| 
 Billy Stanley Armstrong 
Petty Officer Second Class 
PCF-19, COSDIV 12, TF 115, USNAVFORV United States Navy West Helena, Arkansas May 28, 1939 to June 16, 1968 BILLY S ARMSTRONG is on the Wall at Panel W57, Line 34  | 
![]()  | 
 
 | 
 
 
 
 | |
| 
    
     
 REMEMBEREDTerry Boonemtboone@aol.com  | 
| 
 I am a student in a history of Vietnam class and I would just like to extend my appreciation for your sacrifice. You will not be forgotten. 
From  | 
Notes from The Virtual WallOn the night of 16 June 1968, PCF-19 was cruising on a routine patrol offshore northern South Vietnam. A sudden explosion rocked, then sunk, the small ship. Four of its crewmen were lost that night:
 There was no certainty about how it happened - some said the PCF was attacked by North Vietnamese helicopters while others believed that a friendly aircraft had attacked the boat by accident. Eventually the US Air Force concluded that one of its aircraft had attacked the swift boat, believing it to be a North Vietnamese PT boat - a "friendly fire" incident. What was certain was that four men had died, and that two had not been recovered. On 6 October 1993, an armbone fragment was recovered from a grave ashore; a Vietnamese fisherman stated that he had recovered the bone and buried it. It was almost 8 years before the fragment could be positively identified through DNA testing, but once done there was another certainty: Tony Chandler had come home. All that remained of Petty Officer Chandler was buried in the Centerville (Georgia) City Cemetery on 16 June 2001 - a sailor finally home from the sea.  | 
| Contact Us | © Copyright 1997-2019 www.VirtualWall.org, Ltd ®(TM) | Last update 09/12/2019. |