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A fallen Warrior comes home at last

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  • A fallen Warrior comes home at last

    In 1968 Air Force pilot Tom Beyer dissappeared while flying over the jungle in Vietnam in a spotter plane. For 42 years his fate has been unknown.

    On December 15th his remains will, at last, return to his native North Dakota soil.

    http://www.inforum.com/event/article...38/group/News/

    Both my sons will be there, along with many veterans, to honor his sacrifice.


    One more mystery from that damn war solved.
    sigpicUSS North Dakota

  • #2
    Salute , who found his remains ?? your link does not appear to work . ;)

    Comment


    • #3
      The article was in the Fargo Forum.

      It seems a Vietnamese man found the id card, wedding ring and other articles in the 80's but put them in a box and buried them. Before his recent death he revealed the secret to a relative, who dug it up and contacted authorities.

      It seems that the day he vanished GI's reported seeing the plane pass overhead, and shortly afterwards reported an explosion nearby. Combat and the nature of the jungle prevented locating him at the time.
      sigpicUSS North Dakota

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      • #4
        Present Arms.

        God Bless.

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        • #5
          Welcome home Sir! Present arms.....gone but not forgotten.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by 2DREZQ View Post
            The article was in the Fargo Forum.

            It seems a Vietnamese man found the id card, wedding ring and other articles in the 80's but put them in a box and buried them. Before his recent death he revealed the secret to a relative, who dug it up and contacted authorities.

            It seems that the day he vanished GI's reported seeing the plane pass overhead, and shortly afterwards reported an explosion nearby. Combat and the nature of the jungle prevented locating him at the time.

            Thank you .

            Comment


            • #7
              His wife of 5 years never remarried. His Children ages 1 and 3 when he vanished, have no memory of their father. Still, they are relieved to have this closure.
              sigpicUSS North Dakota

              Comment


              • #8
                From the Fargo Forum:

                Four decades from home: Remains of Vietnam veteran return to Fargo
                Maj. Thomas Beyer died more than 40 years ago when the plane he was piloting was lost in the jungles and violence of the Vietnam War.
                By: Dave Olson, INFORUM

                .
                An honor guard from the Grand Forks Air Force Base walks to receive the casket containing the remains of U.S. Air Force Maj. Thomas Beyer on Wednesday night at Hector International Airport in Fargo. The Vietnam War pilot had been missing for more than four decades. Dave Wallis / The Forum
                Karen Beyer with Army National Guard members
                .
                Karen Beyer, the wife of U.S. Air Force Maj. Thomas Beyer, talks with Army National Guard members after the ceremony Wednesday night at the airport.
                Libby Schoemehl, his sister
                .
                Libby Schoemehl, sister of U.S. Air Force Maj. Thomas Beyer, says “it’s been a real rough road” until her brother’s remains were found. Dave Wallis / The Forum
                Maj. Thomas Beyer died more than 40 years ago when the plane he was piloting was lost in the jungles and violence of the Vietnam War.

                He returned home to Fargo on Wednesday night to gently falling snow.

                Family and friends were also there when a plane carrying Beyer’s casket landed about 9 p.m. at Hector International Airport.

                Among them was Beyer’s sister, Libby Schoemehl, who traveled from California to be with her brother one last time.

                Schoemehl said her DNA was used in the testing that confirmed that remains found earlier this year in Vietnam were those of her brother.

                “It’s been a real rough road,” she said, referring to the decades spent wondering about the fate of her brother, who is presumed to have been shot down by enemy fire in July 1968.

                Family members were told earlier this year that personal items and bone fragments believed to be Beyer’s had been recovered in Vietnam.

                On Wednesday night, Beyer’s wife, Karen, who lives in Fargo, and the couple’s two grown children, Steve and Sandra, were on the plane carrying his remains home.

                They were met by many well-wishers, including military color guards from around the region.

                Eight veterans from the Star of the North Marine Corps League came from Park Rapids, Minn., to pay their respects to Beyer and to all service personnel who remain missing in action.

                A number of residents from Park Rapids who served in foreign wars have never been accounted for, said Fred Whiteside, one of the Park Rapids veterans.

                Beyer was a 1959 graduate of Fargo’s Shanley High School, and several of his classmates were at the airport Wednesday.

                Mike Anderson said he hunted and played basketball with Beyer.

                It was gratifying, he said, to see the number of people who turned out to honor his classmate and friend.

                “Some know him, a lot do not,” Anderson said.

                “But, it gives me a great deal of satisfaction,” Anderson said. “This homecoming suits and serves him very well.”

                Russel Stabler, a Vietnam veteran from Hunter, N.D., helped plan the gathering at the airport Wednesday.

                He said the return of a fellow serviceman who had been missing for so long “means a heck of a lot.”

                “It gives us a chance to finally honor him,” Stabler said. “He’s returned to our soil. He’s no longer MIA, and he is going to be with his family.”

                Schoemehl said her brother loved being a pilot, but he didn’t talk much about his Air Force job, at least not with her.

                Schoemehl’s husband, Tony, who was a Navy pilot during the war, said he had a number of conversations with his brother-in-law about what it meant to Beyer to serve in the Armed Forces.

                “I think he was very proud of it. All of us were,” Tony Schoemehl said.

                Services




                •Funeral services will be held for U.S. Air Force Maj. Thomas Beyer at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at St. Mary’s Cathedral, 619 7th St. N., Fargo.


                •Visitation will be one hour before the funeral at St. Mary’s.


                •Following services, burial will be at Holy Cross North Cemetery, 1502 32nd Ave. N., Fargo.





                --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                sigpicUSS North Dakota

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                • #9
                  Welcome home Maj. Thomas Beyer.
                  Don't listen to me, I'm a wack job.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Sometimes, it is so much easier for those of us who did not come back................ unless you have experienced 4 decades of not knowing, where, how ,when or is he dead or alive? We cannot possibly comprehend what it was like for the family...............At least the family now have some peace and have him home to visit in his final resting place.

                    RIP Maj. Thomas Beyer - FEAR NAUGHT
                    sigpicFEAR NAUGHT

                    Should raw analytical data ever be passed to policy makers?

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