Bell, Marvin Earl
Air Force Staff sergeant

Marvin Earl Bell, age 26, from Blytheville, Arkansas, Mississippi county.

Parents: Elmer and Joyce Bell
Spouse: June
Children: Marvin Ramsey Bell was born September 14, 1970 and stepdaughter Alicia

Service era: Vietnam
Schools: Blytheville High (1961)

Date of death: Tuesday, June 30, 1970
Death details: On March 7, 1995, Joint Task Force-Full Accounting (JTF-FA, now DPAA) identified the remains of Staff Sergeant Marvin Earl Bell, missing from the Vietnam War. Staff Sergeant Bell joined the U.S. Air Force from Arizona and was a member of the 40th Air Rescue and Recovery Squadron. On June 30, 1970, he was the flight engineer aboard an HH-53C Super Jolly Green Giant (serial number 68-8283) on a search and rescue mission over Laos. The Super Jolly Green Giant was downed by enemy ground fire during the mission, and SSgt Bell was killed in the crash. Search and rescue teams were unable to recover his remains at the time due to hostile presence in the area. In March 1994, a joint U.S. and Laotian search team recovered remains from the HH-53C’s crash site. In 1995, forensic analysis identified some of the recovered remains as those of SSgt Bell.

Source: National Archives, Associated Press (1970), Blytheville Courier News (1970), Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency

Olsen, Arthur Robert
Air Force 1st lieutenant

Arthur Robert Olsen, age 33, from Blytheville, Arkansas, Mississippi county.

Service era: Korea

Date of death: Thursday, January 29, 1953
Death details: On the evening on January 28, 1953, a B-29 Superfortress (tail number 42-65357A) with a crew of fourteen departed Kadena Air Base in a flight of four. The briefed mission was a night bombing operation targeting the Kompo-Dong supply yard south of Pyongyang, North Korea. Shortly after releasing its payload, the B-29 was attacked by enemy MiG-15 fighters. Just after midnight, the aircraft commander made a distress call and ordered the crew to bail out. A few minutes later, witnesses reported the Superfortress caught fire and exploded in midair near Hungsu-ri. It is believed that five airmen were still aboard the aircraft when it exploded. The nine surviving crew members were captured by the North Koreans; three of them were returned to U.S. custody following the war, and one is known to have died at the Pike’s Peak prisoner interrogation center. While being moved in a convoy to a holding site, the remaining five prisoners were “liberated” by a group of Korean irregulars, believed to be North Koreans masquerading as South Korean guerrillas. Later that day, the B-29’s Aircraft Commander (Captain Gilbert Ashley) was allowed to contact United Nations Forces. On April 24, U.S. forces attempted to rescue the five men, but the rescue aircraft was fired upon during the attempt and the efforts were abandoned. Later reporting revealed the loyalty of the guerrilla unit and the probability that it had used the prisoners as bait. The five prisoners became known as the “Ashley 5,” after the Aircraft Commander, and all five of them remain unaccounted-for, along with the five who were believed to be aboard the plane when it exploded and the one who died at the Pike’s Peak center. First Lieutenant Arthur Robert Olsen, who joined the U.S. Air Force from Arizona, was assigned to the 28th Bombardment Squadron, 19th Bombardment Group. He was the radar bombardier aboard this Superfortress when it went down, and was among survivors known as the Ashley 5. Further attempts to locate him have been unsuccessful and he is still unaccounted-for. Today, First Lieutenant Olsen is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.Relativeswerelatertoldthoseaboardsurvivedthecrashandwereheldcaptivebytheenemy.

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, Courier News (1953)

Gibson, Samuel O.
Sergeant

Samuel O. Gibson from Mississippi County Blytheville, Arkansas .

Service era: World War I

Date of death: Tuesday, October 22, 1918
Death details: Died of disease

Source: American Battle Monuments Commission, Soldiers of the Great War