Background
Richard De Wert was born on November 17, 1931 in Taunton, Massachusetts.
Richard De Wert was born on November 17, 1931 in Taunton, Massachusetts.
He enlisted in the United States. Navy in December 1948. Following recruit training and Hospital Corps training at Nova Scotia Great Lakes, Illinois, he was assigned to the Naval Hospital at Portsmouth, Virginia, during 1949-1950. In July 1950, he joined the Fleet Marine Force and soon sailed for the Far East to take part in the Korean War.
Landing with the First Marine Division at Inchon in September 1950, Hospitalman De Wert participated in operations to liberate the city of Seoul.
During the rest of 1950, he was involved in the landings at Wonsan, the Chosin Reservoir Campaign and the Hungnam Evacuation. In 1951, Hospitalman De Wert served with the Marines as they cleared North Korean guerrillas from rural areas of South of Korea and as they helped drive the enemy beyond the Thirty-Eighth Parallel.
On April 5, 1951, while with the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines during an attack on Chinese Communist forces, De Wert persistently, and in spite of his own wounds, moved through fire-swept ground to aid fallen Marines. He was killed in action while administering first aid to an injured comrade.
The frigate United States Ship De Wert (FFG-45) was named in honor of Hospitalman De Wert.
A clinic in Newport, Rhode Island was named after DeWert on September 17, 2004. The clinic at the Marine Cold Weather Base in Bridgeport, California was named for DeWert in October 2004. A scholarship fund at Pepperdine University has been named for DeWert.
Dewert Avenue in Taunton, Master of Arts is named in his honor.