All posts by Fred OHern

7TH RAF WELFORD REUNION

Just a reminder that the 7TH RAF WELFORD REUNION is in SAN ANTONIO TX the 19th thru 23rd OCTOBER 2010. Reservations have to be made at the hotel by SEPTEMBER 19th 2010 to receive the group rate. I also need to get some idea of the numbers as to the folks interested in the bus trip to Fredricksburg to see if it is a viable option. I will be out of the loop for a few weeks as I am scheduled for surgery the 2nd July and will in hospital for 7-10 days. You can contact me on my other email of [email protected] as my earthlink box gets full rather quickly. You can also contact me either on my cellphone#707-484-2813 or 503-458-6001 after the 15th July 2010. Please don’t hesitate to call me if you have any questions.

Take care, Tina Speer

Colonel Randy Tymofichuk Retires at Hill AFB

by Chief Master Sergeant Mike Eisenberg
388th Equipment Maintenance Squadron Munitions Flight Chief

7/5/2010 – HILL AFB, Utah – On June 23, 2010, the Air Force munitions community said farewell to one of its greatest supporters! There was standing room only in the spacious Hill Aerospace Museum for the retirement of Colonel Randy B. Tymofichuk.

Colonel Tymofichuk was the 309th Missile Maintenance Group Commander at Hill Air Force Base, Utah. He led depot maintenance and repair for all Minuteman III Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles in support of USSTRATCOM requirements. His group was directly responsible for the assembly and transport of rocket motors for Missile Defense Agency test launches and aging and surveillance testing on various solid rocket motors, munitions, and associated equipment.

He served in critical positions in missile operations and maintenance at every echelon in the Air Force to include key staff positions at Numbered Air Force, MAJCOM, and Headquarters United States Air Force, as well as commanding at the squadron and three times at the group level.

It was an incredible sight to witness as supporters came out in groves! Many were Air Force General Officers, Commanders, munitions personnel, retirees, and civilians who worked with or under him while he was Commander of the 75th Maintenance Group, Commander, 784th Combat Sustainment Group, and Commander, 309th Missile Maintenance Group.

This retirement ceremony was especially significant in that Colonel Tymofichuk was bestowed the honor of being nominated and inducted as an honorary member of the Ammo Chiefs Association. His certificate and coin were presented by CMSgt (Ret) Calandra, CMSgt (Ret) Maurer, CMSgt (Ret) Fallen, CMSgt Eisenberg, and (C)MSgt Jones. Colonel Tymofichuk was truly touched to have received such an honor from a group he has respected throughout his career.

The persistent theme from guest speakers, friends, and family was the Colonel’s unwavering dedication and devotion to the advancement of the munitions community and his sincere caring for the personnel that worked for or around him. Although he has retired, his legacy to the munitions community will definitely live on!

John Finn, Medal of Honor Winner, Dies at 100

Please help honor an Aviation Ordnance Chief and Hero, by signing the online petition to have a US Navy ship named after him. http://www.petitiononline.com/USSLTJWF/ . Chief Finn (later commissioned and retired as a Lt. USN) is the only Aviation Ordnanceman (or equivalent in the other services) to be awarded the Medal of Honor!
IYA AmmO YAS

Retired Navy Lt. John W. Finn, received the Medal of Honor for mounting a daring counterattack on Japanese aircraft from an improvised machine gun post during the raid on Pearl Harbor. He died May 27 at a veterans home in Chula Vista, Calif. At 100, he was the oldest surviving recipient of the nation’s highest honor for valor and was among the first to receive the award during World War II.
On the morning of Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, when Japanese aircraft Hawaii, plunging the nation into World War II, numerous acts of valor played out. Of the 15 Medal of Honor recipients from those attacks, 14 were for rescue attempts. John Finn’s award was the only one for fighting back. Amid the death and destruction, Aviation Ordnance Chief Finn, on an airfield runway, was waging a war of his own against the Japanese

A few minutes before 8 o’clock, Japanese planes attacked the Kaneohe Bay Naval Air Station, about 12 miles from Battleship Row at Ford Island, hoping to knock out three dozen Navy aircraft before they could get air born.

Chief Finn, the Aviation Ordnance Chief in charge of munitions at the naval station and a veteran of 15 years in the Navy, was in bed in a nearby apartment with his wife, Alice. He heard the sound of aircraft, saw one plane flash past his window, then another, and he heard machine guns.

He dressed hurriedly, and drove to the naval station. At first, he observed the base’s 20 miles-per-hour speed limit. But then, “I heard a plane come roaring in from astern of me,” he recalled decades later in an interview with Larry Smith for “Beyond Glory,” an oral history of Medal of Honor recipients. “As I glanced up, the guy made a wing-over, and I saw that big old red meatball, the rising sun insignia, on the underside of the wing. Well, I threw it into second and it’s a wonder I didn’t run over every sailor in the air station.”

When Chief Finn arrived at the hangars, many of the planes had already been hit. He recalled that he grabbed a .30-caliber machine gun and mounted it on a makeshift tripod, carried it to an exposed area near a runway and began firing. For the next two and a half hours, he blazed away, although peppered by shrapnel as the Japanese planes strafed the runways with cannon fire.

As he remembered it: “I got shot in the left arm and shot in the left foot, broke the bone. I had shrapnel blows in my chest and belly and right elbow and right thumb. Some were just scratches. My scalp got cut, and everybody thought I was dying: Oh, Christ, the old chief had the top of his head knocked off! I had 28, 29 holes in me that were bleeding. I was walking around on one heel. I was barefooted on that coral dust. My left arm didn’t work. It was just a big ball hanging down.”

Chief Finn thought he had hit at least one plane, but he did not know whether he brought it down. When the attack ended, he received first aid, then returned to await a possible second attack. He was hospitalized the following afternoon.

On Sept. 15, 1942, Chief Finn received the Medal of Honor from Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet, in a ceremony aboard the carrier Enterprise at Pearl Harbor. Admiral Nimitz cited Chief Finn for his “magnificent courage in the face of almost certain death.”

John William Finn was born on July 23, 1909, in Los Angeles County, the son of a plumber. He dropped out of school to join the Navy at age 17.

He served stateside after he recovered from his Pearl Harbor wounds, became a lieutenant in 1944 and remained in military service after the war. He was living on a cattle ranch in Pine Valley, Calif., about 45 miles east of San Diego, before entering the nursing home where he died. His survivors include a son, Joseph. His wife died in 1998.

Only four of the Pearl Harbor Medal of Honor recipients survived the war, ten died in the attack and one died in November 1942 in the battle for Guadalcanal.

MSgt (ret’d) Dave Crute, Ammo

From our Vice President, Rich Pennington:

To ACA membership: Talked with retired MSgt Dave Crute over the weekend about his recovery from cancer surgery and chemo treatments. He’s in very good spirits and thinks in a few more weeks he’ll be back ready for action. Dave retired out of Langley some years ago and stayed in the Hampton Roads area where he has a auto repair shop that him and his son run to serve the local community.

He has a daughter that’s serving aboard the USN George Bush aircraft carrier. The Navy had a family day aboard the carrier and sailed out to open waters for the day a few weeks ago and Dave was able to go out and enjoyed the day.

Dave is a veteran of Vietnam and I had the pleasure of serving with him in the 80’s at Davis Monthan and Langley. Dave always did his best to take care of the troops.

I’m sure he would appreciate a card from old friends and the Ammo community.

Dave Crute, 8 Evelyn Drive, Newport News VA 23602