Hill, Thomas, MSgt

Command and Control
 
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Life Member
 
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Current Service Status
USAF Retired
Current/Last Rank
Master Sergeant
Current/Last Primary AFSC/MOS
39290-Maintenance Management Superintendent
Current/Last AFSC Group
Command and Control
Primary Unit
1980-1981, 39200, Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL)
Previously Held AFSC/MOS
42132-Apprentice Aircraft and Missile Pneudraulic Repairman
42172-Aircraft and Missile Pneudraulic Repair Technician
43370-Maintenance Scheduling Technician
39200-Chief Scheduling Manager
39270-Maintenance Management Technician
Service Years
1961 - 1981
Enlisted srcset=
Master Sergeant

 Official Badges 

US Air Force Honorable Discharge


 Unofficial Badges 

F-106 DART


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
American LegionAir Force Memorial (AFM)49th Fighter Squadron Association
  1985, American Legion - Assoc. Page
  2006, Air Force Memorial (AFM) - Assoc. Page
  2009, 49th Fighter Squadron Association - Assoc. Page


 Additional Information
What are you doing now:

I fish, hunt deer and turkey and camp whenever possible. I am currently working on my families genealogy.
 

   
Other Comments:

I retired from the AF in 1981, then went to work at Monarch Machine Tool Co. in Sidney, Ohio as a Field Service Rep. I worked my way up to Assistant Service Mgr. In 1995 I then accepted a position at Makino Inc. in Mason, OH as a Field Service Engineer. I retired from Makino in 2006. If there was a place I did not see while in the Air Force I saw it while working for the machine tool business. I met lots of interesting people, saw lots of interesting things, and visited many interesting places. In my civilian occupation, I traveled to Canada, Mexico, Turkey, Singapore, Japan, Denmark, and the Netherlands. My military travels took me to Panama, Venezuela, Costa Rico, Vietnam, England, Germany, Belgium, and Spain.

   

 Remembrance Profiles -  1 Airman Remembered


Vietnam War/Counteroffensive Phase V Campaign (1968)
From Month/Year
July / 1968
To Month/Year
November / 1968

Description
This period was from November 1, 1968-February 22, 1969.
Following the cessation of bombing on October 3,. 1968, the United States for the next 4 years restricted flights over North Vietnam primarily to reconnaissance missions. The Air Force diverted airpower resources committed to the campaign over North Vietnam to the air campaign in Laos in an attempt to slow the flow of suppliesfrom North Vietnam down the Ho Chi Minh Trail. This interdiction effort covered an area in the Laotian panhandle from about the 16th to the 18th parallel and focused on the Laotian/North Vietnamese border near the Keo Nua, Mu Ola, and Ban Karai Passes. Much information about targets on the l-lo Chi Minh Trail came from air-dropped electronic sensors. When American bombing choked the major transportation arteries. the North Vietnamese directed truck convoys along secondary roads where they became more vulnerable to tactical air strikes. Throughout November and December 1968 U.S. tactical aircraft and B-52s attacked targets in the Laotian panhandle. AC-130 gunships, flying at night and relying on infrared, radar, and other sensors. proved especially effective in destroying trucks. To counter the intense air attacks, the North Vietnamese quadrupled the number of anti-aircraft guns along the Ho Chi Minh Trail, while adding logistical personnel in Laos for repair work and transport duties.

The USAF also provided close air support to hard-pressed Royal and irregular Laotian forces in northem Laos, where on December 25, North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao troops launched a strong offensive. By late February 1969 the enemy had driven the Laotian forces back across the Plain of Jars to Na Khang.

In South Vietnam, meanwhile. the Viet Cong suffered temporary setbacks under Allied air and ground attacks. On November 1, 1968, the Republic of Vietnam began a military and civic pacification program intended to bring most of the onuttry quickly under government control. Two operations underscored Allied military approaches to pacification.

In the first, the Allies learrted of a large enemy force moving into the Savy Rieng Province, Cambodia. the so-called “Parrot's Beak" that jutted deep into South Vietnam northwest of Saigon. To thwart this penetration, between October 18 and November 11, 1968, the U.S. Air Force airlifted 11,500 men of the U.S. lst Cavalry Division and 3,400 tons of cargo in C-130s over 500 miles from Quang Tri Province in the north to Tay Ninh. Binh Long. and Phuoc Long Provinces. northwest of Saigon. Until the tum of the year, these U.S. Army forces. working with the South Vietnamese, conducted operations in the Cambodian/South Vietnamese border area along the Parrot‘s Beak between the Vam Co Tay and Vam Co Dong Rivers. The USAF supported these operations with tactical aircraft and B-52s flying air support and interdiction missions against troop concentrations, base areas, logistics complexes and transportation lines. In the second major winter operation. starting the first week of December. the Seventh Air Force launched another air campaign in the A Shau Valley, located near the Cambodian border some 30 miles southwest of Hue. Afterward, in January 1969. U.S. Marines entered the valley and found large amounts of materiel that the Communists had abandoned unable to move it during the sustained air attacks. After months of negotiations on January 18, 1969, representatives of the government of South Vietnam and of the National Liberation Front. the Communist political branch in South Vietnam joined the United States and North Vietnam in the Paris peace talks. While negotiations continued in France, the Communist forces in Vietnam launched their first offensive of the new year.
 
   
My Participation in This Battle or Operation
From Month/Year
November / 1968
To Month/Year
February / 1969
 
Last Updated:
Mar 16, 2020
   
Personal Memories
   
Units Participated in Operation

355th Wing - Desert Lightning

 
My Photos From This Battle or Operation
Me and 768
Healing Fields

  153 Also There at This Battle:
  • Avery, James, SSgt, (1962-1970)
  • Bennett, Perry, Sgt, (1967-1971)
  • Bjurstrom, Dennis, SMSgt, (1968-1991)
  • Bopp, Timothy, Sgt, (1966-1970)
  • Brakob, Lyle, CMSgt, (1959-1979)
  • Caprio, Michael, Sgt, (1967-1971)
  • Carnahan, James, Sgt, (1966-1970)
  • Cervantes, Johnny, Sgt, (1967-1971)
  • Cholewa, Joe, Sgt, (1966-1969)
  • Conn, Scott, SSgt, (1966-1973)
  • Cowger, Michael, SSgt, (1966-1974)
  • Daugherty, Rodney, 1stSgt, (1967-1985)
  • Del Rossi, Richard, TSgt, (1968-2005)
  • Dick, David, SSgt, (1966-1970)
  • Durnell, Dale, SMSgt, (1964-1991)
  • Dyson, Herb, SSgt, (1968-1975)
  • Edmisten, Lynell, SSgt, (1965-1969)
  • Ford, Patrick V. (Pat), Maj, (1965-1986)
  • Gallagher, Jack, Sgt, (1965-1969)
  • Geese, Ralph, MSgt, (1965-1986)
  • Gibson, Robert, MSgt, (1967-1991)
  • Goss, Mike, SSgt, (1966-1970)
  • Griffin, Roy, Sgt, (1965-1969)
  • Griffiths, Dennis, SSgt, (1968-1972)
  • Haas, Bill, Sgt, (1968-1972)
  • Hanke, Bruce, CMSgt, (1967-2004)
  • Henderson, James, Maj, (1961-1988)
  • Hendrick, Michael, SMSgt, (1967-1993)
  • Humphreys, Edwin, Col, (1966-1994)
  • Johnson, Richard, CMSgt, (1959-1989)
  • Locy, Jerry, Sgt, (1966-1970)
  • MacFarlane, James, SMSgt, (1962-1989)
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