Born: 04/21/1919
Died: 06/08/2005
Inducted: 10/16/1993
Born
on his family’s farm near Portage, Wisconsin, Robert
"Bob" Jones would watch mesmerized as Charles Lindbergh
over flew the farm on his way to Minneapolis in 1927. Jones decided
then and there, that someday he, too, would be a pilot. In 1930, the
Jones family moved north to Ashland, Wisconsin where Bob's father
got a job as a Wisconsin game warden.
Graduating
from Ashland High School in 1936 Jones held a number of jobs -
lumberjack, farmhand, and milkman - and managed to get in two years
at the University of Wisconsin at Madison before enlisting as a
flight cadet in the U.S. Army Air Corps on July 29, 1940.
His
primary flight training was conducted at Tulsa, Oklahoma, flying the
Stearman PT-13, PT-17, and PT-18 ‘Kaydet’. Jones next
assignment, basic flight training, was at Randolph Field, Texas in
the North American BT-14, ‘Dale’ aircraft. Advanced training
took Bob to Kelly Field where he flew the North American BC-1 and
AT-6 ‘Texan’ airplanes. Graduating flight training, he received
his pilot wings on March 14, 1941 and received his commission as a
second lieutenant on the next day. He requested duty at either
Hawaii or Alaska and, in typical military fashion, was assigned to
the 2nd Observation Squadron, Clark Field in the
Philippines, arriving there on May 8, 1941.
During
that summer, Jones would check out in all of the squadron’s
aircraft including: Thomas Morse O-19E, Douglas O-46, Stinson O-49
‘Vigilant’, Curtiss O-52 ‘Owl’, North American A-27 and the
Martin B-10. In September 1941, the squadron was moved to Nichols
Field southeast of Manila to make way for B-17s planned for Clark.
Shortly
before 0300, Tuesday, December 9, 1941 Nichols Field was attacked.
Lt. Jones was located in a hangar, on alert standby, when he was
wounded by a bomb fragment, which earned him a Purple Heart.
Following the attack, he flew six combat reconnaissance missions.
The unit held out until Christmas morning, 1941 when, with no
airworthy aircraft available, they were designated Provisional
Infantry and ordered to march north towards the front lines.
During
the next four months, Jones would distinguish himself in combat
earning the Bronze Star. On April 9, 1942, the enemy overran
American forces after heavy, persistent attacks. Bob and another
pilot were able to evade capture for 36 hours until they ran into a
Japanese patrol. They joined the Bataan Death March along with
10,000 other Americans arriving at Camp O’Donnell on April 16 or
17. Over the next 40 days, about 1,570 American GIs died from
malnutrition, disease, and beatings.
On
June 6, Bob and most of the survivors were transferred to Camp
Cabanatuan about seven miles away. Another 3,000 GIs died at this
camp. In November, Jones was among the first prisoners shipped to
Japan from the Philippines. He would be interred at three POW camps
– Osaka, Zentsuji Headquarters Camp (Hi-1), and finally Rokuroshi
(Os-24). On September 2, 1945, three B-29s “bombed” the camp
with 55-gallon drums filled with food, clothing, cigarettes, and a
note telling them to stay put. A small unit of the US Cavalry
liberated the POWs six days later.
After
a short stay at home, Bob returned to school graduating in August
1948 from the University of Wisconsin. He remained in the US Army
Air Force being stationed at various bases with several different
jobs while remaining on pilot status. He graduated from bomber pilot
training in the Boeing B-47, May 1952. Over the course of the next 5
years, Jones would add navigator, bombardier, and radar bombardier
ratings. He was also rated as command pilot in the B-50D, B-47E,
B-52B, C, and D aircraft.
In
January 1957, Jones was selected as a pilot for “Operation Power
Flite” a planned non-stop flight around the world. His aircraft
became a backup to the effort and became the first B-52 to land in
Britain. In 1959, because he chopped a
trapped crewmember out of a burning B-52 tail section, he was
awarded the Soldiers Medal, the nation's highest award for valor in
a non-combatant action.
In
1963, Jones graduated from the Air War College located at Maxwell
Field, Alabama, where he was named outstanding graduate. Among his
most notable assignments was his appointment as Chief of SAC's
Standardization Board for Bombers.
Colonel
Jones volunteered for what became two tours of duty in Vietnam,
November 1964 – April 1966. His first assignment was as US
Commander, Long Van VNAF Base, Nha Trang, Vietnam. “Best job I
ever had,” Bob says. “I started with a 100 man squadron which
grew to a Combat Support Group.” Colonel Jones also flew 310
combat sorties in Fairchild C-123B, ‘Provider’ aircraft. He was
awarded the Legion of Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, and eight
Air Medals for his efforts.
Retiring
after 30 years of service on February 1, 1970, he settled in
Wahiawa, Hawaii. For the next six years Bob would fly for several
commercial air service companies - Hawaii Pacific Air, Panorama Air
Tours, Alii Air Hawaii, and Royal Hawaiian Air Service. Bob lost his
FAA Medical Certificate due to an irregular heartbeat in 1976.
August
17, 1996 Bob received the Billy Mitchell Memorial Award from the Air
Force Association in a ceremony in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Bob summed
up his flying career this way, “I flew 13,500 hours as a pilot,
and 350 hours as a navigator/bombardier; I enjoyed most of it”.
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2nd Lt. Robert J Jones, Ashland WI, 1941
(submitted photo)

Jones and wife Dorothy, Portage WI
after honeymooning in Mexico, 1946.
(submitted photo)

Manila newspaper announcing attack
on Nichols Field
(submitted photo)

Bob Hope (left) with Colonel Bob
Jones (right) partially obscured, Nha Trang.
(submitted photo)

Robert J Jones at his 1993
induction ceremony
(WAHF photo)
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