How many of you knew that the youngest American Soldier to be killed during the Vietnam War was only 15 yrs. old? The minimum age for enlistment was 17 years-old with parental consent.
Pfc. Dan Bullock of the Marine Corps was killed in Quangnam Province — the youngest American serviceman killed in the Vietnam war. He doctored his birth certificate at age 14 in order to join the Marines. A year later, he was killed by enemy fire in Vietnam.
At least 5 men killed in Vietnam were 16 years old.
At least 12 men killed in Vietnam were 17 years old.
The oldest to die in the Vietnam War was 62 years-old.
The one life that U.S. Marine Dan Bullock had to give for his country lasted just 15 years, five months and 17 days. The Brooklyn teen, after using a doctored birth certificate to enlist, became the youngest U.S. casualty of the Vietnam War when he was gunned down on June 7, 1969.
His name adorns a street in his old Brooklyn neighborhood and a Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Honolulu. His grave in North Carolina bears a stone paid for years ago by talk show host Sally Jesse Raphael.
Much of that attention was generated by McArthur, who says he remains haunted by the 15-year-old’s sudden and violent death.
Bullock was just 14 when he appeared with his bogus proof of age at the Albee Square Marine recruiting station in downtown Brooklyn.
He was a bright kid and big for his age — standing about 5-foot-9 and 160 pounds. But the rigors of boot camp at Parris Island, S.C., were too much for the recruit, who was still just 14.
“He had already kind of washed out when he got to my platoon,” McArthur recounted. “He had trouble keeping up.”

Color guard stands at attention during ceremony at Vietnam Veterans Plaza.
(New York Daily News Archive)
McArthur made it his mission to aid the young Marine, at times carrying the exhausted teen through the rigorous training. He made the commitment because he knew what put a rifle in Bullock’s hands.
“Dan joined the Marine Corps to help his family out,” McArthur recalled. “His father was a lumber worker and a sharecropper. He didn’t have any skills to get work in New York.”
The two men said farewell after boot camp. Bullock left behind his dad, his stepmom and his 13-year-old sister, Gloria, and wound up about 8,500 miles from Brooklyn.
The rifleman with the Second Platoon of Company F was at the An Hoa Combat Base in Quang Nam Province when a 1 a.m. firefight began on June 7, 1969.
The heroic teen, realizing his fellow Marines guarding the base perimeter were outgunned, began running back and forth to deliver much-needed ammunition for the better part of an hour.
Bullock’s commander, unaware of the dead Marine’s tender age, provided the details in a June 11 letter to his parents on Lee Ave. in Brooklyn.
“He constantly exposed himself to the enemy fire in order to keep the company supplied with the ammunition needed to hold off the attack,” wrote Capt. R.H. Kingrey.
“As the attack pressed on, Dan again went to get more ammunition when he was mortally wounded by a burst of enemy small arms and died instantly.”
McArthur was stunned to learn about Bullock’s death, and a fellow Marine said something that forever stayed with him.
“The Marine said, ‘Did you ever think that if you didn’t help him, he might have lived?’” McArthur recalled. “I lost my mind.”
The combination of guilt and admiration for Bullock led the leatherneck to keep his underage friend’s memory alive.
“He took the secret of his age to the grave with him,” said McArthur. “And he didn’t have to. He could have gone home anytime if he just told how old he was.”
This story originally published in the NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, Sunday, November 9, 2014, and written by Larry McShane
Question to all:
In 1969, Mr. Bullock found a way to beat the system and gain entry into the military as an underage recruit. Can something like this still occur today or has the government implemented checks and balances to prevent recurrence in our modern volunteer military?
Thank you for taking the time to read this. Should you have a question or comment about this article, then scroll down to the comment section below to leave your response.
If you want to learn more about the Vietnam War and its Warriors, then subscribe to this blog and get notified by email or your feed reader every time a new story, picture, video or changes occur on this website – the button is located at the top right of this page.
I’ve also created a poll to help identify my website audience – before leaving, can you please click HERE and choose the one item best describing you. Thank you in advance!
I grew up with Dan Bullock in the same household, he was my uncle. And I have a book coming out this year detailing his childhood, and desire to become a soldier (Marine) at a very young age.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Why was he not given the Medal of Honor. Seems like more young men would died if he had not risked his life to get ammo to them. I too served in the USMC FROM 1971 UNTIL 1979.
LikeLike
He could have been alive!
LikeLike
HEROES COME IN ALL AGES AND GENDERS
LikeLiked by 1 person
VERY INFORMATIVE, WHAT A COURAGES YOUNG MAN
LikeLiked by 1 person
Excellent recounting of a young man(yes, a MAN) with courage, determination, and resolve to carry out and see thru goals he had set . I enlisted in USMC in 1981 at age 17 and that was a serious life step that required much adjustment to my life. I can only imagine what he had to overcome at that age of 14-15 in a combat situation no less. Semper Fi, PFC Bullock
LikeLiked by 1 person
U.S. Marine Bullock was already a MAN among men at 14…… he knew what he wanted to do and did it!
God bless us with more like him today, for we’re really in short supply!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Young men throughout history have joined the military to fight on one side or the other; the U.S. has a history packed with stories like Dan Bullock’s, starting with our own Revolutionary war. The civil war is especially packed with stories of very young boys going off to war.
LikeLiked by 1 person
We had a young kid on our unit (17) that freaked out battalion HQ. They whipped out of the field after 4 months in the boonies. 1st Cav, Company C, 1st Bn, 7th Cav (Garyowen)
LikeLiked by 1 person
What year I’m trying to locate info on my father.
LikeLike
I first attempted to enlist in Corp when I was sixteen, I got all the way to me-so in Albany just about to take the oath when an admin person came in and asked where my birth certificate was, I told him I had no idea, someone suggested to him we were in Albany call over to the state statistical office and check my age, to say the least I was on YouTube way home until I turned 17
LikeLiked by 1 person