Name: Walter Roy Schmidt
Rank/Branch: O2/US Marine Corps
Unit: VMA 121, Marine Air Group 12
Date of Birth: 18 November 1945
Home City of Record: Nassau NY
Date of Loss: 09 June 1968
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 161919N 1070726E (YD273053)
Status (in 1973): Prisoner of War
Category: 1
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: A4E
Refno: 1205
Other Personnel in Incident: (none missing)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 June 1990
from one or more of
the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources,
correspondence
with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.
Updated by the P.O.W.
NETWORK 1998.
REMARKS: LANDED ALIVE, NVA APPROACHING
EGRESS: Always giving the guards a hard time - did not
mentally adapt to
capture.
SYNOPSIS: When Douglas Aircraft created the A4 Skyhawk
the intent was to
provide the Navy and Marine Corps with an inexpensive,
lightweight attack
and ground support aircraft. The design emphasized low-speed
control and
stability during take-off and landing as well as strength
enough for
catapult launch and carrier landings. The plane was compact,
but in spite of
its diminutive size, the A4 packed a devastating punch
and performed well
where speed and maneuverability were essential.
1LT Walter R. Schmidt Jr. was an A4 pilot assigned to
VMA 121, 12th Marine
Air Group. On June 9, 1968, he was assigned a bombing
mission in northern
Thua Thien Province, South Vietnam -- on the northern
sector of the A Shau
Valley.
After making a bombing run, Schmidt's aircraft came under
fire. Schmidt was
seen to eject from the damaged aircraft and parachute
to the ground. Voice
contact was established with 1LT Schmidt and he stated
that he was hurt with
a possible broken leg and that he was unable to move.
North Vietnamese
forces were seen to be approaching his position. It was
not possible to
conduct an extraction at the time, and rescue efforts
were delayed until the
following day.
The next morning, no sign of Schmidt or his parachute
could be found.
Attempts to raise him by radio were futile. It was believed
that Schmidt had
probably been captured. He was classified Prisoner of
War.
Throughout the rest of the war years, Schmidt's family
heard nothing. When
591 Americans were released from communist prison camps
in the spring of
1973 in Operation Homecoming, Schmidt was not among them.
The Vietnamese
denied any knowledge of him.
Since the war ended, over 10,000 reports have been received
by the U.S.
Government relating to Americans prisoner, missing, or
unaccounted for in
Southeast Asia. Many authorities have reluctantly concluded
that hundreds of
them are still alive today.
Whether Walter R. Schmidt survived past the time NVA troops
located him is
unknown. If he spent months or years of torture in POW
camps, we may never
know it. If he is one of those said to be alive still,
we will only know it
when we resolve to bring our men home.
-----------------------------------------
[324.txt 12/29/92]
Bob Smith
New Hampshire
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
U.S. POW/MIAs WHO MAY HAVE SURVIVED IN CAPTIVITY
Prepared by the Office of Senator Bob Smith
Vice-Chairman, Senate
Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs
December 1, 1992
Schmidt, Walter R.
USMC -landed alive, NVA approaching.
----------------------------------------------------
APPENDIX 1
South Vietnam
Walter R. Schmidt, Jr.
On January 9, 1968, Lieutenant Schmidt's A-4E aircraft
was shot
Lieutenant Schmidt was carried as a POW at the time of
operation
Joint Casualty Resolution Center investigations in the
A Shau
---------------------------------
The Full Story of the American Servicemen still held hostage
in South-East
In 9 June, 1968, Marine Captain Walter Schmidt Jr
bailed out
Page 74
of his crippled A4 near A Shau in South Vietnam. He radioed
that he had broken
(DIA 1979 analytical comment)
-Captured alive, JSSA
-Possibly shot, JSSA.
-listed as POW by DIA, 1973
-hostile captured (DoD June 1973
list)
-last known alive (DoD April
1991 list)
[ssrep6.txt 02/09/93]
(1205)
down by hostile ground fire over the A Shau Valley in
Thua Thien
Province, South Vietnam. He ejected and landed
safely and
established voice contact with search and rescue forces
to whom he
reported that he had a hurt hand and a possible broken
leg. SAR
forces observed him on the ground and established that
enemy forces
were within 20 meters of his location.
Homecoming and was declared dead/body not recovered after
the end
of hostilities. Returning U.S. POWs were unable
to provide any
information on his fate.
Valley during August 1989 failed to locate any witnesses
who could
provide information on the crash site or the reported
capture of
Lieutenant Schmidt. They were also unable to locate
any evidence
about his aircraft or his grave site.
The Bamboo Cage, Nigel Cawthorn
Asia.
his leg and could not move. North Vietnamese troops were
seen approaching.
Next day there was no sign of Schmidt or his Parachute.
(29) He did not
return. Nor has he been accounted for.
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