Name: Philip Bradford Terrill
Rank/Branch: E4/US Army
Unit: HHB, 1st Battalion, 92nd Artillery
Date of Birth: 24 September 1947 (Utica NY)
Home City of Record: Hartford NY
Date of Loss: 31 March 1971
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 143740N 1074329E (YB935188)
Status (in 1973): Prisoner of War
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Refno: 1737
Source: Compiled from one or more of the following: raw
data from U.S.
Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA
families, published
sources, interviews. Updated by the P.O.W. NETWORK in
1998.
Other Personnel in Incident: James Salley, Jr. (missing)
REMARKS: 7104 DIED TRI-BORDER AREA
SYNOSIS: SP4 Philip Terrill, a rifleman from HHB, 1st
Battalion, 92nd
Artillery and SFC James Salley, Jr., an advisor from
Advance Team 22, MACV,
were part of an integrated observation systems team and
were taken captive
together on March 31, 1971 after fire support base Number
6 on Hill 1001 was
overrun by elements of the 66th NVA Regiment. The support
base, including an
ARVN camp, was located in Kontum Province, South Vietnam.
Liberation Radio and Hanoi Radio broadcasts in early April
1971 and a Quan
Doi Nhan Dan article appearing in July 1972 referred
to this battle and the
capture of the American advisors.
In 1973, 591 American prisoners were released, but Terrell
and Salley were
not among them. Sgt. David F. Allwine, who was released,
stated that he had
been held with SFC Salley in captivity when Salley died
on July 15, 1971. He
also said that he had helped to bury SFC Salley in Laos.
(The loss site and
the location of the POW camp was in the tri-border area
of Cambodia, Laos
and Vietnam.) According to Allwine, Salley told him that
SP4 Terrell, who
had been seriously wounded, had died on the trail only
four days after his
capture. When 591 American prisoners were released in
1973, Terrill was not
among them.
SFC Salley's death was officially acknowledged in January
1973 by the
Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG) of South Vietnam,
with his date
of death given as August 15, 1971. The PRG, however,
never acknowledged SP4
Terrill's death, nor has Vietnam returned either of the
two men's bodies.
There is no question that the Vietnamese have certain
knowledge of Terrill
and Salley. By any standard, the two are prisoners of
war until their bodies
are returned home. Even more tragically, thousands of
reports have been
received convincing many authorities that scores of Americans
remain alive
in captivity in Southeast Asia. It's time we brought
these prisoners home.
--------------------------------------------------
[naf0617.95 06/18/95]
NATIONAL ALLIANCE OF FAMILIES
FOR THE RETURN OF AMERICAS MISSING SERVICEMEN
WORLD WAR II - KOREA - COLD WAR - VIETNAM
FROM: DOLORES ALFOND - (206) 881-1499
BARB SWORSKI ---- (612)
378-1947
LYNN O'SHEA ----- (718)
846-4350
TO: ALL POW/MIA FAMILY MEMBERS JUNE 17, 1995
IN OUR POSSESSION IS A BRIGHT LIGHTS REPORT. IT
IS OF INTEREST THAT THE
DATE OF THE REPORT IS REDACTED, NO DOUBT TO PROTECT NATIONAL
SECURITY.
WE CAN TELL THE REPORT WAS ISSUED PRIOR TO JULY 10, 1972
AS THAT IS THE
DATE A TYPED COMMENT WAS ADDED TO THE REPORT. THAT
COMMENT MADE BY MAJ.
C.W. WATSON, STATES "SPECIFICS OF PHYSICAL DESCRIPTIONS
DO NOT TALLY,
HOWEVER GEOGRAPHIC LOCATION, DATE OF CAPTURE AND RACIAL
DERIVATION
(CAUCASIAN/NEGRO) INDICATES THIS IS ALMOST CERTAINLY
NAME AND NAME LOST
31 MARCH 1971. SOURCE PUTS THE REPORTED DATE AND
PLACE OF CAPTURE
ALMOST ON THE MONEY FOR NAME."
SO WHO ARE NAME AND NAME?. THEY ARE JAMES SALLEY
AND PHILIP TERRILL.
THE JULY 3RD 1973 MEMO PUTS THEM IN "CATEGORY B
- PROBABLY DIED IN
CAPTIVITY." THE COMMENT READS "REPORTS ON HAND
THAT CORRELATE TO THIS
INCIDENT. RETURNEE (ALLWINE) REPORTED THAT HE RECEIVED
INFORMATION FROM
SALLEY (DIED IN PW CAMP) THAT SUBJECT (TERRILL) DIED
ON THE TRAIL TO
NVN." JAMES SALLEY'S NAME IS ON THE DIED IN CAPTIVITY
LIST. HIS
REMAINS HAVE YET TO BE RETURNED. JAMES SALLEY
IS BUT ONE OF THE MANY
HOSTAGES ALIVE AND DEAD, HELD BY THE VIETNAMESE.
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