SHAW, GARY FRANCIS
Name: Gary Francis Shaw
Rank/Branch: E3/US Army
Unit: A Battery, 3rd Battalion, 19th Artillery, 173rd Airborn Brigade
Date of Birth: 13 March 1948 (Windsor, Novia Scotia)
Home City of Record: Toledo OH
Date of Loss: 11 November 1967
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 143548N 1073634E (YB825184)
Status (in 1973): Killed/Body Not Recovered
Category: 2
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Refno:0905
Other Personnel In Incident: Edwin Martinez-Mercado; John Stuckey; Robert
Staton; (all 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: BTL - LFT FR DED - LATR BOD GONE - J
SYNOPSIS: On November 11, 1967, PFC Edwin Martinez-Mercado, PFC Gary Shaw,
PVT John Stuckey and SP4 Robert Staton were all members of the 173rd
Airborne Brigade on a search and destroy mission in Kontum Province, South
Vietnam, when the unit engaged an enemy force.
Following the battle, the three were judged to have been killed in action,
and were left on the battlefield for later recovery. A few days later, the
area was searched for casualties, but their bodies could not be found.
The three members of the 173rd killed on November 11, 1967 are listed with
honor among the missing because no remains were found. Their cases seem
quite clear. For others who are listed missing, resolution is not as simple.
Many were known to have survived their loss incident. Quite a few were in
radio contact with search teams and describing an advancing enemy. Some were
photographed or recorded in captivity. Others simply vanished without a
trace.
When the war ended, and 591 Americans were released in Operation Homecoming
in 1973, military experts expressed their dismay that "some hundreds" of
POWs did not come home with them. Since that time, thousands of reports have
been received, indicating that many Americans are still being held against
their will in Southeast Asia. Whether the men from the 173rd are among them
is not at all likely. What is certain, however, is that if only one American
remains alive in enemy hands, we owe him our best effort to bring him home.
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