Arthur J. Elliot II explained

Arthur J. Elliot II
Birth Date:April 9, 1933
Birth Place:Thomaston, Maine, U.S.
Death Place:Gò Công, Vietnam
Placeofburial:Cremated, buried at Sea
Nickname:"Jack"
Birth Name:Arthur James Elliot II
Allegiance:United States of America
Serviceyears:1956–1968
Rank: Lieutenant commander
Unit:PBR Squadron 57
Commands:River Patrol Flotilla 5 (RIVPATFLOT 5)
Battles:Vietnam War
Operation Game Warden
Operation Sealords
Awards: Legion of Merit Medal
Bronze Star Medal(Combat Distinguishing Device)
Purple Heart
Combat Action Ribbon

Lieutenant Commander Arthur James Elliot II (April 9, 1933 – December 29, 1968) was an American naval officer killed during the Vietnam War. He received a Bachelor of Science degree from the Gorham State Teachers College in Gorham, Maine, in 1955. In June 1956, he entered the Navy Officer Candidate School and was commissioned an ensign in the Naval Reserve in October of that year. He then served successive sea duty tours on (DD-729) for two years, and was promoted to lieutenant (junior grade). His next tour was on (CLG-4). In 1962, Elliot was assigned as aide and flag lieutenant to commander, naval surface forces, U.S. Pacific Fleet. Upon completion of this tour, he reported for duty as operations officer aboard (DDG-3).[1] [2] He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert B. Elliot of Thomaston, Maine.

In December 1967, Elliot volunteered for duty in Vietnam, where he served as commanding officer of PBR Squadron 57, operating in the Mekong Delta. Under his command, his squadron of river boats achieved an outstanding combat record, taking part in several major riverine operations. On December 29, 1968, Elliot was killed in action while leading his squadron in a riverine interdiction mission. He received the Bronze Star with Combat "V".

Elliot's awards include the Legion of Merit Medal, the Bronze Star with Combat "V", the Purple Heart, National Defense Service Medal, the Vietnam Service medal with two bronze stars, the Vietnam Gallantry Cross with palm, the National Order of Vietnam (5th Class), the Vietnam Campaign Ribbon, the Armed Forces Expeditionary Service Medal and the Navy Expedition Medal.

Honors

was named in his honor and in commission from January 22, 1977, to December 2, 2003.

Notes and References

  1. http://www.usselliot.org/aje_bio.htm Lieutenant Commander Arthur J. Elliot, II
  2. https://www.vvmf.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Arthur-James-Elliot-b.jpg Image