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Sergeant First Class Robert Francis Scherdin

Robert Sherdin wearing his green beret.
  • Unit: 5th Special Forces Group
  • Date of Birth: February 14, 1947
  • Date of Death: December 29, 1968
  • Hometown: Somerville, New Jersey
  • Place of Death: Rontanokiri Province, Cambodia
  • Award(s): National Defense Service Medal, Vietnam Campaign Medal
  • Cemetery: Courts of the Missing, Court B, Honolulu Memorial. National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi
Contributed by Mrs. Kristin Camiolo
Immaculata High School (Somerville, New Jersey)
2024/2025

Early Life

Robert Francis Scherdin was born into a family committed to military service. 

His father, Donald Scherdin, served in World War II as a corporal in Company C, 602nd Tank Destroyer Battalion, Third Army. For his efforts he received the French Croix de Guerre. After the war Donald did not return to his old life as a farm hand in Iowa. He proposed to a young New Jersey woman named Katherine DeMott in January 1945, and the two wed in 1946.

Donald and Katherine settled in veterans’ housing in Neshanic, New Jersey. One year later, on February 14, 1947, they welcomed their first child, a son they named Robert Francis Scherdin. By 1950 the family moved in with Katherine’s parents, in a cozy home in Somerville, New Jersey. Donald got a job at Vanum Cleaners, and later at Suburban Propane Gas Company. In 1949, Katherine gave birth to another boy, Donald. Within a few years the Scherdins moved into their own home a mile east, on North Clark Avenue. Robert and his brother Donald grew up in this quiet neighborhood. 

Growing Up in Somerville

As a young boy, Scherdin led his friends in enthusiastic games of “Army” as part of their very own “East End Militia,” where they battled imaginary enemies and made pretend grenades out of dirt. Scherdin’s friend Jim Langenbach recalled the time Scherdin convinced his friends to answer John F. Kennedy’s call to fitness by walking the 45 miles from Somerville to Jim’s aunt’s house in Long Branch. The pack of friends completed the hike! 

Activities at the Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception shaped much of the Scherdins’ family life. Scherdin’s grandmother served as the chapter president of the Catholic Daughters of America. Robert’s mother, Katherine, and her sisters Anne, Eleanor, and Josephine participated in this group since childhood. His aunt Eleanor worked as the parish secretary for Monsignor Eugene Kelly for 29 years.

Monsignor Kelly served in World War II as a chaplain in the Pacific Theater, saying Mass for Marines on the beach at Okinawa. Scherdin received his sacraments of Baptism, Communion, and Confirmation from Monsignor Kelly in the old brick church in the middle of town. 

High School Years

Robert Scherdin was very active at Somerville High School. He served as a homeroom captain and participated in the Firemen, a safety group at school. He ran track with his younger brother, Don, played football, and sang in multiple choruses. Continuing his interest in the military, he participated in the Rifle Club. Outside of school, Robert, his brother Don, and his cousin John hiked two parts of the Appalachian Trail.

During high school, Scherdin broke his leg, but his participation in school activities remained strong. On a school trip to the Metropolitan Opera in New York, Scherdin got his cast signed by one of the opera singers.

Scherdin, nicknamed “Worms” in the school yearbook, entered The Citadel after his graduation on June 16, 1965, to continue his education at the military school. Sadly, his father, Donald, passed away from a brain tumor on August 25, 1965, only two months after Scherdin’s high school graduation.

On a school trip to the Metropolitan Opera in New York City, Scherdin had his cast signed by one of the opera singers. The Star-Ledger, April 5, 1964.
Robert Scherdin’s senior picture from the 1965 Somerville High School yearbook, The Pioneer. Somerville High School.
Robert Scherdin’s freshman picture from the 1966 Citadel Yearbook, The Sphinx. Find a Grave.

Homefront

Somerville, New Jersey, bustled with growth and activity in the 1940s and 1950s. Located in “the heart of central Jersey,” southwest of the Watchung Mountains and slightly northeast of the rolling farmlands of Hunterdon County, near the Raritan River, the suburban town was located in a prime location. Several highways converged near Somerville, some of these roads dating back to colonial times. Somerville’s location along the train line to New York City made it an especially desirable community after World War II. 

The Somerset County courthouse anchored one end of Main Street, and a variety of shops and businesses lined the busy road. Woolworths, Kugler’s Bike Shop, and a number of bakeries served the growing population. By 1960, more than a dozen houses of worship from all different denominations dotted the town. The Scherdin’s church, Immaculate Conception, stood a block off Main Street, a few minutes from their home. A hospital built in 1925 continued to expand only a few blocks from North Clark Street, where the Scherdins lived.

Somerville’s charm reached a wider audience every May. In 1940, cyclists and enthusiasts from all over the world converged on Somerville for its inaugural elite 50-mile cycling race, the Tour of Somerville. Renamed in 1947, the Kugler-Anderson Memorial Bike Race commemorated the first two winners of the tour, who were both killed in World War II. Furman Kugler (the first winner), the son of the race founder, won the inaugural race, and Carl Anderson won the second 50-mile tour. The race continues every Memorial Day weekend.

World War II 

During World War II, factories in the area provided enormous quantities of war materiel for the Allied effort, specifically chemical products from the American Cyanamid factory in Bridgewater. The military honored the company for its efforts after the war. Just down the road in Manville stood the massive headquarters of the Johns Mansville company, which produced asbestos products. Both companies employed many area residents. 

By the late 1960s, the water pollution created by American Cyanamid drew strong backlash from residents. With the later closure of the John Mansville plant, area employment suffered a significant blow. The environmental and health impacts of these companies challenged area residents for decades.

The Post-War Population Boom

Somerville’s population grew by about ten percent a decade from the 1950s to the 1970s. Veterans and their families moved into “Victory Homes,” built on the east side of town, while developers constructed large garden apartment communities. One such community added 642 units in 1948. The western side of town boasted stately Victorian homes that reminded residents of Somerville’s past as a thriving commercial center. By the time Scherdin prepared to enter high school in 1961, 12,458 people called Somerville home.

Race Relations

While Somerville was a predominantly White community in 1960, its high school was integrated early in the twentieth century. Somerville High boasted Paul Robeson, class of 1915, as its most famous graduate.  African Americans in town were actively involved in all areas of civic life. In 1960, the Somerville Negro Civic Council held a “Freedom Rally” to support the sit-ins of the South. Somerville residents kept informed of national efforts to promote Civil Rights. Monsignor Kelly of Immaculate Conception Church stopped the practice of blackface in church theater productions out of respect for the Civil Rights Movement. As the town grew, its diversity increased. 

By the late 1960s, the unrest that struck the nearby cities of Newark and Plainfield found echoes in Somerville. A few incidents of smashed store windows made the news, and residents complained of “tokenism” on the primarily White police force. Protesters held a march against police brutality. Still, Somerville’s citizens tended to get along, and Monsignor Kelly noted the town’s “warm moral character.”

Growth and Urban Renewal

By the 1960s, many larger businesses in the downtown area moved to the nearby Somerville Circle, a convergence of two major roadways. This move meant that a significant amount of traffic bypassed Somerville’s Main Street and its businesses. Somerville’s town council expressed concern and unveiled a variety of plans to tap into federal funds for urban renewal. Debates over new road configurations and moderate-income housing went on for years. 

At the county level, debates over a proposed jetport worried residents. Ultimately, the County Freeholders deemed the area unsuitable for a jetport and focused on roads as the key infrastructure needed for Somerset County to grow and thrive.

Responses to the War in Vietnam

Residents had mixed reactions to the war in Vietnam, but consistently showed strong support for the troops.

As American involvement in Vietnam grew, rallies for peace also occurred in town. By 1966, three young men from the Scherdins’ parish had died in the war. A fourth died early in 1968. Calls for peace grew. By 1969, the national War Moratorium Day saw candlelight vigils, discussions in schools, film viewings, and petitions in towns across Somerset County. Later, on November 14, 1969, three young local Veterans of the Vietnam War held a rally for peace in Somerville, about five minutes from Scherdin’s home. By 1970, calls for peace spread across the area.

Main Street in Somerville, New Jersey, not far from where the Scherdin family lived, 1960s. Advance Local Media.
The Somerset County Courthouse, built in 1909. Raritan Online.
The Tour of Somerville Fifty Mile Cycling Race. The Central New Jersey Home News, May 31, 1967.

Military Experience

After Scherdin’s second year at The Citadel, he worried about the burden his tuition put on his widowed mother. He put his education on hold and enlisted in the U.S. Army. The Scherdin family had a long legacy of service to their country, and Scherdin followed in those footsteps. In addition to his father, his father’s sister served in the WAVES during World War II. Later, Scherdin’s uncle, Hubert, died as a Prisoner of War during the Korean War.  

In keeping with his adventurous past, Scherdin pursued the rigorous training course required to join the Army Special Forces. At Fort Bragg, North Carolina, Scherdin learned survival skills and how to improvise in the field under pressure. After intense training, he earned his Green Beret. The “Green Berets” were trained to deploy in very small mission groups in austere environments, skills Scherdin would need in Vietnam.  Additionally, in March 1968, Scherdin received his Parachutist Badge at Fort Benning, Georgia. 

Military Assistance Command, Vietnam–Studies and Observations Group 

At some point in 1968, Scherdin was deployed to Vietnam with the 5th Army Special Forces, landing in Nha Trang, Vietnam, before being deployed throughout the country. Scherdin volunteered for the most elite of the Special Forces, the top-secret, all-volunteer Military Assistance Command, Vietnam – Studies and Observations Group (MACV-SOG). Accepted volunteers represented the best of the best in the U.S. Armed Forces. Scherdin made his way to Command and Control North at Da Nang and started his work in this secret group.

Founded on January 24, 1964, MACV-SOG units operated outside the sphere of regular Army operations.  Soldiers signed ten-year Non-Disclosure Agreements as a prerequisite to joining MACV-SOG, as the secrecy of operations remained paramount. Small groups of two to three American soldiers and eight Indigenous soldiers formed Reconnaissance Teams (RTs) that carried out covert reconnaissance of the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos and Cambodia. Sometimes they took Viet Cong prisoners, tapped enemy communications, or committed acts of sabotage. Some covert missions focused on the rescue of American Prisoners of War behind enemy lines.  

Helicopter pilots inserted MACV-SOG units into remote and hazardous areas, targeting “boxes” of six-kilometer-square areas of mountainous jungle terrain. Often, the soldiers climbed metal ladders to and from the helicopters to the ground when no clear landing zone could be found, or were extracted by attaching to long chains hanging from the helicopters. They customized their weapons and wore unmarked uniforms suitable for their top-secret work. MACV-SOG soldiers prepared to improvise and survive in the most difficult conditions. While they aimed to avoid enemy contact, MACV-SOG soldiers trained to fight their way out of difficult situations.

Eventually, Scherdin ended up at Command and Control Central in Kontum, not far from the borders of Cambodia and Laos. In the tight-knit group of MACV-SOG, Scherdin prepared for missions and found time to joke around with his friends. The Americans and their counterparts—Montagnard, Chinese, Vietnamese, and Cambodian soldiers—forged a brotherhood on the front. In the field, their lives depended on cooperation.

The RTs of MACV-SOG were unaware of the details of other teams’ missions. Even within the unit, missions remained secretive, labelled “Long Distance Reconnaissance Patrols” to maintain operational security. Within the unit, RTs had nicknames—often states, poisonous snakes, or weather effects.  RTs maintained autonomy while on mission, and soldiers determined what weapons and supplies they should bring to carry out their assigned task. Missions lasted from a few hours to a few days. Soldiers back at base waited for the return of the helicopters and their friends. 

Scherdin’s Final Mission

On December 29, 1968, Robert Scherdin, Gerald Apperson, and eight Montagnard soldiers embarked on a reconnaissance mission, crossing four miles over the border into Cambodia. As the Assistant Team Leader (the “One-Two”) of RT Vermont, Scherdin carried two radios and led four of the Montagnard soldiers.

Apperson and the lead element moved ahead through the tall grass, bamboo, and trees near the landing zone, while Scherdin led the rear group of Montagnards. As Scherdin’s element moved to join Apperson, they came under heavy fire from the rear, and Scherdin went down, severely wounded. The closest Montagnard, Nguyen Van Vinh, tried to help Scherdin up, but the young soldier simply groaned and could not move. Nguyen realized he, too, had been shot and that the rest of the element had moved on ahead. The wounded Nguyen had no choice but to leave Robert Scherdin behind.

When the enemy barrage started, Apperson called for emergency air support. He explained that the RT had come under heavy fire and that he had been separated from his rear element. Despite repeated attempts to contact Scherdin by radio, Apperson received no reply. 

Shortly after, a helicopter extracted Apperson and the first four Montagnards. The rear element used a signalling panel to alert the helicopter to their location 30 minutes later, about 600 yards from where Apperson and the first element had been extracted. Scherdin remained lost somewhere on the hill behind them.

Helicopters at Command and Control Central, Kontum, 1968. Courtesy of Charles T. Cadenbach.
Scherdin in a silly moment with buddy, Jack Young, at Kontum, 1968. Courtesy of Charles T. Cadenbach.
Bob Scherdin with Jim Jerson (who would be killed in action while searching for Scherdin on December 30, 1968), and his team leader, Gerald Apperson, whose helicopter crashed on return from searching for Scherdin. SOG: A Photo History of the Secret Wars.

Commemoration

The Search

After bringing the Reconnaissance Team back to Kontum, the helicopter quickly refueled. Within 45 minutes, the same helicopter that extracted both the forward team and the Montagnard members of the rear team circled back to search for Scherdin from the air. Darkness fell, forcing the pilots to call off the search.

The rescue crew continued to call for Scherdin over the radio every three minutes, but he never responded. The February 1969 report after the incident stated that “no contact was made with PFC Scherdin after 1230 hours 29 December 1968 by sight or radio.” 

At least one of the Montagnard soldiers thought Scherdin died almost immediately after being wounded, but this was never confirmed. 

The next day, December 29, a 40-man MACV-SOG “Bright Light” recovery team assembled to find Scherdin. This unit also came under heavy attack during their rescue mission and suffered terrible losses. One of the leaders of this group, First Lieutenant James R. Jerson, was killed, along with half his team. Sergeant First Class Robert Howard was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions under fire that day. Still, there was no sign of Scherdin.

The “Wake”

The day after the Bright Light team lost so many men, the soldiers remaining at the base gathered in the club to remember Scherdin and Jerson. They toasted both soldiers, told stories about their fallen friends, and sang an old folk song about a dog called “Hey Blue,” a tradition in MACV-SOG. The men added the names of their fallen friends into the song as a way to honor their memories. 

More Loss

One week later, on January 8, 1969, Scherdin’s team leader, Sergeant First Class Gerald Apperson, Specialist Fourth Class Bill Williams, and a four-man Montagnard crew, returned to the area of their mission. After four days of searching, the team was extracted, but the helicopter they were traveling in crashed. The men in the chase chopper were unable to save anyone aboard, due to exploding ordnance. Once the crash site cooled, recovery teams found no evidence of Scherdin in the wreckage.

The date of Scherdin’s loss, December 29, 1968, also marks the date the U.S. Congress passed the Cooper-Church Amendment, which prohibited U.S. participation in actions in Laos and Cambodia. 

The Family’s Struggle for Information

Katherine DeMott Scherdin learned of her son’s death in January 1969, but the Army officers who came to her door told her she must never speak of Scherdin’s loss. The secrecy of MACV-SOG work, especially in Cambodia, meant that even Scherdin’s mother did not have any real information on what happened to her son, or even where he had been lost, until 1973.  

While some believed Scherdin died shortly after being wounded, proof remained elusive. Mrs. Scherdin periodically received visits from Army officers who showed her pictures of POWs to see if any resembled her son. By 1978, Mrs. Scherdin believed her son would never return home. The Army formally declared Robert Scherdin deceased in 1978, ten years after that mission in Cambodia. 

The search for Scherdin continued, and reports from 1993 and 2019 describe the challenging terrain and the difficulties faced by the elderly Vietnamese veterans interviewed. No remains have been found, but some of the Veteran reports suggest that they found a mortally wounded soldier with a radio in roughly the same time as Scherdin’s mission. 

Remembrance

Today, Robert Scherdin’s name is engraved on the Honolulu Memorial at National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, and on the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C. In the late 1970s, his family placed a memorial marker for him in the local cemetery in Somerville.

Robert Scherdin’s younger brother, Don, later served stateside in the U.S. Navy, and his cousin, John Brower, served as a medic in the 173rd Airborne Brigade in Vietnam from 1970 to 1971.

Scherdin’s alma mater, Somerville High School, honors him with a display that includes his Army jacket and a photograph. Somerville has honored Scherdin’s memory many times over the years, with Memorial Day ceremonies, remembrances by the Elks, and newspaper articles. The Citadel includes him on their list of graduates lost in Vietnam, a testament to the fact that he planned to return to finish his education. A minor league ballpark in New Jersey’s Skyland region has a “Chair of Honor” commemorating Scherdin’s sacrifice and the plight of all POWs. 

Fifty years after his loss, Scherdin’s memory lives on. Posts on POW pages from people who have worn his POW bracelet for decades testify to the fact that this adventurous 21-year-old, who loved his country so much, will live on in the memory of a grateful nation.

Robert Scherdin’s name on the Honolulu Memorial at National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi. American Battle Monuments Commission.
Students from Scherdin’s high school created a shadow box in his honor. June 2, 2018. Courtesy of Rod Hirsch.
Rob Scherdin’s childhood friend, Jim Langenbach, stands behind the Chair of Honor dedicated to Scherdin’s memory at the Skylands Stadium in Sussex County, New Jersey. New Jersey Herald, August 8, 2019.

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This profile was researched and created through the Researching Silent Heroes program, sponsored by the American Battle Monuments Commission.