James Littgens from Keyport, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Service era: Vietnam
Date of death: Thursday, July 9, 1970
Death details: Hostile, killed in South Vietnam
Source: National Archives
Promote & Preserve stories of U.S. fallen soldiers/sailors
James Littgens from Keyport, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Service era: Vietnam
Date of death: Thursday, July 9, 1970
Death details: Hostile, killed in South Vietnam
Source: National Archives
Dennis Joseph Gatti, age 20, from Keyport, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Parents: Connie F. Mongiello
Spouse: None
Children: None
Service era: Vietnam
Schools: Keyport High graduate
Military history: 198th American Division
Date of death: Thursday, May 28, 1970
Death details: Died in South Vietnam from wounds suffered from a booby trap
Source: National Archives, Red Bank Daily Register (1970)
Frederick Curtis Marsh, age 30, from Elberon, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Parents: Elsie M. Marsh and William T.
Spouse: Barbara Jean
Service era: Vietnam
Schools: Graduate from Delhaff High in Delaware, Saint Emma’s Military Academy in Powhatan, Virginia
Military history: 25th Division
Date of death: Friday, April 17, 1970
Death details: Non-hostile death in South Vietnam. Killed in a helicopter crash.
Cemetery: Egg Harbor
Source: National Archives, Camden Courier Post (1970)
Ronald Lee White, age 21, from Eatontown, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Parents: Lawrence B. White Sr.
Service era: Vietnam
Date of death: Tuesday, March 24, 1970
Death details: Non-hostile death in South Vietnam
Source: National Archives, UPI (1970)
Floyd Moye, age 25, from Asbury Park, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Parents: Lillian Wise and step father Henry Wise
Service era: Vietnam
Date of death: Tuesday, March 10, 1970
Death details: Non-hostile death in South Vietnam
Source: National Archives, Asbury Park Press (1970)
Dominic N. Jr. Scatuorchio, age 22, from Spring Lake, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Parents: Domnic and Eileen R. Scatuarchio
Service era: Vietnam
Date of death: Tuesday, March 10, 1970
Death details: Hostile, killed in South Vietnam
Cemetery: Saint Catherine’s Roman Catholic Church
Source: National Archives, Asbury Park Press (1970), Jersey Journal (1970)
Malcolm Jonathan Grim, age 20, from Long Branch, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Service era: Vietnam
Date of death: Friday, January 23, 1970
Death details: Killed in Vietnam by an enemy grenade trap
Source: National Archives, Daily Register (1970)
John A. Jr. Shebanie, age 22, from Freehold, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Parents: John A. Shebanie
Service era: Vietnam
Schools: Rutgers University, Ardena School graduate, Freehold Regional High (1957
Date of death: Wednesday, November 8, 1961
Death details: Among 77 killed in Richmond, Virginia when the engines aboard their plane failed and it crashed into marshland. The crew and passengers died from carbon monoxide poisoning. The flight was enroute from Baltimore to Columbia, South Carolina.
Source: Associated Press (1961), Asbury Park Press (1961)
Edward Livingston Feakes from Red Bank, New Jersey, Monmouth county.
Service era: Korea
Date of death: August 25, 1951
Death details: Late in the evening on August 25, 1951, a B-26B Invader (tail number 44-34580) departed Pusan East Air Base, Korea, carrying four crew members. The briefed mission was a night armed reconnaissance operation over a main enemy supply route between Peakchow and Chaeryong, North Korea. The last radio communication with this aircraft was a routine report with to the tactical air control station near Seoul (call sign Snowflake). The first indication of concern was when the Invader failed to return to base. Once it was determined, that the aircraft was overdue, Air-Sea Rescue was notified and extensive search for signs of the crash site was conducted both over land and water. All search efforts were unsuccessful.
First Lieutenant Edward Livingston Feakes entered the U.S. Air Force from New Jersey and served with the 728th Bombardment Squadron, 452nd Bombardment Wing. He was observer / bombardier on this Invader when it was lost. No returning POWs mentioned contact with 1st Lt Feakes, nor was he seen at any known holding point, interrogation center, hospital, or permanent POW camp. He remains unaccounted-for. Today, First Lieutenant Feakes is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.
Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency