Russell Edward Reinel
Captain
B CO, 1ST BN, 26TH INFANTRY, 1ST INF DIV, USARV Army of the United States Columbus, Georgia August 08, 1946 to February 05, 1969 RUSSELL E REINEL is on the Wall at Panel W33, Line 68 |
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15 Sep 2002
This is to tell the story of a guy who was the Best Company Commander that I ever had. Russell Reinel was my Commanding Officer in Korea in 1968. He was just a year older than I and most of the lower enlisted men in our company. He wanted to be the best he could at all times and expected his men to be the same. Was he a hard liner, not as could be expected, but had a humanity about him. If you screwed up he let you know, and then asked how he could help you be and do better. During the time we were assigned to the DMZ in Korea, the NK's tried to kill Park Chun Hee. We then had the Navy ship captured (Note: USS PUEBLO), it seemed that WW III was about to happen. His answer to the situation was just do our job and we'll come out all right, and we did. I lost track of him after he did his tour and went back to the states and to what ever he had to do. Thirty-four years later while I was looking at a website for our old Regiment, I found the name of my old Platoon Leader and contacted him a few days later. When he was talking to me the first thing he told me was that our old CO, Russ Reinel, was killed in action in Vietnam in 1969. This took me back ... in 1986 I had gone to the Wall and did not find his name [never was a great speller]. I had written a paper on him in college and I figured that he by that time was out or the President of some company, big time. My Platoon Leader said that he and some others had tried to find Russ's wife, but could not. I was told that she was an Army Nurse and by looking on line and through many calls got an address from a girl that had gone to nursing school and been assigned to Fort Ord with her. I made a call and to my suprise I got lucky and found her on the first try. All those that had been in his company [in Korea] that found and I were able to help her know Russ more than she had ever before. She told me that through all these years that she always felt that he was trying to reach out to her and through us she was at last able to. |
28 Jul 2003
I wish to offer this tribute to my commanding officer Co. A 2/31 Inf. It was my good fortune to serve as a commissioned officer under Lt. Reinel while stationed on the Korean DMZ. He took a very young man who had just graduated from North Georgia Military College and taught him much. His firm hand with a kind and fair heart was all I could have asked for. Many an evening he played his guitar and talked about the lot we all shared. His devotion to God and Country could not be questioned and even today we feel his loss. I remember the cold bitter nights when on patrol and his clear voice cracked over the PRC-25:
From a fellow officer and comrade in arms,
Edward E. Patton 68 Kincaid Valley Drive, Abbeville, S.C. 29620 epatton@wctel.net |
6 Apr 2005
I was struck by the memorial comments about Russell Reinel. I was fortunate to have gone through Infantry OCS with Russell (63d Company). Although we weren't in the same platoon, we shared a lot of what any of us who went through the "Benning School for Boys" shared - late nights, early mornings and a whole lot of pain. Russell embodied the spirit of OCS, that of using our initiative and to succeed in making it through another day; we spent a lot time in the front leaning rest and throwing up supper after running up and down the hill toward Infantry Hall, but all in all, it was a growing up time for all of us, even those who didn't make it through the course. Russell's platoon (to a large extent because of him) was seen by the rest of us in 63d Company to be across the board unafraid to take initiative to its limits. Many learned their first lessons in asserting themselves for the first time; they had a 19 year-old who, although a baby age-wise, grew up quickly. We were sorry to see him paneled, but at least he just went back a cycle and finally finished and received his commission later (he went on to win the Silver Star). I know Russell had a particular interest in him and wanted to see him succeed. Your post immediately took me back to how much Russell helped him. I'm obviously very sad to have lost Russell and the six other members of 63d Company that didn't make it through RVN. But other OCS companies lost much higher percentages of their guys, so in my mind that speaks to the high level of quality guys I was privileged to go through OCS with. Russell was one of our best, and I particularly mourn his loss. When they did the 60 Minutes piece and when Newsweek showed his name on the Wall on its cover, many emotions came up. But when I saw the comments on this site about Russell from his fellow troops, I'm convinced my initial impressions about him in OCS were right on, he was a winner and I'm proud to have known him. |
12 Jul 2007
Joe Herber and I got in contact through a website I posted my info on, hoping to reconnect with some guys I served with. I was glad to hear from him, but then he told me Russell Reinel had been killed in Nam in 1969, and I was very saddened to hear this. I worked closely with then-LT Reinel, our C.O. in Korea, in 1967, and was always impressed by this fine man. He was my superior, but he was also my friend, and the finest officer I ever knew. My son has just returned from Washington, where he made a rubbing of Captain Reinel's name from the Viet Nam Memorial. I am putting this on a plaque to hang on the wall of my office, so that I might remember him every day, and so that when people ask me about this small tribute, I can tell them about Russell E. Reinel, an American hero.
Donnie Phillips
phillipsdonnie@bellsouth.net |
26 May 2019
I was in the field as one of Captain Reinel's rifle men the day he was killed in action. I had only been in country about a month and the field less than 2 weeks. I had already saw my first enemy dead as a result of the Captain's leadership in a night time landing and enemy blocking action the week before. We had just stopped walking in file as the Captain went forward on individual recon, never to return. I was so green I didn't know Captain's walked recon. Later did I realize what an exceptional leader he was. Oddly enough I had been treated by his wife at the battalion aid station before I came to field. Two finer soldiers I have never met. May his soul Rest In Peace .
Patrick Guy
1108 Saint Charles Avenue Saint Charles, MO. 63301
Patty and Russell Reinel at Fire Support Base Aachen
Provided by and used with permission of Patrick Guy
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1 May 2020
Award ceremony with medal
date unknown The article in the San Antonio Express from Wednesday, February 26, 1969 headlined with: "Two Former S.A. Men Die in War" After that, it read: "Word has been received here that two former San Antonio men have been killed in Vietnam action." "Capt. Russell E Reinel, 22, a MacArthur High School graduate, was killed in action Feb. 5." "He attended the University of Georgia prior to enlisting in the Army. He served a tour in Korea upon completion of officer candidate school. He was as signed later to Fort Ord California, then volunteered for duty in Vietnam." "Survivors include his wife, Lt. Patricia Reinel of Bayside - Queens, N.Y., who is an Army nurse; and his parents, Lt. Col. and Mrs. Anthony A. Reinel of Columbus, Ga." "Also killed, when the helicopter he was piloting was shot down, was Warrant Officer Normand P. Perron, 23, a John Jay High School graduate." "He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Perron and a sister, Dianne Annette Perron, all of Glen Burnie, Md., and another sister, Mrs. Patricia Hall, Altus. Okla." Russell was survived by his wife Patricia "Patty" Reinel, his mother Veronica Ethel (Williams) Reinel (1921-2016) and father Colonel Anthony Adam Reinel (1918-2004), a retired Colonel who served in WWII, Korea, and Vietnam. He and his parents are buried in Fort Benning Post Cemetery, Fort Benning, Muscogee County, Georgia.. - - The Virtual Wall, 1 May 2020
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