EUGENE J. HILL JR
Home Of Record:
BLACKWOOD
County:
Camden
Status:
Killed In Action
Rank:
PFC
Branch Of Service:
Army
Country Of Incident:
SVN
Date of Casualty:
August 23, 1968
Date of Birth:
May 18, 1948
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EUGENE JOHN HILL JR
PFC - E3 - Army - Selective Service
198th Light Infantry Brigade
Length of service 0 years
His tour began on Jul 27, 1968
Casualty was on Aug 23, 1968
In QUANG NGAI, SOUTH VIETNAM
HOSTILE, GROUND CASUALTY
ARTILLERY, ROCKET, or MORTAR
Body was recovered
Panel 47W - Line 44
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Eugene J. Hill, Jr., who
was known as Genie by his family and friends, was born on May 18, 1948. He
was an outgoing boy and enjoyed spending his summers with his aunt and
uncle, Dolly and Ron McCloskey and seven cousins. He made friends wherever
he went and had good friends in both Philadelphia, PA and at home in
Blackwood, NJ. He attended St. Francis De Sales Grammar School in Runnemede,
NJ. While there, he lived with Aunt Dolly and Uncle Ron.
Gene spent some of his happiest days at Triton High School. His love of
sports won him double letters in football and track. He held two track
records, one, the half-mile, went undefeated for years. Gene graduated in
June 1967.
After graduating, Gene lived with his mother and worked as a linesman
trainee for the Philadelphia Electric Company. After working there for seven
months, he left Blackwood, NJ, and enlisted in the US Army, much to his
family’s dismay.
Gene was sent to Fort Dix in February 1968, for Basic Training. He managed
to earn weekend passes and was able to get home every weekend.
When Gene completed his
Basic Training, he was sent to Fort Gordon, GA. After training there, he had
a 30-day leave and was home for the month of July. He was asked to go to
Non-Commissioned Officers training, but for some reason turned it down. It
could have been that some of his friends did not make it, and he did not
want to leave them. He attained the rank of Private First Class (PFC).
On August 4, 1968, Gene was sent to Vietnam to serve as a Rifleman. He was
assigned to Company C of the 1st Battalion, 52nd Infantry, 198th Light
Infantry Brigade. Gene was stationed at a base camp near Chu Lai. It was
here that he was wounded when his base camp came under hostile mortar
attack. Gene died at 3:00 A.M on August 23, 1968, at the age of 20. He had
been in Vietnam only 24 days.
In Gene’s last letter to his Aunt Dolly, he told her that he was “in a safe
area and not to worry.” However, in a letter sent to a priest friend, he
told him that his camp was surrounded and that he had no regrets going to
Vietnam. Gene was proud to serve his country and thought it was his duty to
do so. He was awarded the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star.
Gene wanted to become a teacher. He would have been a great one, as he loved
people and had a wonderful sense of humor. People loved to be around Gene,
especially his cousins. He delighted in teasing and entertaining them. Gene
was full of life and fun, and to this day is missed not only by his cousins,
aunt, uncle, and mother, but by all who knew him.
Sources: The Hill Family and NJVVMF.
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MESSAGES LEFT ON THEWALL-USA
** Note that some of these
messages are from years ago and their contact information may not be good
anymore **
Jack Newell
jackson97@comcast.net
Brother Viet Vet
Hill grew up in Philadelphia but moved to an aunt's home in Runnemede, New
Jersey, when his parents divorced. In 1967, he graduated from Triton High
School, where he won double letters in both football and track. He became a
lineman for Philadelphia Electric Company before entering the Army in
January 1968, but he talked about wanting to become a teacher when he
returned home from the service. The private first class, a rifleman, was
shipped to Vietnam in July 1968 and assigned to Company C of the 1st
Battalion, 52nd Infantry, 198th Light Infantry Brigade. He was proud to
serve in Vietnam and thought it was his duty to do so. Hill died on August
23, 1968, at the age of 20. Survivors included his parents. Eugene lived on
South 47th Street, in West Philadelphia. Source: Philadelphia Daily News
10/26/1987
Friday, December 05, 2003
Ron Joseph
rearden33@hotmail.com
friend
Ellabell, GA
Never Forgotten
Gene a I ran track and chased girls together in high school. I too was in
Nam and when I returned to find him missing I've never gotten over it. I
miss him and I will never forget him.
Saturday, January 04, 2003
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