Arthur Charles Buck

Lieutenant (junior grade)
VO-67, PACFLT
United States Navy
23 October 1941 - 11 January 1968
Sandusky, OH
Panel 34E Line 027

PACFLT

USN OP-2E

VO-67
Charlie Buck

Naval Flight Officer

Purple Heart, Air Medal, National Defense, Vietnam Service, Vietnam Campaign

The database page for Arthur Charles Buck

21 Aug 1999

As are all CHARLIE is very special.

But CHARLIE is really a very special person to me. I was asked by a personal friend to please put a page up honoring CHARLIE. He was a dear childhood friend to my friend. They spent most of their growing up years from childhood into their teens together. Even joining the service was a joint adventure for them. When it was time for each to take leave, they managed to take leave at the same time. While on leave, as much time as possible was spent together. They were as close as brothers if not closer. The last leave before their ETS (estimated time of separation) my friend came home on leave but CHARLIE was not there. He asked his mother, and CHARLIE's mother, if CHARLIE was home yet. His inquiring only received the answer of "NO, CHARLIE ISN'T HOME". My friend ETSed, and still no CHARLIE. After asking again if CHARLIE was home the only reply was "NO". One month after leaving the service he was told by his mother "CHARLIE isn't coming home. He didn't make it". CHARLIE's spirit lives on in the heart and home of his dear friend.

Please visit
my full memorial to Charlie Buck

From one who remembers,
Luella Gale
finerdwine@aol.com

Mission Notes

NVA and VC elements in South Vietnam were absolutely dependent on men and materiel transported down the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos ... if these supplies could be cut off, the enemy forces in South Vietnam would wither in place. Accordingly, the Trail was of considerable interest throughout the war. One method of intelligence gathering involved the emplacement of acoustic and seismic sensors along the trail; these sensors transmitted data by radio to a processing facility at Nakon Phanom RTAFB in Thailand, where the "take" was used to direct strike missions.

Navy Observation Squadron 67 (VO-67) was formed to provide a highly accurate method of delivering the sensors. VO-67 flew modified SP-2E Neptune aircraft, designated the OP-2E, and took up residence at Nakon Phanom in November 1967. VO-67's first loss occurred on 11 January 1968, when OP-2E BuNo 131436 failed to return from a sensor seeding mission conducted in Laos during a period of bad weather. Since search-and-rescue operations failed to locate either aircraft or crew, the crewmen were classed as Missing in Action. On 23 January a USAF A-1 pilot spotted aircraft wreckage on a mountainside near Ban Napoung. An O-2 from the 23rd TASS took handheld photography of the crash site, which was on a sheer cliffside about 200 feet below the top of a 4600' peak. Topography and enemy presence made a ground search impractical, but it was determined that the aircraft was indeed the missing OP-2E and that the crash was not survivable. On 23 Feb 1968 the crew's status was changed from MIA to Killed in Action, Body not Recovered. The crew consisted of

  • CDR Delbert Austin Olson, pilot
  • LTJG Denis Leon Anderson, copilot
  • LTJG Arthur Charles Buck, navigator
  • LTJG Philip Paul Stevens, copilot
  • Aviation Electrician 2nd Class Richard Michael Mancini
  • Aviation Ordnanceman 2nd Class Michael Land Roberts
  • Aviation Machinist's Mate 2nd Class Donald Nellis Thoresen
  • Photographer's Mate 2nd Class Kenneth Harry Widon
  • Aviation Electronics Technician 3rd Class Gale Robert Siow
In addition to the nine men, the squadron's mascot, a small dog named Snoopy, was aboard the aircraft.

So matters stood for some 25 years. Beginning in 1993, JTFFA teams attempted to locate and excavate the wreckage. After three failures, a fourth team located the wreckage in 1996 and retrieved human remains, two dogtags, and one ID card. Additional excavations were carried out in March 2001 and February/March 2002; these excavations recovered additional remains. Although a large proportion of the remains could not be individually identified, there were identifiable remains from each of the nine men. Three bone fragments came from a small-to-medium-sized domestic dog ... Snoopy too had come home.

In early May 2003 LTJG Arthur "Charlie" Buck's remains were taken to the Gerner-Wolf-Brossia Marsh Funeral Home, 216 Washington St, Port Clinton, Ohio, for burial.



The point-of-contact for this memorial is
one who remembers,
Luella Gale
finerdwine@aol.com 
21 Aug 1999



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With all respect
Jim Schueckler, former CW2, US Army
Ken Davis, Commander, United States Navy (Ret)
Channing Prothro, former CAP Marine
Last updated 05/15/2003