Local hero? A bit curious about that rack...
http://dcourier.com/main.asp?SectionID=1&SubSectionID=1086&ArticleID=147322
He was eager to serve his country.
At only 14 years old, Ron Johnson lied about his age and enlisted with the Navy to fight the Japanese.
The legal age to join the military back then was 17 or 16 with parental consent. It was not uncommon, however, for young men to fib their way in, especially with the amount of anger Americans had right after the attack on Pearl Harbor, according to Johnson.
"Some were caught and sent to Leavenworth (a United States Disciplinary Barracks in Kansas)," Johnson said.
Fortunately for Johnson, he got away with it.
"I think it was because I was in combat all of the time and I was serving a purpose in combat and they didn't want to find out that I was only 14 years old," Johnson said.
Part of the reason may have also been that he was raised as an orphan in a Catholic convent, so when he used a fake name (Ronny Frascona) when enlisting, his records weren't the easiest to trace.
Johnson served from February 1942 as a gunner and dive bomber until the end of the war in August 1945.
He and his pilot never had to eject from their plane, but they did crash into the ocean five times (three of which were due to running out of gas).
"At that time of the war, which was the beginning, we often went beyond the call of duty or the intelligence or our brains," Johnson said.
One instance that made a significant impression on Johnson was when he rode on top of his plane rather than in it during a rescue mission.
When he was on the USS North Carolina, a fighter pilot had been shot down in the Bay of Truk and needed rescuing because he was wounded and within range of Japanese fire.
Johnson's pilot, Mr. Mead, devised a plan that put Johnson in great danger. Johnson agreed nonetheless.
Mead landed in the bay just outside the range of fire. Johnson tied a long rope around his waist. Mead tied the other end to the strut of the pontoon and Johnson swam to the wounded pilot. Once he reached the pilot, Mead dragged them to safety.
There was also the matter of getting all of them back on the USS Carolina in one piece. The King Fisher pontoon had only enough room for two people, a gunner and a pilot. Mead had to fly and the wounded pilot took the gunner's seat.
"My question was ... where are you going to put me?" Johnson recalls asking Mead.
Mead responded: "You're going to straddle the strut and I'm going to tie your hands and feet around it and your back is going to be to the propeller," Johnson said.
"What if we don't get off the ground and we crash?" Johnson continued.
"He said, 'Well, then you're dead,'" Johnson said.
"I said [sarcastically], 'Thanks a lot sir, I really agree with your plan here.'"
It was risky, but they managed to get into the air and make it back to the USS North Carolina safely.
After the war, Johnson continued to serve in the Navy from 1945 to 1950 as a boxer. Out of his 116 fights, he lost only once as an amateur and once professionally.
In May 1950, he re-enlisted with the airborne to fight in the Korean War that began in June 1950. He spent three years there leading a platoon.
Despite all of the action he saw, Johnson was only wounded once. Shrapnel from an exploding suicide plane in Okinawa struck him. However, he recovered quickly.
"The injuries weren't debilitating at all," Johnson said.
Johnson, 83, now lives with his wife, Caroline, in Cordes Lakes.
He used to frequently volunteer for organizations in his area before he went blind three years ago. Yet even today, he still helps out the community as much as he can with his fellow wartime veterans in the American Legion Post 122.
He's 88 years old.....he told a wild ass story to a newspaper guy…..which btw I’d be more interested in having validated than his ribbon rack…..it's a great story….i’m sure it has the embellishments that come with time and a million telling but man how great would it be to find out that it happen as he said…tied to a plane…..awesome.
Is he trying to defraud the government or something....am I missing something?
Getting sick of every time an old guy has his picture taken with military stuff on it people go on the attack and try to prove something wrong…..makes me never want to wear my ribbons or uniform again….I mean God forbid if 50 plus year after I got out I put one on backwards, bought one that looks close to what I remember, or can’t find a discontinued uniform items so I go with my next best guess, or my memory fails and I say the wrong unit number or can’t remember it.
Our core values were true back then as they are today...Integrity first.......why can we not just be happy that a prior military guy is getting recognized and assume that he has integrity until he gives us a reason to doubt it.
Hell I don’t even want to post pictures of my Dad in uniform outside of the family (and I know he was in I went to his retirement ceremony) for the same reason….I don’t want someone trying to tear his uniform apart and disgrace his name for no reason.
Don’t get me wrong I know there are imposters out there…..but unless someone is trying to get personal gain, disability, etc….we don’t need to treat ever old veteran like a lying scumbag…….there has got to be better things a collective of people such as us can apply our “super powers” to that will make a difference in the world.
It looks legit and I can tell you that if he is NA they don't cotton to posers!
The Institute of Heraldry | Home
The purpose of this site is to provide information on United States Army heraldic entitlements; how they are displayed, and how and why it is worn.
So that explains the wings on top of the rack as well.
WHAT? The Navy has air planes?
I guess he went Navy as a boy and joined the Army when he was a man?
What about the airborne oval?
It would (again) APPEAR as though he is wearing:
United States Navy Aviation Observer or USN, USMC, USCG, Aircrew Badge
Combat Infantryman’s Badge
Bronze Star Medal
Purple Heart Medal
Air Medal
Army Good Conduct Medal
Navy Presidential Unit Citation Ribbon
China Service Medal
American Campaign Medal
Asiatic Pacific Campaign Medal w/4 Bronze Stars
World War II Victory Medal
Occupation Medal (the Ribbon is indistinguishable from Army or Navy)
National Defense Service Medal
Korean Service Medal
Philippine Liberation Medal (inverted)
United Nations Korea Service Medal
Pathfinder Badge
Expert Qualification Badge with two Qualification Clasps
Basic Army Parachutist Badge (Unit Flash unidentified)
Wearer’s right:
Presidential Unit Citation Ribbon although I cannot say for certainty if it is Army or Air Force.
I will not even try to determine collar devices, Commemorative devices or the unit lineage for the Enlisted Glider Patch Flash on his beret.
I would suggest contacting Jacey over at MyServicePride.com as she and those folks are very good at taking a closer look not just at the ‘hardware’ but then correlating if in fact it was at least ‘possible’ based upon self-attested dates of service, etc. they could have been awarded.
The bottom line is a thorough look at the individual's service records which are FOIA would spell out precisely what is or is not there. Each Medal has specific criteria and you would really need to look at each one especially in relation to the Era(s) and what if anything was later retroactively authorized or not.
We are very quick to pull the trigger these days and scream 'BS' but honestly, while I can say it is an unusual collection and would grab nearly any of our attention instantly. I just don't know.
I can cite instances where men I have served with posed for their Official DA Photo with unauthorized hardware despite both a genuine belief they were authorized to wear something and a lack of knowledge of the Personnel Administration Professionals who in turn threw that on a DD-214.
Pathfinder Badge (United States) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Pathfinder Badge is a military badge of the United States Army awarded to soldiers who successfully complete the U.S. Army Pathfinder School at Fort Benning, Georgia.
http://gruntsandco.com/perspective-101sts-transition-air-assault-invention-air-assault-badge/
A Perspective on the 101st’s Transition to Air Assault and Invention of the Air Assault Badge -...
Doing some research on the post Vietnam decision to go to one airborne division I came across this fascinating article by Charles S. Bloodworth. I thought readers here would be interested. It features some relatively unknown history about the development of the air assault badge and the Army’s transitioning of the 101st from an airborne ...

WWII World War Two
Korean War
