Vietnam P.O.W. remembered as devoted grandfather, hunter (Thomas Van Putten)

To his children, Thomas Van Putten talked little about his service in the Vietnam War and his 13 months as a prisoner.

But they knew he was a hero.

“We all knew it was a big deal,” said Linda Milley, his daughter.

Mr. Van Putten, whose escape from a Viet Cong prison camp and rescue 18 days later by an Army helicopter crew made national news in 1969, died Saturday of a heart attack at 61.
Family members described him as a devoted grandfather who loved to fish and duck hunt. In fact, he went on a once-in-a-lifetime duck hunting trip on Devil’s Lake in North Dakota in the past month, although it was cut short by a medical issue.

Other Publications You Might Be Interested In

Larry Spencer, POW Veteran

Summer may be gone for a while, but the glorious, crisp mid-autumn weather that we so often experience in Iowa was in full bloom as we met at the Wakonda Club at noon for our weekly meeting.  President Don Flannery welcomed us and called on Rob Hedgepeth for words of

Read More »

The Man Who Fell to Earth (Joseph Kittinger )

On August 16, 1960, Joe Kittinger went for a balloon ride. Sitting inside an open gondola suspended from an enormous helium-filled envelope, the U.S. Air Force captain rose to a height more than 19 miles above the Earth’s surface. His mission that day—part of Project Excelsior—was to test a new

Read More »