LARRY C THORNTON
VIEW ALL PHOTOS (4)
HONORED ON PANEL 4E, LINE 38 OF THE WALL

LARRY C THORNTON

WALL NAME

LARRY C THORNTON

PANEL / LINE

4E/38

DATE OF BIRTH

03/03/1932

CASUALTY PROVINCE

LZ

DATE OF CASUALTY

12/24/1965

HOME OF RECORD

IDAHO FALLS

COUNTY OF RECORD

Bonneville County

STATE

ID

BRANCH OF SERVICE

AIR FORCE

RANK

CMS

Book a time
Contact Details

REMEMBRANCES

LEFT FOR LARRY C THORNTON
POSTED ON 11.8.2012

Photo

In this photo provided by Ron Thornton, Larry C. Thornton poses in a cowboy hat with his three sons, Dennis, Bradley and Ron, in this photo from the early 1960s taken while the family was stationed in Moses Lake, Wash.



Rest in peace with the warriors.

read more read less
POSTED ON 11.8.2012

Never Forgotten

(Photo Credit: his son Ron Thornton)



Rest in peace with the warriors.

read more read less
POSTED ON 7.11.2012

Remembrance

*

read more read less
POSTED ON 7.10.2012
POSTED BY: Nam Vet

Brothers Then, Brothers Forever

July 9,2012: ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — Ever since Sherrie Hassenger's husband went missing with five other U.S. airmen over Laos in 1965, her purpose has been to wish and to hope he would come home. When those men's remains were buried in a single casket Monday , July 8th, at Arlington National Cemetery, she said, some of that purpose was taken away.


'All I listen to is '50s, '60s music,' she said. 'When I saw those Air Force men in those dress blues, just like back then, I just wanted to go up and hug them and kiss them. It felt like maybe I could find a piece of my husband in them.'


The charred remains of the six airmen — identified not through DNA matches but through dental records, personal items and other circumstantial evidence — were buried in a single casket with full military honors, as is common in situations where remains can't be conclusively linked to a specific individual. The remains are representative of six Air Force servicemen: Col. Joseph Christiano of Rochester, N.Y.; Col. Derrell B. Jeffords of Florence, S.C.; Lt. Col. Dennis L. Eilers of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Chief Master Sgt. William K. Colwell of Glen Cove, N.Y.; Chief Master Sgt. Arden K. Hassenger of Lebanon, Ore.; and Chief Master Sgt. Larry C. Thornton of Idaho Falls, Idaho.


The Air Force gave all six posthumous promotions, a military spokesperson noted.


t was Christmas Eve 1965 when their Air Force plane, nicknamed 'Spooky,' took off from Vietnam for a combat mission. The crew sent out a 'mayday' signal while flying over Laos, and after that, all contact was lost. Two days of searches turned up nothing.


For nearly half a century, the airmen's families endured an emotional kaleidoscope that they say is difficult to describe to those who never had to face it. The men were listed for years as missing, and family members held out hope at first that their loved ones had survived. For most that hope faded over time, despite an occasional unconfirmed report that crew members were seen alive. The crash site has been excavated several times over the past decade, but it was not until 2010 and 2011 that human remains were recovered.


Even though Sherrie Hassenger's husband perhaps had the most conclusive identification of all six crew members — a tooth of Hassenger's was recovered and matched through dental records — she and her son Keith Hassenger said they still have nagging doubts about what happened. Both said they appreciated Monday's service and were grateful so many people came to pay respects, but they said they have had a difficult time getting answers over the years. The tooth, in their mind, raises more questions than answers: If a single tooth was found, they wonder, wouldn't it make sense that other teeth or perhaps his skull could be found also?


Keith Hassenger said that while they approached Monday's service with the feeling it might help provide closure, that comfort proved elusive.


'This may be the only thing we get,' he said.


For Jeanne Jeffords, 86, of Temecula, Calif., the hardest part of Monday's service was seeing how emotional it was for her children, who were teenagers when their father died.


'I've lived with it for so long, I'm all teared out,' said Jeffords, who appreciated the opportunity to meet the families of her husband's fellow airmen. 'For all these years we just had a list of names.'


The service drew hundreds of people, including Air Force and Vietnam veterans unrelated to the families.


May GOD bless these heroes and those who love them.


Amen.

read more read less
POSTED ON 7.15.2007
POSTED BY: Robert Sage

We Remember

Larry has a military stone in his honor at Iona Cem, Idaho Fall, ID.
read more read less