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  • Gerald O. Young
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  • Born on May 9, 1930, in Chicago, Illinois, Young joined the Air Force from Colorado Springs, Colorado. During the war he served as a captain in the 37th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron, a helicopter unit operating out of Da Nang Air Force Base, Republic of Vietnam. Young reached the rank of lieutenant colonel before leaving the Air Force in 1980. Aged 60 at his death, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County, Virginia.
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Unit
  • 37
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Birth Date
  • 1930-05-19
Name
  • Gerald Orren Young
Caption
  • Lieutenant Colonel Gerald Young
Birth Place
  • Chicago, Illinois
Awards
  • Medal of Honor
  • Air Medal
  • Distinguished Flying Cross
  • Purple Heart
  • Air Force Commendation Medal
death date
  • 1990-06-06
Rank
Allegiance
Battles
placeofburial
  • Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington County, Virginia
abstract
  • Born on May 9, 1930, in Chicago, Illinois, Young joined the Air Force from Colorado Springs, Colorado. During the war he served as a captain in the 37th Aerospace Rescue and Recovery Squadron, a helicopter unit operating out of Da Nang Air Force Base, Republic of Vietnam. On the night of November 8–9, 1967, Young's aircraft was one of two HH-3E Jolly Green Giant helicopters sent to extract five survivors of a U.S. Army Special Forces reconnaissance team in Laos. The extraction site was known to be hot, surrounded by a well-disciplined, crack North Vietnamese Army (NVA) battalion. Two helicopters had already been shot down and destroyed in the area. Illuminated by a C-130 Hercules dropping LUU-2 parachute flares, "Jolly 29" made a pickup of three survivors before being driven off by intense enemy fire. Young, piloting "Jolly 26", then attempted to pick up the remaining two survivors, both now wounded. Fighting was intense both in the air and on the ground. A U.S. Air Force para-rescueman aboard Young's aircraft, Larry W. Maysey, jumped from the helicopter and ran down a steep slope, rescuing the two remaining men. "Jolly 26" was now being hit with small arms fire. Just after Maysey had helped both survivors safely on board, a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) struck the number one engine, fatally crippling the craft. The engine exploded, inverting the helicopter, which rolled and skidded down a deep ravine and burst into flames; Young and one other man survived the crash and escaped the burning wreckage. Despite severe wounds, Young evaded capture for seventeen hours until being rescued later that day. For these actions, he was awarded the Medal of Honor. The para-rescueman, Maysey, was posthumously awarded the Air Force Cross. Young reached the rank of lieutenant colonel before leaving the Air Force in 1980. Aged 60 at his death, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington County, Virginia.