Brentwood Press - IndexBrentwood Press - DiscoveryBayPress_07.25.08 - Index4A | THEPRESS.NET COMMUNITY JULY 25, 2008
Vet’s search pays off in memories
by Rick Lemyre
Staff Writer
A Florida veteran’s search for the
family of a Brentwood brother-in-arms
has ended successfully and rekindled fond
memories of a young life snuffed out more
than 40 years ago in Vietnam.
Robert Sirop, a 100-percent disabled
veteran of two tours in Vietnam, discovered
the name Armando Villa on the Vietnam
Memorial Wall in Washington, D.C.
while trying to locate another veteran with
the same last name. He made a rubbing
and took pictures of Armando’s name, and
when later research showed Villa had been
a resident of Brentwood, he contacted the
Press to see if current members of the family
were still around. Coincidentally, Villa
and Sirop were both members of the 35th
Regiment, 25th Infantry Division, and although
the two never met, Sirop felt compelled
to send what he’d gathered to Villa’s
family.
“He was my brother,” Sirop said this
week. “I felt like I owed it to him to fi nd his
family. I think it was ordained by God.”
When an article about Sirop’s search
appeared in the July 4 edition of the Press,
it was spotted by Carol Vasquez, a niece
of 90-year-old Blas Franco of Brentwood.
Franco was also Villa’s uncle, and a few calls
later, Sirop was on a tearful phone call with
Art Villa, Armando’s brother in Texas.
Discovery Bay
Insurance Services, Inc.
• Home • Auto
• Business • Health
• Umbrella • Business
• Work Comp • Benefi ts
• All Watercraft
Glenn Hoff man
(925) 516-4700 Direct
(925) 516-4202 Fax
glenn@discoverybayins.com
1555 Riverlake Road, Suite F
Discovery Bay, CA 94505
License #0811409
Proud Members of the Discovery Bay Chamber of
Commerce and the Brentwood Chamber of Commerce
Photo courtesy of Blas Franco
ARMANDO VILLA 1948-1967
“I was numb when he called,” Villa
said. “It’s been 41 years.”
Villa said that every year when Ysleta
High School in El Paso let out for the summer,
he and Armando would hop aboard
a train and head for Brentwood. They’d
spend the summer working the fi elds, staying
with Franco in the same Bramhall
Street house he still lives in. When summer
ended, the boys would head back to Texas
and another year of school.
But once he graduated, Art said, Armando
decided to stay in Brentwood. He
attended DVC and kept working the farms
for about a year, until it got to be too much.
He then decided to join the Army, and let
Photo by Rick Lemyre
Blas Franco and his niece Elma Gillio talk about Elma’s cousin Armando Villa in the
backyard of Franco’s Brentwood home. Villa was killed in Vietnam in 1967, and a
Florida veteran’s search for Villa’s family ended successfully at Franco’s last week.
the GI Bill pay for his schooling once he got
out.
“The last time I saw him was the night
before he left,” said Art. “We slept in the
same room, and I woke up and saw he
wasn’t there. I found him sitting alone in the
dark in the living room; he said he couldn’t
sleep. He said, ‘I don’t want to be a hero; I
just want to do my job, come home and go
to college.’ I told him he would be just fi ne.”
But three months into his deployment,
it all came to a sudden end for the 19-yearold
Villa. An entry on the unit’s Web site
was posted in 2000 by Ed “Doc” Gerson,
who was the medic who attended Villa on
July 15, 1967 when their unit came under severe
machine gun and small arms fi re. Villa,
carrying machine gun ammo, and machine
gunner Dan Archer, were killed.
“I did the best I could for Armando,
but his wound was too deep, Gerson wrote.
“He was put on a stretcher and hoisted up
from beneath a triple canopy of mountain
growth into a CH47 helicopter. We heard
later he didn’t survive. God bless him; that
was one of the nicest dudes I ever met.”
Art Villa said his brother was goodhearted,
“the comedian of the family” who
kept those around him in stitches with his
impressions of just about anyone. He was
a good athlete, loved the Red Sox, and had
an interest in art.
“He was a good person,” said Elma
Gillio, a cousin of Armando, who now
helps look after Franco. “Children would
always gather around him. He was very loving.
I can’t imagine him picking up a gun to
kill someone.”
Franco said it was unfortunate that his
nephew never got a chance to see a lot of
the world around him, partly because he’d
grown up on farms.
“I feel sorry he lost his life before he
could see the city,” he said.
Armando Villa was buried July 22,
1967 in the Ft. Bliss National Cemetery
in Texas. A winner of the Bronze Star and
Purple Heart, he was laid to rest with full
military honors.
Gillio said the call from Sirop brought
back memories both painful and enjoyable.
This week family members gathered at the
Franco house to remember “Mando” once
again.
“It (Sirop’s call) brought all good stories
about Mando back,” Gillio said. “It
was good hearing them again.”
She also said she looked forward to receiving
the mementos from Sirop. “It was
very nice of him to reach out and go to that
extent,” she said.
But Sirop looks at his actions not as
something nice, but something that was his
duty. Vietnam veterans had a rough time of
it coming home, he said, which was particularly
inexcusable for those who were killed.
“I simply wanted to see justice done,” he
said.
To comment on this story, visit www.
thepress.net.