My Adopted
American Heroes



Please,
Allow me to introduce you to:

My Hometown Hero

Capt. John Leslie Ryder


(click for larger image)

Name: John Leslie Ryder
Rank/Branch: O2/US Air Force
Unit:
Date of Birth: 05 July 1946
Home City of Record: Chisholm MN
Date of Loss: 09 June 1970
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates:
1043419N 1074243E (YB785205)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 4
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: O1F
Panel 09W - - Line 35
Other Personnel In Incident:
Barry W. Hilbrich (missing)

And his flight partner

Capt. Barry Wayne
Hilbrich


Name: Barry Wayne Hilbrich
Rank/Branch:
O3/US Army Special Forces
Unit: Company B, S3, 5th Special Forces
Date of Birth: 25 June 1947
(Duere DeWitt TX)
Home City of Record:
Corpus Christi TX
Date of Loss: 09 June 1970
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates:
1043419N 1074243E (YB785205)
Status (in 1973): Missing In Action
Category: 4
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: O1F
Other Personnel In Incident:
John L. Ryder (missing)

SYNOPSIS:
Air Force Capt. John L. Ryder was the pilot of an O1F spotter aircraft on which Special Forces Operations Officer Capt. Barry W. Hilbrich was serving as observer. The two departed Pleiku Airbase on a visual reconnaissance mission on June 9, 1970 south of Ben Het in South Vietnam with an ultimate destination of Camp Dak Saeng.

The aircraft was located just north of Pleiku and was in radio contact with the tactical air control center. Their next scheduled radio contact was at 1327 hours, but no further communication was established. Ryder and Hilbrich were reported missing.

No immediate visual search could be initiated because of incliment weather, and an electronic search conducted produced no trace of the aircraft or the crew. During the period of June 10-19 an extensive search was carried out extending from Pleiku north to the I Corps boundary and west of the Cambodian border, with no sightings of either aircraft or its two officers. The two were officially classified Missing In Action. It cannot be determined whether the enemy knew their fates.

It was thought by the families of most of the men missing that even though they got no word of their loved one, there every chance they had been captured. When the war ended in 1973, and 591 Americans were released in Operation Homecoming, military experts expressed their dismay that "some hundreds" of POWs did not come home with them. Many families were devastated.

John Ryder's mother went to see the Vietnamese in England in 1976. While they were very cordial to her, she says, "they repeated over and over again, they will give out no information on the missing men until the U.S.A. has rebuilt Vietnam."

Reconstruction aid promised by Nixon and Kissinger to Vietnam in 1973 has not been appropriated by Congress, and no aid has been given. Since 1973, the Vietnamese continue to link the issue of aid to that of the American POWs, although the U.S. continues to insist it is a separate, humanitarian issue.

Tragically, thousands of reports continue to flow in regarding the Americans still prisoner, missing or unaccounted for. Some of them specifically refer to an American by name and location, yet no solution for bringing these men home has been found.

Those of us who remember that talks between nations can be tied up indefinitely over the shape of the negotiating table wonder how long our captive servicemen will be able to endure.

(Capt. John L. Ryder graduated from the United States Air Force Academy in 1968.)



John Leslie Ryder lived a few miles north of where I live now. When I first moved here, I saw a house with a very large beam antennae on it. Being a CBer, I asked whose it was. This was when I found out about Capt. Ryder. After he was reported missing, his parents set up ham radio equipment and spent hours in contact with overseas operators in search of their son. Capt. Hilbrich was with John when he went down. I found that I could adopt him also and felt since they were together when they went down, they should be honored together. I hope to find some information regarding him also. We want them both home!!!

John's parents spent the rest of their lives searching for information that might bring their son home. Sadly his parents have passed away, never having found out for sure whether or not their son was alive or dead.

Maybe now, they have been reunited with him,
"BUT"
We don't know for sure, do we??????

Somewhere, somebody does know! We all should have the right to know "for sure" what has happened to our friends and loved ones.!!

The loving wife that John L Ryder left behind while he went to Vietnam to "SERVE AMERICA" never found out what happened to the love of her life. Her high-school sweetheart, gone but never forgotten, torn from her life. Doesn't she have the right to know??????



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Please - READ AND HEAR - these words to the song:
MORE THAN A NAME ON THE WALL
By The Statler Brothers

I saw her from a distance, as she walked up to the wall
In her hand she held some flowers - as her tears began to fall
and she took out pen and paper, as to trace her memories,
She looked up to heaven, and the words she said were these.
She said, "Lord, my boy was special,
and he meant so much to me
and tho I'd love to see him, just one more time you see -
all I have are memories and the moments to recall, so Lord,
can't you tell him, he's more than a name on the wall."

She said he really missed the family
and being home on Christmas day
And he died for God and country - in a place so far away.
I remember just a little boy, playing war since he was three
Lord, this time I know, he's not coming home to me.
She said, "Lord my boy was special,
and he meant so much to me
and tho I'd love to see him, but I know it just can't be
So I thank you for the memories, and the moments to recall
But Lord, could you tell him,
He's more than a name on the wall."



All of them are more than a name on the wall!! All of them deserve to be home - on American soil!! HOME!!! Where they belong - not left behind to become only a name on the wall. Do we have the right to forget? Each and everyone of our men and women who served gave something - some gave all. We need to bring them home! They fought for the freedom for others - isn't it our American right to give them theirs? How there can be anyone who thinks any different, I don't know. Please help by joining Operation Just Cause and adopting one of our American Heros. Fight for those who cannot fight for themselves. Write your Senators, write to your President, Vice President and anyone else you think can help. Isn't it time to make the voices of our MIA's and POW's heard. They cannot do themselves, it is our turn to help.


















Graphics courtesy of "Doc" and Ron.


Many Thanks to these two for their dedication.





There aren't enough words to truly express our "Thanks" to Gunny for all of his time and dedication toward this most important "Cause".




        





"Biographical and loss information on POWs provided by Chuck and Mary Schantag of POWNET and SCOPE SYSTEMS.




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