by Airman 1st Class Aaron J. Jenne
4th Fighter Wing Public Affairs
6/30/2014 - SEYMOUR JOHNSON AIR FORCE BASE, N.C. -- Excellence: the state or quality of excelling or being exceptionally good; extreme merit; superiority.
The Air Force is no stranger to excellence. It is a virtue
engrained into the service's core values and is an integral part of each
Airman's life. According to those who knew and served with, Maj. Gen.
Frederick "Boots" Blesse, a former Air Force ace pilot, he exemplified
excellence during his service.
Current and former Airmen alike, assembled to recognize the
accomplishments of Blesse during a memorial dedication ceremony June 27,
2014, at the 334th Fighter Squadron on Seymour Johnson Air Force Base,
North Carolina.
Due to his distinguished career and legacy, the 334th FS felt that it
was only fitting they create a memorial commemorating the
accomplishments of their former ace pilot.
During the ceremony Blesse's widowed wife, Betty, joined Lt. Col. Donn
Yates, the current 334th FS commander, to unveil a memorial statue in
Blesse's honor. The nearly six-foot tall stone monument boldly stands at
the entrance of the 334th FS building depicted a bust of Blesse and an
inscription which says, "334th Fighter Squadron; Gateway to the Combat
Air Forces; Following in the footsteps of legends ... Maj. Gen.
Frederick C. "Boots" Blesse; Double Ace; 'No Guts, No Glory.'"
"We established this memorial to remind our incoming students as well as
our outgoing graduates that it is our warrior spirit that will often be
decisive in any future conflict," said Lt. Col. Donn Yates, 334th FS
commander. "Their mindset must rely on the training they received here
as well as their aggressiveness during the performance of their duties."
Blesse made a name for himself while serving as the operations officer
of the 334th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron during the Korean War. During
his voluntary assignment at Kimpo Air Base, Korea, the then major
revolutionized the air-to-air combat tactics of the squadron. At the
conclusion of his tour, Blesse was widely recognized as one of the Air
Force's top aces, having destroyed or irreparably damaged more than 15
enemy aircraft. He went on to serve more than 30 years in the Air Force,
including a tour in Vietnam, before retiring as the Air Force' deputy
inspector general. He passed away in October 2012
The ceremony also featured a flyover consisting of current and past
aircraft assigned to the wing. Two F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft flew over
the dedication ceremony, followed by two F-4 Phantoms II aircraft, to
honor Blesse, who flew the Phantom II during his tour in Vietnam.
"The legacy of Gen. Blesse is something for us to look up to and try to
emulate in our careers," said 1st Lt. Joshua Judy, 334th FS pilot in
training, who is set to graduate from B-Course on June 27. "Flying with
the 334th and knowing what he's done for our squadron's history, it
gives me pride to know where we came from and the leaders that were here
before us."
Yates hopes that the memorial will serve as a motivator to those who
serve in the squadron in the future as well as a reminder of how much
Blesse has done for the Air Force.
"General Blesse is precisely the type of warrior we seek to emulate and
produce in our students," Yates added. "This monument will serve as a
lasting testament of Gen. Blesse's life and service and will inspire
Airmen for generations to come. We will all remember his legacy of
excellence."
Betty also expressed her gratitude for her husband's recognition.
"I'm so humbled to be here," Betty said. "To think they would do all
this to recognize my husband is amazing. I know he would have loved it."
Monday, June 30, 2014
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