[Source: The following text about Air Force prisoners of war 
				still unaccounted for was taken word-for-word from: 
				
				http://koreanwarpowmia.net/Reports/Nielsen_Henderson.htm .  
				All credit for this information goes to that website.] 
			 
			Over the years, We’ve located many lists. Most turned out to be 
			alternate versions of things we already know. But, one list has 
			always eluded us, the Nielsen-Henderson List. 
			 
			It’s a mysterious list of airmen who were awaiting repatriation in 
			Kaesong in 1953 just a short walk from freedom. As the story goes, 
			hundreds of men were about to be released, when the Communists 
			realized that the U.S. wasn’t aware of their existence. The airmen 
			were hurriedly loaded up and carried away, never to be heard from 
			again. Heroically, two men, Nielsen and Henderson, compiled a list 
			of their names and somehow the list got to the Americans. 
			 
			Over the years, the list had been lost . . . only an occasional 
			mention in Air Intel reports. It’s been our mission on every trip to 
			the Archives to find that list. 
			 
			We’ve been troubled that neither Nielsen nor Henderson ever showed 
			up on the list of the missing men. It finally occurred to us that, 
			perhaps, they weren’t missing. Maybe they came home. 
			 
			With the help of Tim Casey of the Association of Korean War Ex-POWs, 
			our newly found friend and most valuable asset, We located both 
			Nielsen and Henderson. Though Nielsen is in poor health and unable 
			to contribute, Jack Henderson is very much alive, conversant, 
			helpful, and a delight to speak with. 
			 
			In an hour-long phone conversation, we learned more than we ever 
			expected. Interestingly, Jack has been asked about the list only 4 
			or 5 times in the last 51 years. 
			 
			So here’s the real story. 
			 
			In August of 1951, Jack bailed out of his bullet-ridden F-80. As his 
			chute brought him safely to land, North Korean soldiers aimed 
			machine guns at him from across the river. Jack realized the 
			heart-pounding predicament immediately. Before they would cross the 
			treacherous waters, they would just shoot him. Miraculously, a 
			Chinese Communist Soldier emerged from the bushes next to him and 
			took Jack into custody. 
			 
			Jack was trained and in shape, but not entirely ready, for his next 
			challenge . . . a 150 mile march north to the Yalu river. Many 
			less-fortunate men died along that journey. 
			 
			When he arrived at a converted school-house he had no idea that it 
			would forever be known as Camp 2. It housed mostly officers, though 
			some non-commissioned airmen were there, too. 
			 
			He and his close friend Henry Nielsen would spend almost two years 
			there. Then, in August 1953, they were loaded up on trucks and sent 
			to Kaesong to be repatriated. They were going home! 
			 
			Kaesong didn’t have large buildings to house the 350 men, so they 
			were split up in small numbers in small buildings. Jack was released 
			on 28 August, the only one that day. Others were released 2 to 20 at 
			a time. That made keeping track of each other very difficult. Not 
			until the debriefings, did they realize that some weren't released 
			at all. 
			 
			Jack doesn’t remember making any list. He does recall many 
			debriefings aboard a ship during the long trip home. Though he saw 
			Nielsen on board, they weren't debriefed together. As far as he 
			remembers, He and Henry did not write down the names of those who 
			didn't return. 
			 
			Apparently, the interrogators (aboard the ship and those later on 
			land) were impressed with Nielsen and Henderson’s recollection of 
			other men from Camp 2 who didn’t return. From their debriefs, a list 
			was created and sent via TWX RDAG 9-26 and 9-021, presumably on Sept 
			21 & 26. For those of us who weren't around at the time, a TWX 
			(teletypewriter exchange service) was a switched teletypewriter 
			service in which suitably arranged teletypewriter stations are 
			provided with lines to a central office for access to other such 
			stations 
			 
			The Air Force then compiled the famous Nielsen-Henderson List in 
			September 1953.  
			 
			We’re still hoping to speak with Nielsen to get his side of the 
			story. In the meantime, the following are some of the names that 
			were on the list and still missing. 
  
			
				- Allen, Jack Victor
 
				- Beardall, Harold Martyn
 
				- Bell, Donald Edwin
 
				- Bell, 1 Lt William John
 
				- Brennan, John Charles
 
				- Culbertson, Gene Alan
 
				- Dougherty, Joseph Stephan
 
				- Gross, Robert Franklin
 
				- Guthrie, Edward Sheldon
 
				- Hamblin, Robert Warren
 
				- Hawkins, Luther Reid
 
				- Koontz, Frederick Russell
 
				- Martin, Robert Lee
 
				- Miller, Waldermar Willie
 
				- Rountree, Fred Brinson
 
				 
				 
				 
				 
  
			 
			  
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