ROBERT CLAY VAN VLEET
is honored on Panel 24W, Row 114 of
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.
Full Name: Robert Clay Van Vleet
Wall Name: ROBERT C VAN VLEET
Date of Birth: 5/6/1950
Date of Casualty: 5/26/1969
Home of Record: Magna
State: Utah
Branch of Service: USMC
Rank: PFC
Casualty Country: South Vietnam
Casualty Province:Quang Tri
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Remembrances
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We Remember...

The 12th Marines honors:

PFC Robert Clay Van Vleet

Alpha Battery
1st Battalion 12th Marines

An American Hero...

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Robert Clay Van Vleet
Continued...
Although he was a Corporal he worked very hard and was on Gun #2.

On the day I can never forget the call rang out “battery adjust, enemy contact, rounds, charge, azimuth, deflection”; all our Marines scrambled. It was wet and almost dark.

I was standing behind Gun #1 loading powder bags into a canister. Mike Dias was next to me setting a fuse when I swear that it went completely quiet and I heard for the very first time in my life the words “short round”. For some reason, I will hopefully understand some day, I crouched down; there was a loud snap sound, and then screams. Robert Van Vleet and Raymond Gutierrez were on high ground when the round hit wire or air burst directly between Gun #1 and #2; they died and I was changed forever. Death, pain, blood, sadness and the realization of mortality was the lesson of that day.

I am a United States Marine Veteran but I must admit that at that moment I was a child. The gallant efforts displayed by other Marines inspire me; I will not name them but they were truly heroic. Our Doc worked and men held the victims down, then carried them to the helo; I think we completed the fire mission. At the moment all I could do was help; there was no shortage of leadership and courage. After it was all over and quiet again, I became overwhelmed and jumped into a bunker. I think I was scared; I remember thinking to myself “what the F*ck are you doing? There is no danger now”; the fact is I was changed forever.
Robert Clay Van Vleet
Continued...
God bless Van Vleet and Gutierrez; they were taken at nineteen years. They are forever nineteen while those of us who survived are old. They missed what we were given and I will probably never understand why.


I will never forget these two Marines; they gave all so we can be free. When I hear people speaking of gallant war heroes with medals and citations I remember these two Marines who made the ultimate sacrifice with little if any recognition; they were the gallant heroes I knew.

(Quote, author unknown))

“All Marines die in either the red flash of battle or the white cold of the nursing home. In the vigor of youth or the infirmity of age all will eventually die but the Marine Corps lives on. Every Marine who ever lived is living still, in the Marines who claim the title today. It is that sense of belonging to something that will outlive our own mortality. It is belonging to something which gives people a light to live by and a flame to mark their passing.”

Semper Fi,

Mike Stagner, aka “Orange
0811, Battery A, 1st Bat, 12th Reg.3rd Div.
RVN 1969
Posted by: Mike Stagner
Email: m_stagner@frontiernet.net
Relationship: We served together
Thursday, May 20, 2004
Robert Clay Van Vleet

PFC Van Vleet is remembered by Corporal Michael Stagner, an Alpha Battery Brother...











ONE DAY I CAN NEVER FORGET
MAY 26, 1969

The Battery had been moved to the top of Dong Ha Mountain for a few weeks now. Battery A 1st Battalion 12th Marine Regiment 3rd Marine Division had built a position for their six 105mm Howitzers on the top of a high peak and was capable of providing close artillery support in any direction. The work was very hard. All materials, ammo, supplies and equipment had to be man carried and placed. No trucks, just a placement by CH-53’s and 46’s and the guns tended to sink in the mud. Thousands of sand bags filled with mud had to be assembled into gun pits and houches. The wind and rain chilled you to the bone. The fire missions were long and everybody was worked into a trance. The Marines in the battery were very close to each other. We humped ammo and worked together to accomplish our mission. Many life long friendships were born. Many lives were changed.

As a Battery the troops worked as a unit to accomplish the common tasks. Humping ammo, building fortifications and doing whatever was necessary. But the very close relationships came within the various Gun crews. When your Gun had duty, time off, chow or guard it was only your crew as all others were sleeping, eating or on work parties. The five Marines on your Gun were yours. On Dong Ha Mountain the Guns were arranged in line connected by common pit walls. I was on Gun #1 and shared some personal moments with Gun #2 and #3, but the farther down the line towards the CP the closeness seemed to fade a little. The firebase was the night rest stop for various infantry platoons; they would hump in and out daily. I don’t recall even speaking to these Marines but their presence was always appreciated.

I remember Van Vleet as a skinny, light haired kid from Utah. He was a hard worker, friendly and he knew how to stay out of the Sergeant’s ire; he was on Gun #2. Gutierrez had a slight build and was from California, as I was, but I don’t remember talking to him much about home.
Alpha Battery