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Vance Drummond

Vance Drummond, DFC, AFC (22 February 1927 – 17 May 1967) was a New Zealand–born Australian pilot who fought in the Korean and Vietnam Wars. He initially saw service in the New Zealand military, but joined the Royal Australian Air Force in 1949 and graduated as a sergeant pilot in 1951. Posted to No. 77 Squadron in Korea, he flew Gloster Meteor jet fighters and earned the US Air Medal for his combat skills. He was shot down by a Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15 in December 1951 and imprisoned for almost two years. After returning to Australia he converted to CAC Sabre jets and in December 1961 became a flight commander with No. 75 Squadron; he subsequently led the squadron's Black Diamonds aerobatic team, and was awarded the Air Force Cross in 1965.

Vance Drummond
Vance Drummond at Kimpo, South Korea, 1951
Born22 February 1927
Hamilton, New Zealand
Died17 May 1967(1967-05-17) (aged 40)
Near Williamtown, New South Wales, Australia
AllegianceNew Zealand (1944–48)
Australia (1949–67)
Service/branchRoyal New Zealand Air Force (1944–45)
New Zealand Military Forces (1946–48)
Royal Australian Air Force (1949–67)
Service years1944–67
RankWing Commander
UnitNo. 77 Squadron (1951–53)
No. 75 Squadron (1961–64)
19th Tactical Air Support Squadron USAF (1966)
Commands heldNo. 3 Squadron (1967)
Battles/warsKorean War
Vietnam War
AwardsDistinguished Flying Cross
Air Force Cross
Air Medal (US)
Cross of Gallantry with Silver Star (South Vietnam)

Drummond was promoted to acting wing commander in December 1965 and posted to South Vietnam on staff duties with the United States Air Force. He joined the US Air Force's 19th Tactical Air Support Squadron, operating Cessna Bird Dog aircraft, as a forward air controller in July 1966. That month he earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for his part in rescuing a company of soldiers surrounded by Viet Cong forces. In October he was awarded the South Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Silver Star. Drummond took command of No. 3 Squadron, flying Dassault Mirage IIIO supersonic fighters out of Williamtown, New South Wales, in February 1967. His Mirage crashed into the sea during a training exercise on 17 May; neither Drummond nor the plane was found.

Early life and New Zealand military service

The third child of Leonard Henry Vance Drummond and his wife Dorothy Josephine May, née McKnight, Vance Drummond was born on 22 February 1927 in Hamilton, New Zealand. He had three brothers and two sisters. His education, in Hamilton and Te Awamutu, was cut short so he could farm with his father. Drummond enlisted in the Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) in May 1944 and trained as a navigator; he graduated in September 1945 and was discharged with the rank of sergeant in October.[1] He joined the New Zealand Military Forces in March 1946 and by July was serving with J Force, New Zealand's contribution to the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan.[1][2]

Returning to New Zealand in October 1948, Drummond tried to transfer to the RNZAF as a trainee pilot and was considered too old, but successfully applied to the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) and enlisted in August 1949.[1] His brother Frederick Agnew Vance Drummond (1921–1941) had died on active service with the RAAF during World War II.[1][3]

RAAF flying training and Korean War

 
Drummond (left) and fellow pilot Bruce Thomson in the uniforms they wore during captivity in North Korea, September 1953

On 23 October 1950, while a student with No. 1 Flying Training School in Point Cook, Victoria, Drummond ditched his CAC Wirraway into Lake Corangamite during a low-level exercise.[4][5] He was at an altitude of 200 feet (61 m) when he went to adjust his compass and accidentally knocked his control column forward, causing the Wirraway to dip and strike the water. Drummond remained with the floating plane for two hours before being rescued by boat. The RAAF investigation found that although Drummond was technically at fault, the "glassy" surface of the water and the awkward position of the compass in the Wirraway were the prime causes of his "aquatic adventure".[5] He was considered an above-average student and was not disciplined for his lapse.[6]

After graduating first in his class in February 1951, Drummond was posted to No. 78 (Fighter) Wing as a sergeant pilot. The wing operated North American P-51 Mustangs and De Havilland Vampires out of Williamtown, New South Wales.[1][7] In August, Drummond was posted to No. 77 Squadron, based at Kimpo, South Korea. The squadron had gone into action a week after the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950 and had recently converted from Mustangs to Gloster Meteor jet fighters.[1][8] North Korea's Chinese allies operated a Russian-designed swept-wing jet, the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-15, that outclassed all other fighters in the theatre except the new North American F-86 Sabre.[9][10] The MiGs were often flown by seasoned Russian air force pilots, whose deployment was unofficial, and denied at the time by the Soviet Union.[11] In its first months operating the Meteor, No. 77 Squadron conducted offensive sweeps up the Yalu River with USAF Sabres, bomber escort missions, and combat air patrols.[12]

Drummond was recommended for the US Air Medal for "courage, aggressiveness, tactical skill and devotion" in operations from 1 September to 28 October 1951.[13] He was commissioned as a probationary pilot officer on 30 November.[1][14] On 1 December, he was among a formation of twelve Meteors attacked by a superior force of Soviet-piloted MiGs; three Meteors, including Drummond's, were shot down.[15] He ejected but was captured by the North Koreans and incarcerated in a prisoner-of-war camp.[1][15] Drummond and four other prisoners broke out of the camp in April 1952 but were recaptured after two days. The North Koreans beat Drummond and another escapee, and put all five on trial; Drummond was sentenced to a month in confinement.[1][16] He was promoted to flying officer on 30 November.[17] An armistice ended the fighting on 27 July 1953, but prisoner exchange stretched over several weeks.[18][19] Drummond was released on 1 September and repatriated to Australia shortly afterwards.[19][20] His award of the US Air Medal was confirmed on 30 October 1953 and promulgated in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette on 5 November.[21]

Sabre pilot

 
The RAAF's Black Diamonds aerobatic team

After returning to Australia, Drummond undertook No. 8 Advanced Navigation Course.[22] In April 1954 he was one of six navigators who made a graduation flight from East Sale in Victoria—home of the RAAF School of Air Navigation—to New Zealand in Avro Lincoln bombers.[23][24] He was then posted for flying duties with No. 2 Operational Training Unit (OTU) at Williamtown, where he completed No. 3 Fighter Combat Instructors Course.[22] Drummond was a founding member of the Sabre Trials Flight, established in November 1954 as part of No. 2 OTU under Wing Commander Dick Cresswell, former commanding officer of No. 77 Squadron in Korea.[1][25] The CAC Sabre was the RAAF's first swept-wing, transonic aircraft; belonging to the Trials Flight was, according to the official history of the post-war RAAF, "the Air Force's ultimate status symbol".[25] Drummond was promoted to flight lieutenant on 30 May 1955.[26] On 9 September, he married Margaret Buckham, a law clerk, in St Peter's Anglican Church, Newcastle; the couple had a son.[1]

In February 1959, Drummond was assigned to Headquarters Operational Command, located in Glenbrook, New South Wales.[22][27] From January to December 1961, he undertook No. 15 Course at the RAAF Staff College in Canberra.[1][28] He then joined No. 75 Squadron as a flight commander and was raised to squadron leader on 1 January 1962.[1][29] No. 75 Squadron operated Sabres and was home to the Black Diamonds aerobatic display team, which frequently appeared at events in Australia and its territories; Drummond was appointed leader of the team in October 1962.[1] He also played a major role in squadron mobility exercises.[30] Drummond was posted to the staff of the Department of Air in Canberra in December 1964.[1] On 1 January 1965, he was awarded the Air Force Cross for his "loyalty and devotion to duty, plus a very high sense of responsibility" while serving with No. 75 Squadron.[22][31]

Vietnam War

 
Drummond with "Snoopy", the USAF Cessna Bird Dog he flew as a forward air controller in Vietnam, August 1966

Drummond was promoted to acting wing commander on 16 December 1965 and posted to South Vietnam on the staff of the Second Air Division, United States Air Force (USAF). Based in Saigon, he was to observe US methods of air transport, reconnaissance, ground attack, and air defence.[32][33] In July 1966—apparently at his own behest, according to the official history of the RAAF in the Vietnam War—he joined the 19th Tactical Air Support Squadron as a forward air controller (FAC); he flew in a two-seat Cessna Bird Dog aircraft called "Snoopy".[1][34] Drummond was the first of several RAAF FACs attached to the USAF during the war.[35] The FAC posting was highly prized by RAAF fighter pilots as they otherwise had little opportunity to serve in Vietnam.[34] Their role was to fly low over enemy territory, spotting for ground-attack missions and checking the outcome. The nature of the work meant that, according to the official history of the post-war air force, "the FACs had probably the most hazardous job of any RAAF aircrew in the war".[35]

On the evening of 24 July 1966, having already flown that day, Drummond and his US pilot were called out to assist a company of soldiers besieged by Viet Cong troops. Throughout the night and into the early hours of the next morning, in the face of heavy anti-aircraft fire, they marked enemy positions and directed air support until friendly troops arrived by helicopter to relieve the surrounded company. By the end of the mission, the Bird Dog crew had flown for eleven hours in multiple sorties.[1][36] Drummond was recommended for the Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) for his "outstanding courage and unselfish devotion to duty".[37] On a mission in September, Drummond guided a US patrol into action with a Viet Cong force; the Americans captured the enemy's flag and subsequently gave it to Drummond, who sent it to Australia where his wife and a representative of the Chief of the Air Staff presented it to the Australian War Memorial, Canberra.[38] Drummond was awarded the South Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Silver Star for a mission on 27 October.[1] He finished his tour of duty with the USAF in Vietnam the following month, having flown 381 sorties.[1][36]

Fatal accident and court of inquiry

 
Mirage IIIs of No. 2 OCU (pictured in 1980)

Drummond's acting rank of wing commander became substantive on 1 January 1967.[1][39] He took command of No. 3 Squadron on 3 February.[40] Recently returned to Williamtown following duty at Butterworth, Malaysia, the unit was to convert from Sabres to Dassault Mirage IIIO supersonic fighters.[40][41] Drummond undertook No. 9 Mirage Course with No. 2 Operational Conversion Unit (OCU), commencing on 10 April.[42] He was on a high-altitude combat exercise with three other Mirages on 17 May when his aircraft dived into the sea around 50 nautical miles (93 km) north-east of Williamtown. Drummond had sounded no alert, nor had the jet suffered any obvious structural failure. The other Mirages searched the area but spotted only an oil slick; an air-and-sea search continued for several days but did not locate Drummond or his aircraft.[41]

The court of inquiry into the accident investigated several possible explanations including engine problems, oxygen system failure, and pilot incapacity. It found that the Mirage was fully serviceable prior to the flight. The inquiry also considered Drummond's flying ability and physical fitness. It noted that he was an above-average pilot with "exceptional leadership abilities" based on career assessments and evaluation by the USAF during his recent tour of duty in Vietnam. His medical officer testified that Drummond had been fully assessed four months previously and was fit to fly without restriction. Margaret Drummond was also called as a witness. She said that over the past six weeks her husband had suffered instances of severe headache, double vision, chest pain and heartburn. In response, the medical officer opined that Drummond may have had a heart attack in the air, pointing out that a cardiovascular issue that was manageable on the ground could be exacerbated under flying conditions, and mean that the pilot would be unable to use his radio. The court concluded that such an attack was the most likely explanation for the accident; the Air Officer Commanding Operational Command considered it "reasonable to assume that the cause lay in pilot incapacity".[41] Later that year, the former Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger, was quoted as saying that it "looked like a pilot collapse".[43] Air Commodore Mark Lax, writing in the Defence Department's Aviation Safety Spotlight magazine in 2017, considered that Drummond was "well on track to become the Chief of the Air Staff", and speculated that he may have kept quiet about his symptoms to avoid any restrictions on his flying.[41]

Wing Commander Jake Newham succeeded Drummond as commanding officer of No. 3 Squadron.[40] Drummond's DFC was gazetted on 26 September 1967, backdated to 14 September.[44] Margaret Drummond, accompanied by the couple's son, was presented with the decoration at Government House, Canberra, in April the following year.[1]

In 2013 and 2014, local newspapers reported plans to salvage the Wirraway that Drummond ditched in Lake Corangamite in 1950.[45][46] In August 2021, a specially designed gantry was used to lift the fuselage of the Wirraway out of the lake.[47]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Newton, Dennis. Drummond, Vance (1927–1967). from the original on 9 July 2018. Retrieved 22 June 2018. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Gillespie, The Pacific, p. 307 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Drummond, Frederick Agnew Vance". World War Two Nominal Roll. Department of Veterans' Affairs. from the original on 9 July 2018. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  4. ^ "Pilot clings to plane in lake for 2½ hours". The Herald. Melbourne. 23 October 1950. p. 1. Retrieved 27 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ a b RAAF Headquarters, Accident to Wirraway A20-714, p. 6
  6. ^ RAAF Headquarters, Accident to Wirraway A20-714, p. 11
  7. ^ No. 78 Wing, Operations Record Book, p. 214
  8. ^ Stephens, Going Solo, pp. 224–225, 231–233
  9. ^ Stephens, Going Solo, pp. 229–230
  10. ^ Hurst, The Forgotten Few, pp. 67, 83
  11. ^ Hurst, The Forgotten Few, pp. 107, 140
  12. ^ Stephens, Going Solo, pp. 234–236
  13. ^ "Recommendation: United States Air Medal". Australian War Memorial. from the original on 9 July 2018. Retrieved 18 June 2018.
  14. ^ "Royal Australian Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Canberra. 14 August 1952. p. 3426. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  15. ^ a b Hurst, The Forgotten Few, p. 171
  16. ^ O'Neill, Combat Operations, p. 552
  17. ^ "Royal Australian Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Canberra. 23 July 1953. p. 2066. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  18. ^ Stephens, Going Solo, p. 242
  19. ^ a b "Exchange of prisoners near end". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 2 September 1953. p. 4. Retrieved 18 August 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  20. ^ "Pilot tells of death march". The Daily Telegraph. Sydney. 14 September 1953. p. 7. Retrieved 6 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  21. ^ "United States Air Medal". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Canberra. 5 November 1953. p. 2993. Retrieved 3 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  22. ^ a b c d "Awarded the Air Force Cross: Squadron Leader Vance Drummond" (PDF). Australia and the Vietnam War. Canberra: Department of Veterans' Affairs. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2013. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  23. ^ "6 RAAF men in special flight". The Herald. Melbourne. 30 April 1954. p. 2. Retrieved 7 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  24. ^ Stephens, Going Solo, pp. 149–150
  25. ^ a b Stephens, Going Solo, p. 348
  26. ^ "Royal Australian Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Canberra. 28 July 1955. p. 2299. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  27. ^ Stephens, Going Solo, p. 69
  28. ^ Hurst, Strategy and Red Ink, p. 185
  29. ^ "Royal Australian Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Canberra. 20 December 1961. p. 4707. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  30. ^ "Nineteen in honours list". RAAF News. Vol. 7, no. 1. January–February 1965. p. 3.
  31. ^ "No. 43530". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 January 1965. p. 40.
  32. ^ "Royal Australian Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Canberra. 13 January 1966. p. 101. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  33. ^ "RAAF appointment" (PDF) (Press release). Canberra: Department of Air. 22 December 1965. Retrieved 24 June 2018.
  34. ^ a b Coulthard-Clark, The RAAF in Vietnam, pp. 262–263
  35. ^ a b Stephens, Going Solo, p. 305
  36. ^ a b "RAAF pilot decorated for Vietnam service" (PDF) (Press release). Canberra: Department of Air. 12 September 1967. Retrieved 6 July 2018.
  37. ^ "Awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross: The late Wing Commander Vance Drummond" (PDF). Australia and the Vietnam War. Canberra: Department of Veterans' Affairs. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2013. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  38. ^ "Latest souvenir for Memorial". The Canberra Times. Canberra. 7 October 1966. p. 4. Retrieved 21 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  39. ^ "Royal Australian Air Force". Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. Canberra. 27 October 1966. p. 5349. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  40. ^ a b c RAAF Historical Section, Fighter Units, pp. 6–7
  41. ^ a b c d Lax, Mark (April 2017). "A lack of oxygen or something else?" (PDF). Aviation Safety Spotlight. Defence Aviation and Air Force Safety. pp. 38–42. (PDF) from the original on 18 September 2017. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  42. ^ Susans, The RAAF Mirage Story, p. 128
  43. ^ "Fuel part seen as jet fault". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. 16 October 1967. p. 1. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  44. ^ "No. 44415". The London Gazette (Supplement). 26 September 1967. p. 10427.
  45. ^ "Wirraway to surface". Camperdown Chronicle. Camberdown, Victoria: WD News Publications. 21 November 2013. from the original on 19 August 2018. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
  46. ^ "Ocean Grove diver's 15-year bid to rescue a sunken war plane". Geelong Advertiser. Geelong, Victoria: News Corp Australia. 13 February 2014. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
  47. ^ Coates, Jessica (31 August 2021). "Ditched World War II plane recovered from Lake Corangamite". Geelong Advertiser. Retrieved 1 September 2021.

References

External links

  • AWM photograph (1), taken 1 September 1953, of Drummond and four of his comrades, following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp.
  • AWM photograph (2), taken 2 September 1953, of Drummond on Australian transport plane, following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp.
  • AWM photograph (3), taken 2 September 1953, of Drummond on Australian transport plane, following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp.
  • AWM photograph (4), taken 2 September 1953, of Drummond on Australian transport plane, following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp.
  • AWM photograph (5), taken 2 September 1953, of Drummond following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp.
  • AWM photograph (6), taken 2 September 1953, of Drummond following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp.
  • AWM photograph (7), taken September 1953, of Drummond's return (with five other POWs) to Australia following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp.

vance, drummond, february, 1927, 1967, zealand, born, australian, pilot, fought, korean, vietnam, wars, initially, service, zealand, military, joined, royal, australian, force, 1949, graduated, sergeant, pilot, 1951, posted, squadron, korea, flew, gloster, met. Vance Drummond DFC AFC 22 February 1927 17 May 1967 was a New Zealand born Australian pilot who fought in the Korean and Vietnam Wars He initially saw service in the New Zealand military but joined the Royal Australian Air Force in 1949 and graduated as a sergeant pilot in 1951 Posted to No 77 Squadron in Korea he flew Gloster Meteor jet fighters and earned the US Air Medal for his combat skills He was shot down by a Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 15 in December 1951 and imprisoned for almost two years After returning to Australia he converted to CAC Sabre jets and in December 1961 became a flight commander with No 75 Squadron he subsequently led the squadron s Black Diamonds aerobatic team and was awarded the Air Force Cross in 1965 Vance DrummondVance Drummond at Kimpo South Korea 1951Born22 February 1927Hamilton New ZealandDied17 May 1967 1967 05 17 aged 40 Near Williamtown New South Wales AustraliaAllegianceNew Zealand 1944 48 Australia 1949 67 Service wbr branchRoyal New Zealand Air Force 1944 45 New Zealand Military Forces 1946 48 Royal Australian Air Force 1949 67 Service years1944 67RankWing CommanderUnitNo 77 Squadron 1951 53 No 75 Squadron 1961 64 19th Tactical Air Support Squadron USAF 1966 Commands heldNo 3 Squadron 1967 Battles warsKorean WarVietnam WarAwardsDistinguished Flying CrossAir Force CrossAir Medal US Cross of Gallantry with Silver Star South Vietnam Drummond was promoted to acting wing commander in December 1965 and posted to South Vietnam on staff duties with the United States Air Force He joined the US Air Force s 19th Tactical Air Support Squadron operating Cessna Bird Dog aircraft as a forward air controller in July 1966 That month he earned the Distinguished Flying Cross for his part in rescuing a company of soldiers surrounded by Viet Cong forces In October he was awarded the South Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Silver Star Drummond took command of No 3 Squadron flying Dassault Mirage IIIO supersonic fighters out of Williamtown New South Wales in February 1967 His Mirage crashed into the sea during a training exercise on 17 May neither Drummond nor the plane was found Contents 1 Early life and New Zealand military service 2 RAAF flying training and Korean War 3 Sabre pilot 4 Vietnam War 5 Fatal accident and court of inquiry 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and New Zealand military service EditThe third child of Leonard Henry Vance Drummond and his wife Dorothy Josephine May nee McKnight Vance Drummond was born on 22 February 1927 in Hamilton New Zealand He had three brothers and two sisters His education in Hamilton and Te Awamutu was cut short so he could farm with his father Drummond enlisted in the Royal New Zealand Air Force RNZAF in May 1944 and trained as a navigator he graduated in September 1945 and was discharged with the rank of sergeant in October 1 He joined the New Zealand Military Forces in March 1946 and by July was serving with J Force New Zealand s contribution to the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in Japan 1 2 Returning to New Zealand in October 1948 Drummond tried to transfer to the RNZAF as a trainee pilot and was considered too old but successfully applied to the Royal Australian Air Force RAAF and enlisted in August 1949 1 His brother Frederick Agnew Vance Drummond 1921 1941 had died on active service with the RAAF during World War II 1 3 RAAF flying training and Korean War Edit Drummond left and fellow pilot Bruce Thomson in the uniforms they wore during captivity in North Korea September 1953On 23 October 1950 while a student with No 1 Flying Training School in Point Cook Victoria Drummond ditched his CAC Wirraway into Lake Corangamite during a low level exercise 4 5 He was at an altitude of 200 feet 61 m when he went to adjust his compass and accidentally knocked his control column forward causing the Wirraway to dip and strike the water Drummond remained with the floating plane for two hours before being rescued by boat The RAAF investigation found that although Drummond was technically at fault the glassy surface of the water and the awkward position of the compass in the Wirraway were the prime causes of his aquatic adventure 5 He was considered an above average student and was not disciplined for his lapse 6 After graduating first in his class in February 1951 Drummond was posted to No 78 Fighter Wing as a sergeant pilot The wing operated North American P 51 Mustangs and De Havilland Vampires out of Williamtown New South Wales 1 7 In August Drummond was posted to No 77 Squadron based at Kimpo South Korea The squadron had gone into action a week after the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950 and had recently converted from Mustangs to Gloster Meteor jet fighters 1 8 North Korea s Chinese allies operated a Russian designed swept wing jet the Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 15 that outclassed all other fighters in the theatre except the new North American F 86 Sabre 9 10 The MiGs were often flown by seasoned Russian air force pilots whose deployment was unofficial and denied at the time by the Soviet Union 11 In its first months operating the Meteor No 77 Squadron conducted offensive sweeps up the Yalu River with USAF Sabres bomber escort missions and combat air patrols 12 Drummond was recommended for the US Air Medal for courage aggressiveness tactical skill and devotion in operations from 1 September to 28 October 1951 13 He was commissioned as a probationary pilot officer on 30 November 1 14 On 1 December he was among a formation of twelve Meteors attacked by a superior force of Soviet piloted MiGs three Meteors including Drummond s were shot down 15 He ejected but was captured by the North Koreans and incarcerated in a prisoner of war camp 1 15 Drummond and four other prisoners broke out of the camp in April 1952 but were recaptured after two days The North Koreans beat Drummond and another escapee and put all five on trial Drummond was sentenced to a month in confinement 1 16 He was promoted to flying officer on 30 November 17 An armistice ended the fighting on 27 July 1953 but prisoner exchange stretched over several weeks 18 19 Drummond was released on 1 September and repatriated to Australia shortly afterwards 19 20 His award of the US Air Medal was confirmed on 30 October 1953 and promulgated in the Commonwealth of Australia Gazette on 5 November 21 Sabre pilot Edit The RAAF s Black Diamonds aerobatic teamAfter returning to Australia Drummond undertook No 8 Advanced Navigation Course 22 In April 1954 he was one of six navigators who made a graduation flight from East Sale in Victoria home of the RAAF School of Air Navigation to New Zealand in Avro Lincoln bombers 23 24 He was then posted for flying duties with No 2 Operational Training Unit OTU at Williamtown where he completed No 3 Fighter Combat Instructors Course 22 Drummond was a founding member of the Sabre Trials Flight established in November 1954 as part of No 2 OTU under Wing Commander Dick Cresswell former commanding officer of No 77 Squadron in Korea 1 25 The CAC Sabre was the RAAF s first swept wing transonic aircraft belonging to the Trials Flight was according to the official history of the post war RAAF the Air Force s ultimate status symbol 25 Drummond was promoted to flight lieutenant on 30 May 1955 26 On 9 September he married Margaret Buckham a law clerk in St Peter s Anglican Church Newcastle the couple had a son 1 In February 1959 Drummond was assigned to Headquarters Operational Command located in Glenbrook New South Wales 22 27 From January to December 1961 he undertook No 15 Course at the RAAF Staff College in Canberra 1 28 He then joined No 75 Squadron as a flight commander and was raised to squadron leader on 1 January 1962 1 29 No 75 Squadron operated Sabres and was home to the Black Diamonds aerobatic display team which frequently appeared at events in Australia and its territories Drummond was appointed leader of the team in October 1962 1 He also played a major role in squadron mobility exercises 30 Drummond was posted to the staff of the Department of Air in Canberra in December 1964 1 On 1 January 1965 he was awarded the Air Force Cross for his loyalty and devotion to duty plus a very high sense of responsibility while serving with No 75 Squadron 22 31 Vietnam War Edit Drummond with Snoopy the USAF Cessna Bird Dog he flew as a forward air controller in Vietnam August 1966Drummond was promoted to acting wing commander on 16 December 1965 and posted to South Vietnam on the staff of the Second Air Division United States Air Force USAF Based in Saigon he was to observe US methods of air transport reconnaissance ground attack and air defence 32 33 In July 1966 apparently at his own behest according to the official history of the RAAF in the Vietnam War he joined the 19th Tactical Air Support Squadron as a forward air controller FAC he flew in a two seat Cessna Bird Dog aircraft called Snoopy 1 34 Drummond was the first of several RAAF FACs attached to the USAF during the war 35 The FAC posting was highly prized by RAAF fighter pilots as they otherwise had little opportunity to serve in Vietnam 34 Their role was to fly low over enemy territory spotting for ground attack missions and checking the outcome The nature of the work meant that according to the official history of the post war air force the FACs had probably the most hazardous job of any RAAF aircrew in the war 35 On the evening of 24 July 1966 having already flown that day Drummond and his US pilot were called out to assist a company of soldiers besieged by Viet Cong troops Throughout the night and into the early hours of the next morning in the face of heavy anti aircraft fire they marked enemy positions and directed air support until friendly troops arrived by helicopter to relieve the surrounded company By the end of the mission the Bird Dog crew had flown for eleven hours in multiple sorties 1 36 Drummond was recommended for the Distinguished Flying Cross DFC for his outstanding courage and unselfish devotion to duty 37 On a mission in September Drummond guided a US patrol into action with a Viet Cong force the Americans captured the enemy s flag and subsequently gave it to Drummond who sent it to Australia where his wife and a representative of the Chief of the Air Staff presented it to the Australian War Memorial Canberra 38 Drummond was awarded the South Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry with Silver Star for a mission on 27 October 1 He finished his tour of duty with the USAF in Vietnam the following month having flown 381 sorties 1 36 Fatal accident and court of inquiry Edit Mirage IIIs of No 2 OCU pictured in 1980 Drummond s acting rank of wing commander became substantive on 1 January 1967 1 39 He took command of No 3 Squadron on 3 February 40 Recently returned to Williamtown following duty at Butterworth Malaysia the unit was to convert from Sabres to Dassault Mirage IIIO supersonic fighters 40 41 Drummond undertook No 9 Mirage Course with No 2 Operational Conversion Unit OCU commencing on 10 April 42 He was on a high altitude combat exercise with three other Mirages on 17 May when his aircraft dived into the sea around 50 nautical miles 93 km north east of Williamtown Drummond had sounded no alert nor had the jet suffered any obvious structural failure The other Mirages searched the area but spotted only an oil slick an air and sea search continued for several days but did not locate Drummond or his aircraft 41 The court of inquiry into the accident investigated several possible explanations including engine problems oxygen system failure and pilot incapacity It found that the Mirage was fully serviceable prior to the flight The inquiry also considered Drummond s flying ability and physical fitness It noted that he was an above average pilot with exceptional leadership abilities based on career assessments and evaluation by the USAF during his recent tour of duty in Vietnam His medical officer testified that Drummond had been fully assessed four months previously and was fit to fly without restriction Margaret Drummond was also called as a witness She said that over the past six weeks her husband had suffered instances of severe headache double vision chest pain and heartburn In response the medical officer opined that Drummond may have had a heart attack in the air pointing out that a cardiovascular issue that was manageable on the ground could be exacerbated under flying conditions and mean that the pilot would be unable to use his radio The court concluded that such an attack was the most likely explanation for the accident the Air Officer Commanding Operational Command considered it reasonable to assume that the cause lay in pilot incapacity 41 Later that year the former Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee Air Chief Marshal Sir Frederick Scherger was quoted as saying that it looked like a pilot collapse 43 Air Commodore Mark Lax writing in the Defence Department s Aviation Safety Spotlight magazine in 2017 considered that Drummond was well on track to become the Chief of the Air Staff and speculated that he may have kept quiet about his symptoms to avoid any restrictions on his flying 41 Wing Commander Jake Newham succeeded Drummond as commanding officer of No 3 Squadron 40 Drummond s DFC was gazetted on 26 September 1967 backdated to 14 September 44 Margaret Drummond accompanied by the couple s son was presented with the decoration at Government House Canberra in April the following year 1 In 2013 and 2014 local newspapers reported plans to salvage the Wirraway that Drummond ditched in Lake Corangamite in 1950 45 46 In August 2021 a specially designed gantry was used to lift the fuselage of the Wirraway out of the lake 47 Notes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Newton Dennis Drummond Vance 1927 1967 Archived from the original on 9 July 2018 Retrieved 22 June 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Gillespie The Pacific p 307 Archived 5 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Drummond Frederick Agnew Vance World War Two Nominal Roll Department of Veterans Affairs Archived from the original on 9 July 2018 Retrieved 6 July 2018 Pilot clings to plane in lake for 2 hours The Herald Melbourne 23 October 1950 p 1 Retrieved 27 June 2018 via National Library of Australia a b RAAF Headquarters Accident to Wirraway A20 714 p 6 RAAF Headquarters Accident to Wirraway A20 714 p 11 No 78 Wing Operations Record Book p 214 Stephens Going Solo pp 224 225 231 233 Stephens Going Solo pp 229 230 Hurst The Forgotten Few pp 67 83 Hurst The Forgotten Few pp 107 140 Stephens Going Solo pp 234 236 Recommendation United States Air Medal Australian War Memorial Archived from the original on 9 July 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Canberra 14 August 1952 p 3426 Retrieved 28 June 2018 via National Library of Australia a b Hurst The Forgotten Few p 171 O Neill Combat Operations p 552 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Canberra 23 July 1953 p 2066 Retrieved 28 June 2018 via National Library of Australia Stephens Going Solo p 242 a b Exchange of prisoners near end The Advertiser Adelaide 2 September 1953 p 4 Retrieved 18 August 2018 via National Library of Australia Pilot tells of death march The Daily Telegraph Sydney 14 September 1953 p 7 Retrieved 6 July 2018 via National Library of Australia United States Air Medal Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Canberra 5 November 1953 p 2993 Retrieved 3 July 2018 via National Library of Australia a b c d Awarded the Air Force Cross Squadron Leader Vance Drummond PDF Australia and the Vietnam War Canberra Department of Veterans Affairs Archived from the original PDF on 20 September 2013 Retrieved 30 June 2018 6 RAAF men in special flight The Herald Melbourne 30 April 1954 p 2 Retrieved 7 July 2018 via National Library of Australia Stephens Going Solo pp 149 150 a b Stephens Going Solo p 348 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Canberra 28 July 1955 p 2299 Retrieved 28 June 2018 via National Library of Australia Stephens Going Solo p 69 Hurst Strategy and Red Ink p 185 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Canberra 20 December 1961 p 4707 Retrieved 28 June 2018 via National Library of Australia Nineteen in honours list RAAF News Vol 7 no 1 January February 1965 p 3 No 43530 The London Gazette Supplement 1 January 1965 p 40 Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Canberra 13 January 1966 p 101 Retrieved 28 June 2018 via National Library of Australia RAAF appointment PDF Press release Canberra Department of Air 22 December 1965 Retrieved 24 June 2018 a b Coulthard Clark The RAAF in Vietnam pp 262 263 a b Stephens Going Solo p 305 a b RAAF pilot decorated for Vietnam service PDF Press release Canberra Department of Air 12 September 1967 Retrieved 6 July 2018 Awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross The late Wing Commander Vance Drummond PDF Australia and the Vietnam War Canberra Department of Veterans Affairs Archived from the original PDF on 20 September 2013 Retrieved 30 June 2018 Latest souvenir for Memorial The Canberra Times Canberra 7 October 1966 p 4 Retrieved 21 July 2018 via National Library of Australia Royal Australian Air Force Commonwealth of Australia Gazette Canberra 27 October 1966 p 5349 Retrieved 28 June 2018 via National Library of Australia a b c RAAF Historical Section Fighter Units pp 6 7 a b c d Lax Mark April 2017 A lack of oxygen or something else PDF Aviation Safety Spotlight Defence Aviation and Air Force Safety pp 38 42 Archived PDF from the original on 18 September 2017 Retrieved 22 June 2018 Susans The RAAF Mirage Story p 128 Fuel part seen as jet fault The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media 16 October 1967 p 1 Retrieved 22 August 2018 No 44415 The London Gazette Supplement 26 September 1967 p 10427 Wirraway to surface Camperdown Chronicle Camberdown Victoria WD News Publications 21 November 2013 Archived from the original on 19 August 2018 Retrieved 18 August 2018 Ocean Grove diver s 15 year bid to rescue a sunken war plane Geelong Advertiser Geelong Victoria News Corp Australia 13 February 2014 Retrieved 18 August 2018 Coates Jessica 31 August 2021 Ditched World War II plane recovered from Lake Corangamite Geelong Advertiser Retrieved 1 September 2021 References EditCoulthard Clark Chris 1995 The RAAF in Vietnam Australian Air Involvement in the Vietnam War 1962 1975 The Official History of Australia s Involvement in Southeast Asian Conflicts 1948 1975 Vol 4 St Leonards New South Wales Allen amp Unwin in Association with the Australian War Memorial ISBN 1 86373 305 1 Gillespie Oliver 1952 The Pacific Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939 45 Wellington War History Branch Department of Internal Affairs OCLC 491441265 Hurst Doug 2001 Strategy and Red Ink A History of RAAF Staff College 1949 1999 PDF RAAF Base Fairbairn Aerospace Centre ISBN 0 642 26558 5 Hurst Doug 2008 The Forgotten Few 77 RAAF Squadron in Korea Crows Nest New South Wales Allen amp Unwin ISBN 978 1 74175 500 8 No 78 Wing 1943 1959 Operations Record Book RAAF Unit History sheets Form A50 Canberra National Archives of Australia O Neill Robert 1985 Combat Operations Australia in the Korean War 1950 53 Vol 2 Canberra Australian War Memorial amp Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 642 04330 2 RAAF Headquarters 1950 1951 Accident to Wirraway A20 714 Canberra National Archives of Australia RAAF Historical Section 1995 Fighter Units Units of the Royal Australian Air Force A Concise History Vol 2 Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 644 42794 9 Stephens Alan 1995 Going Solo The Royal Australian Air Force 1946 1971 PDF Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service ISBN 0 644 42803 1 Susans M R ed 1990 The RAAF Mirage Story PDF RAAF Base Point Cook Victoria RAAF Museum ISBN 0 642 14835 X External links EditAWM photograph 1 taken 1 September 1953 of Drummond and four of his comrades following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp AWM photograph 2 taken 2 September 1953 of Drummond on Australian transport plane following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp AWM photograph 3 taken 2 September 1953 of Drummond on Australian transport plane following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp AWM photograph 4 taken 2 September 1953 of Drummond on Australian transport plane following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp AWM photograph 5 taken 2 September 1953 of Drummond following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp AWM photograph 6 taken 2 September 1953 of Drummond following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp AWM photograph 7 taken September 1953 of Drummond s return with five other POWs to Australia following his release from Korean Prisoner of War camp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vance Drummond amp 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