'We finally got it done' - East Taunton Marine honored 54 years after his death

Plaque Dedication for LCPL Raymond R. LaPointe, USMC from TCAM TV on Vimeo.

EAST TAUNTON — Ray LaPointe is never far from Tom Swisher's mind. He wears his friend's name on a scuffed metal bracelet.

"When it's a nice day, I look up at the bright blue sky and think of him," said Swisher, 71, who grew up in tight-knit East Taunton.

He looked up to LaPointe, who was two years older, and always good for a ride to the swimming hole past the airport. LaPointe would arrange to come back by in his 1961 Ford Galaxy.

"He'd pick us all up and bring us back," Swisher recalled.

Raymond R. LaPointe of East Taunton, a lance corporal in the U.S. Marines, was killed in action in Vietnam on Sept. 10, 1967. He was 19.
Raymond R. LaPointe of East Taunton, a lance corporal in the U.S. Marines, was killed in action in Vietnam on Sept. 10, 1967. He was 19.

Lance Cpl. Raymond Roland LaPointe has been gone more than 54 years. He died on Sept. 10, 1967. He was killed by North Vietnamese fire, according to military records. LaPointe was one of 13 Tauntonians who died in the Vietnam War.

Memorial Mass and marker dedication

On Saturday, Nov. 20, a memorial Mass was said for LaPointe at Holy Family Church in East Taunton. The Catholic service was followed by a dedication of an updated family gravestone at St. James Cemetery.

Ray LaPointe’s nephew, Fred, 60, drove in from Mississippi for the memorials. While he never met Ray, Fred said he was talked about in the family as a great guy.

“He was a person that would try to make everybody happy. He was the type of person to do whatever needed doing,” Fred LaPointe said.

Speakers at the service included Mayor Shaunna O’Connell, City Councilor-elect Larry Quintal and Dave Levesque of the Taunton Area Vietnam Veterans Association. Taunton Community Access & Media filmed the ceremony and will be broadcasting it.

City Councilor-elect Larry Quintal, spoke at a memorial for Raymond R. LaPointe on Nov. 20, 2021 at St. James Cemetery in East Taunton. Behind him from left to right are Mayor Shaunna O'Connell and City Councilor John McCaul.
City Councilor-elect Larry Quintal, spoke at a memorial for Raymond R. LaPointe on Nov. 20, 2021 at St. James Cemetery in East Taunton. Behind him from left to right are Mayor Shaunna O'Connell and City Councilor John McCaul.

“To have this type of turnout 54 years later shows you how much he was loved,” Swisher said.

It took an unlikely series of events and tenacity from family, friends and local politicians to bring last Saturday’s memorial to fruition.

"We finally got it done," Swisher said.

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In May, the city dedicated a plaque at Pine Hill Cemetery to LaPointe. Swisher began talking with LaPointe family members about possibly erecting a memorial marker at St. James Cemetery, where other LaPointes are buried.

Jennifer Hammett, Ray’s niece, called Silva Funeral Home, where Quintal is funeral director, to make arrangements for the funeral of her father, Roger LaPointe, who was nearing the end of his life. As Swisher tells the story, Quintal put two and two together, asking her, “Did he have a younger brother?”

Family, friends and elected officials honored the memory of Raymond R. LaPointe on Nov. 20, 2021 at St. James Cemetery in East Taunton.
Family, friends and elected officials honored the memory of Raymond R. LaPointe on Nov. 20, 2021 at St. James Cemetery in East Taunton.

In order to make the updates to the LaPointe family gravestone, someone needed to sign off on the change. Roger LaPointe, Ray’s brother and a Marine himself, signed the paperwork in hospice before he died.

“Roger had a big, big smile on his face,” Swisher said.

Cemetery rules limit markers to one per family, however. Working with Quintal, a plan was worked out to use the blank back side of the LaPointe family stone to add Ray’s dates of birth, death, rank and place of death. Quintal also had the stone cleaned.

The LaPointe family headstone was cleaned and Raymond R. LaPointe's name was added. The updated marker was dedicated on Nov. 20, 2021 at St. James Cemetery in East Taunton.
The LaPointe family headstone was cleaned and Raymond R. LaPointe's name was added. The updated marker was dedicated on Nov. 20, 2021 at St. James Cemetery in East Taunton.

Swisher said the updated memorial wouldn’t have been possible without the work of Quintal, O’Connell, the Taunton Area Vietnam Veterans Association and others.

“He's a solid human being,” Swisher said of Quintal. “If he says he's going to do something, he'll do it.”

The memorial Mass and gravestone dedication brought together not only the LaPointe family but also friends from East Taunton.

"LaPointes were very active growing up, very active in the community, in Holy Family Church” said Fred LaPointe, Ray’s nephew. “That was our way of living back then. Everybody knew everybody.”

The battle

According to the National Archives, Ray LaPointe was killed Sept. 10, 1967 by artillery, rocket or mortar fire in Con Thien, where the 3rd Battalion of the 26th Marines held a position just outside the demilitarized zone between North and South Vietnam.

Col. Harry L. Alderman called the battle during which LaPointe died, "The hardest fighting [the battalion] encountered since arriving in Vietnam," according to the Marine Corp’s 1984 book, “U.S. Marines in Vietnam: Fighting the North Vietnamese 1967.”

Tom Swisher, now of Dighton, wears this memorial bracelet for his friend Raymond R. LaPointe, a lance corporal in the U.S. Marines who was killed in action in Vietnam on Sept. 10, 1967, when LaPointe was 19 years old.
Tom Swisher, now of Dighton, wears this memorial bracelet for his friend Raymond R. LaPointe, a lance corporal in the U.S. Marines who was killed in action in Vietnam on Sept. 10, 1967, when LaPointe was 19 years old.

Swisher, who graduated from Taunton High School two years after Ray LaPointe, and served in the U.S. Navy, said the memorials are for more than his friend’s valor.

“It isn't because he got killed in Vietnam,” Swisher said. “He was one of the nicest young men who ever came out of East Taunton. Anyone that needed a favor, Ray was there at a young age. I really loved him. He was a friend.”

Watch the ceremony

Taunton Community Access & Media filmed the dedication ceremony. It will be broadcast at a later date, and available for viewing in the TCAM archives.

Taunton servicemembers killed in the Vietnam War

Edward J. Andrade

Lawrence T. Andrews

John Donahue

Edward J. Dull

David A. Francis

James E. Henry

Douglas J. Lamaire

Raymond R. LaPointe

Paul R. Lee

William C. Murphy

John J. Raymond

Ronald Roderick

Wayne T. Severino

Send your news tips to reporter Chris Helms by email at CHelms@tauntongazette.com. Support local journalism by purchasing a digital or print subscription to The Taunton Daily Gazette.

This article originally appeared on The Taunton Daily Gazette: Taunton veteran: Ray LaPointe, who was killed in Vietnam, honored