ROBERT HUGH GAGE
Name: Robert Hugh Gage
Rank/Branch: E4/US Marine Corps
Unit: Company A, 1st AT Battalion, 1st Marine Division
Date of Birth: 17 March 1945
Home City of Record: Columbus OH
Date of Loss: 03 July 1966
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 155650N 1081508E (BT059649)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 2
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Refno: 0381
Other Personnel In Incident: (none missing)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 October 1990 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 1998.
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: Cpl. Robert Hugh Gage was very proud to be a Marine. He was proud
to serve his country in Vietnam. He had completed his tour of duty and had
been in Da Nang for only a couple of days awaiting the next ship home when
he disappeared. The last anyone saw of Robert H. Gage was as he was talking
to some local girls outside a Vietnamese house.
Robert Gage was listed Missing in Action. The U.S. believes that the
Vietnamese can tell us what happened to him. His official loss location is
listed as near Hoa An in Quang Nam Province, Republic of Vietnam. Search was
made by two platoons and eight dogs, but no trace was found of Gage.
There are nearly 2500 Americans missing in Southeast Asia. Mounting evidence
indicates that some of them are still alive, held captive. The Paris Peace
agreements of 1973 dictated that the Vietnamese would return all prisoners
of war and make the fullest possible accounting of the missing. They did
neither. Men known to have been prisoner of war were not released. Men who
died in captivity have not been returned for burial.
The U.S. Government policy statement is that we do not have actionable
evidence of Americans held captive, yet there are over 10,000 reports on
file. Over 100 of them, according to one State Department official, pass the
"closest scrutiny" our intelligence community can give them. Until serious
effort is made to find those men we left behind, their families will wonder
whether their men are alive or dead.
Robert H. Gage was promoted to the rank of Staff Sergeant during the period
he was maintained missing.
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