From: chuckmans@aol.com
Date: 06/25/18 14:49:36
Subject: My New Book
Gentlemen:
I apologize for the earlier incomplete
transmission.
You had once requested that I notify you when
my book VIETNAM: Remembrances of a War was published, which has finally
occurred. Thank you very much for your written contribution to the work.
The book will be available (in hardcover
only) shortly at www.lulu.com (the publisher), www.amazon.com and
www.barnesandnoble.com. The "retail" price per book is ridiculous at
$38 but Lulu's I understand is lower than Amazon's and Barnes and Noble's.
If you wish to purchase the book from me, it is available for $25 per copy plus
$3.17 for postage for a total of $28.17.
All the best,
Chuck Mansfield
631-288-2803
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
From: robert moser
Date: 07/09/18 18:40:42
To: Mark Sztanyo
Subject: Fwd: F-105 Flyby article
Great story. I flew with John Disososway at Jet Airways
India in 2007-09. He was a pilot in the USAF and Delta Airlines retiring in
2006 from Delta.
I know a few of the guys standing at attention, including
Jim and Gene Camp who I flew with on the C-141A at Travis AFB, CA 1971-79.
Awesome jet the F-105!
F-105 Flyby article
One
not soon forgotten by all who were there - or ever experienced the exhilaration
from making high speed low altitude passes!Here is the article on the F-105 at the AF Academy in June
1968.
Republic F-105
Thunderchief
Remembering Three of the
Fallen F-105 Thunderchief Heroes of the Vietnam Era
The
Remarkable Exploits of Three Thunderchief Pilots Are a Must-Read on Memorial
Day.
It’s
Memorial Day in the United States, part of a long three-day weekend where
people in the U.S. reflect on the high cost of freedom and liberty as they
remember those who sacrificed their lives for it. While it is a somber holiday
it is also a celebration of heroes. Heroes who set the highest bar for
selflessness, honor and sacrifice. It is a day when we recalibrate what it
means to be an American.
There
are a remarkable number of great American stories to be told on Memorial Day.
Realistically, far too many to tell in a single day. I find these stories daily
in research about military aviation history. Even after years I unearth new
names and heroic exploits every week. It is a seemingly endless tablet of
remarkable tales etched into the bedrock of freedom’s foundation. And as
history arcs forward into the future, the foundation is expanded by more and
more heroes.
There is one era that produced images that are
particularly iconic to me. Images that shaped my boyhood impression of what it
means to be a hero. It was the era of the early U.S. involvement in the air war
over Vietnam. In particular, one group of pilots repeatedly shows up in photos
of medal winners and in heroic tales. They were the “Thud drivers”, the pilots
of the Republic F-105 Thunderchief.
The
F-105 Thunderchief itself was an ambitious aircraft. It’s journalistically and
politically indelicate to write about any historical military aircraft as “bad”
or “dangerous”, so we will handle the F-105 and its history over Vietnam
objectively and respectfully. Early in its history, during 1961, the F-105 had
the lowest rate of accidents of any jet fighter in the history of the Air
Force. But by June of 1964 accidents in the F-105 Thunderchief increased remarkably.
There were a reported 33.7 accidents per 100,000 flying hours in the F-105 by
half way through 1964, a massive increase compared to earlier years.
Republic
F-105D-30-RE Thunderchief (SN 62-4234) in flight with a full bomb load of M117
750 lb bombs. Normally drop tanks were carried on the inboard wing pylons. This
aircraft was shot down on 24 December 1968 over Laos while being assigned to
the Wing Headquarters, 355th Tactical Fighter Wing, Takhli RTAFB. Major Charles
R. “Dick” Brownlee was the pilot of the lead aircraft (s/n 62-4234, call sign
“Panda 01”) in a flight of four. The flight was conducting an afternoon strike
mission against Route 911, between the Ban Karai Pass and the city of Ban
Phaphilang, Khammouane Province, Laos. At 15:47h the aircraft attacked a truck
moving along Route 911. 62-4234 was hit by anti-aircraft fire and caught fire.
Major Brownlee’s aircraft exploded at roughly the same time he ejected from his
aircraft. The next day a rescue attempt of heavily injured or dead Brownlee
failed, but a member of the rescue team, CMS Charles D. King, was captured,
too. Both men are listed as missing in action. The location was on the northern
edge of a large valley and just east of Route 911, approximately 16 km
southwest of Ban Thapachon (location 170600N 1055600E).
Especially
during this era in the Thunderchief’s history, it was best to stick to
observations that acknowledged its curvaceous, needle-nosed fuselage, artfully
shaped wings that leave one with the visual impression of speed, and its
remarkable performance. Even more so than the F-104 Starfighter, the F-105
Thunderchief was what most Americans visualized when they heard the term “Jet
Fighter” in the 1960’s.
The
Thunderchief looked the part of a supersonic fighter. It did not, however,
deliver great survivability during this era. It was not because the
Thunderchief was somehow cursed. It may be fairer to suggest its mission was
cursed.
It’s
also best not to discuss the calamitous employment of the F-105 by the U.S. Air
Force Thunderbirds that ended in a fiery aircraft disintegration on May 9, 1964
at an airshow venue in California. That F-105 broke apart after receiving
initially undetectable damage earlier in its career while midair refueling. The
Thunderbirds only flew the F-105 in six shows before they switched back to the
North American F-100D Super Sabre. The Thunderbird F-105 crash killed USAF
Capt. Gene Devlin in aircraft 57-5801.
Thunderbird
pilot Capt. Gene Devlin died in an F-105 crash on May 9, 1964. (Photo: USAF and
Aerospace Museum of California)
Thunderbird
pilot Capt. Gene Devlin’s F-105 crash on May 9, 1964 was the 15th accident in
an F-105 in only five months during 1964. But it would get worse. Only four
days after Devlin’s crash in California, a Nellis AFB F-105D lost its engine on
takeoff and crashed into the Las Vegas suburb of Woodland North. The results
were catastrophic. A mother and three children died on the ground where the
aircraft crashed. The impact leveled seven houses and destroyed two cars. More
homes burned near the crash scene. The pilot did not survive either. Following
that horrific run of accidents that culminated in the Woodland North calamity
the Air Force grounded all F-105s until a cause for the accidents was
determined. A number of problems with the F-105 were subsequently discovered
and corrected during inspections and the aircraft were returned to service in
time for the escalation of the Vietnam War.
A U.S.
Air Force Republic F-105D Thunderchief attempting to dodge an SA-2 missile over
North Vietnam. (USAF)
It is
fair to acknowledge the Republic F-105 Thunderchief was a plane thrust into a
mission that was largely misunderstood, frequently evolving, and very different
from what the “Thud” was originally designed for, low-level, supersonic nuclear
strike missions. As a result, the “Thud” earned its unfortunate nickname by
raining out of the Southeast Asian skies with frightening regularity, often
taking with it the lives of America’s finest.
The
USAF Thunderbirds only flew the F-105 in six demonstrations. (Photo: USAF and
Ron Rentfrow)
But also
in fairness, the F-105 Thunderchief shouldered the majority of the USAF’s
burden of bombing heavily defended targets in North Vietnam. In the first five
years of the American involvement in the air war over Vietnam, the F-105
Thunderchief flew 70% of all attack missions. Regardless of your assessment of
the Thunderchief, the odds were always stacked against it. In all, a staggering
382 Thunderchiefs were lost in Vietnam, nearly half the total number that was
built.
Different
from the aircraft itself the men who flew the F-105 Thunderchief, like USAF
Captain Samuel E. Waters, were absolutely dependable no matter the odds or the
mission. Capt. Waters was the type of a man you think of when you picture a jet
fighter pilot. Chiseled features, serious countenance, heroic look, stony
glare.
A USAF
photo F-105D Thunderchief Pilot Capt. Samuel E. Waters. (Photo: USAF)
Unlike
his outwardly attractive but structurally dubious aircraft, Capt. Waters had intrinsic
mettle. He was a hero. An icon. The worthy subject of statues in town squares
or the name of a new high school.
Capt.
Samuel E. Waters died 51 years ago on Tuesday December 13, 1966 over the dense
jungle region of Ha Tay Province, North Vietnam. It was, according to some
records, the first day the U.S. launched airstrikes on the capital city of
Hanoi. The 29-year old combat pilot was a member of the 12th Tactical Fighter
Squadron, 388th Tactical Fighter Wing.
It is
already difficult to sort through accurate records about Captain Samuel E.
Waters. According to three websites and social media posts, Capt. Waters was
flying Republic F-105D Thunderchief #61-0187 the day he died. His target was
the Yen Vien railroad yard just ten miles south of the city center outside
Hanoi. He had successfully bombed his target and was exiting the area when his
aircraft was struck by an SA-2 Guideline surface-to-air missile (SAM). He
managed to nurse his wounded Thunderchief for about 15 miles before it finally
succumbed to damage from the missile.
A U.S.
Air Force Republic F-105D Thunderchief trailing fire and smoke just after
interception by an SA-2 missile on February 14, 1968. The SA-2 did not actually
hit an aircraft — the warhead was detonated by a command from the tracking
radar or by a proximity fuse in the missle when it neared the target, throwing
deadly fragments over a wide area. The pilot, Robert Malcolm Elliot
(1929-1968), was killed. His body was not recovered until 1998. (USAF)
What
struck me about the photo I found of Capt. Samuel E. Waters was that his image,
and the similar images of men, fighter pilots, like him shaped my impression of
what a real man truly was. What a hero is. In small suburbs and country towns
people talked about these men. Men like Capt. Waters.
Another
remarkable hero of the Thunderchief era was Lt. Karl W. Richter. Richter was an
Air Force Academy graduate from 1964. He began training to fly fighter aircraft
after graduation and subsequently volunteered to go to Vietnam. Richter learned
to fly the F-105 Thunderchief at Nellis AFB, Nevada. He immediately volunteered
to ferry an F-105 over to Thailand where he knew he would be put in the action.
Once he arrived in Thailand he was assigned to the 421st Tactical Fighter
Squadron (TFS) of the 388th Tactical Fighter Wing (TFW) at Korat Royal
Thai Air Force Base, a hub of F-105 action over Southeast Asia.
Lt.
Richter flew his first F-105 Thunderchief combat mission only four days after
arriving in Southeast Asia. He eventually completed 198 combat missions over
Vietnam in a number of aircraft including the F-100 Super Sabre and the O-1A
Bird Dog light Forward Air Control (FAC) aircraft. Richter also shot down a
North Vietnamese MiG-17 on September 21, 1966 using the cannon on his F-105. At
only 23 years old and still a First Lieutenant, Richter was the youngest USAF
combat pilot to shoot down an enemy aircraft in the Vietnam conflict at the
time.
F-105
Thunderbird pilot Lt. Karl W. Richter. (Photo: USAF)
Lt. Karl
W. Richter was shot down on July 28th, 1967 at the age of 24. He was leading a
bombing attack on a North Vietnamese bridge when he was struck by automatic
anti-aircraft fire (AAA). Richter managed to eject from his F-105 and
parachuted into rocky terrain where he sustained life-threatening injuries
including a broken neck. Although a rescue force was able to retrieve him
quickly, Lt. Richter died in the rescue helicopter on his way back to safety.
There
are several statues of Lt. Karl Richter at prominent locations around the U.S.
commemorating his remarkable courage and career. Perhaps the most significant
inscription is on the one displayed at Maxwell AFB in Alabama. Below the
chiseled figure of F-105 Thunderchief fighter pilot Lt. Karl W. Richter the Biblical
inscription of Isaiah 6:8 reads:
“Whom
shall I send, and who will go for us? Here am I. Send me.”
It is
not only a fitting inscription for the lives and sacrifices of F-105
Thunderchief pilots like USAF Capt. Gene Devlin, Capt. Samuel E. Waters and Lt.
Karl W. Richter, but for every service person we remember on Memorial Day in
the U.S. who gave their lives for freedom and security.
Top image: Crews of the F-105D and F-105G
Thunderchiefs in Thailand. (USAF)
You can find it in Military Aviation, Military History Tags: Republic F-105 Thunderchief, Thunderbirds,
U.S. Air Force, Vietnam
war
on May 28, 2018Tom Demerly.
on May 28, 2018Tom Demerly.
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