| Name: | Calvin Coolidge Cooke, Jr. | |
|
| Rank/Branch: | Staff Sergeant/US Air Force | ||
| Unit: | TDY from
Ching Chuang Kang Air Force Base, Taiwan to Detachment 1, 345th Tactical Airlift Squadron Tan Son Nhut Airbase, South Vietnam |
||
| Date of Birth: | 18 April 1946 | ||
| Home of Record: | Washington, DC | ||
| Date of Loss: | 26 April 1972 | ||
| Country of Loss: | South Vietnam | ||
| Loss Coordinates: | 113803N 1063547E (XT745866) Click coordinates to view maps |
||
| Status in 1973: | Killed/Body Not Recovered | ||
| Category: | 2 | ||
| Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: | C130E "Hercules" | ||
| Other Personnel in Incident: | Harry A. Amesbury, Jr.; Richard E. Dunn; Donald R. Hoskins; and Richard L. Russell (all missing); Kurt F. Weisman (remains returned) | ||
REMARKS: CRASH - 1 REM RCV - N SIGN SUBJ - J
SYNOPSIS: The Lockheed C130
Hercules, or "Herc" for short, was a multi-purpose propeller driven aircraft
used as a transport, tanker, gunship, drone controller, airborne command and
control center, weather reconnaissance and electronic reconnaissance platform;
as well as search, rescue and recovery aircraft. In the hands of the
“Trash Haulers,” as the crew of the Tactical Air Command transports styled
themselves, the C130 proved to be the most valuable airlift instrument in the
Southeast Asia conflict. They were so valuable, in fact, that Gen. William
Momyer, 7th Air Force Commander, refused for a time to let them land at Khe Sanh
when the airstrip was under fire from NVA troops surrounding the base. The
C130 was critical in resupplying American and allied troops in this area, and
when the Hercules could not land, it delivered its payload by means of a
parachute drop.
To bolster the Air Force’s ability to supply troops in Southeast Asia, aircrews
stationed at Ching Chuang Kang Airbase, Taiwan - known also as “CCK Airdrome” -
flew to different locations on 3-week temporary duty (TDY) rotations before
returning to their home station for 3 days. These TDY stints took them to
Korea, Borneo, Indonesia, Japan and Africa; but most trips took them to bases in
South Vietnam.
Their supply drops were usually accomplished in one of two ways, both requiring
the plane be airborne and at very low altitude when done. One method
employed parachutes attached to supply pallets. As the plane flew over the
drop zone, the parachutes pulled the cargo from the plane. In the second
method, a hook attached to the cargo was dropped from the plane, affixed to some
firm fixture on the ground and as the plane departed the area, the cargo was
pulled out of the plane. Both delivery methods required considerable skill under
the best of circumstances to be completed successfully.
On 26 April 1972, Major Harry A. Amesbury, Jr., pilot; Capt. Kurt F. Weisman,
co-pilot; 1st Lt. Richard L. Russell, navigator; SSgt. Calvin C. Cooke,
loadmaster; TSgt. Richard E. Dunn, loadmaster; and Sgt. Donald R. Hoskins,
flight engineer; comprised the crew of a C130 that departed Tan Son Nhut Airbase
on a night emergency resupply mission to the ARVN troops trapped in the besieged
city of Anh Loc, Binh Long Province, South Vietnam. The provisional capitol
located approximately 65 miles northwest of Saigon had been under siege off and
on since early April by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces. Airborne
support in the form of supply drops of food, medicine and armament, as well as
close air support, were critical in keeping the city from being overrun.
After arriving in the target area, Major Amesbury established radio contact with
the onsite Forward Air Controller (FAC). After providing currant mission
related information, at 0412 hours the FAC gave Major Amesbury clearance to
initiate the supply drop. As the C130 made its pass over Anh Loc at a very
low altitude, the aircraft was struck by communist small arms fire and crashed
into a large rubber plantation approximately 1 mile southwest of the city.
From his vantage point, the FAC watched as the cargo aircraft began its climb to
drop altitude, then looked away. When he looked back, he saw the Hercules
in flames going into the trees. He reported that under the circumstances,
he saw no tracers aimed at the aircraft.
In the pre-dawn darkness an aerial visual and electronic search utilizing all
aircraft already in the area commenced immediately. However, due to the
intense enemy surrounding An Loc, no ground search of the crash site was
possible. During the search operation, no emergency beepers were heard and
no parachutes seen. At the time the search was terminated, Harry Amesbury,
Richard Russell, Calvin Cooke, Donald Hoskins and Kurt Weisman were declared
Killed in Action/Body Not Recovered.
In early February 1975, an ARVN ground team under the control of an American
Special Forces advisor was inserted into An Loc to search for Americans lost in
several incidents in the area including the crew of the C130. While at
that aircraft’s crash site, the team recovered partial remains believed to
belong to one of the crew. Before departing the area, the team made note
of the fact that the entire crash site location had been heavily scavenged.
On 27 February 1975, those remains were positively identified as Kurt Weisman.
Beginning in 1989, US personnel obtained the first of five separate acquisitions
of remains and personal affects/artifacts associated with this loss incident.
These remains were recovered from refugees living in Thailand as well as local
villagers. Some were confiscated from unscrupulous bones brokers who
thrive on the trade of human misery. Others were found under the control
of a group of people in Saigon. In spite of being heavily scavenged, the
crash site excavation yielded a remarkable amount of aircraft wreckage, life
support equipment, personal items, bone fragments and teeth.
The first set of material attributed to this case was turned over by a South
Vietnamese woman living in a refugee camp in Thailand who stated she witnessed
the C130 crash at An Loc. When interviewed, she said that as she prepared
to leave Vietnam, she was given bones and an ID tag belonging to Harry Amesbury
to take with her in the hope that the items would help smooth her way to a new
life.
In November 1991, a Vietnamese man turned over remains he said he obtained from
two other Vietnamese who collected them from the crash site. He also
claimed to have identification media that belonged to Major Amesbury, but it was
not turned over with the bone fragments.
The third accession of remains surfaced in 1992 when an investigative team under
the auspices of the Joint Task Force for Full Accounting (JTFFA) returned to
Binh Long Province to conduct interviews with local residents regarding this and
other losses in the region. One villager reported he knew that several
people held remains. Eventually one of the villagers turned over several
bones/bone fragments and an ID tag rubbing. During this trip, team members
also conducted a site survey to establish the perimeters of the crash site for
later excavation.
In March 1993, a JTFFA excavation team returned to An Loc. During the
recovery operation, they found bone fragments and teeth in 9 different crater
impact features that comprised the C130’s crash site that covered an area 96
meters long and 38 meters wide. Two of the craters were located in the
northern portion with the other seven being dispersed southward. The last
impact crater was located a distance of 80 meters away from the northern-most
crater. Further, all of these locations are adjoined to or within the
96X38 meter area. The maximum depth excavated in any location of the site
was 3 meters.
The last accession of remains occurred in February/March 1998. In February
a South Vietnamese woman living in Georgia contacted the National League of
Families of POW/MIAs claiming she had remains and personal affects of Harry
Amesbury. In March she turned over the material to US personnel. In
addition to pieces of bone, she handed over Major Amesbury’s military ID card
and his wedding ring.
Over time all of the human remains and personal affects belonging to several
crewmen were transported to the US Central Identification Laboratory, Hawaii (CIL-HI)
for examination. In addition to 5 teeth that matched Major Amesbury’s
dental radiographs; long bones including both arms, left leg and the femur from
the right leg; along with very small pieces of cranium, were positively
identified through mt-DNA as belonging to Harry Amesbury.
At the family’s request, Major Amesbury’s remains were cremated and flown to
Boise, Idaho on Sunday, 27 May 1991. The following Tuesday, his asses were
scattered by the family on land that overlooked the Snake River near Marsing
purchased by Major Amesbury and his wife for their retirement. When asked
why the family chose to scatter his remains in that location, Harry Amesbury’s
son, David, responded, “This is where he’d want to be.”
The rest of the bones and teeth recovered and associated with the Hercules’ loss
remain under the control of CIL-Hi in the belief that one day technology will
reach a stage where they also can be positively identified and returned to the
families.
While the fate of Major Amesbury and Capt. Weisman is resolved and each man’s
family has the peace of mind of knowing where their love one lies, only
unanswered questions remain for the rest of the C130’s aircrew. If they
also died in their aircraft, they have a right to have their remains returned to
their families, friends and country. However, if any of the crew survived,
they most certainly would have been captured and their fate, like that of other
Americans who remain unaccounted for in Southeast Asia, their fate could be
quite different. Either way there is no doubt the Vietnamese could return
them or their remains any time they had the desire to do so.
Since the end of the Vietnam War well over 21,000 reports of American prisoners,
missing and otherwise unaccounted for have been received by our government.
Many of these reports document LIVE America Prisoners of War remaining captive
throughout Southeast Asia TODAY. Pilots and aircrews in Vietnam were
called upon to fly in many dangerous circumstances, and they were prepared to be
wounded, killed or captured. It probably never occurred to them that they
could be abandoned by the country they so proudly served.