AK State Office of Veterans Affairs honored Army Guardsmen for 1955 rescueBy 1st Lt. Balinda ONeal
July 17, 2022
On July 9, 2022, more than 67 years later, the Alaska State Office of Veterans Affairs presented medals to one veteran and 13 family representatives of the Alaska Army National Guard’s First Scouts. The ceremony took place at the high school gym in Gambell, a St. Lawrence Island village located south of the Bering Strait and approximately eight miles from where the Lockheed P2V-5 Neptune crashed.
“In 1955 each member received a Letter of Appreciation for their actions,” said Verdie Bowen, director of the Office of Veterans Affairs, who explained that at the time there were no medals in the U.S. or National Guard inventory that could be awarded for their heroism. The Guardsmen, Siberian Yupik Eskimos, responded to the crash site in umiaks, open boats with wooden frames covered by bearded seal or walrus hides. The Alaska Heroism Medal citation states that the First Scouts mobilized and rescued the 11-member crew who received critical burns and gunshot and shrapnel wounds. The two MiG 15’s that shot down the Navy patrol plane, 40 miles off of Siberia and 200 miles west of Nome, remained overhead during the extraction. “The community reached out requesting commendation that more accurately recognized the valor of these brave men,” said Bowen, stating that part of the Office of Veterans Affairs mission is to help veterans obtain earned military awards. “No matter how long it takes, we are dedicated to honoring those that served with valor,” said Bowen. During the Cold War, the 297th Infantry Scout Battalions operated from small villages in Northern and Western Alaska, constantly observing the Bering Sea coastline and often providing significant intelligence information.
Edited By: Mary Kauffman, SitNews
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