Jim Thompson was born on
July 8, 1933, in Bergenfield, New Jersey. He enlisted in the U.S. Army
on June 27, 1956, and was trained as a Clerk. Thompson was accepted into
Infantry Officer Candidate School at Fort Benning, Georgia, in
September 1957, and was commissioned a 2LT of Infantry on April 18,
1958. After completing Ranger School and Jump School, he served as an
instructor with the U.S. Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, from
August 1958 to June 1960. His next assignment was as a Platoon Leader in
the 2nd Brigade of the 34th Infantry Regiment, stationed in South Korea
from June 1960 to July 1961. Thompson then served as a reenlistment
officer with Headquarters XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort Bragg, North
Carolina, from September 1961 to September 1962, and then as a staff
officer with 1st Special Forces at Fort Bragg, from September 1962 to
December 1963. He then served with the Military Assistance Advisory
Group in the Republic of Vietnam from December 1963 until the L-19 Bird
Dog he was flying on was shot down and he was captured by the Viet Cong
on March 26, 1964. After spending 3,278 days in captivity, longer than
any other American during the Vietnam War, he was released during
Operation Homecoming on March 16, 1973. He was briefly hospitalized at
Valley Forge Army Hospital and then served as a Staff Officer at the
U.S. Army Military Personnel Center and in the Office of the Deputy
Chief of Staff for Personnel at Headquarters U.S. Army until his
retirement from the Army on December 30, 1981. Jim Thompson died on July
14, 2002. He chose to be cremated, but he has a cenotaph at
Andersonville National Cemetery in Andersonville, Georgia.
His Army Distinguished Service Medal Citation reads:
Colonel
Floyd J. Thompson distinguished himself by outstandingly meritorious
service to the United States Army while serving in a series of assigned
duties which clearly demonstrates distinguished performance during the
period December 1963 to December 1981. During this period, Colonel
Thompson served as a Special Forces Detachment Commander at Fort Bragg,
as a Deputy Director of the Infantry School at Fort Benning, and as a
staff officer at the United States Army Military Personnel Center and in
the Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Personnel, Headquarters,
Department of the Army. While he made major contributions to these
organizations through his leadership skills and professionalism, he made
a truly incalculable and remarkable impression on the entire Nation
through his nine year internment as a prisoner of war. As the longest
held prisoner during the Vietnam era, Colonel Thompson demonstrated
truly magnificent powers of faith, physical endurance, and trust in the
Nation during years of almost unfathomable deprivation and hardship.
That he emerged from this experience with a determination to continue to
serve and to share his experience with his fellow Americans, no matter
how uncomfortable to him personally, is a true testament to his
indomitable spirit and belief in his country. The value and dimension of
Colonel Thompson's many accomplishments, singular dedication to duty,
and overall extraordinary and distinguished performance represent
meritorious achievement and distinction in the most honored and
cherished traditions of the United States Army.
|