Community Corner

State Senator Looking for Fallen Soldier's Faces

Some 700 Georgia soldiers who were killed in Vietnam, including a Cumming native, should have their photographs displayed in Washington.

Credit: Mario Roverto DurΓ‘n Ortiz/Wikimedia

Over 1,500 Georgians who were sent to Vietnam to battle communist forces in that country’s decades-long civil war never returned. Now, a Cobb County state senator wants to ensure their legacies live on for the next generation.

The effort to give a face to just under 750 missing or killed Georgia soldiers is part of a nationwide effort to collect photographs of all 58,300 people honored on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Sen. Judson Hill told the Marietta Daily Journal that adding a face to the name of a missing or fallen soldier brings his story to life and helps make the memory of the war more personalized.

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Photos of missing or fallen troops will be used in a multimedia display coming to a new educational center at the famous memorial in the nation’s capital called the Wall of Faces, the MDJ says.

According to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, only Sgt. Charlie T. Gazaway of Cumming does not yet have a photograph associated with him. Gazaway was killed in a vehicle crash in Quang Tri Province on March 4, 1971 and was a member of the 5th Cavalry, 5th Infantry Division.

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Anyone with photographs of Gazaway or any of the men without photosΒ can submit a scanned copy of the photo to the Wall of Faces at this link. Additionally, physical copies of photos of the above men can be mailed to the organization at:

The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, Attn: Call for Photos
2600 Virginia Ave., NW, Suite 104,
Washington, DC 20037

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