On
29 June at 1000 a bust of CW4 Michael Novosel will be dedicated at Fort
Riley, KS. For more information contact George Metz at (412) 269-9266.
At
the age of 19, Michael Novosel joined what was then the Army Air Corps.
That was just ten months prior to Pearl Harbor, and by 1945, he was a
captain flying B-29 Superfortress bombers in the war against Japan. He
left the service for a brief time due to reductions in force after the
war was over and settled in Fort Walton Beach, Florida, to raise his
family.
Novosel
joined the U.S. Air Force Reserves and went back on active duty to
again serve his country during the Korean War. He left the service again
in 1953 and was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Air
Force Reserve in 1955.
In
1963, Novosel was working as a commercial airline pilot when he decided
to return to active military duty. By then, he was 41 and the Air Force
did not have space for any more officers in the upper ranks. Novosel
made the decision to give up his rank of lieutenant colonel in the Air
Force to join the Army and fly helicopters as a chief warrant officer
(CW4) with the elite Special Forces Aviation Section. He served his
first tour in Vietnam flying medevac helicopters (Dustoff) with the
283rd Medical Detachment. His second tour in Vietnam was with the 82nd
Medical Detachment. During that war, Novosel flew 2,543 missions and
extracted 5,589 wounded personnel, among them his own son, Michael J.
Novosel, Jr. (the following week Michael J. Novosel, Jr. returned the
favor by extracting his father after he was shot down).
On
the morning of October 2, 1969, he set out to evacuate a group of South
Vietnamese soldiers who were surrounded by several thousand North
Vietnamese light infantry near the Cambodian border. The South
Vietnamese soldiers' radio communication was lost and their ammunition
expended. Without air cover or fire support, Novosel flew at low
altitude under continuous enemy fire. He skimmed the ground with his
helicopter, while his medic and crew chief yanked the wounded men on
board. He completed 15 hazardous extractions, was wounded in a barrage
of enemy fire and momentarily lost control of his helicopter, but when
it was over, he had rescued 29 men, for which he would be awarded the
Medal of Honor. Novosel completed his tour in March 1970.
When
Novosel retired as the senior warrant officer with the Warrant Officer
Candidate Program in 1985, he had been a military aviator for 42 years
and was the last World War II military aviator in the U.S. to remain on
active flying duty. Novosel accumulated 12,400 military flying hours,
including 2,038 in combat.
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