Medal of Honor Recipient Leo K. Thorsness Passes Away at 85
Earned Nation's Highest Award for Valor during Vietnam
MOUNT PLEASANT, S.C., May 3, 2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Congressional Medal of Honor Society announces that Colonel Leo K. Thorsness, Medal of Honor recipient, passed away Tuesday afternoon, May 2, 2017, in St. Augustine, Florida at the age of 85.
Leo Thorsness was born on February 14, 1932, in Walnut Grove, Minneapolis.
Thorsness grew up in Walnut Grove where he attended school and earned the rank of Eagle Scout. He attended South Dakota State College in 1950. He enlisted in the Air Force a year later and went on to graduate from the Aviation Cadet Program with a commission earning his wings. He served as a fighter pilot with Strategic Air Command and Tactical Air Command before being assigned to Vietnam with the 357th Tactical Fighter Squadron. While flying a mission in April 1967, his wingman was shot down. Thorsness, critically low on fuel, circled their parachutes and engaged four MIG-17 aircraft in a dogfight damaging one and driving the others away. Eleven days after this dramatic mission he was shot down over North Vietnam and subsequently captured and interned by the North Vietnamese at the Hoa Lo Prison, nicknamed the "Hanoi Hilton". He was released on March 4, 1973, almost six years after he was shot down. He was awarded the Medal of Honor by President Richard M. Nixon at a White House ceremony on October 15, 1973. Thorsness retired from the Air Force in 1973 at the rank of Colonel.
Leo K. Thorsness is survived by his wife Gaylee and family. Funeral services are pending. There are 74 recipients alive today.
About the Congressional Medal of Honor Society
The Congressional Medal of Honor Society was chartered by Congress in 1958 and consists exclusively of the living recipients of our nation's highest award for bravery in combat, the Medal of Honor. Those who wear this light blue ribbon and Medal around their neck are "recipients" of this prestigious award; they are not "winners." Although it is common to refer to the Medal as the Congressional Medal of Honor, it is simply named the Medal of Honor, although, as stated, the Congress did establish the Society as the Congressional Medal of Honor Society.
Contact: Victoria Kueck
843-884-8862
[email protected]
SOURCE Congressional Medal of Honor Society
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