Byrd, Hugh McNeil Jr.
Army Captain

Hugh McNeil Byrd Jr. from Berea, Kentucky, Madison county.

Service era: Vietnam

Date of death: Thursday, January 9, 1969
Death details: On January 9, 1969, an O-1G Bird Dog (tail number 51-5059) carrying two crew members took off from Phu Bai Combat Base on a visual reconnaissance mission over South Vietnam. En route, the plane diverted to assist a reconnaissance team that was in enemy contact near Khe Sanh, South Vietnam. After assisting the team and being relieved by another aircraft, the Bird Dog began its return to Phu Bai. Bad weather set in and this aircraft was not instrument equipped, and the pilot reported he was lost. Dong Ha Air Base and other radar controllers tried to determine the aircraft’s last position but were unsuccessful. The Bird Dog disappeared from the radar and all efforts to contact the aircraft went unanswered. The aircraft and its two crew members could not be accounted for.

First Lieutenant Hugh McNeil Byrd Jr. entered the U.S. Army from Kentucky and was a member of the 220th Aviation Company, 212th Aviation Battalion, 1st Aviation Brigade. He was the pilot of this Bird Dog when it went missing, and he was lost with the aircraft. After the incident, the U.S. Army promoted 1LT Byrd to the rank of Captain (CPT). Today, Captain Byrd is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.

Based on all information available, DPAA assessed the individual’s case to be in the analytical category of Non-recoverable.

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency

Gardner, John Garrett
Marines Captain

John Garrett Gardner, age 26, from Hot Springs, North Carolina, Madison county.

Service era: Vietnam

Date of death: Saturday, June 3, 1967
Death details: On June 12, 2000, the Central Identification Laboratory-Hawaii (CILHI) identified the remains of Captain John Garrett Gardner, missing from the Vietnam War. Captain Gardner entered the U.S. Marine Corps from North Carolina and was a member of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 165, Marine Air Group 36, 1st Marine Air Wing. On June 3, 1967, he copiloted a CH-46A Sea Knight (bureau number 150955, call sign “YWZ”) carrying five other crew members and an unknown number of South Vietnamese special forces members on an extraction mission in Salavan (formerly Saravane) Province, Laos. While taking off from the landing zone, the aircraft was hit by enemy small arms fire and crashed, killing Capt Gardner. His remains could not be recovered at the time. However, between 1993 and 1996, a joint U.S. task force traveled to Salavan Province and recovered artifacts and human remains from the site; the combined remains were sent to CILHI for analysis. Investigators were able to forensically identify Capt Gardner among the remains.
Cemetery: Memorialized at Arlington National, interred in New Flats Cemetery in Spring Creek, North Carolina

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, findagrave.com