Specialist Fifth Class

Michael Allen Hughey
21 year old Single, Caucasian
From JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
Combat Aviation Crew Chief
281st Assault Helicopter Company
10th CAB, 17th CAG, 1st  AVN BDE
Tour of duty began on Sep 30, 1968
KIA on Feb 14, 1970 Vic KHANH HOA, South Vietnam
Non-combat related helicopter crash
DOB May 07, 1948
SOUTHERN BAPTIST CONVENTION
(VN Wall Panel 13W - Line 9)


                                                         Sketch by Cliff Wheeler



armycrew

 

 

Michael Allen Hughey was the crew chief on board UH-1H 66-17127 when the helicopter crashed during the conduct of a “Sniffer” Mission, run out of Nha Trang, South Vietnam killing the four 281st crew members and two Special Forces equipment operators.  The 281st lost Warrant Officer Duke Payne, Aircraft Commander, Warrant Officer Thomas Guenther, Pilot, and Specialist 5 Mike Hughey, Crew Chief and SGT Bobby Brewer, Door Gunner.  A summary of the accident follows:

The 281st  Helicopter, UH-1H, SN: 66-17127 was performing a combat aviation support mission for the 5th Special Forces Group using an Airborne Personnel Detector (SNIFFER) in the vicinity of Dong Bo Mountain, 4 Nautical Miles Southwest of Nha Trang, RVN. There was a crew of 6 on board; 4 Aircraft Crew members and 2 Special Forces soldiers operating the SNIFFER machine. At 1000 hours Army Aircraft 67-17127 took off from Nha Trang AAF enroute to its mission on Dong Bo Mountain. Its mission was to fly 50 Feet above the trees at 70 knots so that the SNIFFER machine could detect any smoke in the area.  From 1005 to 1006 hours the SNIFFER machine had medium to high readings from BP 960 409 to BP 950 424, the last reading approximately 2 minutes before aircraft 66-17127 crashed into the trees. The Lead Gunship, piloted by WO1 Gardner and 1LT McKeegan, was approximately 100 meters behind 66-17127 and based on their observations it appears that the aircraft may have had an equipment failure causing the aircraft to assume a nose low attitude which resulted in it loosing altitude and impacting into the trees.  It was noted that the aircraft had a very slow airspeed and low rotor RPM when it struck the trees, rolled to the ground and exploded. Following the explosion SP4 Johnson, the Door Gunner on the Command Ship, was lowered to the ground, near the crash site. There was no sign of life and SP4 Johnson was recovered from the area.  At the time of impact the aircraft was traveling into the wind, which was from the North and its initial impact was on a northerly heading, the wind was light and the visibility was unlimited. The aircraft crash was classified as a non hostel incident in that neither ground fire nor hostile forces were observed in the area. 

Michael Hughey and his fellow crew members shall not be forgotten by the 281st AHC Flight.

 
                  A MAN IS NOT DEAD UNTIL HE IS FORGOTTEN

ONCE AN INTRUDER....ALWAYS AN INTRUDER