Douglas Vincent Dailey
Senior Master Sergeant
606TH SPECIAL OPS SQDN, 56TH SPECIAL OPS WING, 7TH AF United States Air Force Waterford, Michigan June 30, 1936 to January 07, 1974 (Incident Date December 13, 1968) DOUGLAS V DAILEY is on the Wall at Panel W36, Line 14 |
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SMSGT Douglas Vincent Dailey, USAF 606th Special Operations Squadron Nakhon Phanom, Thailand MIA 13 December 1968
I have worn an MIA bracelet that bears his name for 13 years. I dedicate this page to the memory of SMSGT Douglas Vincent Dailey.
Heidi J. Gipprich |
I am an active duty Air Force member assigned to the 41st Combat Rescue Squadron (Jolly Greens) at Moody AFB, Georgia. I received a POW/MIA bracelet through the VFW after requesting to be the sponsor of anyone from Michigan (I grew up in Saginaw). I have been wearing SMSgt Dailey's silver bracelet for two years. This past week-end my wife and I rode to northern Georgia where The Wall was on display. There we were finally able to make a connection with Doug. We visited the local VFW and were told about this site.
Matt Holloway MSgt |
I'm his grandson and I wish I could of met him.
Douglas Dailey
06 Oct 2006 I wish I could have met him. I am glad our last names are the same ... from what my dad has told me and my mom he sounds like a wonderful man.
From his grandson, |
I don't know who Douglas V Dailey is but I have worn the silver bracelet for 13 years. I still pray either if he is dead or alive, that he is up in heaven! |
Notes from The Virtual WallOn 13 December 1968 a C-123K PROVIDER of the 606th Special Operations Squadron launched from Nakhon Phanom RTAFB, Thailand, on a night FAC mission over the Ho Chi Minh Trail area. The low-and-slow C-123K's mission was to obtain visual or infrared sightings of traffic along the Trail and to act as a controller for bombers - in this case, B-57 CANBERRA bombers from the 8th Tactical Bomber Squadron, Phan Rang AB, SVN.Weather conditions along the Trail were good - clear with a half moon, ground fog, no wind and no cloud ceiling. At 0300 hours, as a B-57 was executing an attack against ground targets, the B-57 collided with the upper surface of the circling C-123K. Both aircraft - and nine aircrewmen - went down. Only one - 1st Lt Thomas M. Turner from the C-123 - was rescued. The others simply disappeared into the Laotian jungles about 30 miles southwest of the Ban Kari Pass. A ground search was impossible due to total enemy control of the area, but airborne search-and-rescue operations continued until 15 December, when the formal SAR effort was terminated. At that point, the crewmen and their status were as follow:
None of the eight men have been repatriated.
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