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Dad's Helmet found in Vietnam jungle 36 years later

T Bone

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Hey all,

Something real cool has happened to my Dad. He was an USAF pilot during Vietnam. He was a FAC pilot flying the OV-10 Bronco and was shot down at low altitude in 1970 while flying a mission over the Ho Chi Minh trail. He was listed as MIA until recovered a few days later alive and mostly well.

Here is an email he received yesterday. It's worth the read IMO. His call sign was NAIL 28.


From: Marcus Rhinelander <mqrhinelander@___.com>
To: mikeltaylor@___.com
Subject: your old helmet?
Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 07:51:06 -0700 (PDT)
>Hello-
>
>I got your e-mail address from Rick At____on, whom I
>met yesterday as part of a project on the Ho Chi Minh
>Trail. My research partner, Nat Stone, and I have
>spent a year and a half interviewing people who lived
>and served on (and over) the Trail to gain a picture
>of its importance to the war and see what remains of
>it today.
>
>We started this project by walking (mostly) from Mu
>Gia pass to the Cambodian border in Laos, interviewing
>villagers along the way. A month or so into our trip
>(January 2005) we came to a village south of Muang
>Nong where we found a U.S. flight helmet on a shelf in
>the headman's house. We eventually managed to get the
>story out of them- supposedly the headman got it from
>some Vietnamese who were scavenging a crash site for
>scrap metal.
>
>On our return, we contacted the MIA JTF search team
>working in Laos. They visited the village (which they
>recorded as Ban Taloung but we were told was called
>Ban Bloy) that October, searched the crash site,
>identified the aircraft as an OV-10, and traced it to
>the operational loss of Nail 28 on 7 May, 1970,
>Captain Michael L. Taylor. Who, I hope, was you.
>
>If so, I'm very happy to be able to make contact with
>you and to know that you made it back safely. I
>thought I'd send you a photo that I took that day- you
>may be interested to see you old helmet again. I'm
>afraid that I don't think I'll be in Idaho soon, but
>hope that maybe we can meet one day.
>
>Meanwhile, all the best,
>Marcus
>
>PS- I have a copy of this photo on my website along
>with other pictures of the Trail today, but it is
>unfortunately (and, I trust temporarily) down for repairs.
>

Dadsflighthelmet.jpg


Dad is quite moved by the recent event and he says he wants his helmet back.

T Bone
 
Tyson that is beyond cool- an amazing thing! I'm sure it stirred memories inside your father that have long been silent. Kudos to all!
 
Cool! Did they find my underwear? I lost it along the trail in 1971......haven't been able to wear any since. (Except long johns when hunting in sub-freezing temps.)




Really, Tyson - that IS cool. I'm sure he would want it back.
 
Great story Tyson. The email wasn't clear as to if your father will be receiving his helmet. Any idea?

Those guys who work the MIA JTF have a very important (and cool in many ways) job. It kinda gives peace to a military man and his family that the US will always continue to find you in the event the worse happens and you go missing.

Again, thanks for the read.
 
CA Hunter --that's funny I don't care what other's say--

T-Bone--pretty cool stuff--hope your dad gets it back somehow---chris
 
Leupold BX-4 Rangefinding Binoculars

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