KIMSEY, WILLIAM ARTHUR JR.
Name: William Arthur Kimsey, Jr.
Rank/Branch: W2/US Army
Unit: 220th Recon Aviation Company, 17th Aviation Group, 1st Aviation Brigade
Date of Birth: 09 January 1947 (Oak Ridge TN)
Home City of Record: Reliance TN
Loss Date: 21 January 1968
Country of Loss: North Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 170013N 1070543E (YD230810)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 4
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: O1D
Refno: 1001
Source: Compiled 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 in 1998.
Other Personnel In Incident: Charles J. Ramsay (missing)
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: On January 21, 1968, an O1D aircraft (tail #57-2930) from
"Catkillers" (220th Recon Aviation Company) departed the Hue/Phu Bai
airfield on a combat support mission (the Marines describe the mission as an
"NGF mission over North Vietnam") over the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). The
crew of the aircraft consisted of U.S. Army WO1 William A. Kimsey Jr.,
pilot; and U.S. Marine Capt. Charles J. Ramsey, aerial observer.
The aircraft was directing Naval gunfire on an active anti-aircraft site
when radio contact was lost. Just prior to radio failure, WO Kimsey reported
that their aircraft had been hit. A Forward Air Controller (FAC) on station
conducted a search for several hours without locating the crash site or
making contact with the crew.
Defense Department records list a slight variance in latitude and longitude
location of loss for Kimsey and Ramsay, but the U.S. Army confirms that both
men were last known to be at grid coordinates YD230810, and that there is no
reason to suspect either of the crew bailed out.
Bill Kimsey had been 21 for two weeks when his O1D aircraft was shot down
just into North Vietnam near the DMZ. Ramsey was an "old man" of 35. There
has been no further word of him or of Charles Ramsay.
Although there is no substantive information on the crew of the O1D,
evidence continues to mount that some Americans are still held prisoner of
war. There are nearly 2500 Americans who did not return from Southeast Asia
at the end of the war. Some were known to have been taken prisoner. Most can
be accounted for by the communist governments of the region.
The Vietnamese have continually raised the issue of accountability in the
context of aid and/or diplomatic and trade relations, but the U.S.
Government has been reluctant to negotiate on this basis, preferring instead
to maintain a strict "humanitarian" level of discussion, which has resulted
in the return of a few remains, but no American prisoners of war.
Our American soldiers go to war prepared to be wounded, taken prisoner, even
prepared to die. They do not go prepared to be abandoned. If there is even
ONE American alive, we must do everything possible to bring him home.
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