Bay of Plenty Times

Film helps renew hunt for hero

Family’s quest to bring US Navy pilot’s remains home gains movie support, writes Thalia Beaty

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THE FILM DEVOTION reignited efforts to repatriate the remains of Jesse Brown, America’s first black Navy pilot, who died in 1950 after having to crash land his damaged plane during the Korean War.

Fred Smith, the founder of Memphisbas­ed Fedex, financed the film about Brown because he thought Brown deserved wider recognitio­n, a feeling his surviving relatives share, and lobbied the Trump administra­tion to support the search efforts after consulting with Brown’s daughter, Pamela.

“I’m still determined to try to get Jesse Brown home and put him where he ought to be in Arlington [National Cemetery],” Smith said. “Among the other heroes of the republic next to his wingman, Tom Hudner.”

Smith’s daughters, Rachel and Molly, who produced the film, met members of Brown’s family at the 2018 funeral of Hudner, who received the Medal of Honour after trying to rescue Brown.

Hudner returned to North Korea in 2013 in an attempt to locate Brown’s remains, but was unsuccessf­ul.

Jessica Knight Henry, Brown’s granddaugh­ter, said attending Hudner’s funeral at Arlington solidified her grandmothe­r’s desire to have her husband’s remains interred in Arlington.

“He’s never had a full sort of burial with the pomp and circumstan­ce that we think is worthy of what his contributi­on is to this country” Knight Henry said, speaking from Washington.

Brown grew up in Mississipp­i, the son of sharecropp­ers, and succeeded in qualifying to be a pilot in the Navy, despite his training officer refusing to pin on his wings — just one of many racist insults and hurdles he overcame.

Smith has donated Devotion’s proceeds, in part, to endow a new scholarshi­p fund, the Brown Hudner Navy Scholarshi­p Foundation, for the children of Navy service members pursuing studies in STEM.

“Mr Smith spent an incredible amount of money imaging the area where we think that my grandfathe­r’s remains are,” said Knight Henry, adding that her family has worked with different agencies and groups to maximise any potential opportunit­y to get answers.

More than 7500 American military personnel remain unaccounte­d for in the Korean War, according to the government agency that tracks prisoners of war and those missing in action. _AP

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This circa 1950 photo provided by the US Navy shows Jesse Brown in the cockpit of an F4U-4 Corsair fighter at an unidentifi­ed location. Photo / US Navy via AP
ENTERTAINM­ENT This circa 1950 photo provided by the US Navy shows Jesse Brown in the cockpit of an F4U-4 Corsair fighter at an unidentifi­ed location. Photo / US Navy via AP

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