Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Fallen tanker pilot to be honored in building dedication
 
Photos 
Fallen tanker pilot to be honored in building dedication
Family members Maj. Robert F. Woods watch as the caisson carrying him is prepared to move to a grave site April 9, 2008, at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia. Officials from the 916th Air Refueling Wing will dedicate an auditorium in Major Woods' honor June 26, 2011. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Scott T. Sturkol)
Download HiRes
Fallen tanker pilot to be honored in building dedication

Posted 6/1/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Lori B. Alves
916th Air Refueling Squadron Public Affairs


6/1/2011 - SEYMOUR JOHNSON AIR FORCE BASE, N.C. (AFNS)  -- Airmen from the 911th Air Refueling Squadron will honor a fallen tanker pilot June 26 here by dedicating a new auditorium in his name.

The event comes exactly 43 years to the day that the late Maj. Robert Francis Woods was declared missing in action after his plane crashed over Vietnam, and four years after his remains were finally returned to his homeland.

"I think this is an amazing way to honor Major Woods and his family for the great sacrifice they gave for their country," said Lt. Col. Phil Heseltine, the 911th Air Refueling Squadron commander. "I can't imagine how hard it would be for a family, or my family if I went on a deployment and just didn't come home."

Currently known as the "Tankertorium," the auditorium on the first floor of the building shared by the 911th ARS and 77th ARS will be officially named The Maj. Robert F. Woods Auditorium.

"This is the first honor presented to us in Dad's name," said 68-year-old Lana Taylor, the eldest of Major Woods' four children. "This is very rare. We (the Woods family) know that and are so appreciative."

The Woods family is dear to Colonel Heseltine's heart.

By chance, as a ROTC cadet at the University of Utah, then-Cadet Heseltine purchased a POW/MIA bracelet with Major Woods name chiseled on it. Later, he determined that Major Woods was a former tanker pilot and had flown in numerous combat missions, much like himself.

"I wore it off and on through college," said Colonel Heseltine, who has flown in combat missions in Operations Southern Watch, Northern Watch, Noble Eagle, Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. "When I graduated in 1993, it went with me. I wore it pretty much any time that I was in uniform, and it deployed with me when I went downrange. When I was finally able to return it to the Woods family, it was amazing; just a very special event. And now, I have this amazing opportunity to honor the Woods family."

In June of 1968, Major Woods and Capt. Johnnie Clayton Cornelius were flying a visual reconnaissance mission over Quang Binh Province, Vietnam, when their 0-2A Skymaster crashed in a remote mountainous area. Their aircraft, used for forward air control missions, was seen exploding into a steep bank by another aircraft, according to the Department of Defense. Immediate search efforts were unsuccessful, no parachutes were found and no emergency beeper signals were heard. Both Major Woods and Captain Cornelius were pronounced MIA at that time.

"My mother never gave up hope. She never accepted the fact that he was dead," Ms. Taylor said. "I was already married and living with my husband when this happened. My siblings (at the time all under the age of 10) still lived at home, and they all believed that he would return home. Unfortunately, they don't remember a lot about our father. But myself and other family members always tell stories about him. I tell them as much as I know."

Between 1988 and 2006, joint U.S. and Vietnamese teams, led by the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command, investigated the incident and surveyed the crash site numerous times. During that time, two Vietnamese citizens turned over human remains and the pilots' dog tags, and two former North Vietnamese soldiers recalled the crash and identified the burial site of both pilots. DOD officials identified the remains as Major Woods and Captain Cornelius Nov. 30, 2007.

It was then that the names of the two pilots struck a chord with Colonel Heseltine.

"I had stopped wearing it for a while because from taking it off and on, the bracelet developed a crack on the top of it," he said. "I immediately went to the shelf where I had placed it and decided to contact the family."

Through phoning a reporter in Utah, Colonel Heseltine was able to make contact with Ms. Taylor and made arrangements to give the bracelet back to the family during the burial at Arlington National Cemetery. The bracelet was presented to Major Woods' only son Chuck, who then passed it along to his son Mackenzie. Chuck Woods was only 8 years old when his father was declared MIA.

Colonel Heseltine and Ms. Taylor have stayed in contact since their first meeting at Arlington. When she received the telephone call from Colonel Heseltine asking for permission to dedicate the auditorium in her father's name, she was overjoyed.

"(Colonel Heseltine) has turned out to be such a great gift to our family," Ms. Taylor said, describing her late father as a quiet man, but also a jokester. "This is going to be a joyous celebration. The mourning is over. We are very honored, and Dad would be beyond words over this. He would just be amazed. He would be grinning."



tabComments
No comments yet.  
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Life Extension Programs modernize ICBMs

SecAF visits basic military training

Through Airmen's Eyes: Airman battles breast cancer

Remains of two Airmen lost in 1969 identified, honored

Top female AF general tells personal examples of women's progress in military

Wizards salute Andrews Airmen, service members

Online access simplifies dependent updates

Aviano unveils first locally painted F-16

'Green Flag' keeps Airmen, Soldiers mission ready

Contingency Response Airmen battle elements at JRTC  1

AF awards $25K to essay winners

Through Airmen's Eyes: Ultimate wingman helps save friend's life  12

Declassified document shows 'real' flying saucer

Hurlburt Airman found dead after boating mishap identified

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Teal ropes to spotlight sexual assault response  37

Air Force Academy energy research will yield global benefits


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing