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North
High School Wall of Honor
Robert Lee Gates
Class of June, 1949 |
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Research
done by Claradell Shedd, Class of 1953 and Robert Lee Gates, Class of
1949 |
Robert
Lee Gates |
Bob graduated in the June, 1949 North
High class. He enlisted in the US Marine Corps on July 5, 1949 in
Des Moines, IA. His service number was 1100566. Bob's next of kin
was listed as Mr. and Mrs. Lee Oliver Gates, 408 East Sheridan Avenue,
Des Moines, IA.
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Photo at left is Bob's graduating class from boot training at
the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in San Diego, CA on 10 September
1949. Bob is in the third row from the bottom, the seventh person
in from the left hand side. |
Click
on photo to view enlarged version |
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Robert Lee Gates |
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Year |
|
Rank |
|
Status |
 |
June, 1949 |
|
Graduated |
|
Graduated from North High
School, Des Moines, IA |
July 5,
1949 |
x |
US Marine
Corps |
x |
Enlisted in Des Moines,
IA |
July, 1949 |
x |
Basic Training |
x |
Marine Corps Recruit Depot,
San Diego, CA |
October,
1949 |
x |
Home on Leave/PFC |
x |
Home on leave from boot
camp at MCRD, San Diego. Photo (shown below) taken at Des Moines
Airport before returning to San Diego, CA for additional training. |
October,
1949 |
x |
Training |
x |
Returned to San Diego,
CA for orders for first duty station |
November,
1949 |
x |
Training |
x |
Assigned to US Naval Magazine
and Weapons Depot, . Port Chicago, Suisun Bay, CA. Security guard
duty. |
June, 1950 |
x |
Training |
x |
US Naval Training Center,
Great Lakes, IL. US Marine Corps Reserve. Six year enlistment
effective July 1, 1950 |
July, 1950 |
x |
Training |
x |
Assigned Ninth Marine
Corp Reserve District, E Company, 2nd Battalion, Fort Des Moines,
IA |
October,
1950 |
x |
Training |
x |
*Recall to active service.
Ordered to Camp Pendleton, CA for advanced infantry training.
C Company, 2nd Platoon, 2nd Infantry Training Battalion, Tent
Camp #2. |
February,
1951 |
x |
Training/PFC |
x |
Assigned to 6th Replacement
Draft Fleet Marine Force for deployment to Korea. |
February
14, 1951 |
x |
Enroute |
x |
**Transport from San
Diego to Kobe, Japan via USS General George M. Randall took 19
days. Assigned to H Company, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment,
1st Division Fleet Marine Force. From Kobe, took ship to Pusan,
Korea. From Pusan, Korea, one-day train ride. Trucked. Then walked
to area with pup tents. We were there! |
March
1, 1951 |
x |
Arrived Port |
x |
Arrived at Kobe, Japan |
March
1, 1951 |
x |
Embarked |
x |
Embarked
from Kobe, Japan for Korea |
March 5,
1951 |
x |
Arrived Korea/
Combat |
x |
Arrived Pusan, Korea.
One-day train ride; then trucked to front lines. H Company, 3rd
Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, ****1st Maine Division, Mri Pearl.
Browning Automatic Rifleman (BAR man) |
June, 1951 |
x |
Combat/CPL |
x |
Fire Team Leader. Promoted
to Corporal |
November,
1951 |
x |
Combat/Sgt |
x |
Machine Gun Section Leader.
Promoted to Sergeant. Participated in four combat campaigns: First
United Nations Counter Offensive, Communist Chinese Spring Offensive,
United Nations Summer-Fall Offensive, 1951-1952 Korean Winter |
March 15,
1952 |
x |
Enroute |
x |
*****Survivors of the
6th Replacement Draft leaves Korea via East Coast Village Solscho-Ri
aboard the USNS Marine Adder (T-AP-193) to Kobe, Japan. |
March 17,
1952-
March 30, 1952 |
x |
Enroute/SGT |
x |
******6th Replacement
Draft leaves Kobe, Japan aboard the USNS Walter H. Gordon, arriving
in San Francisco, CA on March 30, 1952. |
April, 1952 |
x |
Military |
x |
Marine Barracks, MCRD,
San Diego, CA. Debriefing about experience of combat. Back to
9th Marine Corps Reserve. |
October
17, 1952 |
x |
Family |
x |
At Collins, IA, married
Virginia JoAnn Fertig with whom had corresponded during Bob's
time spent in Korea. |
1952-1999 |
x |
Employment |
x |
International Harvester
Company. Zone Manager. Worked in the heavy truck business in sales,
engineering, and management. |
July, 1956 |
x |
Discharge |
x |
Discharged from United
States Ninth Marine Corps Reserve |
December,
1999 |
x |
Retirement |
x |
Retired from Freightliner
Corporation in Des Moines, IA |
Present
(2013) |
x |
Volunteer |
x |
Iowa Gold Star Military
Museum; Camp Dodge, IA |
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*Camp Pendleton, CA
C Company, 2nd Platoon, 2nd Infantry Training
Battalion, Tent Camp 2 (click
here to enlarge photo below)
Bob Gates is in the front row, the fourth from the left side |
 |
**USS General
George M. Randall (AP-115)
Korean War
As an MSTS ship, USS General George M. Randall made scheduled runs between
the West coast of the United States and the Orient until fighting erupted
in Korea in the summer of 1950. She participated in the amphibious assault
at Inchon which routed the North Korean Army and forced Communist evacuation
of South Korea. After hordes of Chinese Communist troops poured into
Korea and trapped American forces, she served in the evacuation of Hungnam,
which saved the embattled G.I.'s enabling them to return to the fight.
She moored at New York, New York, on 26 May 1951,
and made four voyages from New York to Bremerhaven and Southampton
before returning to the Pacific. On 11 March 1951, General George
M. Randall departed Yokohama, Japan, with the bodies of 52 men, the
first Korean War dead to be returned to the United States, including
Major General Bryant E. Moore, who had commanded the IX Corps. Armed
Services honor guards were in attendance at the departure, as was
an Army Band, and was heavily covered by the press. The ship arrived
at San Francisco, also carrying 1500 officers and men of the 1st Marine
Division being rotated home for 30 day leave. She then returned to
Yokohama on 24 October.
***1st Marine Division
(From the 1st Marine Division Presidential
Unit Citation Award)
The President of the United States takes pleasure in presenting
The Presidential Unit Citation to the First Marine Division Reinforced
for services as set forth in the following citation:
"For extraordinary heroism in action against the enemy aggressor
forces in Korea during the periods 21 to 26 April, 16 May to 30 June,
and 11 to 25 September, 1951. Spearheading the first counteroffensive
in the spring of 1951, the First Marine Division, Reinforced, engaged
the enemy in the mountainous center of Korea in a brilliant series of
actions unparalleled in the history of the Marine Corps, destroying
and routing hostile forces with an unrelenting drive of seventy miles
north from Wonju. During the period 21 to 26 April, the full force of
the enemy counteroffensive was met by the Division, north of the Hwachon
Reservoir. Although major units flanking The Marine Division were destroyed
or driven back by the force of this attack, the Division held firm against
the attackers, repelling the onslaught from three directions and preventing
the encirclement of the key center of the lines. Following a rapid regrouping
of friendly forces in close contact with the enemy, the First Marine
Division, Reinforced, was committed into the flanks of the massive enemy
penetration and, from 16 May to 30 June, was locked in violent and crucial
battle which resulted in the enemy being driven back to the north with
disastrous losses to his forces in the number of killed, wounded, and
captured. Carrying out a series of devastating assaults, the Division
succeeded in reducing the enemy's main fortified complex dominating
the 38th Parallel. In the first significant offensive of the action
in Korea, from 11 to 25 September 1951, the First Marine Division, Reinforced,
completed the destruction of the enemy forces in Eastern Korea by advancing
the front against a final desperate enemy defense in the "Punch
Bowl" area in heavy action which completed the liberation of South
Korea in this locality. With the enemy's major defenses reduced, his
forces on the central front decimated, and the advantage of terrain
and the tactical initiative passing to friendly forces, he never again
recovered sufficiently to resume the offensive in Korea. The outstanding
courage, resourcefulness, and aggressive fighting spirit of the officers
and men of the First Marine Division, Reinforced, reflect the highest
credit upon themselves and the United States Naval Service."
(From the 1st Marine Division Presidential Unit Citation Award)
The President of the Republic of Korea takes profound pleasure
in citing for outstanding and superior performance of duty during the
period 26 October to 27 July 1953 the First United States Marine Division
Reinforced for the award of President Unit Citation:
"Landing at Wonsan on 26 October 1950 the First United States Marine
Division (Reinforced) advanced to Yudam-ni where they engaged the Chinese
Communist Forces. The heroic and courageous fighting of the First United
States Marine Division (Reinforced), which was outnumbered but never
outfought by the Chinese Communist Forces; coupled with its fight against
the terrible winter weather in this return to Hungnam, has added another
glorious page to the brilliant history of the United States Marines.
After regrouping and retraining, the First United States Marine Division
(Reinforced) rejoined the United Nations Forces and began the attack
to the north which drove the aggressors relentlessly before them. The
enemy spring offensive during April 1951 which threatened to nullify
the recent United Nations gains was successfully repulsed by the First
Marine Division (Reinforced) and when other Republic of Korea Forces
were heavily pressed and fighting for survival the timely offensive
by this Division gave heart to the people of Korea."
****Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR)
WWI saw the first use of automatic weapons on a large scale. The Model
1918 Browning Automatic Rifle, known as the BAR, was created by arms
designer John Browning to be a light automatic weapon which could be
fired from the shoulder or hip. The weapon saw service with the American
forces during the last stages of WWI, where it provided "walking
fire" for attacks on enemy positions. It fired a standard .30 caliber
rifle cartridge that was valued for its range and penetrating power.
Between the World Wars, several variations on the basic design were
made, including the addition of a folding bipod. The BAR was used extensively
in WWII where it became an essential weapon in the American rifle squad.
During the Korean War, the BAR again saw active service in all major
campaigns. Its accurate automatic fire took a deadly toll on the enemy.
The .30 Caliber Air-Cooled Machine Gun
Althought the M1917A1 water-cooled machine gun was a fine weapon, the
U.S. Army found that it was too bulky to be used effectively in tanks.
Therefore, following WWI, they adapted John Browning's design and developed
an air-cooled light machine gun which did not require all off the apparatus
of the water-cooled gun. By WWII, the design had been refined and it
was also considered a desirable weapon for the infantry. It could be
easily carried and set up on a small tripod by a machine gun crew. The
air-cooled weapon could fire at a rate of 400-550 rounds per minutes,
which was slightly slower than the M1917A1. Designed the M1919A4 machine
gun, it saw remarkable service in WWII where it proved to be a highly
effective weapon. During the war, a further adaptation was made with
the addition of a buttstock bipod, lighter weight barrel, and flash
hider. Weapons that were so modified were renamed the M1919A6. Both
styles of air-cooled machine guns saw rugged service on the hills, valleys,
and fields of Korea. |
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*****USNS Marine Adder;
T-AP-193
USNS Marine Adder (T-AP–193) was a troop ship for the United States
Navy in the 1950s. She was built in 1945 for the United States Maritime
Commission as SS Marine Adder, a Type C4-S-A3 troop ship, by the Kaiser
Company during World War II. In 1950, the ship was transferred to the
Military Sea Transport Service of the U.S. Navy as a United States Naval
Ship staffed by a civilian crew. After ending her naval service in 1957,
she entered the National Defense Reserve Fleet, but was sold for commercial
use in 1967. Renamed SS Transcolorado, she was chartered by the Military
Sealift Command as a civilian cargo ship designated T-AK-2005.
******USS General Walter H. Gordon; T-AP-117
In November 1951, upon expiration of APL's charter, she was taken into
the Military Sea Transportation Service (MSTS), reinstated on the Naval
Vessel Register and placed in service as a civilian-manned Navy transport.
USNS General W. H. Gordon (T-AP-117) departed San Francisco in December
1951 on the first of many trans-Pacific voyages in support of Korean
War operations.
Here is Bob's story as related to Ann Wright for the Veterans History
Project at the Library of Congress:
http://lcweb2.loc.gov/diglib/vhp/story/loc.natlib.afc2001001.82366/transcript?ID=mv0001
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From left: Hatfield
Friend, Ted Hatfield, Eva Hatfield (mother), Gladys Willis and
son, Bob Long,
Lee and Hazel Gates, Bob Gates, Ron Hartman (in rear), Mary Casebolt,
Bob Gates's grandmother,
Gertrude Nelsen, Dick Stalcup, Deane Nelsen, Jens P. Nelsen |
October, 1949: At
Des Moines, IA airport on leave from Boot Camp
at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, CA
(Marines here now returning to San Diego, CA) |
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USS
General George M. Randall (AP-115) |
AP-115
Logo |
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USS General George
M. Randall; AP-115 Awards, Citations and Campaign Ribbons |
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Precedence
of awards is from top to bottom, left to right
Top Row-China Service Medal (extended) - American Campaign Medal
- Europe-Africa-Middle East Campaign Medal
Second Row-Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal - World War II Victory
Medal - Navy Occupation Service Medal (with Asia clasp)
Third Row-National Defense Service Medal - Korean Service Medal
- Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal (1-Lebanon)
Fourth Row-Philippine Liberation Medal - United Nations Service
Medal - Republic of Korea War Service Medal (retroactive) |
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Nov-Echo-Alpha-Foxtrot |
USNS
Marine Adder (T-AP-193) |
Call
Sign: NEAF |
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USNS Marine Adder;
T-AP-193 Awards, Citations and Campaign Ribbons |
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Precedence
of awards is from top to bottom, left to right
Top Row - National Defense Service Medal
Bottom Row - Korean Service Medal (8) - United Nations Service
Medal - Republic of Korea War Service Medal (retroactive) |
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USS
General Walter H. Gordon (T-AP-117) |
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USS General Walter
H. Gordon; T-AP-117 Awards, Citations and Campaign Ribbons |
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Precedence
of awards is from top to bottom, left to right
Top Row - American Campaign Medal - Europe-Africa-Middle East
Campaign Medal
Second Row - Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal - World War II Victory
Medal - National Defense Service Medal (2)
Third Row - Korean Service Medal (4) - Vietnam Service Medal (2)
- Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation (2)
Fourth Row - United Nations Service Medal - Republic of Vietnam
Campaign Medal - Republic of Korea War Service Medal (retroactive) |
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Korea: H-3-7 Column;
April 1951 |
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In
Des Moines; October, 1949 |
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Korea: C Rations
in the field; Summer, 1951 |
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Inji, North Korea |
Aboard the USS
Walter H. Gordon |
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above:
Brick Memorial Wall;
Gold Star Museum, Johnston, IA
right: Camp Pendleton/1950: Bob Gates; Deane Gordon Nelsen |
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above:
Urbandale Tree Park with Memorial Pavers for
Joe Boitnott, Robert L Gates, Theodore L Hatfield,
Robert D Long, Robert Niffenegger, Richard C Swift |
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Robert
Lee Gates
SGT
How Company, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment,
1st Division Fleet Marine Force
United States Marine Corps |



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Good Conduct; Korean Service Medal w./2
stars; National Defense Service Medal; Combat Action Ribbon;
Naval Unit Citation; Presidential Unit Citation;
Security Guard Ribbon; Fleet Marine Force Ribbon;
Presidential Unit Citation/Korea; Marine Corps Reserve Ribbon;
Marine Corps Reserve Medal;
Korean Service Medal; United Nations Service Medal/Korea; Army
Commander's Award for Public Service
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References |
(1)
Information was obtained from the Records on Military Personnel
Who Died, were Missing in Action, or Prisoners of War as a result
of the Vietnam War. This document can be found online at the National
Archives and Records Administration at http://www.archives.gov/.
(2) The comprehensive list of names from North High's 1893-2018
graduation classes are from Claradell Shedd's North Des Moines
High School website. The names of North High School graduates
can be found online at: http://www.ndmhs.com/.
Robert Lee Gates's 1949 class page is: http://www.ndmhs.com/pages/yearclass1949(2009.60).html. |
|
In
Des Moines, IA: 03/02/13. |
Music:
"Semper Fidelis" |
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