• HOME
    • Whats New
    • Search
    • Site Map
    • Links
  • ASSOCIATION
    • Registration Form>
      • Registration Form
    • Membership
    • Quartermaster
    • Reunions
    • Current Members
    • Newsletters
    • Current Events
    • Deceased
    • Donations
  • HISTORY
    • 5th Regiment History
    • Indian Wars
    • World War II
    • Korea
    • Vietnam History >
      • Vietnam History >
        • Vietnam History Book
      • After Action Reports
      • Ben Cui Tribute
      • Michelin Firefight
      • Rifle and the Myth
    • Iraq History>
      • Iraq History
      • Iraq Certificate of Appreciation
    • Afghanistan History 2nd BN, 5th Inf
    • Two Centuries of Valor
    • Coat of Arms
    • 5th Infantry March
  • MEMORIAL PAGES
    • World War II Memorial Page
    • Korean Memorial Page
    • Vietnam Memorial Page>
      • Alpha Company Memorial Page
      • Bravo Company Memorial Page
      • Charlie Company Memorial page
      • Headquarters & HHC Company
    • Iraq Memorial page
    • 2nd Battalion, 5th Inf Afghanistan
    • 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry Afghanistan
    • 2nd Battalion,5th Inf, 3rd IBCT, 1st Armored Div
  • GUESTBOOKS
  • PHOTO ALBUMS

Picture
DOUG AND PATTI ALLEY PHOTO COURTESY OF PATTI ALLEY
Picture
PFC - E3 - Army - Selective Service 

25th Infantry Division 
Length of service 0 years
His tour began on Feb 7, 1966
Casualty was on Feb 26, 1966

In , SOUTH VIETNAM
HOSTILE, GROUND CASUALTY
MULTIPLE FRAGMENTATION WOUNDS
Body was recovered

 
Panel 05E - Line 78


Douglas Dwight Alley: 1945 - 1966 
The Boys Who Cut The Grass 

Picture
When we moved into our house on Douglas D. Alley Drive in Newark, DE, about a year ago,  I knew nothing about the person for which our street is named, nor did I give it much thought.  During a recent web search I noticed the words "Douglas Dwight Alley" and "Vietnam".  Quite by accident, I had entered a site listing the names of Delaware citizens appearing on the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington D. C.   Douglas Dwight Alley of Newark, Delaware, Alpha Company, 1st mechanized battalion, 5th Infantry, 25th Infantry Division, appears on Panel 5E, line 78 of the Wall.  Killed in action: February 26, 1966.  Ground casualty.  Cause of death: Multiple fragmentation wounds, hostile.  Age at death: 20.

Douglas Alley was 20 years old when enemy shrapnel ended his life in Vietnam over 35 years ago.  Although there is no real connection between him and I besides my address, I wanted to learn more about this young man. I visited the University of Delaware library and searched newspaper archives from around the time of his death for more information. 

The Wilmington Evening Journal dated February 28, 1966 provided a summary of Douglas' life.   After graduating from Newark High School, he worked at a local dairy farm before being drafted.  He was married while home on leave in November 1965.  Three months later, Douglas was killed while on patrol near Cu Cui,  25 miles north of Saigon, a mere sixteen days after his arrival in Vietnam.  He and his young wife Pat never had a chance to share a home of their own.


A grainy newspaper picture of Douglas reveals a casual and confident young man, one eyebrow raised, a hint of a smile.  A boy trying to look like a man - killed in action after less than three weeks in Vietnam.  His picture, combined with the details of his life and death, made the tragedy of his loss very real and personal for me.

Douglas was one of two Delaware men killed in Vietnam that day - the seventh and eighth Delawareans killed in the line of duty in Vietnam.  A week after Douglas' death, the editorial page of the Wilmington Evening Journal included a quote from a man who may have known Douglas:   "That boy used to cut my grass...this is really the first time that the war has come home to me.  Why, I knew that boy well....  I knew him well."

The Newark Post recently published an article I wrote in tribute to Douglas Alley.  A few days later, I received a call from an old neighbor of the Alley family.  She had attended Douglas'  wedding and funeral.  She remembered him as a quiet and responsible boy - in her opinion the nicest of the Alley boys.  I got to know Douglas a little better through this gracious woman's memories of a young man killed many years ago.

122 Delawareans are included in the over 58,000 names inscribed on the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial.  Many of us have no direct connection to these brave men and women.  As the years go by our connection to these lost souls becomes even more distant.  Many of the fallen have no direct descendants to keep their memory alive.  We must not let them be forgotten.  That is what Memorial Day is about - remembrance and honor.   In my own small way, I have come to know Douglas Alley.   This Memorial Day, he will be in my thoughts.  Just one of the many young soldiers who have fought and died for our country... who will cut the grass no more.

Tom Casti  * 
407 Douglas D. Alley Drive 
Newark, DE 19713 

tcasti@wlgore.com 


*Tom Casti  lives in the Woods of Yorkshire development in Newark, and he is working with neighbors and the City of Newark to place a Memorial to Douglas D.  Alley in the park on the street named in his memory.   Douglas Dwight Alley Park Dedication

Picture

If you have anything to add to Douglas' tribute please email it to webmaster@bobcat.ws

BACK 

Web Hosting  by Ron Henry      Webmaster Randy Kethcart