MORGAN, THOMAS RAYMOND
REMAINS RETURNED Identified 07/28/97
Name: Thomas Raymond Morgan
Rank/Branch: O3/United States Air Force/pilot
Unit:
Date of Birth: 27 September 1933
Home City of Record: Akron OH
Date of Loss: 26 January 1967
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates:120800 North 1084000 East
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 3
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: F100 D Super Sabre
Missions:
Other Personnel in Incident: none
Source: Compiled by P.O.W. NETWORK from one or more of the following: raw
data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA
families, published sources, interviews.
REMARKS:
DOD announces identification of remains
No. 128-M
July 28, 1997
MEMORANDUM FOR CORRESPONDENTS
The remains of two American servicemen previously unaccounted-for from
Southeast Asia have been identified and are being returned to their families
for burial in the United States.
They are identified as Maj. James B. East, USAF, of Oklahoma City, Okla. and
Lt. Col. Thomas R. Morgan, USAF, of Akron, Ohio.
On April 26, 1969, East was attacking an enemy mortar position in Laos when
his A-1J Skyraider was struck by enemy ground fire. The aircraft crashed and
exploded.
In 1994, a Lao witness identified a possible crash site associated with that
of East. A joint U.S./Lao Recovery Team excavated the site later that year
and found aircraft wreckage, pilot-related items, and human bone fragments.
On January 26, 1967, Morgan was conducting a strike mission over a target in
South Vietnam. As the attack began, pilots in other aircraft on the mission
observed smoke trailing from Morgan s F100D Super Sabre. His plane burst
into flames and broke in half prior to impact.=20
Investigations of Morgan s crash site were conducted in 1967 and 1968 by
American investigators, but no remains were located. A joint U.S./Vietnamese
recovery team in 1994 excavated the crash site and found human remains. In
1996, a local Vietnamese turned over more bone fragments and personal
effects of Morgan scavenged from the crash site. Morgan s remains were
subsequently identified.
Mitochondrial DNA testing was used to confirm the two identifications. The
remains will be shipped from the U.S. Army Central Identification Laboratory
in Hawaii at a date to be determined by the families.
With the identification of these two servicemen, there remain 2,116
unaccounted-for Americans from the Vietnam War.
The U.S. government welcomes and appreciates the cooperation of the
governments of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and the Lao People s
Democratic Republic which resulted in the accounting of these servicemen. We
hope that such cooperation will bring increased results in the future.
Achieving the fullest possible accounting for these Americans is of the
highest national priority.
[Distributed through the P.O.W. NETWORK]
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