Belleville Soldier Killed in Vietnam During Enemy Fire
22 May 1969
Lieuetnant Colonel Alfred Barnes of Ralph Street, Belleville, a 20-year career Army office, was killed during an enemy rocket and mortar attack in Vietnam on May 12, 1969.
Mrs. Sadie R. Barnes, his wife, was notified by telegram of the overseas tragedy.
Colonel Barnes had a personal dream fulfilled when he assumed command of a battalion two months ago.
On March 15, Colonel Barnes had taken command of the 5th Battalion, 46th Infantry, a position of which he was very proud, his wife said.
“This is something that he had trained for all the years that he had been in the service,” she said. “He had always been a commander and he felt that battalion commander was the complement to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel.”
Mrs. Barnes added that her husband was very dedicated to the Army and felt very strongly that it was necessary to be in Vietnam.
“I know that my husband was happy in his job and that he died happy in that sense,” she said. “He believed that what he was doing was right.”
Colonel Barnes began his service career at Ft. Benning, Georgia, in 1949, after receiving his commission as a Second Lieutenant upon graduating in 1948 from Howard University in Washington, where he had been a member of the Army ROTC.
In June 1950, he accompanied the first contingent of American troops into Korea and in the ensuing year participated in five major campaigns as platoon leader and rifle company commander. During the conflict he received seven citations which included the Silver Star with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Bronze Star with two Oak Leaf Clusters, the Purple Heart and the Korean Presidential Citation.
Upon returning to the United States in June 1951, Colonel Barnes spent two years with the 82nd Airborne Division at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, and two years in the 1st Army area, which includes New York and the New England states.
After completion of the infantry officers’ advanced course in 1955, Colonel Barnes was attached to the 10th Mountain Division at Ft. Riley, Kansas, where he was a rifle company commander.
The unit was sent to Europe for a three-year tour of duty which was cut short for Colonel Barnes when he was injured in an auto accident in 1956.
He was brought back to the United States and spent the next nine months in an Army hospital in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.
The 42-year-old soldier was station commander n the Army Personnel Center at Ft. Dix for three years before returning to Europe for a four-year tour of duty during which he was promoted to major in 1962.
In 1964, he became an assistant professor of military science at Virginia State College, Petersburg, Virginia, and headed that department at Norfolk State College, Norfolk, Virginia, in 1965.
Alfred Barnes
- LTC – O5 – Army – Regular
- 41 year old Married, Negro, Male
- Born on May 20, 1927
- From MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY
- Length of service 20 years.
- His tour of duty began on Jul 15, 1968
- Casualty was on May 12, 1969
- in QUANG NGAI, SOUTH VIETNAM
- HOSTILE, GROUND CASUALTY
- OTHER EXPLOSIVE DEVICE
- Body was recovered
- Religion
- PRESBYTERIAN
- Full Name: ALFRED BARNES
- Date of Birth: 5/20/1927
- Date of Casualty: 5/12/1969
- Home of Record: MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY
- Branch of Service: ARMY
- Rank: LTC
- Casualty Country: SOUTH VIETNAM
- Casualty Province: QUANG NGAI
BARNES, ALFRED
- Lieutenant Colonel, United States Army
- DATE OF BIRTH: 05/20/1927
- DATE OF DEATH: 05/12/1969
- BURIED AT: SECTION 46 SITE 1341-B
- ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY
Michael Robert Patterson was born in Arlington and is the son of a former officer of the US Army. So it was no wonder that sooner or later his interests drew him to American history and especially to American military history. Many of his articles can be found on renowned portals like the New York Times, Washingtonpost or Wikipedia.
Reviewed by: Michael Howard