🇺🇲 Vietnam War Stories: Honoring the Heroes We Lost: Master Sergeant Jerry M. Shriver




🇺🇲 Vietnam War Stories: Honoring the Heroes We Lost: Master Sergeant Jerry M. Shriver

Master Sergeant Jerry M. "Mad Dog" Shriver was a legendary Green Beret. He was a platoon leader with Command and Control South, MACV-SOG.  MACV-SOG was a joint service high command unconventional warfare task force engaged in highly classified operations throughout Southeast Asia. 

On the morning of April 24, 1969, Shriver's platoon was dropped into Cambodia by four helicopters. Upon departing the helicopter, the team had begun moving toward its initial target point when it came under heavy volumes of enemy fire from several machine gun bunkers and entrenched enemy positions estimated to be at least a company-sized element.

Shriver was last seen by the company commander, Captain Paul D. Cahill, as
Shriver was moving against the machine gun bunkers and entering a tree line on the southwest edge of the LZ with a trusted Montagnard striker. Captain Cahill and Sergeant Ernest C. Jamison, the platoon medical aidman, took cover in a bomb crater. Cahill continued radio contact with Shriver for four hours until his transmission was broken and Shriver was not heard from again. It was known that Shriver had been wounded 3 or 4 times. An enemy soldier was later seen picking up a weapon which appeared to be the same type carried by Shriver. 

Master Sergeant Jerry M. Shriver was declared Missing in Action. On June 12, 1970, a search and recovery unit recovered remains that were later identified as Sergeant Jamison, but no trace was found of Shriver. 

A recipient of the Silver Star, the Bronze Star, Air Medal and the Purple Heart Medal Master Sergeant Jerry Michael Shriver is  memorialized at Courts of the Missing at the Honolulu Memorial. He was 27 years old.  Lest We Forget.


Original description and photo sourced by US Army Center of Military History

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