LCDR ROGER H. MULLINS, USN
Lucky Bag Yearbook
From the 1945 Lucky Bag:
Roger Hugh Mullins
Boat Club 4, 3, 1; Foreign Language Club 4, 3
Loss
From Wall of Faces:
On Wednesday, February 17, 1960, a Douglas R4D-5 (DC-3) from Naval Advisory Group, Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) was on a flight from Saigon to Hue when it crashed into Hon Chay Mountain, a 2,752 foot (839m) mountain peak near Da Nang, Quang Nam Province, South Vietnam. All three crew members were killed. They included LCDR George W. Alexander, LCDR Roger H. Mullins, and ATC William M. Newton. [Taken from aviation-safety.net and other web sources]
Other Information
From researcher Kathy Franz:
As a junior at Effingham High School in 1936, Roger was in the comedy play “Oh! Susan.” He played the bass in the school orchestra and graduated in 1937.
After the Naval Academy, Roger served in the Pacific fleet and on the U. S. S. Missouri.
In April 1947, he completed instruction at Pensacola and was then stationed with a training unit at Banana River, Florida.
In March 1951, Roger was an instructor at Annapolis. He represented his mother during an exhibit of her oil painting titled “Renascent” at the 22d Biennial Exhibit of Contemporary American Oil Paintings at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D. C.
In April 1953, he was an officer in the radar division on the U. S. S. Bennington when a boiler exploded killing 11 men off the coast of Cuba.
In May 1954, Roger was serving with Fleet Aircraft service Squadron 200 at the Hendon Royal Air Force Station in Middlesex, England. He was promoted to lieutenant commander in October 1955.
His parents were Beth and Vern, a grocer who later was a traveling salesman for machinery; sisters Virginia, Rita and Joan; and brother Sidney.
Roger was appointed a professor of naval science at the Alabama Polytechnic Institute in August 1956. He previously served with a NATO logistics unit.
He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery and is listed on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.
The Decatur Daily Review reported on February 26, 1960 that he was survived by “his wife, the former Dorothy Brooks, to whom he was married soon after his graduation from Annapolis; two children, Eileen and Stephen; his parents and two sisters, Mrs. Arthur Bridgman … and Mrs. Alan Poole…” He had graduated from Effingham High School and attended the University of Illinois.
Photographs
Related Articles
Eugene Captain ‘45, Foster Simonsen ‘45, and Milton Turner ‘45 were also in 9th Company.