33.3 F
Clarksville
Tuesday, March 19, 2024
HomeNewsFort Campbell Soldiers lost at Gander remembered around the world

Fort Campbell Soldiers lost at Gander remembered around the world

Fort Campbell KY - 101st Airborne DivisionFort Campbell, KY – Many gathered Friday to remember the 248 Soldiers – noncommissioned officers and officers from units across this division, the majority from 3rd Battalion of the 502nd Infantry Regiment – who lost their lives December 12th, 1985, in a plane crash at Gander, Newfoundland. The troops were returning home from a six-month peacekeeping mission in Sinai, Egypt, as part of the Multinational Force and Observers.

This year marks the 29th anniversary of that heartbreaking winter day. There were several memorial ceremonies Friday, not only at Fort Campbell, but across the world.

Col. Peter N. Benchoff and Command Sgt. Maj. John Brady pay tribute, to the 248 Soldiers who lost their lives in a plane crash in Gander, Newfoundland at the 29th Gander Memorial Ceremony. Twenty nine years  ago  this  morning,  Arrow  Airlines  flight  1285  took  off  from  Gander  Newfoundland  in  Canada  with  eight  crew  members  and  248  Soldiers,  noncommissioned officers,  and  officers  from  units  across  this  division,  the  majority  from  3rd  Battalion  of  the  502nd  Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division. The flight crashed  immediately following takeoff and  there  were  no  survivors. The soldiers were returning home from a peace keeping mission in Sinai, Egypt.  Strike Soldiers and Screaming Eagle families gather yearly in remembrance. (Sgt. 1st Class Eric Abendroth/U.S. Army)
Col. Peter N. Benchoff and Command Sgt. Maj. John Brady pay tribute, to the 248 Soldiers who lost their lives in a plane crash in Gander, Newfoundland at the 29th Gander Memorial Ceremony. Twenty nine years ago this morning, Arrow Airlines flight 1285 took off from Gander Newfoundland in Canada with eight crew members and 248 Soldiers, noncommissioned officers, and officers from units across this division, the majority from 3rd Battalion of the 502nd Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division. The flight crashed immediately following takeoff and there were no survivors. The soldiers were returning home from a peace keeping mission in Sinai, Egypt. Strike Soldiers and Screaming Eagle families gather yearly in remembrance. (Sgt. 1st Class Eric Abendroth/U.S. Army)

“There is no more important task that we as Soldiers and citizens can perform, than to remember our fallen who gave their lives in defense of their country. We lost brothers of our Strike brigade family, but today’s ceremony is witness, they and their sacrifice are not forgotten,” said Col. Peter N. Benchoff, commander, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), at the Fort Campbell Gander Memorial Ceremony, where 248 Strike Soldiers stood in formation as tribute to each of the fallen Soldiers.

Strike Soldiers and Screaming Eagle families gathered in remembrance of the 248 Soldiers who lost their lives at Gander during Fort Campbell’s memorial ceremony at 10:30 a.m. Friday, Dec. 12. (Sgt. 1st Class Eric Abendroth/U.S. Army)
Strike Soldiers and Screaming Eagle families gathered in remembrance of the 248 Soldiers who lost their lives at Gander during Fort Campbell’s memorial ceremony at 10:30 a.m. Friday, Dec. 12. (Sgt. 1st Class Eric Abendroth/U.S. Army)

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Mickael Cruz remembered his late father, Staff Sgt. Francisco Cruz Salgado. Cruz was 8 years old when his father died 29 years ago on Arrow Flight 1285 at Gander. Today he is honoring his father with his military service.

“I wanted to serve to finish off what he didn’t finish,” Cruz said. “He didn’t get to finish his career in 20 years. I want to finish my service through him.”

“When I got here [Fort Campbell],” said Cruz, “the first thing I wanted to do was go to Air Assault School because he [Cruz’s father] was Air Assault.”

Cruz graduated December 11th, 2006. He took the wings they gave him at school and pinned them onto his father’s tree, where they still are today.

Screaming Eagle families gathered in remembrance of the 248 Soldiers who lost their lives at Gander during Fort Campbell’s memorial ceremony at 10:30 a.m. Friday, December 12th 2014 (Sgt. 1st Class Eric Abendroth/U.S. Army)
Screaming Eagle families gathered in remembrance of the 248 Soldiers who lost their lives at Gander during Fort Campbell’s memorial ceremony at 10:30 a.m. Friday, December 12th 2014 (Sgt. 1st Class Eric Abendroth/U.S. Army)

A somber memorial ceremony was also held in Sinai, Egypt.

“This tragic loss of 248 American warriors and its eight crew members reminds us all that no mission is truly accomplished until the last Soldier has successfully reintegrated back at home station,” said 2nd Lt. Jonathan Bobb, assigned to Task Force Sinai, and the Multinational Force and Observers. “Perhaps no other event in its peacetime history has so wrenched the soul and torn at the heart of the U.S. Army as the Gander tragedy, which ranked as the worst military air disaster in the nation’s history.”

Also at the ceremony in Egypt, Col. Clark Lindner, Task Force Sinai commander and chief of staff for the Multinational Force and Observers, alongside his senior enlisted adviser, Command Sgt. Maj. Alexis Shelton, laid a wreath at the base of a marble memorial bearing the names of all who perished in the crash.

After placing the wreath at the base of the memorial, Lindner addressed the audience which had gathered.

“While in the years since, the loss of life has become all too commonplace, with more than 6,843 Soldiers giving their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan, it is important to remember that every life is precious, a gift,” said Lindner to a parade field full of service members from 14 different nations. “We cannot know why their lives were cut short, but we can honor their memory by the way in which we live our own lives.”

Wreaths were also laid in remembrance of the fallen at Fort Campbell, Hopkinsville, Kentucky, Gander, Newfoundland and Arlington National Cemetery.

Former Spc. David W. Mooty, of Headquarters Headquarter Company, 3rd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment, was still in Sinai 29 years ago waiting to redeploy when he heard about the crash.

“There was a mandatory battalion formation called,” Mooty recalled. “Our battalion XO asked us to gather around him, quite unusual for a battalion formation but certainly appropriate for what he was about to say. We were all in shock.”

Twenty-nine years later, it appears that the tragedy has created a band of brothers who continue to gather together in remembrance of what many commonly refer to now as Gander.

“We pick up right where we left off,” said Mooty. “Great people and we are all proud of the time we have spent serving our country and at Fort Campbell.”

Every year since the tragedy, the men and women of Fort Campbell, Sinai, Egypt, and Gander, Newfoundland, ensure the lives of these fallen Soldiers are never forgotten during ceremonies held in honor of the lives lost. December 12th, 2015, will be the 30th anniversary of the Gander crash.

The Original News Stories

248 Fort Campbell Soldiers killed

Written by Sp4 James Hull
Public Affairs specialist

Mourners looks on as members of the 101st Airborne Division carry a casket containing the remains of members of the 3rd Bn., 502nd Inf., 101st Airborne Div., into a hangar for a memorial service. On December 12, 1985, 248 soldiers of the 3rd Battalion were killed in a plane crash at the Gander Airport, Newfoundland, Canada. They were returning to the United States after participating in peacekeeping duty with the Multi-national Force and Observers in the Sinai Desert.
Mourners looks on as members of the 101st Airborne Division carry a casket containing the remains of members of the 3rd Bn., 502nd Inf., 101st Airborne Div., into a hangar for a memorial service. On December 12, 1985, 248 soldiers of the 3rd Battalion were killed in a plane crash at the Gander Airport, Newfoundland, Canada. They were returning to the United States after participating in peacekeeping duty with the Multi-national Force and Observers in the Sinai Desert.

Some 248 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) and Fort Campbell Soldiers were killed in an early morning plane crash at Gander (Newfoundland) International Airport today, returning from six months of peacekeeping duty on the Sinai Peninsula in the Middle East.

The Soldiers, representing many division and post military units, died when the chartered Arrow Air DC-8 plane they were aboard crashed on takeoff at about 6:45am, Newfoundland time, this morning.

The pilot and crew of eight also died in the crash, bringing the total number of dead to about 256.

Canadian Transport Minister Don Mazankowski said the airplane got no higher than 1,000 feet into the air before crashing.

The crash is the worst ever in Canada and is reported to be the worst air disaster in U.S. military history.

“This is the deepest and most heart-felt tragedy of my time in the Army,” division and post commander Maj. Gen. Burton D. Patrick told about 70 news reporters at a 12:30pm news conference today. “The first priority of this division now is the Families.”

The general said Family members who had gathered at a post gymnasium to greet the home-bound Soldiers had been informed of the tragedy.

Patrick said a Family support center had been set up within hours of the crash and that other Fort Campbell Families were assisting in comforting survivors.

“This division and the entire United States Army is in mourning today. We have suffered a tragic loss. Cohesion and comradeship are like still waters…they run deep.”

“This tragedy will have an everlasting impact, but the fiber of this division is strong,” Patrick said, obviously moved by the tragedy.

“We will take care of the Families, reconstitute our forces and continue with the mission. They wouldn’t want it any other way.”

Patrick said that since about 45 percent of the Soldiers stationed at Fort Campbell were married, he estimated approximately half the Soldiers in the crash could have been married.

As Patrick spoke, a “response team”, headed by Maj. Gen John S. Crosby, was headed to the scene of the crash to “provide all possible assistance.”

Once the Soldiers’ bodies are claimed by the Army, they will be transported to Dover AFB, Delaware, where they will be identified.

Patrick said Families will be notified from Dover and that names of the killed Soldiers will be released to the public as the Families are notified.

The commander said a memorial service will be held “as early as practical next week.”

This was the third of four contingents returning from the Sinai mission. About 970 Soldiers were in the task force. The rotational force had been part of the Multinational Peacekeeping Force and Observers since July.

"Silent Witness" the Arrow Air Flight 1285 memorial at Gander Lake
“Silent Witness” the Arrow Air Flight 1285 memorial at Gander Lake

The Multinational Peacekeeping Force and Observers on Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula has troops from the United States, Fiji, Colombia, Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Italy, Uruguay, France and England. They are under command of military officers from Norway.

The MFO was created as a peacekeeping force to police the disengagement of Israeli and Egyptian troops under the two nations’ 1979 peace treaty, the only such treaty between Israel and an Arab country.

The ill-fated DC-8 had flown from Cairo, Egypt to Cologne, West Germany, where it refueled. Gander was the second refueling stop and last leg of the journey to Fort Campbell.

Gander International Airport is located approximately 150 miles northwest of St. John’s, the capital of Newfoundland on Canada’s Atlantic seaboard. It is often used by planes traveling between North America and Europe.

The Soldiers returning from the Sinai were being replaced by the 3rd Battalion, 60th Infantry, 9th Infantry Division from Fort Lewis, Wash., in a rotation which began earlier this month.

Although the exact cause of the crash has not been determined, officials have ruled out sabotage. The accident remains under investigation.

3-502nd bears terrible cost

Written by Sp4 James Hull
Public affairs specialist

Considering there are scores of agency representatives, technicians and volunteers to comfort and aid the 248 Families affected by last week’s tragic Arrow Air DC-8 crash, there is one group, almost as keenly affected, undergoing the unenviable task of “continuing with the mission.”

They are the Soldiers of the 3rd Battalion, 502nd Infantry Regiment. The Soldiers whose comrades perished in the crash. The Soldiers who worked side by side with those who died.

Military bearing means more now to the Soldiers of the 3rd Bn., 502nd Inf. Rgt., than perhaps it does to any other military unit.

“We’re all leaning on each other,” said Chaplain (Capt.) Richard Murdoch.

Murdoch bears an extra grief. Until he was replaced by (Capt.) Troy Carter earlier this year, he was the chaplain for this grieving battalion. The men who died in the DC-8 crash were his men. And sadly enough, Carter was also killed in the crash.

But Murdoch remains strong. “The thing is,” he said, “we look to the chaplain as God’s agent for blessing and comfort.”

In an effort to prevent the Soldiers from focusing on their own grief, Murdoch helped put together a system whereby each of the Families in the Fort Campbell area has been assigned a Soldier from the battalion.

The Soldiers augment the work of the official assistance officers assigned to each Family.

“It’s a safety net,” Murdoch explained, “so that we know someone from this command is contacting our Families every day. Our Soldiers act as a point of contact to the assistance officers.”

Acting battalion commander, Maj. Frank Hudoba, battalion executive officer, has also kept the Soldiers busy by scheduling daily briefings and updates with battalion leaders.

“The biggest thing is to keep busy,” Hudoba said. “To do for the people that suffered a greater loss than we did.”

Hudoba said the unit has the material to print a yearbook containing a special section on the lost Soldiers, and he is soliciting suggestions from his men on the establishment of a “living memorial” for the 248 dead.

When the Families have left this area, they will have cherished photographs, letters and other articles of remembrance to hold on to of their loved ones.

The Soldiers of the 3rd Bn. 502nd Inf. Rgt. will have each other.

Maj. Gen. John Herrling Answers Questions

Do you remember December 12th, 1985? What you were doing? Where you were? And how you felt when you got the news of the crash?

Retired Maj. Gen. John Herrling, 2nd Brigade commander at the time of the Gander Crash
Retired Maj. Gen. John Herrling, 2nd Brigade commander at the time of the Gander Crash

“I remember it like it was yesterday. At the time I was in the kitchen getting ready to go off to the brigade headquarters for PT. It was about 6 in the morning and I got a call from the brigade S3 and he said he had heard the news on TV and they were reporting a crash of a military aircraft in Gander, Newfoundland and he said ‘that’s a strange coincidence, our guys are coming back from the Sinai.’ I walked across my driveway to my next door neighbor who was the chief of staff of the 101st. Col. Bruce Moore and I relayed the conversation with Bruce and he got a hold of the 101st operations center. So I went off to the brigade headquarters and he went to the division headquarters and he called me maybe 15-20 minutes later and he said, ‘I got some bad news for you, that was your plane that went down and right now they’re reporting no survivors,’ and that’s how I found out about it.”

“I had a real feeling of despair but my real concern was for the Families and the friends that would be gathering in a couple of hours to welcome that group back to Fort Campbell. That was the real focus of my attention.”

“I just knew that all of us in the 101st were going to have to do everything that we could for the families and friends of those that had been lost in that plane crash. So we started putting everything together and figuring out how we were going to do that. My big concern was we were having a welcome back ceremony in the 2nd brigade gym, I believe it was scheduled for 9:30 a.m., and I had to figure out what I was going to say to those people when I walked into that gymnasium.”

The rumors were out and the news was reporting the crash so there were families and friends that had already assumed it was the flight that they were waiting on that wouldn’t make it home.

“There were rumors and people had already heard the television reports and there was a lot of concerned folks but I still had to get up and make a formal announcement.”

“In the time I had between confirming that was our group of folks and walking into that gym I had some time to write myself some notes.”

How does a commander deal with such a tremendous loss?

“It was the most difficult period in my Army career I think and that particular morning was probably the most terrible time I had in the 35 years I spent in the military. You just have to sit there and think for a minute on what you can do for the families and all the friends that had gathered there to welcome them home. That’s your first and primary concern, what can we do to help the families.”

In just three hours, he coordinated with the division personnel officer, division adjutant general and the hospital to put together a group of people that could be most beneficial to the families.

“I knew when I walked into that gymnasium and made the formal announcement we were going to have some very troubled people. So we needed medical staff in there to help deal with all that.”

How did the crash affect the rest of your military career?

“Once you go through a tragedy like that you realize that this can happen at other places and other times. I think for the rest of my time on active duty, whenever we were involved in a large exercise and we were moving people around and we were training somewhere, safety was foremost in my mind. We took every course that we could to ensure that what you were doing was as safe as it could possibly be and that you weren’t jeopardizing anybody’s life or limb by neglecting to think of something that needed to be done.”

Do you still relive the day of the crash?

“For the first year I thought of the crash daily and then other years as they passed I would go back less frequently.”
If the victims could hear you now, what would you say to them?

“I would just tell them that they did a terrific job the six months they were in the Sinai. You couldn’t have asked anything more from a group of Soldiers and the mission they had over they. They did it perfectly. Everyone realized that the 3rd battalion and the task force over there had just done one super job and the commander of the multinational force and observers, who commanded that battalion when it was in the Sinai, saw it fit to come to the states for the memorial service, he felt that strongly about it.”

Was that the final rotation of 101st troops in the Sinai? If so, did the mission end or did it get turned over to another peace-keeping force?

He wasn’t sure.

Did any 502nd Soldiers assist with the funeral detail in Dover?

“Major General Burton Patrick, the 101st Airborne Division commander at the time, insisted that the remains of the Soldiers, that once they were identified at Dover Air Force Base be escorted by detail from the 101st and he made that happen. So every Soldier, once they left Dover, they had an escort to take them back to their home town or back to Arlington National Cemetery or wherever the Family wanted them to go.”

Do you have a message you want to get out to the victim’s families?

“It’s been 26 years but I haven’t forgotten as I’m sure they surely have not forgotten. Their sons and daughters did a wonderful job and they really need to be proud of their service. It really is a tragedy and it just points out the fact that they were on a peace keeping mission and keeping the peace is sometimes a very difficult thing to do. Sometimes there’s a price to keeping the peace and in the case of those Soldiers they paid a very dear price and so did their Family and friends for their service in the Sinai.”

In reference to a ceremony dedicating the grove of Canadian Sugar Maple trees at Fort Campbell in September 1987 — Did you meet Janice Johnston, the 16-year-old Canadian girl who sparked the effort to plant the trees? No, not that he can remember. Were you there for the dedication? “I was there and came back because I was stationed in Europe at the time. I was able to come back for that.” What are your thoughts about the memorial trees? “It’s a wonderful way to honor those that died at Gander. It’s a growing thing. It’s a living thing. Those trees will be there for years and years and it will be a constant reminder to not only Family and friends but a constant reminder for Soldiers serving at Fort Campbell the sacrifice that some of the predecessors made back 25 years ago.”

Have you ever visited any of the other memorials and if so what have you thought of them?

“I was at the inauguration of the memorial in Hopkinsville, when it was dedicated and it was very well done.”
“It wasn’t only tough on me but it was tough on my wife and some of the other division wives because they had to deal with a lot of the wives whose husbands had died and so it was very traumatic for them too, but we got a lot of help from the division, across the Army and the surrounding communities.”

“It was just a tragedy that was hard to deal with and I think Department of the Army did a great job. They sent a bunch of psychiatrist and psychologist in to talk to people, particularly those in the battalion that had come in on the first or third flight because inevitably somebody was going to look in the mirror and think ‘why didn’t this happen to me, why did I have a safe flight and those guys didn’t.’ There were some psychological problems that had to be dealt with and the Army did a great job in sending in teams of folks who could sit down and talk to them individually or in groups and try to resolve some of their problems.”

Casualties

The following list of Soldiers killed in the plane crash at Gander, Newfoundland, Canada, appeared in the Kentucky New Era, Hopkinsville, KY, December 16th, 1985, as supplied by the Pentagon on December 15th, 1985.

Pfc. Mark E. Abrams 1st Lt. Joey McCarty
Pfc. Herbert D. Alexander Spc. Christine M. McCleery
Staff Sgt. Steven A. Andreoff 1SG Robert F. McCook
Spc. Danell Andrews 2nd Lt. J. Scott McCormick
Spc. Ivan R. Aponte Spc. Calvin McWhite
Pvt.2 Stuart N. Arrowood Staff Sgt. Jerry W. Malone
Spc. Roger D. Arvin Capt. Edward J. Manion
1st Lt. Luis A. Avillan Pvt.2 Thomas L. Martin
Spc. Bobby L. Banks Pvt.2 Donald L. Mathis
Spc. Daniel M. Barber Sgt. Ronald C. Mayhew
Pfc. Eric J. Bauman CW2 Dirk A. Miller
Pvt.2 Edward M. Beer Sgt. Larry G. Miller
Spc. Wyatt D. Benson Staff Sgt. Richard D. Miller
Pfc. Sammy D. Bittle Spc. Timothy E. Miller
CSM Hasland O. Black Sgt. John M. Millett
Pfc. Paul J. Bostwick Sgt. James A. Mollett
Sgt. John P. Bowen Staff Sgt. Samuel T. Moore Jr.
CW3 Robert Bowen Pfc. Lindale Morgan
Spc. John T. Bradley Jr. Spc. Steven W. Mullins
Spc. Steven J. Bradshaw Sgt. Michael Murray
Pfc. Darrin P. Brady Spc. Michael A. Napier
Sgt. Charles F. Brancato Sgt. 1st Class Joseph A. Nartia
Spc. Tony L. Brasfield Sgt. 1st Class Donald C. Nelson
Pvt.2 William R. Brilya Pvt.2 Kenneth J. Nelson
Spc. George A. Britt Staff Sgt. Steven R. Nelson
Pfc. Johnny L. Brown Sgt. Richard S. Nichols
Pvt.2 Gregory A. Buchanan Pfc. Michael T. Nolan
Spc. James D. Burdette Sgt. Francisco Ocasio Jr.
Pfc. David A. Bury Pfc. Robert L. Olson
Pvt.2 Trevor Campbell Pvt. Gregory A. Owens
Pfc. Gregory T. Carter Spc. Gary W. Padgett
Sgt. Mark E. Carter Pfc. Theodore L. Pafford
Capt. Troy G. Carter Sgt. Jeffrey R. Palmisano
Pvt.1 Dennis Cartwright CW3 Rudy Parris
Pvt. Phillip R. Caudill Sgt. Thomas F. Parsons
Pfc. Garett R. Chaddock Pvt.2 Vickie S. Perry
Spc. Stephen R. Colby Spc. Terry R. Pevey
Pfc. Bobby L. Coleman Pvt.2 Alvin Phillips
Sgt. Miguel A. Cordero Sgt. James D. Phillips Jr.
Pfc. Orlando F. Council Jr. 1st Lt. Barry C. Powell
Pfc. Michael E. Craig Spc. Raimo K. Puntanen Jr.
Pvt.2 Paul M. Crawford Spc. Michael R. Rahr
Spc. Francisco Cruz-Salgado Capt. Terry L. Rains
Pfc. Troy R. Cupples Pfc. David L. Rawls
Pfc. Walter G. Daniels Patrick S. Reasbeck
Spc. Thomas Danielson Pvt. Melvin W. Reed
Sgt. James A. Davis Staff Sgt. Jessey T. Reynolds
Spc. Jimmy D. Davis Pfc. Gregory W. Richardson
Staff Sgt. Thomas E. Davis Pfc. Richard D. Rimiller
Pfc. Herbert R. Deckman Spc. Bobby E. Roberts
Cpl. Joseph L. Diventura Staff Sgt. Wilbur G. Roberts Jr.
Spc. Thomas D. Dixon Sgt. Vergil L. Robertson Jr.
Staff Sgt. James F. Duckworth Sgt. Thomas E. Robinson Jr.
Sgt. Brian L. Dumpert Pfc. Ronald C. Russell
Sgt. Brian E. Easley Spc. Ray A. Ruth
Capt. Michael C. Eastman Spc. Ricky A. Schmoyer
Capt. Kyle L. Edmonds Sgt. Peter E. Schremp
Spc. Christopher Englebert Pfc. Keith M. Schultz
Sgt. James A. Ferguson Spc. Gary L. Scott
Spc. Mark W. Ferguson Pfc. Blanchard T. Searcy
Pvt.2 Kevin F. Fink Staff Sgt. Ronald W. Sears
Spc. David Fitch Pfc. Frederic C. Seitz
Cpl. Thomas J. Foskey Staff Sgt. Timothy D. Sellner
Cpl. Paul K. Fuller Pvt.2 Ernest W. Serna
Sgt. Kevin A. Gantzer Spc. Michael D. Shipley
Spc. Anthony L. Gayton Pfc. James E. Shook
Pfc. Scott W. Gerdes Pfc. Robert D. Shultz
Sgt. Gary L. Givens Spc. Carl N. Simmons
Sgt. 1st Class David L. Godsey Spc. George H. Simmons
Spc. Michael J. Gonzales Sgt. Earl Singleton
Pfc. Roberto Gonzalez Spc. Matthew S. Sloan
Pvt.2 Joseph W. Goree Pvt.2 Clinton D. Smith
Spc. Kelly O. Graham Sgt. 1st Class Rex V. Smith
Spc. Thomas L. Graham Spc. Scott J. Smith
Staff Sgt. Douglas F. Grala Pfc. Thomas E. Smith
Spc. Christopher Gray Pvt. Mark Spearman
Pfc. Richardo Guerra Spc. James M. Spears
Capt. Brian D. Haller Spc. Michael S. Stack
Pfc. William W. Hansen III Pfc. David C. Staten
Pvt.1 Chester D. Hardeman Pfc. Alexander W. Stearn
CW3 Benny J. Harden Spc. Dane Stephens
Pfc. Brian D. Harris 2nd Lt. Kip L. Stevens
2LT Robert B. Hart Sgt. Randy S. Stewart
Pvt.1 Mark S. Hassing CW2 Earl C. Stone
Spc. Reginald Haugsdahl Pfc. Gary L. Straub
Pvt.1 David W. Heidecker Spc. Richard Stringer
Sgt. Paul C. Hemingway Pvt.2 Scott A. Stritch
Pvt.2 Joe W. Highfill Sgt. Randall K. Thomas
Pfc.Thomas T. Hileman Spc. Robert F. Thomas
Spc. Donald E. Hobbs Sgt. Danny C. Thompson
Pfc.Kevin S. Hobbs Spc. Scott B. Thompson
Staff Sgt. Jerry W. Holliman Sgt. Christopher G. Thornton
Spc. Robert S. Hoyer Sgt. Theodore Travis
Spc. Charles W. Hughes Pvt.2 Thomas N. Tucker
Staff Sgt. Frank J. Hughes Staff Sgt. Vincent L. Turner
Pfc. Jeffrey D. Hull Pfc. Steven C. Venneri
Cpl. Herbert G. Ivy Pfc.Wayne Vinson
Pvt.1 Adrian D. Jackson Spc. Gregory Walker
Lt. Col. Marvin A. Jeffcoat Spc. Guy W. Walker
Staff Sgt. Donny K. Jennings Pfc. Brian E. Wallace
Spc. Todd M. Jennings Pfc. Mark E. Wallace
Pvt.1 Jerrin A. Johnson Sgt. 1st Class Abraham Ward
Staff Sgt. Ravon L. Johnson Sgt. 1st Class Thomas E. West
Sgt. Joseph A. Jones Pfc. John C. Wester
Pvt.2 David A. Jordan Spc. Frank C. Wheeler
Spc. Robert S. Kaplin Staff Sgt. Emery S. White III
Sgt. Ibrahim Karadsheh Spc. Michael L. Whiteman
Spc. Jeff S. Kee Staff Sgt. Darnell Wilburn
Sgt. Timothy L. Kidd Pvt.2 Franklin R. Wilkins
Pfc. Jerry J. King Spc. Rodger L. Wilson
Capt. Robert M. King Staff Sgt. James A. Winston
Staff Sgt. Thomas J. Kirby Spc. James H. Williamson
Pfc. Bruce E. Kiser Sgt. Richard N. Willingham
1st Lt. John K. Kosh Spc. Theodore M. Wisson
Staff Sgt. Mark R. Kubic 1st Lt. John B. Witmer
Spc. John M. Kuehn Sgt. Kevin M. Witt
Spc. Randall A. Lane Sgt. Robert N. Wolford III
Maj. Michael R. Lawrence Staff Sgt. Lawrence A. Wood
Sgt. Donald G. Lineberry Sgt. William L. Wooliver
Pfc. William M. Lloyd Spc. Virginia R. Word
1st Lt. Paul D. Long Spc. John R. Wright
Spc. David C. Lundgren Pfc. Robert Wyn
Pfc. Benjamin R. Lynch Pfc. Cary T. Yeargan
Sgt. Paul A. McArdle Spc. Cathleen M. Ziegler

Cockpit Crew

John Griffin, Captain
John Robert Connelly, First Officer
Mike Fowler, Flight Engineer

Cabin Crew

Maia Matasowski, Flight Service Manager
Jean Sarafin, Flight Attendant
Desiree McKay, Flight Attendant
Ruthie Phillips, Flight Attendant
Stacy Cutlar, Flight Attendant

RELATED ARTICLES

Latest Articles