[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 124 (Thursday, September 19, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S6640]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL POW/MIA RECOGNITION DAY
Major Louis Fulda Guillermin
Mr. CASEY. Mr. President, I rise to acknowledge the military service
of a Pennsylvania constituent who paid the ultimate sacrifice for our
Nation during the Vietnam War. Tomorrow, September 20, is National POW/
MIA Recognition Day, so it is only fitting that I tell his story. After
a 45-year absence, Maj. Louis Fulda Guillermin, U.S. Air Force, is
finally returning home to Pennsylvania.
Louis Guillermin, the only child of the late Wister and Myrtle Booker
Guillermin, was born on January 6, 1943, in West Chester, PA. Louis
joined the Air Force after college and completed his pilot training at
Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, TX. In addition, he received
further training in radar and celestial navigation instruction at
Connelly Air Force Base. Louis was commissioned as a second lieutenant
and awarded his silver wings in April 1964.
During his second tour in South East Asia, Major Guillermin flew
counterinsurgency missions as a navigator in an A-26A Invader aircraft
for the 609th Air Commando Squadron. On April 28, 1968, at the age of
25, Major Guillermin's aircraft went down over Savannakhet Province,
Laos. Louis would remain missing for many years and would achieve the
rank of major while on missing-in-action status. Many years later, his
aircraft was located, and on May 28, 2013, the Department of Defense
positively identified his remains thanks to the efforts of the Joint
Prisoners of War, Missing in Action Accounting Command.
Despite having been missing for all these years, Maj. Louis F.
Guillermin was never forgotten. The Vietnam Veterans of America,
Chapter 436, of Chester County, PA, adopted his name for their chapter.
Now, Louis will be laid to rest on October 5, and on behalf of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the Nation, I would like to welcome
him home.
I share the story of Major Guillermin not only because the formal
recognition of his sacrifice is long overdue, but also as a reminder
that there are many others that remain missing. An estimated 1,644
members of the Armed Forces remain unaccounted for from the Vietnam
War. A total of 91 of those are from Pennsylvania. I would also like to
mention that there are an estimated 83,000 total unaccounted for
members of the Armed Forces since World War II. We as a nation have a
responsibility to make every effort in accounting for the missing and
providing this information to the loved ones and the communities who
have experienced such a profound loss. May Major Guillermin, and all
missing-in-action servicemembers who have passed on from this world,
rest in eternal peace. You have more than earned your dignity and
honor, as well as our reverence. You are not forgotten.
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