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David Middleton - Class of 1968
Submitted by Bill Norvell - 1965 <w.norvell@att.net>
on 22/Jun/2022
97.101.167.73

Dave
Middleton passed away on Saturday, June 18, 2022, at Mercy
General Hospital in Sacramento, CA. He was 71. Memorial
services will be conducted from 1:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. on
Saturday, July 16, 2022, at the Grass Valley Veterans
Memorial Building. There will be a military honors ceremony
at 2:00 p.m.
Dave was born on Dec. 30, 1950, in Newburgh, NY, to Morrison
and Edith Middleton. He served in the U.S. Army from Feb.
1970 to Aug. 1972, as a helicopter pilot. He earned 14 Air
Medals, the Army Commendation Medal for Valor, and the
Purple Heart. After the military, he worked in the crane and
rigging industry for most of his life. He was a licensed
general contractor, a California RE Broker, and was a board
member of the Nevada County CA Building Code and
Accessibility Board of Appeals. Dave loved to cook
especially with his grandchildren, and to go out to
restaurants. He enjoyed golf, poker, reading, watching old
westerns, and watching his children, and grandchildren play
sports. He was a member of the Vietnam Vets, American
Legion, Scottish Rite, the Crow Canyon Masonic Lodge #551 F
& AM, and the helicopter group Dark Horse.
He is survived by his wife of 37 years, JoAnne of Nevada
City; children Anthony (Shawna) of Placerville, Anina (Jeff)
of Ione, Brian (Twylight) of Las Vegas, NV; sister Moira
(Jim) of Sun City, AZ; grandchildren, Jack, Kayleigh, and
Charlotte. He was preceded in death by his parents Morrison
and Edith Middleton; and brother Bruce Middleton.
Memorial contributions may be made to the VVA Chapter 535,
P.O. Box 37, Grass Valley, CA 95945, or the Frank Gallino
Post 130 American Legion, P.O. Box 1113, Grass Valley, CA
95945. - December 30, 1950 – June 18, 2022

Former Newburgh man among 10 Vietnam
helicopter pilots in new book
Jan. 6 will mark 50 years since former Newburgh resident
Dave Middleton was shot down in Vietnam while piloting a
Loach helicopter on a mission to which he wasn't originally
assigned.
Shot in both legs, he survived with the help of his crew
chief and was later awarded the Purple Heart — a medal that,
like Dave, had its origins in Newburgh. Middleton is just
one of the many thousands honored on this day, Veterans Day,
Nov. 11, each year.
Now he's also had the honor of having his part of time in
Vietnam recounted in the latest book by author Colin Cahoon,
himself a former Army pilot.
"Mended Wings" tells the tales of 10 Vietnam War helicopter
pilots wounded in combat, in chronological order from 1966
to 1972.
Here, the helicopter that Dave Middleton piloted is being
sling loaded back to base after the crash.

Middleton had enlisted in the Army after getting a low draft
number, in order to gain some control over the course he
would follow. He started in combat engineers, only to regret
that choice when he found out it did not involve much
engineering design work, but mostly involved carrying the
mines and explosives for operations. He jumped at the chance
to learn to fly a helicopter when he read about it in the
Army Times newspaper.
Middleton doesn't talk a lot about the day he was wounded or
the rest of his time in Vietnam, but he has never been able
to forget it.
"It doesn't leave you," he said in a Nov. 5 phone interview.
"It's this little piece of your life that always stays with
you."
Dave Middleton in Vietnam.

On that January day, Middleton was trailing another Loach
helicopter on a patrol mission, flying down tree lines
between rice paddies, looking for evidence of the presence
of Viet Cong soldiers. He got the job because the pilot
originally assigned to the trailing position experienced
throttle failure.
The helicopter that Dave Middleton piloted is sling loaded
back to base after the crash.
Well, the enemy was there that day, and the two Loaches
immediately came under machine gun fire. They flew out of
firing range, then dropped down again, resuming their
overlapping circles approach and checked the next tree line,
which was cold, meaning no evidence of recent enemy
activity.
But the next tree line exploded with red muzzle flashes, and
the other Loach was shot down, landing in a rice paddy.
Middleton's job at that point was to suppress enemy fire, so
the downed pilot and his gunner would have a chance to be
rescued. Middleton made a hard right turn, firing a minigun
mounted on the left side of the aircraft into the trees
while his crew chief, Jim Wheeles – who was flying with him
for the first time – fired a machine gun.
Halfway into the turn, bullets ripped through the cockpit,
striking Middleton in both legs with such force that his
knees smacked his face, giving him a bloody nose.
Meanwhile, the helicopter went into an uncontrollable spin
and landed hard in the mud of a canal.
Dave Middleton and Jim Wheeles were pondering their options,
knowing they had to get out of there or face certain capture
by the enemy, when they heard the approach of a Huey
helicopter coming to rescue them.
Wheeles, who had only suffered a cut on his chin, ran toward
the Huey while Middleton somehow got to his feet. But as he
did, the still spinning rotor blades of the Loach – he'd
neglected to turn off the engine – struck the back of his
helmet. He lost consciousness for a few seconds, and when he
came to he saw Wheeles jump aboard the Huey and it began to
take off.
Did they think Middleton was dead? Middleton wondered.
But then the Huey settled back down, and Middleton looked up
to see Wheeles jump out of it and slog his way across the
rice paddy to him. He dragged Middleton out from under the
rotor blades, slung him over his shoulder and carried him,
fireman-rescue style, across the paddy to the Huey.
Rehab and return home
It took Middleton a lot of time and rehab, but he eventually
was able to walk on his own again, although he would have a
limp for the rest of his life. His days in the Army were
over, though, and he was medically retired from military
service in August 1972.
He came home and returned to Orange County Community
College, where he had been struggling before his time in the
Army began. He got his grades up and graduated. He then
graduated from Arizona State University, where he studied
construction management – a field in which he went on to
have a successful career.
And he has no complaints about his post-Army life.
"If they had let me stay in the Army, I never would have met
my wife, never had my kids," he said.
Although his construction work took him all over the
country, he eventually settled in Nevada City, California,
with his wife, JoAnne, who he first met tending bar in a
hotel where he was staying on one of those construction
jobs. He has three children and two grandchildren, with a
third grandchild on the way.
And he still thinks about those he knew in Vietnam,
especially those who didn't make it home.
"I cry more now," he said, "thinking about the guys who
died. I eventually joined the Vietnam Veterans of America,
because being around others who were there helps. But none
of us can shake it.

"But I can't say my life has been bad," he adds. "I'm
happy to be alive."
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