Showing posts with label Northeast POW/MIA Network. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northeast POW/MIA Network. Show all posts

Friday, May 28, 2021

33rd Annual Northeast POW/MIA Network Vigil - June 17, 2021...Hesky Park, Meredith .. Please pass the word.

 

We are excited to have two great speakers for the Vigil this year. Both are family members and have a story to share of living with a family member listed as a MIA. We invite you to come and hear their stories and share them with others. 

Deborah Crosby, the daughter of an American pilot shot down over Vietnam never gave up in her quest to find her father's remains. And now, it is a mission accomplished.  

Deborah Crosby,  was only six when she was sent home from the first grade to learn her father was presumed dead, though his body had not been found during Operation Rolling Thunder.
Lt Cmdr Frederick P Crosby had been deployed on the Bon Homme Richard, an Essex-class aircraft carrier stationed off the Vietnam coast.

Deborah's mother could never talk about that day, but she gave Crosby and her brothers a binder with articles about her father's plane zooming low through the clouds on a bomb damage assessment mission before it was gunned down by North Vietnamese ground forces in 1965. The 31-year-old pilot was armed only with cameras, his daughter said.
'They were coming in low and fast on an enemy who is already spun up because he's already been attacked,' said Karl Zingheim, historian at the USS Midway Museum in San Diego.

'They were bearing the full brunt of the attack so they could bring the intelligence to bring back to the (aircraft) carrier.'
Crosby and her grandmother made a pact to someday bring home her father's remains and bury him in his hometown of San Diego.

In 2016, military investigators found his remains in a fish pond in north Vietnam. Deborah Crosby fulfilled her promise to her late grandmother.


 he was finally given a military burial in San Diego, after a half-century effort to find him by his daughter from Long Island. He's home now





Our second speaker is Col. Patricia Blassie (RET) on May 11, 1972 Lt. Michael Blassie, a 1970 graduate of the Air Force Academy, learned to fly A-37s at Columbus Air Force Base in Mississippi. When he took off from the American base in Bien Hoa that May morning, Blassie, who had arrived in South Vietnam less than four months earlier to join the 8th Special Operations Squadron, had already flown 130 combat missions.

Shortly after starting his initial strike on an artillery position outside An Loc near the Cambodian border, a burst of tracer rounds was seen coming toward Blassie’s plane. His flight commander, Maj. James Connally, described what happened next in a letter to Blassie’s parents: “Mike’s aircraft was hit and began streaming fuel. He must have been killed instantly, because he did not transmit a distress call of any kind. The aircraft flew a short distance on its own and then slowly rolled over, exploding on impact in enemy-held territory.”

Other planes were dispatched to provide cover while an Army helicopter rescue team went in to inspect the wreckage. The team encountered such “a murderous hail of fire” it was forced to leave, wrote Connally.

The day following Blassie’s death, his parents in St. Louis were visited by an Air Force chaplain who informed them that their son had been killed in action, but his body could not be recovered.

That would be the same official explanation the Blassie family would hear for the next 26 years.

In 1994, Patricia Blassie was a captain in the Air Force and living in Marietta, Ga., when she received a phone call from Ted Sampley. The former Army Green Beret told her he had just written an article for the Vietnam veterans’ newsletter he published proving that her brother was buried in the Tomb of the Unknowns.








Doc Jones

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

National POW MIA Recognition Day events in Camden, Maine


National POW MIA Recognition Day events in Camden, Maine, will be held on the Camden Village Green Sept. 20 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Camden's local Post 30 will hold a silent ceremony, followed by a reading of the names of members of U. S. Armed Services members from Maine, from all wars, who are still unaccounted for. Click here for more information.

War Memorial Post 30 in Camden, Maine is pleased to host this event and we hope the public will come out and join us for this event. 

September 20th is National POW/MIA recognition day. We will have a table set up with information on this day and those who remain missing and unaccounted for from Maine. 

If anyone who is a relative of someone who remains unaccounted for we would appreciate meeting you and having you join us. If it rains we will hold the event at the Legion Hall at 91 Pearl Street in Camden


Annual POW/MIA Recognition Day hosted by the Dept. of NH Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)

Annual POW/MIA Recognition Day hosted by the Dept. of NH Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW)

Event start: Sat, 09/21/2019 - 10:00am
Event end: Sat, 09/21/2019 - 11:00am
Location: New Hampshire State Veterans Cemetery

The annual ceremony, hosted by Dept of NH Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), will be held in the Memorial Walkway (weather permitting). For more information, please contact the Cemetery office during normal business hours (M-F, 8AM-4PM) at 603-796-2026.

POW/MIA Recognition Day
POW/MIA Recognition Day honors the commitments and the sacrifices made by our nation's prisoners of war and those who are still missing in action. By custom, it is on the third Friday in September. National POW/MIA Recognition Day is one of the six days specified by law on which the black POW/MIA flag shall be flown over federal facilities and cemeteries, post offices and military installations. Discover more about POW/MIA Recognition Day's history.


Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Northeast POW/MIA Network Freedom Ride

Faith and Trust ..... 
We must never Forget

Save The Date!


Northeast POW/MIA Network Freedom Ride ~ June 13, 2019

26th Anniversary of the Freedom Ride 
31st Anniversary of the Vigil 

Hesky Park "The Rock" Meredith, NH 

”Ride to the Rock”


POW/MIA Vigil..Freedom Ride..'Together Always 

Freedom Ride line up at Lowe's Gilford by 5:45 pm, bikes leaving
 for Meredith at 6:00 pm to arrive for 7 pm.

For speaker list and additional information click on the link below

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Update from Paul Martin on the Bible and Missing Man Table

To All Concerned,
The director of the VA facility in NH has and is helping to rectify this problem. They at the VA were blindsided by this also. In no way does this reflect on the director or his staff.
As a member of the committee that worked on the installation of this table, it sits there today because of,  the Director and his staff. The North East POW/MIA Network has been informed as to the handling of the issue and is fully aware of the pending outcome. This is an outrage and the staff at the VA facility is in no way responsible for it. What we need to do as Veteraans organizations is band together to stop this assault on our Freedoms that these groups seem to think they can demand removal of items from places of Honor to our comrades.
I have full confidence that the outcome of this issue will be satisfactory to all Veterans and that we stand ready for the next assault on our Monuments
Sincerely,

Paul Martin
North East POW/MIA Network

Saturday, February 2, 2019

Manchester Missing Man Table Update

Good morning,

I wanted to provide some more information and follow up.   Mr. Montoya has been very active and has developed a temporary solution that allows us to put the bible in a locked case adjacent to the table along with an updated script.  The placement in a locked case is to ensure the safekeeping of the bible.  The script defining the meaning of the items on the table will be displayed above the table and in the case with the bible.   The updates to the script help to further identify why the bible is really an artifact and not a religious symbol. The hopeful permanent solution will allow for a locked case secured to the table which will be used to display the bible. 

The updated language which further personalizes the script and shows the intent of the Veteran dedication as well as the symbolism of the bible in place is as follows: 


MANCHESTER VA MEDICAL CENTER MISSING MAN TABLE

The table is round – to show our everlasting concern.

The cloth is white – symbolizing the purity of their motives when answering the call to serve.

The single red rose reminds us of the lives of these Americans….and their loved ones and friends who keep the faith, while seeking answers.

The yellow ribbon symbolizes our continuing uncertainty, the hope for their return, and our determination to account for them.

A slice of lemon reminds us of their bitter fate, captured and missing in a foreign land.

A shaker of salt symbolizes the tears of our missing and their families - who long for answers after decades of uncertainty.

The lighted candle reflects our hope for their return – alive or dead.                                                                                                                                                                                 
The Bible, donated by Former U.S. Army Air Corps Tech. Sgt. Herman "Herk" Streitburger of Bedford, New Hampshire, was one of the few personal items he had while he was held in captivity in a German Prisoner of War Camp. It represents the strength gained through faith, to sustain us and those lost from our country.  For former Tech. Sgt. Streitburger, a symbol to remind all he never forgot those who served, that he served with and who never came home. (Adjacent to the table in locked display case for safekeeping.)
The glass is inverted – symbolizing their inability to share a toast.

The chairs are empty – they are missing……………..

This display was donated by the Northeast POW/MIA Network and Rolling Thunder Chapter 1, by Veterans for Veterans, to demonstrate their everlasting concern.  Manchester VA Medical Center is honored to ask all who enter to take notice, pause to reflect and offer gratitude for the service, sacrifice and valor of our Prisoners of War and those that remain Missing in Action. 


Faith, Trust, Truth, Responsibility & Accountability ..... We must never Forget

I am available for any and all questions related to this. 


With respect,



Kristin Pressly
Public Affairs Office
Manchester VA Medical Center
718 Smyth Road
Manchester, NH 03104
(603) 624-4366 x 6779
(603) 722-9527
Suicide Prevention is Everyone’s Business. #BeThere.

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Bible Remove from Missing Man Table at Manchester VA



 A few months back a few Veterans, yes, Vietnam Veterans with the assistance of Blue Star Family Members, Northeast POW/MIA Network and VA Representatives worked together on an effort to place a ‘“POW/MIA Missing Man Table”  in the lobby at the Manchester VA.

 It was a Great Ceremony with Director Al Montoya as guest speaker, many Veteran Organization Leaders, several WWII POWs and Senator Maggie Hassan whom I had the honor of sitting with. That Day Rolling Thunder NH1 raised a new POW/MIA Flag.

There is a Bible that is placed on every Missing Man Table. The one placed that day belonged to a 95 year old WWII POW who was one of the 5 that was able to make it with us that day. Beautiful Ceremony, to saw the Least.

Now, because of ‘few’ complaints the Bible has been removed from that table, "until the legal department can check out responsibility". They are not willing to just leaving the Bible until the facts are checked out!

That Missing Man table represents ALL Veterans, ALL Religions. The fact that the Bible is on the table is just part of the setting and SHOULD NOT and WILL NOT Be Removed.

This is the State of  "Live Free Or Die"! Veterans in This State I don’t believe care what Federal Regs might say! If 99% say it’s fine and 1 % don’t like it...Sorry! Time for Veterans to stand as one!! Here and at VA it stops !! 

The Bible of 95 year Old Veteran, WW2 Veteran STAYS! You don’t like it, State your name and say so.

Bob Jones
President Northeast POW/ MIA Network
Meredith, NH
677-7045
corpmanrcj@comcast.net
www.northeastpowmianetwork.org

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

POW Flag replaced with a transgender flag by Bob Jones, President Northeast POW/MIA Network

The POW flag was removed and in its place a transgender flag stands outside of Representative Jennifer Wexton's office in Washington on January 4, 2019.

The question is where is the POW flag?



Courtesy Photo/Office of Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton

A picture speaks a thousand words....this photo is from the Congresswoman’s and clearly shows that the POW flag is no longer there....please call and ask that it be returned to its rightful place.
Congresswoman Jennifer Wexton (D-Va.-10th) is displaying a transgender pride flag outside her Washington office.
The pink-, blue- and white-striped flag is displayed at the door to her office, along with the U.S. and Virginia flags.
In a statement, Wexton says she’s displaying the flag because she has family members and friends who are transgender. Chief of Staff Abigail Carter says Wexton is an aunt to a transgender person.
Wexton says she wants the transgender community to know they’re welcome. Since it went on display, Wexton says she’s received messages of support and appreciation from across the country.
Wexton is a former prosecutor who defeated Republican Rep. Barbara Comstock in November.
For those willing to contact our Congressional leaders on the issue of Rep. Jennifer Wexton and her removal of the POW Flag and replacing it with the transgender flag (https://www.cbsnews.com/…/congresswoman-displays-transgend…/) How to contact your Representatives: 

Members of the U.S. Congress
  • U.S. Senators—Get contact information for your Senators in the U.S. Senate.
  • U.S. Representatives—Find the website and contact information for your Representative in the U.S. House of Representatives.



Bob "Doc" Jones
Northeast POW/MIA Network 
Meredith, NH
677-7045
www.northeastpowmianetwork.org




Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Open Letter to Our Veterans

Since we became an independent country many years have come and gone, however, there is one constant that remains from the 1700’s through today. Our country has had many brave men and women volunteer to defend our country.
There was a movie produced about World War II, whose name I cannot recall, but at the end there is a line which rings true (even though the words are not an exact quote), “Where do we get these brave men and women to always step forward when the need arises?” These men and women come from all over our country and too many times are taken for granted. Men and women, who during times of war and peace, are on-call 24 hours a day 7 days a week and spend countless holidays, birthdays and special events away from their family and friends.
The pay is not great, but they continue to volunteer and many make it a career. They are mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, cousins and friends. We may not always agree in the wars and battles that we fight, but this should not deter us from the support we give to these men and women in uniform. It is through the sacrifice that they and the numerous individuals before them have made, which provides us with the freedoms we have to disagree and speak our objections.
While words cannot pay what we owe you and your families, we ‘thank you’ for your sacrifice. To the families who have lost loved ones, we offer our most heartfelt condolences. Many of us have never endured the pain you must feel, but our hearts hurt for your loss and wish we could help ease your pain. Let us never forget the people who did not make it home.
Remember those still serving in our prayers and never take for granted the sacrifices they make. In closing, one more time I would like to say…… THANK YOU!!!
Blue Star Mothers of New Hampshire


Thursday, June 21, 2018

Passing of Billy Hendon.

Sadly last night I learned that Billy Hendon passed. This was a great and amazing man who fought on behalf of the POW/MIA. Congress B. Hendon spent time with us here in NH during a Network Vigil and Freedom Ride..I remember when the President Don and I were taking him back to the Airport in Manchester and talking about everything we could think of, one question asked was, “ with all the info on both sides, whom are we to believe”? He stated, “ Nobody, study the evidence and find Out yourself “! Bob Sharing this from John Molloy.... He spent nearly 4 decades working intensively to bring American POWs home from Vietnam. He was the co author with Elizabeth Stewart of New York Times Best Seller: An Enormous Crime The Definitive Account of American POWs Abandoned in Southeast Asia. Billy also produced the following u tube video and his dedicated efforts caused him severe financial distress. Sacred Ground for America in Hanoi. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luz1Hy2NFUQ We owe it to Billy to make every effort to get the sealed/classified records of the returned POWs opened so that we can obtain information on those who were abandoned and on the collaborators, like John McCain, who basks in the reputation of a hero/patriot when he is slime. Please remember Billy in your prayers. May Our Lord welcome Billy to his eternal rest where he shall be able to meet those whom he tried his utmost to rescue. John Molloy, OSJ Chairman National Vietnam & Gulf War Veterans Coalition

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Trump must press for remains, news about American POWs from Korean War at summit, families say


From: Kathleen Shemeley <pow.mia.ctfmn@gmail.com>
Date: June 4, 2018 at 5:46:17 PM EDT
Dear Bob, 
Would probably be useful for families, activists and vets to add comments to this new Fox piece on POWs (some comments there now suggest this should NOT be a priority)
Here's the latest from Mark Sauter concerning the upcoming summit.

Kathy


Monday, April 30, 2018

Jerry Greenwood from the VetCenter to attend NH Freedom Ride

Jerry Greenwood from the VetCenter in White River Junction, Vermont will once again be joining us for the NH Freedom Ride.

Jerry will be at Hesky Park on June 14th and June 15th to support veterans and their families. Please take some time to stop by and say hello!

Veteran with local ties will sing National Anthem

Christopher Clark of Tilton, New Hampshire and graduate of Interlakes High School class of 87' will lead us in the National Anthem at the NH Freedom Ride on June 14, 2018. 

Upon graduation from Interlakes High School he attended Plymouth State College as a vocal performance major 1987-1990. He served in the US Army as a PFC Combat Engineer and is a Gulf War Era Veteran. Upon his honorable discharge from the military he went on to granduate cum laude with a bachelor's in humanities from College of Lifelong Learning. 

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Deborah Crosby will be our guest speaker for the 30th Anniversary of the POW/MIA Vigil

Deborah Crosby will be our guest speaker for the 30th Anniversary of the POW/MIA Vigil..The daughter of an American pilot shot down over Vietnam never gave up in her quest to find her father's remains. And now, it is a mission accomplished.  

Her dad was finally given a military burial in San Diego, after a half-century effort to find him by his daughter from Long Island. 
He's home now.



June 14th....Hesky Park .. Please pass the word.

Doc Jones

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Call to Action!!!

From: Donna Knox <donnadknox@gmail.com>
Date: April 24, 2018 at 6:23:32 PM EDT
To: pitapaco@metrocast.net
Subject: Important POW MIA Legislation
Hi Bob,

The Coalition of Families is working with Blair Bjellos in Senator Dean Heller’s office to move the Bring Our Heroes Home Act (S-120) through committee, to the floor and ultimately to passage. In case you haven’t been following the bill, S-120 is the 115th Congress’ version of the comprehensive declassification legislation that former Senator Ayotte introduced in the 114th Congress—before she lost her bid for re-election.

This bill addresses the need to declassify documents related to POW/MIAs in a way that none before has attempted to do. It would be a significant shift in the effort to account for our missing service personnel.

I have attached a letter I’ve written generically to our community of advocates. It explains S-120 in a bit more detail and it lays out what we can do at this time to help turn the bill into law. We have made it simple. I hope you will read the letter, then articulate your support for the bill. After working this issue for 25 years, I am confident that, if passed, S-120 will make a tremendous difference to the accounting effort. It will bring transparency. It will help us make sure the government is doing its job. 

Thank you for your support for the men who gave so much. They and their families deserve answers.

Sincerely, Donna 

Donna D. Knox, Esq.

Legislative/Policy Liaison
Coalition of Families of Korean & Cold War POW/MIAs

We Need Your Help!!! Bring our Heroes Home (S-120)




Monday, March 19, 2018

One last service for WWII flag By Seth Robson, Stars and Stripes

CAMP RED CLOUD, South Korea — A flag colored in part with the blood of U.S. prisoners of war and draped over their coffins for funerals at stalags will be used one last time at Arlington National Cemetery next month.
The flag will cover the coffin of its owner, retired Sergeant Robert Hopkins. The former enlisted Chaplain from the 38th Field Artillery Battalion, 2nd Infantry Division, used the flag at more than 300 POW funerals during World War II.
It will be transported to the Virginia cemetery from its home at the 2nd ID Museum at Camp Red Cloud, where Hopkins left it in 1979.
Hopkins was captured in the Battle of the Bulge at Krinkelt, Belgium, in December 1944 and forced to march with 2,300 POWs to a stalag, or World War II German prisoner of war camp.
“Within two weeks of being a prisoner, it was my sad job to bury over 700 American soldiers. Not because they were all worn out. Not because they were ready to die but because somebody didn’t want them to live. The Germans would shoot them for sport,” he recalled at the time he donated the flag to the museum.
Hopkins was a POW at Stalag VIIIA near Gorlitz and in January 1945 officiated the first formal military funeral service inside Germany, for American POW Bruce Schalm.
The Germans agreed to allow a flag to be used and for Schalm to be buried in a makeshift casket made of boards bound with wire. Prison corpses were normally stripped and tossed in an open pit, Hopkins said.
“The flag … was made from two sugar bags, which two British soldiers stole from the camp,” he recalled.
It was painted with blue and red dye mixed with blood, he said.
“That was easy to come by. Soldiers were always bleeding to death,” he said.
Guards photographed the service for propaganda purposes but POWs stole the photographs. The Germans were furious, Hopkins said.
“Three days later, I watched two British soldiers being shot to death by having bullets fired into their feet, then every six inches up their bodies until they died. Their last words were ‘Don’t let them find the flag, use it for the memory of all who die,’ ” he said.
When Hopkins was transferred to another stalag he took the flag with him. He and other soldiers carried it for more than 2,300 miles all over Germany, he said.
“The flag was hid so no German could find it. After we left Gorlitz the guards were more tolerable and at times we were permitted to use the flag, then the flag would go into hiding again,” he said.
Four months later, Hopkins escaped, taking the flag with him. After the war he became a Methodist Minister in Natural Bridge, Virginia.
After he died earlier this month, his family asked the 2nd ID Museum to loan them the flag for his funeral at Arlington National Cemetery.
The Center for Military History approved the request and the flag is on its way to Arlington. It will return to the 2nd ID Museum after the ceremony, a museum staff member said.
“We are honoring a member of the greatest generation and this is the least we can do. This guy was a real hero,” the staff member said.
Hopkins’ son, Norman Hopkins, who served as a U.S. Army Sergeant in Vietnam, said his father often told the story of the flag, which sat in a cupboard of their home while he was growing up.
“When I was young, I used to see the flag and hold it in my hands. Dad would tell me about the British soldiers who got shot because they would not give it up. The flag meant a lot to my dad and it means a lot to me,” he said.
Norman Hopkins said that although his father was a Chaplain, he carried a .45 revolver and a Thompson machine gun during the war.
“He was asked one time … why he carried guns. He said: ‘A shepherd must protect his flock.’”
Hopkins’s funeral will include an honor guard to fold the flag before its return to the museum, he said.
The British soldier’s sacrifices for the flag are an example for today’s soldiers, Norman Hopkins said.
The last time it was used at a funeral, he said, “was in World War II. I hope… the alliances we have in Europe and in Asia are as strong as they were during World War II. It doesn’t matter if it is a South Korean soldier, a French soldier, an Italian soldier or an Australian soldier. The alliance should be there.”
Museum technician Incha Koslosky prepares a U.S. flag
used for funerals of Allied POWs during World War 
II for shipment to
Arlington National Cemetery, 
where it will be used during its owner's funeral.


Sergeant Robert Hopkins wrote his name on the back of this 
U.S. flag, which is colored with the blood of World War II 
Allied POWs. It will be used at his funeral at Arlington Cemetery next month.



2nd ID enlisted Chaplain Sergeant Robert Hopkins presides over 
the first formal U.S. POW funeral in Germany during World War II. 
Two of the other soldiers in the picture were shot for refusing to 
give up the flag and this photograph, which they stole from the Germans.


This flag was made by American prisoners held at Stalag VIIIA in Gorlitz, Germany 
and was used in the first formal funeral allowed by the Germans in January 1945. 
A German guard was preparing to shoot into the funeral group until a major 
stopped him. The major wanted to take a photograph for propaganda purposes
(Courtesy of the 2nd Infantry Division Museum) 


HOPKINS, ROBERT
SGT   US ARMY
WORLD WAR II
DATE OF BIRTH: 04/26/1919
DATE OF DEATH: 06/24/2004
BURIED AT: SECTION 69  SITE 3420
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY 

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Former Prisoners of War Recognition Day ceremony

Former Prisoners of War Recognition Day ceremony
When: Saturday, April 7, 2018
Time: 10:00am - 11:00am
Location: New Hampshire State Veterans Cemetery
The Dept of NH Veterans of Foreign Wars, Auxiliary, and the NH Chapter of the American Ex-Prisoners of War
 cordially invite you and your family and friends to the annual Former Prisons of War
Recognition Day ceremony in the Chapel that starts at 10:00am.