Remembering the Fallen in Alexandria

Families gather to honor veterans.

Army Specialist Johnny Jerome Smith was three months shy of his 21st birthday when he died May 20, 1970, in Quang Tin Province in Vietnam. On May 29, he was among the 67 Alexandrians killed or missing in action in Southeast Asia honored during the city’s Memorial Day Ceremony at the Capt. Rocky Versace Plaza and Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

“I was only 13 when I lost my brother,” said Arlisa Smith Walton, who only last year learned of the memorial to Alexandria’s fallen Vietnam veterans. “I have met so many others who were about the same age as me when they lost someone. Coming here is a way for us to share our memories of those we lost.”

Until recently, Smith was one of 22 Alexandrians without a corresponding photo in the Faces Never Forgotten database for fallen Vietnam veterans. Through the efforts of childhood friend McArthur Myers, Walton was tracked down, along with others.

“We are down to three missing photos,” said Friends of Rocky Versace representative and Memorial Day ceremony organizer Kevin Rue. “We will continue our efforts until all of Alexandria’s fallen are accounted for.”

Those still with missing photos include: SGT Robert W. Dean; 101st Airborne Division; Pfc Darrell L. Gibbons; 3d Bn, 4th Marine Regiment; and PVT Jeron F, Valentine; 1st Logistical Command.

Miss Northern Virginia, Alice Gyamfi, sang the National Anthem at Monday’s ceremony and Saint Rita’s American Heritage Girls Troop 1381 led the crowd in the Pledge of Allegiance.

Family members of Alexandria’s fallen were presented with the Department of Defense 50th Anniversary Vietnam War Commemoration certificates and members of the Anna Maria Fitzhugh Chapter of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution made the Gold Star Family presentations.

Attendees at Monday’s event included World War II veteran Chief Master Sergeant William A. Tippins, and James Spengler, director of the City of Alexandria's Recreation, Parks and Cultural Affairs Department. Spengler is the brother of Capt. Henry Spengler and attended with his brother’s widow, children and grandsons.

“This memorial is a very special place,” said Walton. “It’s a real tribute to Johnny and all of the men who never made it home.”