fbpx
Wikipedia

Floyd James Thompson

Floyd James "Jim" Thompson (July 8, 1933 – July 16, 2002) was a United States Army colonel. He was one of the longest-held American prisoners of war, spending nearly nine years in captivity in the forests and mountains of South Vietnam, Laos, and North Vietnam during the Vietnam War.

Floyd James Thompson
Thompson on Easter Saturday in 1975
Nickname(s)Jim
Born(1933-07-08)July 8, 1933
Bergenfield, New Jersey, U.S.
DiedJuly 16, 2002(2002-07-16) (aged 69)
Key West, Florida, U.S.
Allegiance United States of America
Service/branch United States Army
Years of service1956–1982
Rank Colonel
Unit7th Special Forces Group
Battles/warsVietnam War
AwardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal
Silver Star
Legion of Merit
Bronze Star Medal with "V" Device
Purple Heart (2)
Air Medal

Early life edit

Jim Thompson was born July 8, 1933, in Bergenfield, New Jersey, as the son of a bus driver. He graduated from Bergenfield High School in 1951.[1] Thompson worked for the A&P supermarket,[2]: 19  before he was drafted by the United States Army on June 14, 1956.[2]: 28  He was at first a very truculent, rebellious soldier, but then decided that he liked the military. After basic training at Fort Dix, New Jersey, he decided to make the military his career.

Military career edit

After completing Officer Candidate School (OCS),[2]: 32  Thompson served stateside and also spent a year in Korea.[2]: 37  He was stationed at Fort Liberty when he was recruited into the Army Special Forces as a Green Beret.[2]: 41  After completing Ranger School and United States Army Airborne School, he served as an instructor with the U.S. Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia, from August 1958 to June 1960. His next assignment was as a platoon commander in the 2nd Brigade of the 34th Infantry Regiment, stationed in South Korea from June 1960 to July 1961. Thompson then served as a reenlistment officer with Headquarters XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort Liberty, North Carolina, from September 1961 to September 1962, and then as a staff officer with 1st Special Forces at Fort Liberty, from September 1962 to December 1963.[3]

Vietnam War edit

Captain Thompson went to Vietnam in December 1963.[2]: 52  Prior to his deployment, he hadn't heard of the country. He was to serve only a six-month tour of duty but was captured on March 26, 1964. He was released on March 16, 1973, ten days short of nine years.

Capture edit

On March 26, 1964, Thompson was a passenger on an observation plane (an L-19/O-1 Bird Dog) flown by Captain Richard L. Whitesides when it was downed by enemy small arms fire at 16°39′12″N 106°46′21″E / 16.65333°N 106.77250°E / 16.65333; 106.77250, about 20 kilometers from Thompson's Special Forces Camp near Quảng Trị, South Vietnam. Thompson survived the crash with burns, a bullet wound across the cheek, and a broken back.[4] Whitesides was killed in the crash.[5] Thompson was quickly captured by the Viet Cong.[4]

Aerial search and ground patrols failed to find any trace of the aircraft.[2]: 94  On March 27, 1964, an Army officer visited Thompson's home and told his pregnant wife Alyce that he was missing. The trauma sent her into labor and their son was born that evening.[4]

Prisoner of war edit

Thompson spent the next nine years (3,278 days) as a prisoner of war, first at the hands of the Viet Cong in the South Vietnam forests, until he was moved in 1967 to the Hanoi prison system.[6] During his captivity, he was tortured, starved, and isolated from other American POWs.[7] His captors pressured him to sign statements proving that the United States' involvement in Vietnam was criminal. He refused and was beaten, choked and hanged by his thumbs. They also tied his elbows behind his back and hung him from a rafter until he passed out. At night he was tossed into a tiny wooden cage, where he was handcuffed and shackled in leg irons.[4] At one point, Thompson did not speak to another American for over five years. In January 1973, Thompson was transferred to Hỏa Lò Prison.[4] He was released with the other POWs in mid-March 1973 in Operation Homecoming.

Return to the United States edit

The years following Thompson's release were not happy ones. His troubled life was chronicled in an oral biography called Glory Denied by Tom Philpott. Although Thompson was promoted to lieutenant colonel upon release and then to full colonel, he had missed the most important years of his military career while in prison. He had no formal military education beyond OCS and lacked even a college degree or experience as a company commander.[2]: 295 

He had difficulty adjusting to a vastly changed peacetime Army. In addition, Thompson's marriage had been troubled even before his captivity, and his wife Alyce, believing him dead, was living with another man at the time he was repatriated. He and his wife divorced in 1975. Alyce told author Tom Philpott that she believed prison had affected her husband's mind. She said he suffered from nightmares and was abusive towards both her and the children.[8] Thompson later remarried but divorced soon afterwards. Thompson never formed any kind of a relationship with his children. His daughters were 6, 5 and 4 when he left, and his son was born the day of his capture. Only his eldest child barely remembered him. He eventually became completely estranged from all of them.

Thompson said that one of the things that helped him cope with his brutal imprisonment was thinking of the fine family that awaited his return. He developed a very serious drinking problem and was in several military hospitals for treatment.[2]: 349 

In 1977, Thompson attempted suicide with an overdose of pills and alcohol.[2]: 430  His superiors told author Philpott that had it not been for Thompson's status as a hero, he would have been dismissed from service because of his alcoholism. In 1981, while still on active duty, Thompson suffered a massive heart attack and a severe stroke. He was in a coma for months and was left seriously disabled. He was paralyzed on one side and could speak only in brief phrases for the rest of his life.

Retirement edit

The stroke that left Thompson's left side paralyzed[2]: 431  and his age contributed to his forced retirement from active duty in the Army. A ceremony was held for him in The Pentagon on January 28, 1982. Thompson received the Distinguished Service Medal in appreciation for his 25 years of service to his country as an Army officer.[9] Because of his recent stroke, he had a hard time speaking, so Michael Chamowitz, his close friend and lawyer, read his retirement speech.

I am honored to receive this award (the Distinguished Service Medal) today but at the same time I am saddened to be leaving active military service. The Army has been my life and I am proud of each of my twenty-five years of service.

Of those 25 years, I spent nine as prisoner of war. Those days were grim, and survival was a struggle. I was able to withstand that long agony because I never lost my determination to live—no matter how painful that became—because I love my country and never lost faith in her, and because I had dreams of what my life would be like upon my return to America. Those dreams were always, unquestionably, of a life that was Army. I found that the dream of continued service gave me a goal that helped me survive my years as a POW.

After my return from Vietnam, the opportunity to serve became the motivating force in my life. Military service has given me my greatest challenges and my greatest rewards. I have worked hard for sound leadership development in the Army and for realistic training. The greatest problem faced by POWs was fear of the unknown. This fear can be reduced, not only for the potential POW but across the awesome environment of the battlefield, by training which is honest enough to address the real issue of combat and which is tough enough to approximate battlefield conditions.

No, I do not now retire freely—there was much I still wanted to do—but circumstances present me no alternative. I leave active military service because I must. But for the rest of my life, the Army will be no less a part of me, and of what I am, than what it has always been.

Colonel Floyd James Thompson

January 29, 1982[10]

Later years and death edit

In 1981, Thompson moved to Key West, where he remained active in the community, according to the Monroe County Office of Veterans Affairs. In 1988, Thompson and a number of other former prisoners of war were awarded medals by President Ronald Reagan.

In 1990, Thompson's son Jim was convicted of murder and imprisoned for sixteen years.[11]

On July 8, 2002, the staff of JIATF (Joint Interagency Task Force) East and some of his close friends threw Thompson a birthday party. He was described as being in high spirits and full of excitement. During the celebration, he quoted General Douglas MacArthur: "Old soldiers never die, they just fade away."

Eight days later, on July 16, 2002, Thompson was found dead in his Key West By the Sea condominium, at the age of 69. His body was cremated, and his ashes scattered at sea off the coast of Florida. There is a memorial marker for him at Andersonville National Cemetery.

In an update to Glory Denied, Tom Philpott reported that Alyce Thompson died of cancer in 2009. He also mentioned that Thompson's daughter Ruth had suffered three disabling heart attacks and had lost a son to suicide. Philpott reported that Ruth had told him the strength of character that she inherited from both her parents had helped her though the difficult times. Glory Denied was later turned into an opera written by Tom Cipullo.[12]

Military awards edit

In October 1974, Thompson started to receive medals and awards in recognition for his service in Vietnam. South Vietnam gave him the country's highest award to Allied enlisted military personnel for valor, the Republic of Vietnam Military Merit Medal.[13]

In recognition of his escape from Viet Cong POW camp for two days in October 1971, Thompson received the Silver Star.[2] For his nine years in captivity, Thompson received the Army Distinguished Service Medal, Bronze Star Medal, and Legion of Merit. The Bronze Star recognized his continuous resistance to the enemy. The Legion of Merit recognized his suffering for his nine years in captivity.[2]

A ceremony was held on June 24, 1988, in the White House honoring POWs from World War I, World War II, Korea and Vietnam. Two representatives were picked from each war to receive the Prisoner of War Medal. Thompson and Everett Alvarez were chosen to represent POWs from Vietnam.[14]

His military decorations and awards include:

U.S. Awards & Decorations
Personal decorations
   Army Distinguished Service Medal
   Silver Star
   Legion of Merit
 
 
  Bronze Star with "V" Device
 
 
  Purple Heart with Bronze Oak Leaf Cluster
   Air Medal
U.S. Awards & Decorations
Unit awards
   Presidential Unit Citation
   Meritorious Unit Commendation
Service awards
   Prisoner of War Medal
   Army Good Conduct Medal
Campaign & Service awards
   National Defense Service Medal
   Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal
 
 
 
 
 
  Vietnam Service Medal w/ three 316" Silver Stars and one 316" Bronze Star
   Korea Defense Service Medal
Service & Training awards
    Armed Forces Reserve Medal with Bronze Hourglass
   Army Service Ribbon
 
 
  Army Overseas Ribbon with Bronze Numeral 2
U.S. Awards & Decorations
Badges and Tab awards
   Combat Infantryman Badge
   Parachutist Badge
   Special Forces Tab
   Ranger Tab
   18 Overseas Service Bars
Foreign Awards & Decorations
Personal decorations, Unit awards, and Service awards
   Republic of Vietnam Military Merit Medal
    Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm and Gold Star
   Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces Honor Medal (1st Class)
   Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation
   Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation with Palm
   Republic of Vietnam Civil Actions Medal Unit Citation with Palm
   Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal with 1960- Device

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Martin, Douglas (18 July 2002). "F. J. Thompson, 69, Longtime P.O.W., Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-02-15.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Philpott, Tom, at Centreville, VA, Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War (1st ed.), New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company (published May 2001), pp. 324, ISBN 0-393-02012-6
  3. ^ "Veteran Tribute: Floyd James Thompson (Colonel, USA)". Veterantributes.org. Retrieved 2017-06-12.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Bio, Thompson, Floyd J." Pownetwork.org. Retrieved 2022-04-01.
  5. ^ "Airman Missing From Vietnam War Accounted For (Whitesides)". Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency. Retrieved 2021-03-04.
  6. ^ New York Times, July 19, 2002
  7. ^ Tom Philpott (2001-04-02). "The Prisoner". The New Yorker. New York City. p. 56. Retrieved 2013-08-28.
  8. ^ Richard Bernstein (2001-08-02). "The Glory And Tragedy Of a P.O.W. Scorned". The New York Times. New York City. p. E1. Retrieved 2013-08-28.
  9. ^ Philpott, Tom, at Centreville, VA, Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War (1st ed.), New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company (published May 2001), pp. 385–386, ISBN 0-393-02012-6
  10. ^ Philpott, Tom, at Centreville, VA, Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War (1st ed.), New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company (published May 2001), pp. 384–385, ISBN 0-393-02012-6
  11. ^ Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War, « The Thompson family's postwar lives read like a Jerry Springer show, replete with severe alcoholism, spousal abuse, adultery, teenage pregnancy, bitter divorce and the jailing of Thompson's son on a murder charge».
  12. ^ Midgette, Anne (7 May 2007). "A Former P.O.W., Now Sentenced to Loneliness". The New York Times. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  13. ^ Philpott, Tom, at Centreville, VA, Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War (1st ed.), New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company (published May 2001), pp. 322–323, ISBN 0-393-02012-6
  14. ^ Philpott, Tom, at Centreville, Virginia, Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War (1st ed.), New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company (published May 2001), pp. 398–400, ISBN 0-393-02012-6

External links edit

  • Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War
  • F. J. Thompson, 69, Longtime P.O.W., Dies, Published: July 18, 2002 in The New York Times
  • "Floyd James Thompson". Find a Grave. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  • POW Network
  • Booknotes interview with Tom Philpott on Glory Denied: The Saga of Jim Thompson, America's Longest-Held Prisoner of War, August 5, 2001.

floyd, james, thompson, this, article, about, american, prisoner, prominent, chicago, lawyer, floyd, thompson, lawyer, floyd, james, thompson, july, 1933, july, 2002, united, states, army, colonel, longest, held, american, prisoners, spending, nearly, nine, ye. This article is about the American prisoner of war For the prominent Chicago lawyer see Floyd Thompson lawyer Floyd James Jim Thompson July 8 1933 July 16 2002 was a United States Army colonel He was one of the longest held American prisoners of war spending nearly nine years in captivity in the forests and mountains of South Vietnam Laos and North Vietnam during the Vietnam War Floyd James ThompsonThompson on Easter Saturday in 1975Nickname s JimBorn 1933 07 08 July 8 1933Bergenfield New Jersey U S DiedJuly 16 2002 2002 07 16 aged 69 Key West Florida U S Allegiance United States of AmericaService wbr branch United States ArmyYears of service1956 1982RankColonelUnit7th Special Forces GroupBattles warsVietnam WarAwardsArmy Distinguished Service Medal Silver StarLegion of Merit Bronze Star Medal with V DevicePurple Heart 2 Air Medal Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career 2 1 Vietnam War 2 1 1 Capture 2 1 2 Prisoner of war 2 1 3 Return to the United States 2 2 Retirement 3 Later years and death 4 Military awards 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editJim Thompson was born July 8 1933 in Bergenfield New Jersey as the son of a bus driver He graduated from Bergenfield High School in 1951 1 Thompson worked for the A amp P supermarket 2 19 before he was drafted by the United States Army on June 14 1956 2 28 He was at first a very truculent rebellious soldier but then decided that he liked the military After basic training at Fort Dix New Jersey he decided to make the military his career Military career editAfter completing Officer Candidate School OCS 2 32 Thompson served stateside and also spent a year in Korea 2 37 He was stationed at Fort Liberty when he was recruited into the Army Special Forces as a Green Beret 2 41 After completing Ranger School and United States Army Airborne School he served as an instructor with the U S Army Infantry School at Fort Benning Georgia from August 1958 to June 1960 His next assignment was as a platoon commander in the 2nd Brigade of the 34th Infantry Regiment stationed in South Korea from June 1960 to July 1961 Thompson then served as a reenlistment officer with Headquarters XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort Liberty North Carolina from September 1961 to September 1962 and then as a staff officer with 1st Special Forces at Fort Liberty from September 1962 to December 1963 3 Vietnam War edit Captain Thompson went to Vietnam in December 1963 2 52 Prior to his deployment he hadn t heard of the country He was to serve only a six month tour of duty but was captured on March 26 1964 He was released on March 16 1973 ten days short of nine years Capture edit On March 26 1964 Thompson was a passenger on an observation plane an L 19 O 1 Bird Dog flown by Captain Richard L Whitesides when it was downed by enemy small arms fire at 16 39 12 N 106 46 21 E 16 65333 N 106 77250 E 16 65333 106 77250 about 20 kilometers from Thompson s Special Forces Camp near Quảng Trị South Vietnam Thompson survived the crash with burns a bullet wound across the cheek and a broken back 4 Whitesides was killed in the crash 5 Thompson was quickly captured by the Viet Cong 4 Aerial search and ground patrols failed to find any trace of the aircraft 2 94 On March 27 1964 an Army officer visited Thompson s home and told his pregnant wife Alyce that he was missing The trauma sent her into labor and their son was born that evening 4 Prisoner of war edit Main article U S prisoners of war during the Vietnam War Thompson spent the next nine years 3 278 days as a prisoner of war first at the hands of the Viet Cong in the South Vietnam forests until he was moved in 1967 to the Hanoi prison system 6 During his captivity he was tortured starved and isolated from other American POWs 7 His captors pressured him to sign statements proving that the United States involvement in Vietnam was criminal He refused and was beaten choked and hanged by his thumbs They also tied his elbows behind his back and hung him from a rafter until he passed out At night he was tossed into a tiny wooden cage where he was handcuffed and shackled in leg irons 4 At one point Thompson did not speak to another American for over five years In January 1973 Thompson was transferred to Hỏa Lo Prison 4 He was released with the other POWs in mid March 1973 in Operation Homecoming Return to the United States edit The years following Thompson s release were not happy ones His troubled life was chronicled in an oral biography called Glory Denied by Tom Philpott Although Thompson was promoted to lieutenant colonel upon release and then to full colonel he had missed the most important years of his military career while in prison He had no formal military education beyond OCS and lacked even a college degree or experience as a company commander 2 295 He had difficulty adjusting to a vastly changed peacetime Army In addition Thompson s marriage had been troubled even before his captivity and his wife Alyce believing him dead was living with another man at the time he was repatriated He and his wife divorced in 1975 Alyce told author Tom Philpott that she believed prison had affected her husband s mind She said he suffered from nightmares and was abusive towards both her and the children 8 Thompson later remarried but divorced soon afterwards Thompson never formed any kind of a relationship with his children His daughters were 6 5 and 4 when he left and his son was born the day of his capture Only his eldest child barely remembered him He eventually became completely estranged from all of them Thompson said that one of the things that helped him cope with his brutal imprisonment was thinking of the fine family that awaited his return He developed a very serious drinking problem and was in several military hospitals for treatment 2 349 In 1977 Thompson attempted suicide with an overdose of pills and alcohol 2 430 His superiors told author Philpott that had it not been for Thompson s status as a hero he would have been dismissed from service because of his alcoholism In 1981 while still on active duty Thompson suffered a massive heart attack and a severe stroke He was in a coma for months and was left seriously disabled He was paralyzed on one side and could speak only in brief phrases for the rest of his life Retirement edit The stroke that left Thompson s left side paralyzed 2 431 and his age contributed to his forced retirement from active duty in the Army A ceremony was held for him in The Pentagon on January 28 1982 Thompson received the Distinguished Service Medal in appreciation for his 25 years of service to his country as an Army officer 9 Because of his recent stroke he had a hard time speaking so Michael Chamowitz his close friend and lawyer read his retirement speech I am honored to receive this award the Distinguished Service Medal today but at the same time I am saddened to be leaving active military service The Army has been my life and I am proud of each of my twenty five years of service Of those 25 years I spent nine as prisoner of war Those days were grim and survival was a struggle I was able to withstand that long agony because I never lost my determination to live no matter how painful that became because I love my country and never lost faith in her and because I had dreams of what my life would be like upon my return to America Those dreams were always unquestionably of a life that was Army I found that the dream of continued service gave me a goal that helped me survive my years as a POW After my return from Vietnam the opportunity to serve became the motivating force in my life Military service has given me my greatest challenges and my greatest rewards I have worked hard for sound leadership development in the Army and for realistic training The greatest problem faced by POWs was fear of the unknown This fear can be reduced not only for the potential POW but across the awesome environment of the battlefield by training which is honest enough to address the real issue of combat and which is tough enough to approximate battlefield conditions No I do not now retire freely there was much I still wanted to do but circumstances present me no alternative I leave active military service because I must But for the rest of my life the Army will be no less a part of me and of what I am than what it has always been Colonel Floyd James ThompsonJanuary 29 1982 10 Later years and death editIn 1981 Thompson moved to Key West where he remained active in the community according to the Monroe County Office of Veterans Affairs In 1988 Thompson and a number of other former prisoners of war were awarded medals by President Ronald Reagan In 1990 Thompson s son Jim was convicted of murder and imprisoned for sixteen years 11 On July 8 2002 the staff of JIATF Joint Interagency Task Force East and some of his close friends threw Thompson a birthday party He was described as being in high spirits and full of excitement During the celebration he quoted General Douglas MacArthur Old soldiers never die they just fade away Eight days later on July 16 2002 Thompson was found dead in his Key West By the Sea condominium at the age of 69 His body was cremated and his ashes scattered at sea off the coast of Florida There is a memorial marker for him at Andersonville National Cemetery In an update to Glory Denied Tom Philpott reported that Alyce Thompson died of cancer in 2009 He also mentioned that Thompson s daughter Ruth had suffered three disabling heart attacks and had lost a son to suicide Philpott reported that Ruth had told him the strength of character that she inherited from both her parents had helped her though the difficult times Glory Denied was later turned into an opera written by Tom Cipullo 12 Military awards editIn October 1974 Thompson started to receive medals and awards in recognition for his service in Vietnam South Vietnam gave him the country s highest award to Allied enlisted military personnel for valor the Republic of Vietnam Military Merit Medal 13 In recognition of his escape from Viet Cong POW camp for two days in October 1971 Thompson received the Silver Star 2 For his nine years in captivity Thompson received the Army Distinguished Service Medal Bronze Star Medal and Legion of Merit The Bronze Star recognized his continuous resistance to the enemy The Legion of Merit recognized his suffering for his nine years in captivity 2 A ceremony was held on June 24 1988 in the White House honoring POWs from World War I World War II Korea and Vietnam Two representatives were picked from each war to receive the Prisoner of War Medal Thompson and Everett Alvarez were chosen to represent POWs from Vietnam 14 His military decorations and awards include This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message U S Awards amp DecorationsPersonal decorations nbsp Army Distinguished Service Medal nbsp Silver Star nbsp Legion of Merit nbsp nbsp Bronze Star with V Device nbsp nbsp Purple Heart with Bronze Oak Leaf Cluster nbsp Air Medal U S Awards amp DecorationsUnit awards nbsp Presidential Unit Citation nbsp Meritorious Unit CommendationService awards nbsp Prisoner of War Medal nbsp Army Good Conduct MedalCampaign amp Service awards nbsp National Defense Service Medal nbsp Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Vietnam Service Medal w three 3 16 Silver Stars and one 3 16 Bronze Star nbsp Korea Defense Service MedalService amp Training awards nbsp nbsp Armed Forces Reserve Medal with Bronze Hourglass nbsp Army Service Ribbon nbsp nbsp Army Overseas Ribbon with Bronze Numeral 2U S Awards amp DecorationsBadges and Tab awards nbsp Combat Infantryman Badge nbsp Parachutist Badge nbsp Special Forces Tab nbsp Ranger Tab nbsp 18 Overseas Service Bars Foreign Awards amp DecorationsPersonal decorations Unit awards and Service awards nbsp Republic of Vietnam Military Merit Medal nbsp nbsp Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm and Gold Star nbsp Republic of Vietnam Armed Forces Honor Medal 1st Class nbsp Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation nbsp Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross Unit Citation with Palm nbsp Republic of Vietnam Civil Actions Medal Unit Citation with Palm nbsp Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal with 1960 DeviceSee also editPrisoner of War Camps Aircraft losses of the Vietnam War Awards and decorations of the Vietnam War U S prisoners of war during the Vietnam War List of people pardoned or granted clemency by the president of the United StatesReferences edit Martin Douglas 18 July 2002 F J Thompson 69 Longtime P O W Dies The New York Times Retrieved 2017 02 15 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Philpott Tom at Centreville VA Glory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War 1st ed New York NY W W Norton amp Company published May 2001 pp 324 ISBN 0 393 02012 6 Veteran Tribute Floyd James Thompson Colonel USA Veterantributes org Retrieved 2017 06 12 a b c d e Bio Thompson Floyd J Pownetwork org Retrieved 2022 04 01 Airman Missing From Vietnam War Accounted For Whitesides Defense POW MIA Accounting Agency Retrieved 2021 03 04 New York Times July 19 2002 Tom Philpott 2001 04 02 The Prisoner The New Yorker New York City p 56 Retrieved 2013 08 28 Richard Bernstein 2001 08 02 The Glory And Tragedy Of a P O W Scorned The New York Times New York City p E1 Retrieved 2013 08 28 Philpott Tom at Centreville VA Glory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War 1st ed New York NY W W Norton amp Company published May 2001 pp 385 386 ISBN 0 393 02012 6 Philpott Tom at Centreville VA Glory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War 1st ed New York NY W W Norton amp Company published May 2001 pp 384 385 ISBN 0 393 02012 6 Glory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War The Thompson family s postwar lives read like a Jerry Springer show replete with severe alcoholism spousal abuse adultery teenage pregnancy bitter divorce and the jailing of Thompson s son on a murder charge Midgette Anne 7 May 2007 A Former P O W Now Sentenced to Loneliness The New York Times Retrieved 16 April 2020 Philpott Tom at Centreville VA Glory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War 1st ed New York NY W W Norton amp Company published May 2001 pp 322 323 ISBN 0 393 02012 6 Philpott Tom at Centreville Virginia Glory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War 1st ed New York NY W W Norton amp Company published May 2001 pp 398 400 ISBN 0 393 02012 6External links editGlory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War F J Thompson 69 Longtime P O W Dies Published July 18 2002 in The New York Times Floyd James Thompson Find a Grave Retrieved 2008 02 02 POW Network POW MIA Freedom Fighters Booknotes interview with Tom Philpott on Glory Denied The Saga of Jim Thompson America s Longest Held Prisoner of War August 5 2001 Portals nbsp Biography nbsp New Jersey nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Floyd James Thompson amp oldid 1167917933, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.