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Capt Mason Irwin Burnham

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Capt Mason Irwin Burnham Veteran

Birth
Okmulgee, Okmulgee County, Oklahoma, USA
Death
19 Apr 1972 (aged 28)
Laos
Burial
Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 60, Site 7934
Memorial ID
View Source
In loving memory of... Capt. Mason Irwin Burnham.
*** Burnham's remains were recovered 07 Jun 1994 and id'd 01 Oct 1999. In 2000 he received two funeral ceremonies, the first at Arlington National Cem. and a later funeral at Restlawn Mem. Gardens, Salem.
*** Captain Burnham was a member of 421st Tactical Fighter Squadron. On April 20, 1972, he was the co-pilot of a McDonnell Douglas Phantom II Fighter (F-4D) on a combat mission over Quang Tin Province halfway between Ben Giang, South Vietnam and Chavane, Laos. His aircraft was shot down. His remains were recovered on June 7, 1994 and identified on October 1, 1999. His name is inscribed on the Courts of the Missing at the Honolulu Memorial.


You may be gone, no longer living on this earth; but you will live on - in the memories of your family and friends. There will always be a part of you living in those who knew you. You will live on because we remember you!


MASON IRWIN BURNHAM - Air Force - CAPT - O3
Age: 31
Race: Caucasian
Date of Birth Sep 19, 1943
Born: Okmulge OK - He lived in Salem, Vancouver WA, and Roseburg before moving to Eugene in 1964.
From: PORTLAND, OR
Social Security Number: 542-42-0279 State: Oregon
Religion: EPISCOPAL, ANGLICAN
Marital Status: Married - Ex-Wife, Judy M. Burnham - Remarried - Thomas. Daughter, Kimberly T. Burnham Heddinger. Son, Mason S. Burnham. Parents: Father, Lyle M Burnham (1906 - 1990) and Mother, Rebecca M Burnham (1908 - 1999). Brother and one grandchild.


CAPT - O3 - Air Force - Reserve
His tour began on Apr 20, 1972
Casualty was on Mar 27, 1975
In QUANG TRI, LAOS
Hostile, died while missing, FIXED WING - CREW
AIR LOSS, CRASH ON LAND


Body was recovered
Panel 01W - Line 4


Captain Burnham was a member of 421st Tactical Fighter Squadron.

On April 20, 1972, he was the co-pilot of a McDonnell Douglas Phantom II Fighter (F-4D) on a combat mission over Quang Tin Province halfway between Ben Giang, South Vietnam and Chavane, Laos. His aircraft was shot down.

His remains were recovered on June 7, 1994 and identified on October 1, 1999.

Burnham's remains were recovered 07 Jun 1994 and id'd 01 Oct 1999.

In 2000 he received two funeral ceremonies, the first at Arlington National Cemetery and a later funeral at Salem OR.


*************************************************

Vietnam pilot to get homecoming burial 28 yrs after death
Monday, June 12, 2000
EUGENE, Oregon -- A pilot who died during the Vietnam War 28 years ago will be laid to rest in Salem this week.
It will be the second funeral for U.S. Air Force Captain Mason Burnham. His unidentifiable remains were buried during a May 25 ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

The identified remains, along with all the medals the pilot earned, will be buried Saturday.

"If it's anything like the one in Arlington, it'll just be awesome," Burnham's daughter, Kim Heddinger, said Friday.

Burnham died when his F-4D Phantom jet was shot down over Laos while flying escort on a bombing run near the Vietnam border in May 1972. The wreckage wasn't discovered until 1989, and attempts to recover the remains of Burnham and a second pilot stretched from 1993 to 1998.

Heddinger flew to Arlington for the service honoring her father and the jet's other pilot, Major Thomas Amos of Missouri.
"Taps" was played at the grave, an honor guard fired a 21-gun salute and four F-16 jets performed a flyover in the "missing man" formation.

"When the guy played 'Taps,' this light mist came down on us," said Heddinger, who was 6 when her father's aircraft disappeared. "But it only lasted like 10 or 15 seconds and then stopped, so we all knew it was like tears from heaven."

Burnham was born September 19, 1943, in Okmulge, Oklahoma. He lived in Salem, Vancouver, Washington, and Roseburg before moving to Eugene in 1964.

He received a bachelor's degree in business from the University of Oregon in 1968.

In addition to his daughter, Burnham is survived by his wife, Judy Thomas, a son, brother and one grandchild.


****************************
A military honor guard on May 25, 1999 laid to rest the recently discovered remains of Major Thomas H. Amos, a U. S. Air Force F-4 pilot, and Captain Mason I. Burnham, his navigator, killed when their F-4 plunged into a Laotian forest near the Ho Chi Minh Trail on April 20, 1972.

Amos and Burnham were assigned to the 366th Tactical Fighter Wing, based at Da Nang in South Vietnam. They were flying a night escort mission with an AC-130 gunship when they abruptly ceased radio contact. Witnesses saw a fireball, with no parachutes.

In 1989, two Vietnamese looking for incense wood stumbled on the wreckage in a remote part of Quang Nam-Da Nang province. The US Air Force interviewed the pair four years later and began recovery efforts at the crash site in 1994.
The difficult terrain made recovery work slow. The discovery of unexploded ordnance caused authorities to halt the search in June 1998.

By then, however, searchers had recovered enough bone fragments and other items to positively identify Amos and Burnham.

They also recovered the men's dog tags.

Burnham's tags were returned to his daughter, Kim Heddinger, last summer.

She has worn them almost every day since, "because he wore them next to his heart when he was killed," she told an interviewer in her hometown of Eugene, Oregon.


******************************

.


Military Information: CPT, US AIR FORCE
In loving memory of... Capt. Mason Irwin Burnham.
*** Burnham's remains were recovered 07 Jun 1994 and id'd 01 Oct 1999. In 2000 he received two funeral ceremonies, the first at Arlington National Cem. and a later funeral at Restlawn Mem. Gardens, Salem.
*** Captain Burnham was a member of 421st Tactical Fighter Squadron. On April 20, 1972, he was the co-pilot of a McDonnell Douglas Phantom II Fighter (F-4D) on a combat mission over Quang Tin Province halfway between Ben Giang, South Vietnam and Chavane, Laos. His aircraft was shot down. His remains were recovered on June 7, 1994 and identified on October 1, 1999. His name is inscribed on the Courts of the Missing at the Honolulu Memorial.


You may be gone, no longer living on this earth; but you will live on - in the memories of your family and friends. There will always be a part of you living in those who knew you. You will live on because we remember you!


MASON IRWIN BURNHAM - Air Force - CAPT - O3
Age: 31
Race: Caucasian
Date of Birth Sep 19, 1943
Born: Okmulge OK - He lived in Salem, Vancouver WA, and Roseburg before moving to Eugene in 1964.
From: PORTLAND, OR
Social Security Number: 542-42-0279 State: Oregon
Religion: EPISCOPAL, ANGLICAN
Marital Status: Married - Ex-Wife, Judy M. Burnham - Remarried - Thomas. Daughter, Kimberly T. Burnham Heddinger. Son, Mason S. Burnham. Parents: Father, Lyle M Burnham (1906 - 1990) and Mother, Rebecca M Burnham (1908 - 1999). Brother and one grandchild.


CAPT - O3 - Air Force - Reserve
His tour began on Apr 20, 1972
Casualty was on Mar 27, 1975
In QUANG TRI, LAOS
Hostile, died while missing, FIXED WING - CREW
AIR LOSS, CRASH ON LAND


Body was recovered
Panel 01W - Line 4


Captain Burnham was a member of 421st Tactical Fighter Squadron.

On April 20, 1972, he was the co-pilot of a McDonnell Douglas Phantom II Fighter (F-4D) on a combat mission over Quang Tin Province halfway between Ben Giang, South Vietnam and Chavane, Laos. His aircraft was shot down.

His remains were recovered on June 7, 1994 and identified on October 1, 1999.

Burnham's remains were recovered 07 Jun 1994 and id'd 01 Oct 1999.

In 2000 he received two funeral ceremonies, the first at Arlington National Cemetery and a later funeral at Salem OR.


*************************************************

Vietnam pilot to get homecoming burial 28 yrs after death
Monday, June 12, 2000
EUGENE, Oregon -- A pilot who died during the Vietnam War 28 years ago will be laid to rest in Salem this week.
It will be the second funeral for U.S. Air Force Captain Mason Burnham. His unidentifiable remains were buried during a May 25 ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

The identified remains, along with all the medals the pilot earned, will be buried Saturday.

"If it's anything like the one in Arlington, it'll just be awesome," Burnham's daughter, Kim Heddinger, said Friday.

Burnham died when his F-4D Phantom jet was shot down over Laos while flying escort on a bombing run near the Vietnam border in May 1972. The wreckage wasn't discovered until 1989, and attempts to recover the remains of Burnham and a second pilot stretched from 1993 to 1998.

Heddinger flew to Arlington for the service honoring her father and the jet's other pilot, Major Thomas Amos of Missouri.
"Taps" was played at the grave, an honor guard fired a 21-gun salute and four F-16 jets performed a flyover in the "missing man" formation.

"When the guy played 'Taps,' this light mist came down on us," said Heddinger, who was 6 when her father's aircraft disappeared. "But it only lasted like 10 or 15 seconds and then stopped, so we all knew it was like tears from heaven."

Burnham was born September 19, 1943, in Okmulge, Oklahoma. He lived in Salem, Vancouver, Washington, and Roseburg before moving to Eugene in 1964.

He received a bachelor's degree in business from the University of Oregon in 1968.

In addition to his daughter, Burnham is survived by his wife, Judy Thomas, a son, brother and one grandchild.


****************************
A military honor guard on May 25, 1999 laid to rest the recently discovered remains of Major Thomas H. Amos, a U. S. Air Force F-4 pilot, and Captain Mason I. Burnham, his navigator, killed when their F-4 plunged into a Laotian forest near the Ho Chi Minh Trail on April 20, 1972.

Amos and Burnham were assigned to the 366th Tactical Fighter Wing, based at Da Nang in South Vietnam. They were flying a night escort mission with an AC-130 gunship when they abruptly ceased radio contact. Witnesses saw a fireball, with no parachutes.

In 1989, two Vietnamese looking for incense wood stumbled on the wreckage in a remote part of Quang Nam-Da Nang province. The US Air Force interviewed the pair four years later and began recovery efforts at the crash site in 1994.
The difficult terrain made recovery work slow. The discovery of unexploded ordnance caused authorities to halt the search in June 1998.

By then, however, searchers had recovered enough bone fragments and other items to positively identify Amos and Burnham.

They also recovered the men's dog tags.

Burnham's tags were returned to his daughter, Kim Heddinger, last summer.

She has worn them almost every day since, "because he wore them next to his heart when he was killed," she told an interviewer in her hometown of Eugene, Oregon.


******************************

.


Military Information: CPT, US AIR FORCE

Gravesite Details

Interment date 5-25-2000.



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