary had been killed. I don’t remember the call sign of Kalama’s team at that point, but I do remember that when I came in from that patrol, I instantly asked to go out with Barkwood because I wanted to get back in the bush.) We were attached to India’s 3rd Platoon, who made up the right column, and we were to drop off covertly when we neared Hill 881N. (This was a method that was used from time to time to insert Recon teams. I didn’t care for it because you immediately had to worry about the Grunts opening up on you. It only took one of them not to get the word, catch a glimpse of you, mistake you for the NVA, and open up whereupon the rest would as well.) Our orders were that if India came under fire before we could drop off, we were to return to Hill 881S (because our mission at that point would have been blown). When about halfway to Hill 881N, the Grunts came under fire. It started with seven shots from a heavy machine gun; first three, then four a second later. India took a lot of casualties, and our team leader, Cpl. “Bill” Bryan, volunteered that the team join the Grunts rather than withdraw as instructed by our operation order. Lt. Brindly, India’s 3rd Platoon Commander, accepted the offer, and we added our seven rifles to theirs.
Paul was calm and collected as we took some fire and established a perimeter for the evacuation of the Grunt wounded and dead. He required no special attention and did what he was supposed to without hesitation or complaint. That may not sound like much, but it is; it really is. A lot of guys, especially new guys, jam up at these times. Helping with dead and wounded Marines, taking fire, smoke, concussion, noise like you’ve never heard before, choppers coming in firing, not knowing what will happen next – all that is really scary stuff. Paul didn’t bat an eye, kept a steady hand, and performed like a real pro.
Lt. Brindly asked us to get on line for an assault up the small hill in front of us (the intermediate objective). This was the classic Marine “walking assault.” To put a point on it: We were about to walk, uphill, into the flaming muzzles of an entrenched, numerically superior, and determined enemy. By comparison, the scariest thing you’ve ever imagined is kid’s stuff. Paul got on line, again, without hesitation or complaint.
Lieutenant Brindly gave the command: “Fix bayonets!” We all looked at him at once. Recon guys never hear this command in their line of work. In fact, I doubt that there was a single bayonet among us. But it sure drove the fact home about what we were about to do.
Paul never wavered. The assault stepped off, and we moved downhill for a few yards and then started up the intermediate objective. We quickly lost contact with the Grunts on our left (what remained of 3rd Platoon) and were now the extreme right of the Marine line. The elephant grass was high, and we had trouble keeping sight of each other. The enemy held fire until we were among them at the top of the hill. Then things got pretty dicey.
The Grunts didn’t know we had made it that far and opened up on us at the same time the NVA did (the Grunts couldn’t see us because of the elephant grass and were shooting at where they knew the NVA were). We were vastly outnumbered, and rifle fire was coming from every direction along with enemy grenades and Marine mortar rounds. There was so much fire and so many NVA that each of us was locked in our own little war. It was pretty desperate fighting, and we were all hit. I took a bullet right away and was preoccupied with that and getting the Marine fire off of us, so I don’t know what happened with Paul – I couldn’t see him. He was taken from the hill along with Lionel Guerra and the others about an hour or so before I was. I know Lionel saw him at the bottom of the hill where they had taken the wounded (Lionel was wounded very badly also).
Eventually, I was taken from the hill (something I had not expected to live to see) through a fantastically courageous rescue by the Marines of India Company (God bless the Grunts). After a short stop at Khe Sanh for blood, morphine, and bandages, I was flown to the huge Navy Hospital in Da Nang. They had me on a gurney and were wheeling me into a large, dark room that had scores of metal sawhorses holding up stretchers on either side of the central aisle that they were rolling my gurney down. The room seemed cavernous and had only enough light to barely make out the interior. As we proceeded down the aisle, there was an island of bright light coming up on my left. As we got closer, I could see that there were lights and medical personnel clustered around a stretcher. I.V.’s were running to a Marine on the stretcher; it was Paul.
The Corpsman around him were comforting him in the uniquely tender way military men do. A genuine form of love that exists only in those circumstances. I called out for him not to worry, that everything was OK and that he was going home. He didn’t hear me. He was quite delirious and wasn’t conscious in the real sense of the word. Had he survived, he would have had no memory of that time – I’m sure of that. The Corpsman pushing my gurney told me in a subdued voice that Paul had shrapnel wounds throughout his liver and pancreas and wouldn’t survive. “St!” I thought (the same thing I thought back on the hill when Cpl. Bryan told me he was going to die and then did so). St – what a totally inadequate comment. “Inadequate” applies, though; that’s what I felt while I watched my friends die and could do nothing about it.
I don’t know how anyone can say that something positive can come out of a tragedy like Paul’s death. But, for me at least, I’ve tried to offset it by remembering the example he gave; calm, cool, steady, upright – even in the most terrifying circumstances a Marine can face. If I had a son, I’d like him to be like Paul: strong, even at the end.
~PJ
(Bob Pagano)
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OBITUARY NOTICE:
Son Of Phoenix Couple Dies In Vietnam Hospital
Marine PFC. Paul Melvin Beddoe Jr., 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Melvin Beddoe, Route 4, Box 466A, Phoenix, died Jan. 21 in a Da Nang hospital, one day after he received fragment wounds from an explosive device while on patrol in the vicinity of Quang Tri. The Marine was a member of Company B, 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion. He was rushed to the hospital in Da Nang immediately after the injury occurred, but treatment failed to save his life.
The message was delivered by a Marine captain and a Navy officer from Eugene to the youth’s mother yesterday afternoon. His father, who is with the Miller Products Division of W. R. Grace Company, was attending a meeting in Sacramento where he was contacted. He returned to Medford last night.
Young Beddoe, an outstanding student throughout his high school career at Phoenix, had been interested in military history throughout his life, listing it as his favorite subject. After attending Walla Walla College in College Place, Wash., for one year he enlisted in the Marines June 1, 1967, and arrived in Da Nang Dec. 4.
He was born in Medford Nov. 13, 1948. While a student at Phoenix High School, he won the first-place trophy in the junior men’s division in oratory at the Linfield College Speech Tournament. He was also prominent in track at the high school with the shotput his leading event. He was one of the speakers at his class graduation at Phoenix High School and was a member of the Young Americans for Freedom.
The Beddoe family has lived in the Rogue River Valley since 1945. Surviving in addition to the Marine’s parents are two sisters, Dr. Gladys Beddoe, who is in her first year of residency for surgery in the Riverside County Hospital, Riverside, Calif., Pamela Beddoe, a freshman at Phoenix High School, and one brother, Alex F. Beddoe, in his second year at Loma Linda University School of Dentistry, Loma Linda, Calif.
Siskiyou funeral Service Directors are in charge of arrangements.
Bob Pagano, I thank you for your letter though it was not written TO me, it was written FOR me. It is the closest I have come to hearing what may have happened to a good friend of mine who was killed on 881S. We were Corpsmen together at Bethesda NH in the ER until he was sent FMF and I was sent to OR Tech School. We had discussed trading orders as he did not want to go to Vietnam but I did. He delayed making a decision until it was too late. His name was Eric Radtke. He was an HN (E-3) assigned to the 26th Marines and was, as I recall from info at The Wall, killed in a rocket attack.
All I could add is that he had an infectious and raucous sense of humor and red hair. He also wore glasses and may have been assigned to H&S Co.
I would love to hear from anyone who knew Eric and/or the circumstances of his death. I can be reached on twitter @paulwortman1 or you might guess how to reach me on facebook.
BTW: After Eric’s death I did get my chance to go green as Sr Corpsman, Echo Co., 2/6.
Cpl. Beddoe,
I know Paul is in a better place. While we probably never met, Paul epitomized what makes a Recon Marine. We few we happy few, we band of brothers.
May he rest in Peace.
Semper Fidelis,
Larry Mullane
Echo Co. 3rd Recon Bn. Team’s Sidedish and Leghorn
12-67 10-69
I was there that day as a scout w/Lt Thomases’ platoon..parallel w/Lt Brindley’s platoon..there was friendly fire because of terrain..I remember screaming at a fellow Marine through the fire..not to shoot direction he was pointed…knew Marines were there..we lost Lt. Thomas and Brindley on that day..so sorry for your loss..we fought long and hard that day..countless acts of bravery..too many to mention..thank you for your service..Semper Fi!!!!!!!!!!!
I was in 3rd recon bn, 64-65. Don’t remember much, but this man is someone I would have liked to serve with. The men I served with were of his character also. Semper Fi, and brothers remember your OATH to the Constitution, we may be needed again.
This is the Real Story of the Marine Corps’ prowess in combat ..the individual Marine … that magnificent Marine – S/F
Words can not express the anxiety,pride and sense of loss I just felt from reading this. I never experienced combat having served in the Corps from 1976 -1980 but I have never been lost on all the sacrifices all Marines living and dead that came before and after me. Semper Fi PFC Beddoe R.I.P.
>god bless paul and his band of brothers! from echo recon 2/7 1st air cav. 1970