Hammon, Keith E.

Data Sources - Air Force Manual No. 200-25A, Department of the Air Force, Washington, October 16, 1961  page 1. Sanitized copy. National Archives KOREAN Conflict Casualty File (KCCF) 1950-1954. 

 

MIAs in Incident; Schneidt, Norman William; Kelleher, Robert Patrick; Hammon, Keith E.; Schmitt, Warren W.; Jensen, Wayne F.; Kirk, Charles F.; Garrison, Fred Herron; Evans, Emmett O'Neal,

                                      

03/92 -- Korea, and the men yet to be accounted for -- the "official list" --  is a list of U.S. servicemen known to have been held as prisoners of war by the red Chinese and North Koreans from the Korean War but not released or accounted for by the communists, as released on May 27, 1957 at a hearing of the House Subcommittee on the Far East and Pacific by the Department of Defense.

The lists, the printed minutes of the May 27, 1957 hearing and the "sense of congress" resolution were subsequently buried in the archives. The original list had 450 names compiled from American POWS who were repatriated by the Reds, as well as from photographs released by the Reds, Chinese radio propaganda broadcasts, and letters written home by captured men. The "revised" list was narrowed down in august of 1961 to 389 men, and all were arbitrarily declared dead by the military services, the USG still lists them as "unaccounted for".

Names and ranks only were released at the time, and printed in "The Spotlight" on August 27, 1979, along with the above information and background. Further information has been compiled by the P.O.W. Network from the Hawaii POW/MIA Korean Memorial records, National Archives documentation, and public United States Air Force documentation, and changes made to the original published information. (FEBRUARY 1992)
 

Keith Hammon is listed on the "HONOR ROLL OF FORGOTTEN AMERICANS" yet is noted as having died "while missing" by the National Archive.

https://dpaa-mil.sites.crmforce.mil/dpaaProfile?id=a0Jt000000Im0EZEAZ

03/12/2021

Service Member  TSGT KEITH EDWARD HAMMON

  • KOREAN WAR
  • UNITED STATES AIR FORCE
  • Unaccounted For

On November 8, 1952, a B-29 Superfortress (serial number 44-62073) departed Kadena Air Base with twelve crew members on a night bombing operation targeting the military staff at a school in Yongpung-ni, North Korea. While approaching the target, three MiG-15s fired on the B-29, causing a part of the aircraft to suddenly decompress and explode. Three crew members survived this incident but were captured by enemy forces, and were eventually returned to U.S. custody at the end of the war. The fate of other nine crew members was unknown, and their remains not recovered.

Technical Sergeant Keith Edward Hammon, who entered the U.S. Air Force from Indiana, was assigned to the 370th Bombardment Squadron, 307th Bombardment Group (Medium). He was the flight engineer on this Superfortress when it was lost. No returning prisoners of war mentioned contact with TSgt Hammon, nor was he seen at any known holding point, interrogation center, hospital, or permanent POW camp. He remains unaccounted-for. Today, Technical Sergeant Hammon is memorialized on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.

Based on all information available, DPAA assessed the individual's case to be in the analytical category of Deferred.

If you are a family member of this serviceman, DPAA can provide you with additional information and analysis of your case. Please contact your casualty office representative.