John Lewis Mc Daniel
Major
772ND TAC ALFT SQDN, 463RD TAC ALFT WING, 7TH AF United States Air Force Gibsonville, North Carolina July 08, 1933 to April 26, 1968 JOHN L McDANIEL is on the Wall at Panel 52E, Line 22 |
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John McDaniel is my wife's cousin and we all attended the same high school. ROADSIDE MEETINGS
A little more tired at close of day, Our soldiers at Khe Sanh will never forget your valor; our family and hometown will never forget your sacrifice.
Roy V. Fair, Colonel (Ret.) |
John Lewis McDaniel was my mother's brother. He loved his family and his country. He left behind a wife, 4 sons, a mother, 2 sisters and 4 nieces, who love him and still miss him to this day, 37 years later. We have not yet been able to bring him home, but there is hope that one day he will be found and the government will bring him back to U.S. soil where he belongs. He grew up in Georgia and Gibsonville, NC, and he worked his way through college at the University of North Carolina where he joined the ROTC and later made a career for himself flying planes in the Air Force. He was a brave man who faced his challenges head-on and he was truly, OUR HERO.
From a niece. |
Notes from The Virtual WallOPERATION DELAWARE, which began 19 April 1968, was intended to disrupt enemy activities in the western part of the A Shau Valley. On 25 April, US cavalry units air assaulted into the abandoned airstrip at A Loui. On the 26th, in weather with ceilings as low as 300 to 500 feet, C-130s from Cam Ranh Bay, Bien Hoa, and Tan Son Nhut were tasked with air-dropping supplies to the cavalrymen. The first 20 C-130s received antiaircraft fire, and seven of them were hit. The 21st C-130 (tail number 60-0298) was hit heavily by .51 caliber and 37mm AAA fire and its cargo was set afire. The pilot elected to attempt an emergency landing on the airstrip but hit trees on final, crashed, and exploded. When the burning wreckage cooled sufficiently, the bodies of five of the eight men were recovered - but there was no trace of the pilot, navigator, or loadmaster. All eight men were classified killed in action:
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