SMITH, WILLIAM ARTHUR JR.

      Name: William Arthur Smith, Jr
Rank/Branch: W1/US Army
 Unit: Company A, 9th Aviation Battalion, 9th Infantry Division
 Date of Birth: 24 June 1945
  Home City:  Battle Creek, MI
Date of Loss:  27 September 1968
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
           Loss Coordinates: 101643N 1062847E (XS608377)
   Status (in 1973): Missing in Action
Category: 4
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: UH1H

                   Other Personnel in Incident: (none missing)

 Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 01 September 1990 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.

 
   SYNOPSIS: On September 27, 1968, WO1 William A. Smith, Jr. was the aircraft commander of an UH1H helicopter (tail #67-17164) on a command and control
    mission in the vicinity of My Tho, Kien Hoa Province, Republic of Vietnam. The pilot onboard the aircraft was LT Quentin F. Hurst, crewchief, PVT Jeffrey C. Niles, and gunner Kevin L. Grain.

    [NOTE: Several Defense Department listings show Smith's aircraft as an OH6A helicopter, but the Army and Joint Casualty Resolution Center (JCRC) records
                            indicate it was a UH1H.]

     During the mission, the aircraft was hit by enemy ground fire, burst into flames and exploded on contact with the My Tho River. Several U.S. Navy patrol boats
     were in the area, and the crash of the aircraft was observed. Boats arrived at  the site minutes after the crash. During the aerial search of the crash site,
     three aviator helmets, aircraft debris, personal items belonging to the aircraft crew and an oil slick were located on the water in the vicinity. However, no
            evidence of survivors was seen, nor were any bodies located.

    On 29 September, the bodies of three crew members were found floating in the vicinity of the crash site. The three remains were recovered and subsequently
       identified as Niles, Hurt and Grain. It was determined that the recovered  crew members survived the crash and later died by drowning. Thus it was possible that Smith survived as well and was captured. He was classified Missing in Action.

      A photo taken on the morning of September 28 of the shoreline in the same general area as the crash was examined by a photo interpreter who stated that it
     appeared that in the photo something or someone was dragged ashore in the vicinity of the crash site. However, questioning of the local riverside people
        indicated that a small sampan had been pulled ashore at that location.

    Leaflets were distributed along the shoreline seeking information from villagers about the fate of WO1 Smith. Also, an indigenous investigator traveled the north
   bank of the My Tho River searching for information or a body washed ashore. The results of both efforts were negative.

    In December 1974, remains were recovered that remotely associated with this incident. However, the Identification Laboratory in Thailand identified the
               remains as Mongoloid, and not those of WO1 Smith.

    A source reported information on a U.S. helicopter shot down in 1973 or 1974 in the vicinity. Reportedly, the dead pilot was pulled out, stripped, and buried in
      the vicinity. This was thought to possibly correlate to Smith [even though this
                incident was some 4-5 years following Smith's loss].

 

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