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Name: Richard K. Harper
Rank/Branch: W3/US Army
Unit: Headquarters, MACV
Date of Birth: 02 October 1941 (Norwood MA)
Home City of Record: Burlington MA
Date of Loss: 19 May 1965
Country of Loss: South Vietnam
Loss Coordinates: 141745N 1084450E (BR570815)
Status (in 1973): Killed/Body Not Recovered
Category: 2
Aircraft/Vehicle/Ground: O1F
Other Personnel In Incident: Leroy M. Donovan (missing)
Source: Compiled by Homecoming II Project 15 October 1990 from one or more of the following: raw data from U.S. Government agency sources, correspondence with POW/MIA families, published sources, interviews.
REMARKS: ACFT OVERDUE-JF815-J
SYNOPSIS: The O1 "Bird Dog" was used extensively in the early years of the war in Vietnam by forward air controllers and provided low, close visual
reconnaissance and target marking which enabled armed aircraft or ground troops
to close in on a target. The Bird Dog was feared by the enemy, because he knew
that opening fire would expose his location and invite attack by fighter planes
controlled by the slowly circling Bird Dog. The Vietnamese became bold, however,
when they felt their position was compromised and attacked the little Bird Dog
with a vengeance in order to lessen the accuracy of the impending air strike.
On May 19, 1965, O1 pilot CWO Richard K. Harper was assigned an aerial
reconnaissance mission over South Vietnam. His observer was SFC Leroy M.Donovan.
The aircraft, assigned to Headquarters, MACV, departed Holloway
Airfield at about 1300 hours.
At 1700 hours the aircraft was an hour overdue. A check was made with airfields
where the plane could have landed along its flight path, with negative results.
A search was initiated in and around Camp Holloway, and along the route the
aircraft was to take. Searches continued until May 25, but no sign of the
aircraft or crew was found. Loss location is estimated to be in Binh Dinh
Province, near the border of Kontum Province.
Radio Hanoi broadcast on May 28 that the Viet Cong had shot down an O1F aircraft
on May 18, which may or may not correlate to this aircraft because of the date
discrepancy. Nothing was ever found of the crew or plane, and no further
indication that the crew had been captured was ever found.
Donovan and Harper are among nearly 2500 Americans who disappeared in Southeast
Asia. Experts now believe, based on thousands of reports received, that there
may be hundreds of Americans still alive, captives of a long-ago enemy, today.
Whether the crew of the O1F lost on May 19, 1965 is among them is not certain.
What is clear, however, is that we must do everything it takes to bring these
men home. Our honor depends upon it.
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