Kittleson, Galen C., CSM

Deceased
 
 Photo In Uniform   Service Details
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Last Rank
Command Sergeant Major
Last Service Branch
Infantry
Last Primary MOS
00Z-Command Sergeant Major IN
Last MOS Group
Infantry
Primary Unit
1976-1978, 00Z, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne)
Service Years
1942 - 1978
Infantry Special Forces
Command Sergeant Major
Ten Service Stripes
Ten Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

20 kb


Home State
Iowa
Iowa
Year of Birth
1924
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by MAJ Mark E Cooper to remember Kittleson, Galen C. (Pappy), CSM.

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Contact Info
Last Address
Toeterville, Iowa
Date of Passing
May 04, 2006
 
Location of Interment
First Lutheran Cemetery - Saint Ansgar, Iowa

 Official Badges 

Special Forces Group Infantry Shoulder Cord


 Unofficial Badges 






 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

The passing of a hero: Command Sgt. Maj. Galen Kittleson

TOETERVILLE — The final battle of a distinguished soldier is finished.
Retired Command Sgt. Maj. Galen Kittleson died of cancer late Thursday.
He was 81.
“We won’t see another like Sergeant-Major,” 36-year-old Jon Henaman of St. Ansgar, a veteran of the Army airborne infantry, said of his mentor. “He was an incredible man who touched many lives, a legend in the military Special Forces.”
And among civilians of all ages who knew the man.
“Gay’s life was about core values — family, faith, love of country and respect for his fellow human beings,” 41-year-old Bob Collier of Austin, Minn., said. “His was a life of service and sacrifice.”
Kittleson’s distinguished military career spanned four decades, several continents  and three wars — World War II, Korea and Vietnam.
One of the elite Alamo Scouts during World War II and a Green Beret in Vietnam, Kittleson rose through the ranks to become command sergeant major of the 1st Special Forces and the U.S. Army garrison on Okinawa.
His age and the affection he elicited from the thousands of young troops he trained at Fort Bragg, N.C., earned Kittleson the nickname “Pappy.”
There are medals — Silver Star, Bronze Star, Purple Heart and more — of which he seldom spoke.
There is a book — “Raider” — chronicling Kittleson’s remarkable life of service.
Former Green Beret and military journalist Charles Sasser said of Kittleson, “He is a hero. Everyone in Special Forces knew him. Yet almost no one outside the military knows, because true heroes like Galen do not draw attention to themselves. They just live.”
As a 19-year-old in 1943, he carried a mortally wounded comrade out of the dense New Guinea jungle. He was awarded the Silver Star.
Even the span of 56 years could not erase the deep sadness in his dark eyes. “He didn’t make it,” Kittleson said in a 1999 interview.
At a tender age, Kittleson learned to face and overcome his deepest fears.
He was in Cabanatuan on Jan. 30, 1945 — part of the daring raid when the 6th Ranger Battalion and a handful of Alamo Scouts liberated some 500 American prisoners who survived the Bataan Death March.
He was there in the fall of 1957 — when the now famous “Little Rock Nine” took their first tentative steps into history, integrating Little Rock, Ark., Central High School.
He was there in 1970 — part of the POW raid on Son Tay near Hanoi in North Vietnam.
More than 30 years later, in a 2002 interview, frustration still lingered as Kittleson shook his head, saying “That one didn’t work out.”
When he retired in 1979, his beloved troops bronzed his beret before Kittleson returned to his rural Mitchell County roots with his wife,  Darlene.
And once again, he was there for another generation — the teenagers of the Alamo Scout Troop he founded in 1982.
Collier and Army Sgt. 1st Class Elisa Feldt, now a decorated member of the elite Golden Knights Parachute Team, were among the first Alamo Scout alumni.
Kittleson, they say, was a commanding figure.
His manner was straightforward; his expectations, high. His lessons of honesty, self-discipline, self-reliance and respect shaped the adults they would become.
“Yet he was such a humble man, certainly never one to brag,” Collier said. “Not until I read the book, did I fully understand his accomplishments, his self-sacrifice.”
“Sergeant Major has been an inspiration in my life, the person behind my career in the military,” the 41-year-old Feldt said. “He taught me discipline. From him I learned about honor, about courage. I will always remember him in that uniform, standing tall.”
A poor farmer’s son from Iowa, Kittleson traveled far from his roots, finding courage and faith, said his son, Lance Kittleson, an ordained minister and chaplain in the Army Reserve. “And in doing so he earned the love of his family and the respect and gratitude of a nation.”
For Galen Kittleson — the soldier and the man — even in death, there is victory.

   


Vietnam War/Tet Counteroffensive Campaign (1968)
From Month/Year
January / 1968
To Month/Year
April / 1968

Description
This campaign was from 30 January to 1 April 1968. On 29 January 1968 the Allies began the Tet-lunar new year expecting the usual 36-hour peaceful holiday truce. Because of the threat of a large-scale attack and communist buildup around Khe Sanh, the cease fire order was issued in all areas over which the Allies were responsible with the exception of the I CTZ, south of the Demilitarized Zone.

Determined enemy assaults began in the northern and Central provinces before daylight on 30 January and in Saigon and the Mekong Delta regions that night. Some 84,000 VC and North Vietnamese attacked or fired upon 36 of 44 provincial capitals, 5 of 6 autonomous cities, 64 of 242 district capitals and 50 hamlets. In addition, the enemy raided a number of military installations including almost every airfield. The actual fighting lasted three days; however Saigon and Hue were under more intense and sustained attack.

The attack in Saigon began with a sapper assault against the U.S. Embassy. Other assaults were directed against the Presidential Palace, the compound of the Vietnamese Joint General Staff, and nearby Ton San Nhut air base.

At Hue, eight enemy battalions infiltrated the city and fought the three U.S. Marine Corps, three U.S. Army and eleven South Vietnamese battalions defending it. The fight to expel the enemy lasted a month. American and South Vietnamese units lost over 500 killed, while VC and North Vietnamese battle deaths may have been somewhere between 4,000 and 5,000.

Heavy fighting also occurred in two remote regions: around the Special Forces camp at Dak To in the central highlands and around the U.S. Marines Corps base at Khe Sanh. In both areas, the allies defeated attempts to dislodge them. Finally, with the arrival of more U.S. Army troops under the new XXIV Corps headquarters to reinforce the marines in the northern province, Khe Sanh was abandoned.

Tet proved a major military defeat for the communists. It had failed to spawn either an uprising or appreciable support among the South Vietnamese. On the other hand, the U.S. public became discouraged and support for the war was seriously eroded. U.S. strength in South Vietnam totaled more than 500,000 by early 1968. In addition, there were 61,000 other allied troops and 600,000 South Vietnamese.

The Tet Offensive also dealt a visibly severe setback to the pacification program, as a result of the intense fighting needed to root out VC elements that clung to fortified positions inside the towns. For example, in the densely populated delta there had been approximately 14,000 refugees in January; after Tet some 170,000 were homeless. The requirement to assist these persons seriously inhibited national recovery efforts.
   
My Participation in This Battle or Operation
From Month/Year
January / 1968
To Month/Year
April / 1968
 
Last Updated:
Mar 16, 2020
   
Personal Memories
   
Units Participated in Operation

1st Cavalry Division

29th Civil Affairs Company, I Corps

1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment

630th Military Police Company

18th Military Police Brigade

16th Military Police Group

545th Military Police Company

300th Military Police Company

212th Military Police Company

66th Military Police Company

272nd Military Police Company

716th Military Police Battalion

504th Military Police Battalion

218th Military Police Company

194th Military Police Company

1st Military Police Company, 1st Infantry Division

615th Military Police Company

148th Military Police Detachment, 759th Military Police Battalion

720th Military Police Battalion

95th Military Police Battalion

127th Military Police Company

527th Military Police Company

154th Transportation Company

552nd Military Police Company

23rd Military Police Company

4th Battalion, 42nd Field Artillery

557th Military Police Company

101st Military Police Company

981st Military Police Company

93rd Military Police Battalion

500th Military Police Detachment

4th Infantry Division

1st Aviation Brigade

101st Airborne Division

92nd Military Police Battalion

16th Military Police Brigade

89th Military Police Brigade

90th Military Police Detachment (CID)

 
My Photos From This Battle or Operation
No Available Photos

  9992 Also There at This Battle:
  • Adams, Harold, SGT, (1967-1968)
  • Adams, John, LTC, (1966-2001)
  • Adkisson, Jim, (1966-1969)
  • Agard, George R, SP 5, (1968-1971)
  • Aho, Milt, SP 5, (1969-1971)
  • Akins, Donald, CW4, (1963-1985)
  • Albano, Michael, SP 4, (1966-1972)
  • Albin, Ray, SGT, (1966-1969)
  • Aldrich, Hugo, CW4, (1964-1998)
  • Aldridge, Jon, SP 5, (1968-1971)
  • Alexander, Brian, SP 4, (1970-1973)
  • Alexandrou, Alex, SP 5, (1966-1969)
  • Alfred, Harry, SGT, (1967-1969)
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