Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

 

SP6 Carl Anthony Palen

 Name:Carl Anthony Palen

Rank/Branch: E5/US Army

Unit: 61st Assault Helicopter Company "Lucky Stars", 268th Aviation Battalion,

17th Aviation Group, 1st Aviation Brigade

Date of Birth: 11 March 1947

Home City of Record: Dubuque IA

Date of Loss: 03 January 1971

Country of Loss: South Vietnam

Loss Coordinates: 134700N 1090630E (BR960250)

Status (in 1973): Missing In Action

Category: 4

Acft/Vehicle/Ground: U6 "Beaver"

Other Personnel In Incident: Thomas R. Okerlund; Dennis W. Omelia; Patrick

Magee; Luis G. Holguin; Ferris Rhodes; Michael Parsons (all missing)

 

REMARKS:

 

SYNOPSIS: On January 3, 1971, Capt. Ferris A. Rhodes, Jr. was the pilot of a U6 "Beaver" (serial #52-25884), carrying six passengers: 1Lt. Michaeld D. Parsons, WO1 Thomas R. Okerland, WO1 Dennis W. Omelia; WO1 Luis G. Holguin; SP6 Patrick J. Magee; and SP5 Carl A. Palen. This was an administrative support flight from Qui Nhon to Ban Me Thuot, South Vietnam, to collect replacement helicopters for the company. Some of the men aboard were helicopter pilots, and would fly the choppers back to the base at Qui Nhon.

The U6 "Beaver" is an older, fixed wing aircraft of reasonable size (bigger than a "Bird Dog", for instance), rather short and squatty with a somewhat wide body. The aircraft departed Qui Nhon at about 0900 hours on January 3 without filing a proper flight plan, nor was the weather briefing obtained prior to takeoff. About 14 miles southeast of Phu Cat, at 1120 hours, radio and radar contact was lost with the plane.

Because Capt. Rhodes had announced plans to remain overnight at Ban Me Thuot, no immediate searches were made. By January 9, when Rhodes and his passengers still had not returned, search efforts were begun at 0900 hours, and continued throughout the day with no sign of the aircraft or its personnel.

The area of takeoff was tricky and the weather conditions were not good. Other pilots said that if planes taking off did not reach a safe altitude fast enough, they would crash into a mountain. Cruising speed for the "Beaver" was a mere 106 mph making it a prime target for flak. Conditions in the area indicated that the aircraft was shot down, and several years passed before the crew was finally declared dead.

Evidence mounts that Americans are still alive in Southeast Asia. It is not known for sure if any of the crew of the U6 survived and are among them, but there is no evidence that they are dead. If they survived, they could still be alive. If not, then someone else's brother, son, husband, father is alive. We owe them our very best effort to bring them home.

Information from No-Quarter:

--- General / Personal ---

Last name: PALEN
First name: CARL ANTHONY
Home of Record (official): DUBUQUE
State (official): IA
Date of Birth: Friday, April 11, 1947
Sex: Male
Race: Caucasian
Marital Status: Single

--- Military ---

Branch: Army
Rank: SP6
Serial Number: 481582517
Component: Regular
Pay grade: E6
MOS (Military Occupational Specialty code): Unknown/Not reported
Major Organization: 1st Aviation Bde

--- Action ---

Start of Tour: Sunday, January 3, 1971
Date of Casualty: Tuesday, August 22, 1978
Age at time of loss: 31
Casualty type: (C3) Non-hostile, died while missing
Reason: Air loss - Crashed on land (Fixed wing aircraft, non-crew)
Country: South VietNam
Province: Unknown/Not Reported
The Wall: Panel 05W - Row 023

The Wall Memorial
1st Aviation Brigade