Brigg "Joe" Sicilia

BornAug. 26. 1937
DiedJan. 1, 1969
Service BranchArmy
RankCaptain
Rating or JobOrdinance Expert
UnitSecret Service
CampaignViet Nam
Military CitationsSeveral unlisted citations
Honors 
Family 
Notes

Capt. Brigg “Joe” Sicilia

Aug. 26. 1937 - Jan. 1, 1969

Chico

On Aug. 26, 1954, the day he turned 17, Joe Sicilia left Chico High School and signed enlistment papers at the local recruiter’s office.

The Army was his home for the next 14 years. He spent nine of those years as an

enlisted man before being commissioned an officer by President Kennedy in 1963.

His father recalled that in Sicilia’s days in Chico, he drove beet trucks in the summer and as a hobby raised bees. He also played football for Chico High School.

Once in the Army, Sicilia was trained to disarm explosives. That did not constitute all of his distinguished career, however.

He served as part of a Secret Service force that accompanied President Lyndon Johnson on a tour of Southeast Asia. He also received a medal for assistance to the Air Force.

Sicilia was shipped to Vietnam in February 1968 as an ordnance officer. While there he received two more medals: One for rescuing a Vietnamese child who was headed for a pile of captured enemy ammunition about to be exploded; another for disarming an AWOL South Vietnamese soldier found carrying an armed grenade in a crowded street.

The Army released few details on the circumstances of Sicilia’s death other than to say he was killed “as a result of a wound received while driving a military vehicle on a military mission when he was hit by fragments from an unknown type of explosive thrown over a wall.”

Joe Sicilia, 31, left a wife and 18-month-old daughter.

Chico News & Review, May 26, 1988

 

Sources

National Archives

Chico News & Review

Mementos