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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, July 6, 2009

Heroic war pilot Kenneth Reusser, 89


Los Angeles Times

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

U.S. Marine Corps Col. Kenneth L. Reusser, center, was joined by Marine Staff Sgt. Marvin Harper, left, and Air Force Staff Sgt. Kim Nickerson on the 2002 Freedom Train, whose honorees included Oregon veterans.

ROB FINCH | The Oregonian via Associated Press

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Retired Marine Col. Kenneth Reusser, who flew 253 combat missions in three wars and was shot down five times, died June 20 in Clackamas, Ore. He was 89.

The cause of death was not announced.

Reusser received two Navy Cross medals, one for combat during the battle for Okinawa late in World War II and another for leading a raid over Korea in 1950 in which he flew at a low altitude to look inside enemy buildings.

In Vietnam he flew helicopters and while on a rescue mission to find downed crewmen was shot down, suffering burns over one-third of his body. His injuries forced his medical retirement in 1968 after 27 years of service.

Retired Marine Maj. Gen. Bob Butcher, chairman of the Flying Leathernecks Historical Foundation and Aviation Museum in San Diego, said Marines who flew with Reusser regarded him as the bravest man they had met.

"He was an incredible hero," Butcher said.

Born Jan. 27, 1920, in Cloverdale, Ore., Reusser was the son of a Christian minister. He enlisted in the Navy Reserve in August 1941 and was soon sent to aviation training.

Later he was part of the Black Sheep squadron headed by the now-legendary Gregory "Pappy" Boyington.

During one mission, Reusser was assigned to attack a Japanese reconnaissance plane that was gathering intelligence on the location of U.S. forces. He followed the Japanese plane at altitudes that the U.S. plane was not made to withstand. When his guns froze, Reusser used the propellers of his F4U-4 Corsair to rip through the Japanese plane's tail section, sending it crashing to the sea.

In 1950, he led missions to destroy enemy facilities in Inchon. The citation for his Navy Cross notes:

"Major Reusser led his flight in a strafing attack against a hostile factory, destroying several vehicles and 30 of the enemy in a truck despite intense and accurate hostile anti-aircraft fire.

"Suspecting that the strong defenses protected vehicles of war, he ordered his flight to orbit the target at 3,000 feet while he investigated the factory at window-level and, on his second pass, made in the face of automatic fire coming from the windows, discovered that the factory was a vehicle and tank assembly plant."

Reusser flew back to the aircraft carrier and then returned to the site with rockets and napalm, destroying the target.

In addition to his wife, Trudy, Reusser is survived by their sons, Richard C. and Kenneth L. Jr.