Hensel, R., SMSgt

Aircraft Maintenance
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Current Service Status
USAF Retired
Current/Last Rank
Senior Master Sergeant
Current/Last Primary AFSC/MOS
423X4-Aircraft Pneudraulic Systems Mechanic
Current/Last AFSC Group
Aircraft Maintenance
Primary Unit
2005-Present, 119th Fighter Squadron - Jersey Devils
Previously Held AFSC/MOS
99000-Basic Airman
4-A
42-Air
2A3X3-Tactical Aircraft Maintenance
43191-Aircraft Maintenance Superintendent
Service Years
1966 - 2005
Voice Edition
Enlisted srcset=
Senior Master Sergeant

 Official Badges 

Air Force Retired


 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Air Force Sergeants Association (AFSA)Post 158, Emilio Marandino PostAir & Space Forces Association (AFA)Patriot Guard Riders
  1990, Air Force Sergeants Association (AFSA) - Assoc. Page
  1992, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW), Post 158, Emilio Marandino Post (Landisville, New Jersey) - Chap. Page
  1998, Air & Space Forces Association (AFA) - Assoc. Page
  2010, Patriot Guard Riders


 Additional Information
What are you doing now:

  Keeping busy with my wife Donna, whom I will be married to forty years in July 2009.  We've traveled quite alot having gone to Germany, Switzerland, Italy and Austria in March 2006.  March 2007 we drove my inlaws to the Mayo Clinic in Minnesotta.  What a snow storm we ran into in Madison Wisconsin!  January 2008 we drove to Florida.  Visited some of the old TDY bases Tyndall and  McDill.  I always enjoyed TDY's, and it brings back good memories to go their.  July 2008 we drove to Albuquerque New Mexico for a wedding, then up to Colorado Spings and Denver.  As you can see I enjoy driving, so I took a part time job driving.  One of my "FOX HOLE BUDDIES" Joe Fenton, convinced me to look into parts delivery.  I work three days a week for an auto dealership and have a four day weekend.  WOW,  if I knew it would be that good, I would have done it forty years ago!! 

    When our children were young, it opened up an avenue to our social lives, so do our five grand children.  In many ways re-aquainting us with people we lost touch with.  Its true, you really get to enjoy them so much more than the hectic pace of raising your own.  I finally have two sons!  both are really nice guys and thank God, both marriages seem to be very sound.
 

   
Other Comments:


I graduated from Cape May Vocational Technical Institute in 1966 and went to work for Weaton Plastic Co. in Mayslanding as a design draftsman.  I had a technical deferment from them to avoid the draft and one from my parents' family farm but felt an obligation to serve in the military.  As a child who played soldier with my cousins and admired my uncles in uniform I was inspired to join the military.  The Vietnam War was going on and everyone was saying "don't join", this didn't persuade me .  I joined the New Jersey Air National Guard in August and left for basic in October 1966.  After graduation from Chanute AFB as a hydraulic repairman, I was hired full time by the NJANG as a technician.  From that day on I knew I made the right decision about joining the military.  On January 26, 1968 the 177th TFG was activated for the Pueblo Incident and we were sent to Phu Cat, Vietnam for a one year tour.  After 14 years as a hydraulic technician, I cross trained to flight line and was a crew chief certified on F-106s, T-33s and F-16s.  I retired from my technician job with NJANG on my 55th birthday, December 27, 2000 and stayed on as a triditional Guardsman working in the Maintenance Control section (MOCC).  The first plane flew into the World Trade building at 0910 and by 0925 hours I received a phone call saying we were activated and to report to base ASAP.  I stayed on active duty for two years doing Noble Eagle missions and retired from NJANG military on December 27, 2005 at age 60. 

     From my first day as a technician until my last day as a traditional guardsman, I knew I had a job that was the envy of my family and friends.  Exotic travel to places they only heard about and TDYs to warm climates in January and Feburary always seemed like greener pastures to them and for the most part, they were correct.  I couldn't imagine working any other job and being any happier than with what I was doing in the Air National Guard. 
 

   

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  1968-1968, 354th Field Maintenance Squadron

Airman 1st Class
From Month/Year
March / 1968
To Month/Year
June / 1968
Unit
354th Field Maintenance Squadron Unit Page
Rank
Airman 1st Class
AFSC/MOS
Not Specified
Base, Station or City
Myrtle Beach
State/Country
South Carolina
   
 Patch
 354th Field Maintenance Squadron Details

354th Field Maintenance Squadron
Type
Maintenance
 
Parent Unit
Field Maintenance Units
Strength
Squadron
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Apr 25, 2023
   
Memories For This Unit

Best Friends
Frank Grober, Dan Tozer, Bill (doggie)D'Augostino, Jay Moser

   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
No Available Photos
5 Members Also There at Same Time
354th Field Maintenance Squadron

Cline, Larry, MSgt, (1961-1996) 432 43290 Master Sergeant
Watson, William, MSgt, (1955-1975) 421 42173 Technical Sergeant
Anctil, Gerard, Sgt, (1964-1968) Airman 1st Class
Jordan, James, Sgt, (1967-1971) 534 53430 Airman 1st Class
Gray, Russell, MSgt, (1967-1989) 431 43151C Airman 1st Class

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