Rosenspire, Walter, Pvt

Fallen
 
 Service Photo 
 Service Details
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Last Rank
Private
Last MOSGroup
Infantry
Primary Unit
1918-1918, American Expeditionary Force (AEF)
Service Years
1915 - 1918
Enlisted Collar Insignia
Private

 Last Photo 
 Personal Details 

220 kb


Home State
Missouri
Missouri
Year of Birth
1896
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Sgt David A. Stutesman to remember Marine Pvt Walter Rosenspire.

If you knew or served with this Marine and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Casualty Info
Home Town
St. Louis

Casualty Date
Jun 09, 1918
 
Cause
KIA-Killed in Action
Reason
Artillery, Rocket, Mortar
Location
France
Conflict
World War I
Location of Interment
American Cemetery - Aisne-Marne, France
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Plot A Row 2 Grave 87

 Official Badges 

French Fourragere Wound Chevron World War I Victory Button (Wounded in Action)


 Unofficial Badges 


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
World War I Fallen
  1918, World War I Fallen


  1917-1918, 5th Marines



From Month/Year
July / 1917
To Month/Year
January / 1918
Unit
5th Marines Unit Page
Rank
Private
MOS
Not Specified
Base, Station or City
Not Specified
State/Country
Not Specified
 
 
 Patch
 5th Marines Details

N/A
The activation of the Fifth Marines dates back to June 1917, just prior to the U.S. force deployment to France during World War I. The Regiment won its nickname, the “Fighting Fifth,” on the battlefields of western Europe. So fierce were its efforts in the Battle of Belleau Wood and subsequent victories that the French government awarded the Regiment the Croix de Guerre with two palms and one gilt star. Today, each Marine serving in the Regiment also wears the Fourragere, a French unit award, on the left shoulder of his uniform to recognize the legacy and valor of his predecessors.

5th Marines and 6th Marines – 1918 Battle of Belleau Wood – Awarded the Fourragere aux couleurs de la Croix de guerre with palm leaf three times.






















Briefly deactivated, the Regiment was reactivated in June 1920, to guard the delivery of the U.S. Mail against domestic bandits. While they were on the job, not one Marine was killed and not one piece of mail was lost to thieves. In March 1927, the Regiment deployed to South America and fought in support of the Nicaraguan government against rebel bands until April 1930. Shortly thereafter, the Regiment was again briefly deactivated. Troubled times and small conflicts in the Americas however, led to the Regiment’s reactivation on 1 September 1934.

After further service in the U.S. and in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the Fifth Marines deployed to New Zealand in 1942 as part of the U.S. Pacific Campaign against Japan. During the course of World War II, the Regiment further distinguished itself in action at Guadalcanal, Eastern New Guinea, Peleliu and Okinawa. The post-war years found the Regiment on occupation duty in North China until May 1947, when it relocated to Guam. In August 1950, it moved to its current home, Camp Pendleton, California.

The country again called upon the Fifth Marines in August 1950, when the Regiment found itself in combat on the Pusan Perimeter in Korea. During the next three years the Regiment fought at Inchon and Seoul, the Chosin Reservoir, and on both the East Central and Western Fronts. The Fifth Marine Regiment returned to Camp Pendleton in March 1955, and remained there for the next eleven years.

In May 1966, the Fifth Marines arrived in the Republic of South Vietnam where it would remain until April 1971. Vietnam era Marines added the names Rung Sat, Chu Lai, Phu Bai, Hue, Khe Sahn, An Hoa, Tam Ky, and Da Nang to the Regiment’s long list of distinguished battle actions.

In August 1990, the nation again called on the “Fighting Fifth” – this time in support of Operation Desert Shield. On 26 January 1991, while embarked with the largest amphibious task force since World War II, Regimental Landing Team (RLT) Five, in conjunction with RLT-2, conducted heliborne and surface assaults for Exercise Sea Soldier IV in Southern Oman. On 25 February 1991, the Regiment disembarked in direct support of Operation Desert Storm and the liberation of Kuwait. Less than three months later, Fifth Marines received an executive order to conduct humanitarian assistance and relief operations in Bangladesh. The Regiment returned to Camp Pendleton on 29 June 1991.

In the decade following Operation Desert Storm, the Regiment deployed to Yellowstone National Park, the Umatilla National Forest in Oregon and Clear Creek, Idaho to combat wild fires. Simultaneously it sourced the battalion landing teams for the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), or MEU (SOC).

In January of 2003, the Fifth Marines deployed to Kuwait to take part in Operation Iraqi Freedom. On 21 March, the Regiment became the first unit to cross the line of departure into Iraq as it moved to seize the Rumayllah Oilfields. During the course of the next few weeks, the Regiment repeatedly distinguished itself in combat actions as it continued the offensive to liberate Baghdad and collapse the regime of Saddam Hussein. During much of the attack north, the Regiment led the 1st Marine Division in the deepest attack in Marine Corps history.

Today, the Regiment continues to participate in exercises and contingency deployments with the 1st Marine Division, and to prepare forces for deployment with the 31st MEU (SOC). Ever ready to answer the nation’s call, the “Fighting Fifth” is recognized as the Marine Corps’ most highly decorated regiment.
 
Type
Infantry
 
Parent Unit
Infantry Units
Strength
USMC Regiment
Created/Owned By
44  Rush, John (MTWS Asst Chief Admin), GySgt 536
   

Last Updated: Jun 30, 2017
   
Memories For This Unit

Best Friends
23rd, 43rd, and 67th Companied, 5th Marine Regiment

   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
No Available Photos
141 Members Also There at Same Time
5th Marines

Hunter, Daniel Amos, 1stSgt, (1910-1918) 3 First Sergeant
Bayne, Russell Calvin, 1stLt, (1915-1918) 3 Corporal
Jones, Samuel Stanhope, Cpl, (1917-1918) 3 Corporal
Riordan, George Francis, Pvt, (1915-1918) 3 Corporal
Kellum, Charles Harvey, Pvt, (1914-1918) 3 Private
Roberts, Leon John, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 Private
Rubinson, Harry, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 Private
Walleigh, Harry Ralph, Pvt, (1914-1918) 3 Private
Brown, Aden, Pvt, (1916-1918) OF Private
Wise, Frederick May, LtCol, (1899-1926) 3 0302 Lieutenant Colonel
Berry, Benjamin Schofield, BGen, (1916-1942) 3 0302 Major
Feland, Logan, MGen, (1898-1933) 3 0302 Major
McCoy, James C., Capt, (1903-1918) 3 0302 Captain
Baston, Albert P., 1stLt 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Beauchamp, Felix, Capt, (1917-1919) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Hope, Edward Buist, 1stLt, (1917-1919) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Stockton, James Roosevelt, Capt, (1917-1919) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Yarborough, George Hampton, 1stLt, (1917-1918) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Somers, Vernon Lee, 2ndLt, (1917-1918) 3 0302 Second Lieutenant
Burnett, John Thomas, 1stSgt, (1906-1918) 3 0369 First Sergeant
Buford, David Lambert, GySgt, (1915-1918) 3 0369 Gunnery Sergeant
McCarthy, Charles F., GySgt, (1910-1919) 3 0369 Gunnery Sergeant
Wood, William Edward, GySgt, (1911-1919) 3 0369 Gunnery Sergeant
Bell, Joe, Sgt, (1917-1919) 3 0311 Sergeant
Inman, Leon W, GySgt, (1917-1919) 3 0311 Sergeant
Nice, William Frederick, 2ndLt, (1915-1919) 3 0311 Sergeant
Pilcher, Luther Wade, Sgt, (1915-1918) 3 0311 Sergeant
Sims, Amor LeRoy, BGen, (1917-1949) 3 0311 Sergeant
Wright, Gilbert, Sgt, (1912-1919) 3 0311 Sergeant
Acuff, Robert E., Cpl, (1917-1918) 3 0311 Corporal
Evans, Frederick Tutewiler, Cpl, (1918-1919) 3 0331 Corporal
Geer, Prentice, BGen, (1921-1946) 3 0311 Corporal
Seay, Samuel, Cpl, (1916-1918) 3 0311 Corporal
Goodwin, Warren, GySgt, (1917-1945) 3 0311 Private 1st Class
Price, Ivan Leo, PFC, (1917-1918) 3 0311 Private 1st Class
Abbott, Carl Talmadge, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 0300 Private
Barron, William Lawrence, Pvt, (1916-1918) 3 0311 Private
Bradley, Max, Pvt, (1915-1946) 3 0311 Private
Brandon, Ian Leroy, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 0311 Private
Brown, Dilmus Lee, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 0311 Private
Brown, William Henry, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 0300 Private
Broxup, John, Cpl, (1918-1918) 3 0311 Private
Chason, Arthur Anderson, Pvt, (1917-1921) 3 0311 Private
Eplin, Frank Leiber, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 0311 Private
Johnson, Ralph, Pvt, (1918-1918) 3 0311 Private
Lancaster, Ralph, Cpl, (1916-1920) 3 0311 Private
Lyon, Russell, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 0311 Private
Orr, Joseph Lee, Pvt, (1917-1918) 3 0311 Private
Ryan, William J., Sgt, (1917-1920) 3 0311 Private
Woodfield, Virgil Halcult, Pvt, (1917-1919) 3 0311 Private
Young, Austin E, Pvt, (1917-1919) 3 0311 Private
Rutstrum, Calvin Frithiof, HM2, (1917-1919) FMF HM-8404 Other Service Rank
Doyen, Charles Augustus, BGen, (1881-1918) 99 9903 Brigadier General
Puryear, Bennet, MGen, (1904-1943) 30 3010 Major
Spencer, Ery, Col, (1907-1944) 30 3002 Captain
Shepherd, Lemuel C, Gen, (1917-1956) 99 9901 Second Lieutenant
Woods, Moses, MSgt, (1917-1919) 30 3049 Master Sergeant
Boller, Jr, John Franklin, 1stSgt, (1912-1936) 30 3013 Sergeant
Napp, Jack, Cpl, (1915-1918) 0 8511 Corporal

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