A GOOD AGE: The Stratton incident becomes the Stratton way (Richard Stratton)

News stories about the Vietnam conflict were a daily staple in the spring of 1968 when I joined The Patriot Ledger as a copy reader on the news desk. I soon learned that the year before a Quincy native, Lt. Cmdr. Richard Stratton, had been captured after he was forced to eject from his Skyhawk fighter-bomber and was being held as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam. He was in the “Hanoi Hilton,” the same prison camp where the late Sen. John McCain was held.

There was grave concern for the hometown Navy aviator. After his capture on Jan. 5 1967, he had been photographed that April in striped prison garb at a North Vietnamese “press conference” bowing to his captors. He appeared to have been beaten and allegedly confessed to war crimes. The photo ran in Life magazine April 7, 1967 and it became an international news story, one of the most famous images of the war.

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A Look Back: March 7 (James Cutter)

50 Years Ago ■Mrs. Mary Cutter, 211 Elm St., grandmother of Capt. James Cutter, prisoner of war in North Vietnam, reported this morning that she has learned her grandson will be among the last prisoners to be returned to the U.S. “He hasn’t been there (as a POW) as long

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Behind Barbed Wire: A POW’s Story (Ed Leonard)

I arrived at Udorn RTAFB in early May, 1967, to fly A-1E and A1-H Skyraider with the 602nd Fighter Squadron (Commando). I was to fly 247 combat missions during three consecutive tours and participated in the rescue of 18 aircrew members. On May 31, 1968, going for number 19, I

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12 POW’s Released (Klaus Zupp)

Twelve captive American G.I.s freed yesterday by Cambodian Prince Norodom Sihanouk were released to Australian today and will fly here iater in the day on the first leg of their journey home, it was announced. One of the freed soldiers was a Hoosier. A spokesman for the Australian Department of

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