Tragic Romance
by Robert A. Waters
On
May 9, 1962, Daniel Schmidt died on an operating table at Fort Miley Veteran’s
Hospital in San Francisco. The former
airman, only 31, expired as doctors performed open heart surgery.
More
than 33,000 Americans had died in the Korean War and Schmidt, who survived the
conflict, may have been its final victim.
On
the bone-freezing night of January 15, 1953, Stardust 40, a B-57 from the 91st
Strategic Reconnaissance Squadron, flew 22,000 feet over western Korea. Its official mission was to drop propaganda
leaflets, but the flight carried some top brass, including Colonel John Knox
Arnold, Jr. and Major William H. Baumer.
One of the lesser-important crew members was Airman 1st Class
Daniel C. Schmidt, listed in the official records as an “aircraft observer” from
Portland, Oregon.
As
Stardust 40 ended its mission and turned to head home, 12 Russian MIG-15 jet
fighters swept out of the sky in a surprise attack. Heavy anti-aircraft fire from the ground
shook the American plane. Surrounded by
the MIGs, and taking ground fire, Stardust 40 had no chance. The battle was brief—after three engines
caught fire, the crew bailed out.
The
fourteen flyers landed in the Korean country-side. Eleven were soon rounded up and transferred
to China, while three were never found.
Back
home, Daniel Schmidt’s pretty red-haired wife, Una, was informed that the plane
had gone down. She said she received
notice from the air force that all the airmen were missing and presumed dead. Two months later a son, Danny Walter Schmidt,
was born.
In
Apollo’s Warriors: The United States Air
Force Special Operations during the Cold War, Michael E. Haas writes of the
ordeal suffered by the airmen: “Kept handcuffed and chained in solitary
confinement for months, the [Stardust 40] crewmen underwent grueling mental and
physical torture. Eighteen months after
their internment and a year after the war was over, the Chinese broke their
silence to announce the forthcoming trial on the charges of germ warfare. In October, 1954, the crewmen were put
through a highly publicized propaganda trial before a Chinese military tribunal
and—surprise—found guilty.” Each was
sentenced to long prison terms.
Then,
on August 4, 1955, the crewmen were released, in exchange for Chinese
scientists held by the United States.
By
then, Una had remarried. “I thought
Danny was dead,” she told reporters. “I
intend to meet my husband when he arrives from overseas. We have a great deal to discuss, including
the future of our son.” Una moved out of
the trailer she shared with her new husband, Alford Fine, and went into
seclusion. She hired an attorney to help
her sort out the “nuptial tangle,” as the newspapers termed it.
Shortly
after marrying her new husband, Una had learned that Daniel was still alive in
a “red Chinese” prison. She corresponded
with him, and even sent pictures of Danny, Jr.
But she never informed him about Alford.
“I figured [Daniel had] gone through enough hell without me putting a
little more on him,” she said.
After
Schmidt returned back to the states, he refused to meet with Una. Deeply hurt at what he perceived as her
betrayal, he flatly rejected any attempt at reconciliation. He did state, however, that he would seek
custody of their son. For several weeks,
lawyers for both Daniel and Una used the news media to publicize their own
version of events.
Finally,
Schmidt’s mother spoke with her son and persuaded him to meet Una. Once Daniel saw his bride, all bitterness was
forgotten. On August 25, the Associated
Press reported that “a surprise reconciliation put Airman Daniel Schmidt and
his wife Una on a belated honeymoon Thursday and wiped out his plans for a
divorce…They promptly went into seclusion and were reported to be at an Oregon
beach.”
Since
Una had never annulled the marriage, the two were still legally bound.
Alford
Fine, called the “forgotten man” by reporters, hitched his trailer home to his
car and drove off into the sunset. His
grief must not have lasted long, since five months later he married again. Then
the jilted second husband faded from history.
The
glow on the rekindled Schmidt marriage soon wore off. Daniel and Una divorced, and both remarried.
The
star-crossed couple led anonymous lives until 1962, when newspapers reported
that Daniel had died. He’d never
recuperated from the torture inflicted by the Chinese, or from the crushing
blow of finding his wife had remarried during his forced absence.
Like
her second husband, Una faded into obscurity.
Throughout
the ordeal, newspapers referred to the poem, “Enoch Arden,” written by Lord
Alfred Tennyson. The poem related the
story of a shipwrecked sailor who returned home 10 years later, only to find that
his wife had remarried. Like Daniel C.
Schmidt, Enoch Arden also came to a tragic end.
1 comment:
That is an amazing story. I'm amazed Hollywood hasn't made a movie of it, it has all the ingredients. Wonderful. Michael, London
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