Looking For A Picture of Seaman Gil Lester Carter For The New Wall Of Faces Exhibit To The Vietnam Memorial On The Mall In Washington, DC

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Looking For A Picture of Seaman Gil Lester Carter For The New Wall Of Faces Exhibit To The Vietnam Memorial On The Mall In Washington, DC

dfkwist
Gentlemen,

I am helping find the last missing pictures for the Vietnam Memorial in Washington DC

No money is involved -- no advertisements - no promotions

I was a "soldier boy" and don't know a frigate from a carrier.  Lady in Hawaii has asked me to help her with the last few missing in Louisiana.  Gil Lester Carter being the name  I'm interested in.

BUT my experience looking for pictures has caused me to realize that army aviation unit were extraordinarily close and kept good contact with one another after the war.  EVERY time I go looking for an army KIA from an aviation unit I respectfully ask them to look up all their KIAs to make sure each has a picture at the Vietnam Memorial.  They often have others missing pictures and they move to fill those missing pictures fairly quickly.

This is you business and not mine, but I wanted you to know while people are still alive to jump in and complete the mission.  One in every three men awarded the Vietnam Service Medal has now passed so time IS running out.

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1. Does anyone know if there was a Cruise Book for Helicopter Attack Sq -3 for 1967?

2. Can you survey your membership for a picture of Carter?

3. If there is no one with a picture, may I very respectfully ask for ANY kind of clues/tips/leads about Carter?

Thank you
Dana

_

Note sheet on Gil Lester Carter attached

Please read this letter sent to a lady thought to be his mother, likely no longer alive

Dana Kwist

6345 Tuckerman Lane

Colorado Springs, CO  80918 ( [hidden email] ) 719-306-4632

November 10, 2017

 

 

Roberta C. Sturdivant

5914 Southwind

Houston, TX  77033

 

Dear Ms Sturdivant,

 

I wonder if you are the mother of, or related in any way to the late United States Navy Aviation Machines Mate Gill Lester Carter who was killed in action in the Vietnam War on August 17, 1967?

 

This letter is sent to, very respectfully, ask you for your help locating a photograph (or even a newspaper image) of Gil Carter.  The photo will be posted to “The Wall of Faces” as a portion of “The Wall” on the mall in Washington, DC.  If you go to that website you will recognize that there is no image posted for Gil Carter.

 

This letter is directed to you based on a study of the names of people who appear are related.

 

Like all who gave their lives in that war, Gil Carter’s face deserves to be placed alongside the thousands of others now at the Vietnam Memorial for all Americans to see.  Lacking a photo could I, very respectfully, ask you to help find out where he attended high school, to look for a yearbook picture and help find people who might still be able and willing to help in the hunt for a picture?

 

I am attaching an updated online version of a New Orleans Advocate article from January 14, 2017 that explains the nature of Ms Hoehn’s campaign.  When Ms Hoehn began to focus on Louisiana in January 2017 she was looking for 280 of the 885 lost from Louisiana.  Today that number of missing pictures is 44 and Gil Carter is one of them.  Ms Hoehn lives in Hawaii and, now that my home state of Colorado has a complete set of pictures, she has asked me to help her.

 

Please watch this youtube video that deals with the subject of the Wall Of Faces:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=7BHBU5HJW8o

 

For more information about Ms Hoehn, please look up her name on the internet where you will see many articles about her.  Her campaign does not solicit money or advertisements: just pictures that are immediately sized and touched up then hung on the Wall of Faces for all of America to see at the Vietnam Memorial.  In the process her campaign has completed state sets in South Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Hawaii, Nevada, Oregon, Alaska, Utah, Colorado, Washington state, Nebraska, Kansas and recently Arizona.  Hopefully the state of Louisiana will soon follow. 

 

If a photo is located it can be sent to Ms Hoehn at [hidden email]  or to my email [hidden email].

 

Sincerely,

 

 

Dana Kwist                                                                                           

Enclosure:

New Orleans Advocate Jan 14, 2017 updated online article

 

Woman on mission to help 'Wall of Faces' project put faces with names of soldiers killed, missing in Vietnam

BY FAIMON A. ROBERTS III JAN 14, 2017 - 6:30

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Janna Hoehn looks at pictures of Vietnam veterans that she has collected as part of her work to help the Wall of Faces project by the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund. The project seeks to put a picture with every name etched on the wall.

 

   Harvey Watkins Booker is a name like 58,000 others (NOTE: Booker’s name, used here, is merely an example and Gil Carter  could just as easily have been used as the example)   : inscribed in the black granite wall of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.

   Booker, who was from New Orleans, was killed on April 26, 1968, the deadliest year of the war, during a gun battle in Long An province. 

    And while Booker's name has been memorialized, his image has not, at least not yet. He is among more than 8,000 soldiers — 279 from Louisiana — either killed or missing in Vietnam whose picture has so far eluded the volunteers of a project called the "Wall of Faces," which is trying to match every name on the wall with a photo. 

    The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund is raising money to build an educational center near the Washington, D.C., memorial that will include photos of the slain. In the meantime, it has established an online “Wall of Faces.” The site — vvmf.org/Wall-of-Faces/ — also provides other basic information about each deceased veteran and provides a way for friends and loved ones to post remembrances.

   Janna Hoehn is one of the volunteers seeking photos.

   This is something of a mission for Hoehn, who eight years ago visited the memorial and, in a spontaneous act of commemoration, did a rubbing of the inscribed name of a randomly chosen soldier: Gregory John Crossman.

   After she returned to Hawaii, she decided to track down Crossman’s family and give them the rubbing from the wall, but she couldn’t find them. She enlisted the help of a cousin, and after several months, they located Crossman’s family and sent them the rubbing.

Some time later, Hoehn saw a news story about efforts to put pictures with every name on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall. She sent in a photo she had gotten of Crossman and was later contacted and asked to help locate pictures of fallen soldiers from Maui.

    Hoehn pored over phone listings, skimmed newspaper obituaries and traveled to high schools to flip through yearbooks. She met siblings, children and sometimes even parents of soldiers who died in America’s most controversial war.

    Still, the effort lagged.

    But a story in her local newspaper gave it a boost. Pictures started pouring in from around the country.

    “That’s when I realized how many people read the newspaper online that have moved away,” she said.In six months, she was able to track down the 42 missing pictures from Hawaii.

     But Hoehn decided to keep going. She started looking for the missing pictures of soldiers from her California hometown and then broadened her search from there.

     Six years later, Hoehn has helped locate all the photos for soldiers from Washington, Oregon and Idaho and has launched efforts in several other states, working her way from west to east. In all, she estimates that she has helped collect more than 4,000 photos.

    She has ongoing efforts in Texas, Oklahoma and Missouri, but after completing Kansas a couple of months ago, she decided to tackle Louisiana. 

    The parish with the most missing photos is Orleans, with 35. Caddo Parish has 29, Calcasieu and Ouachita 17 each.

    Tracking down the photos is not easy. Often the hometown listed in the official Department of Defense records is the town where the soldier enlisted, rather than where they were born or grew up, meaning searches of local databases come up empty.

    Also, many of the casualties in Vietnam were too young to have their own children, so their photos often ended up in the hands of siblings and then got passed down to nephews and nieces who never knew the fallen soldier. “At some point, they don’t keep the pictures anymore,” Hoehn said.

    Also, the emotional toll of the war meant some pictures may never have been kept in the first place, she said. “For some, it was too much to keep a photo around,” Hoehn said.

    Hoehn concedes that her project may never be complete, but every time she gets discouraged, she thinks of Jack McKinnon.

    McKinnon was from Santa Cruz, California, or at least that’s what it said on his military records. But Hoehn wasn’t able to find any record of him or his family. A local historian had also tried to locate McKinnon, without success.  Then a story ran in the local newspaper, and about two weeks later Hoehn got a call from a man in Indiana.  He was a long-haul trucker and had happened to be in Santa Cruz on the day the article ran.   Jack McKinnon was his brother.

 

The Wall of Faces will be a part of an underground gallery near the Vietnam Memorial (sometimes called The Wall) on the mall in Washington, DC. 

 

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The campaign to build the Education Center at The Wall is an effort to build an educational and honorific component to one of the nation’s most powerful and moving memorials.

The Education Center at The Wall will: 

  • Put a face to every one of the more than 58,000 names listed on The Wall
  • Share some of the hundreds of thousands of objects left at The Wall by families, military comrades, and others over more than three decades.
  • Provide a historical account of the events that took place on the battlefield and the homefront during the Vietnam Era.
  • Tell the story of The Wall


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Explore the Education Center at The Wall

          ">
T
he Education Center at The Wall

.  

The campaign to build the Education Center at The Wall is well under way. The land has been appropriated. Final design approvals are in hand.

With each passing day, we lose more Vietnam veterans. Their stories must be preserved and told now so that future generations never forget the lessons of the Vietnam era.

There were 58,318 lost in the Vietnam War.  Most have a picture to represent themselves but Gil Carter does not, so instead a “place holder” image is used that looks like this:

 

                                                        ">

 

The entire Carter family gave a lot to America and I hope you will agree that Gil Carter deserves to be remembered with more than a “cartoon” style image of himself.

 

To verify the accuracy of this letter: 1. Go to the internet and type in “vvmf”, 2. Hit “Wall of Faces”, 3. Activate “Advanced Search”, 4. Type in “Gil Carter”, then hit “Louisiana” and you will see the above image in the place of an actual photograph.

_

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Artist’s rending of the inside of the future Education Center that will serve as a gallery to display pictures of the men lost in the Vietnam War as a part of the Vietnam Memorial on the mall in Washington, DC

 

 

 



CARTER - Gill Lester Carter - Alexandria LA Rapides Parish.doc (1M) Download Attachment
Louisiana Picture.PNG (1M) Download Attachment
outside view.jpg (845K) Download Attachment
explore.jpg (109K) Download Attachment
axo.jpg (158K) Download Attachment
vietnam-veteran-photo-needed.png (11K) Download Attachment
InsideGallery.PNG (623K) Download Attachment
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Re: Looking For A Picture of Seaman Gil Lester Carter For The New Wall Of Faces Exhibit To The Vietnam Memorial On The Mall In Washington, DC

kid purington
                                   ..From a F/book post...