Hi. My name is Sue Boley. I am a 34 year old female from the great Mountain State of West Virginia. I have been married for 16 years this June and have two daughters. My husband, Brian was in the Army for close to ten years. During many of those years he wore a POW/MIA bracelet bearing the name of SM/Sgt Ronnie L. Hensley. SM/Sgt Hensley was a member of the USAF and was lost over Laos April 22, 1970. A couple of years ago Brian was able to take his bracelet off as SM/Sgt Hensley was returned home for a proper burial. He was buried on US soil 11/8/95. Even though Brian felt funny without his bracelet for awhile he was very pleased to finally be able to remove it.
I have wanted to do something to help in the efforts to bring our people back where they belong for a long time, but until recently I did not know what I could do to help. Then I found a link that lead me to several POW/MIA pages. Here I found out that I could adopt a POW/MIA and attempt to help bring him home. This page will be about him.
Name: Michael Robert Norton Rank/Branch: E2/US Army
Unit: C Battery, 5th Battalion, 27th Artillery, 1st Field Force, Vietnam
Date of Birth: 26 January 1948
Home City of Record: Eskdale WV
Date of Loss: 03 November 1969
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 121410N 1072200E (YU557544)
Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: Ground
Other Personnel in Incident: (none missing)
REMARKS:
SYNOPSIS: On November 2, 1969, Pvt. Michael R. Norton was a gunner with an artillery battery at a forward fire support base in Quang Duc Province, South Vietnam near the Cambodian border. The fire base was in jeopardy of hostile enemy attack and being overrun, therefore, the unit was pulling out of the area.
During the withdrawal, the unit came under enemy 50 caliber machine gun fire and the unit dispersed into the jungle. By the time they had regrouped the next day, it was reported that Pvt. Norton was with the unit.
The unit then moved on to link up with a mobile strike force which was to guide tham to Bu Prang. When they arrived at Bu Prang, it was discovered that Norton was NOT present, and it was determined that he was last seen at an LZ (landing zone) near where the unit began the trip.
Aerial searches of the LZ and surrounding area were conducted with no success. Pvt. Michael R. Norton was classified Missing in Action. Norton's family patiently waited for the war to end. They never received word that Michael had been captured, but understood that it was possible.
When the war ended, and 591 Americans were released from communist prison camps in Southeast Asia, Michael R. Norton was not among them. Military authorities at the time expressed their dismay that "hundreds" of men expected to be returned had not been released. Furthermore, the Vietnamese denied any knowledge of these men.
Since the fall of Saigon in 1975, refugees have flooded the world, bringing with them reports relating to the American missing in Southeast Asia. By 1989, the U.S. Government had conducted over "250,000 interviews" and reviewed "several million documents" related to these men.
Many U.S. Congressmen and others who have had access to this classified material are convinced that many, many Americans are still held captive in Southeast Asia. One of them could be Michael R. Norton. It's time we brought our men home.
Since receiving the above information regarding Pvt Norton I have found that he has been promoted to SFC (Sergeant First Class). He was officially declared a casualty of the Vietnam war May 1, 1978. That was 20 years ago and still no word regarding his whereabouts.
Graphics courtesy of Wishmaker.
Graphics courtesy of Ron Fleischer
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