Each year since 2015, around the Fourth of July, I've posted a tribute to the men who died in Vietnam on Independence Day 50 years earlier. This will be last such post.
Navy Airman James Timothy O'Neill, 20, of Baltimore, was the last American serviceman to die in Vietnam on a Fourth of July, and he was the only one who perished on July 4, 1973.
“How sad to think someone would suffer all those years over something that was an accident,” she said. “If that man had come to our door he would have been welcomed. We bore him no animosity.”
Timmy had an aptitude for mechanical and electronic equipment, and he helped his father in his sideline of repairing cars. He was also an avid fisherman and would sometimes take off and walk several miles to his favorite fishing hole.
Ms. Zulkowski said Timmy enlisted when he was 18 and loved being in the Navy. He was not much for writing letters, but he sent his parents detailed tape recordings telling them in great detail about his work and travels.
“I never knew you in 1973, but I knew of you. Until this day I never knew your name was on the ‘Wall.’ I remember typing the Captain's letter of condolence to your parents. Processing the letter disturbed me because it all seemed so sad.
“In July of 1973
everything was just about finished, wrapped up, the final curtain for a long
involvement and you should have been home in a few months. Occasionally over
the past 28 years I have recalled typing that letter, wondering how your family
must have felt when they received it.
“I know nothing about the
life you lived. I know nothing about the hopes and plans you may have had for
the future. This I do know. God never intended for mankind to be in conflict
with one another.”
I searched for “YN3 McClurkin” to share with him the information I had learned about Timmy but was never able to find him.
One of Timmy’s high school friends, Bob Lari, posted a message that illustrates the type of person he was. Bob, who knew Timmy since they were nine or ten years old, wrote:
“In 1971 like most
juniors I received my high school class ring. Later that year there was
an evening activity night at the school. Tim joined me and my usual
entourage from school. As the evening was winding down, we went outside
and sat on a small hill overlooking the football field. All was well
until an acquaintance from school attacked me from behind. I was seated
at the time and at a significant disadvantage. We tumbled down the hill
and landed on the football field in single combat. I don’t recall how
long the engagement lasted, but it ended in a draw as our respective factions
pulled the belligerents apart. To this day I don’t know what motivated
the attack.
“On the drive home, I
noticed my class ring had fallen off during the affray. It was near
midnight on a moonless Saturday night, and my ring was somewhere on an
unlighted football field. I decided it was futile to return to the field
as the odds of finding the ring were slim even in daylight. Everyone went
home and went to bed, or so I thought.
“Early Sunday
morning my dad followed his usual routine of going outside to retrieve the
Sunday paper from the lawn. When he opened our front door, he noticed
something Scotch taped to the outer side. It was my class ring.
While the rest of the town slept, Tim went to his house, retrieved a rake,
hiked back to the school, and in the gloom of night raked the football field
until he found my ring.
“I have no words to
describe my gratitude or my sense of loss at the passing of the best friend
anyone could ever ask for. Knowing Tim, I can’t help but believe he was
probably attempting to help someone when tragedy struck. The loss of a
friend is still heartfelt to this day.”