Posted on 08/04/2019 6:05:27 PM PDT by Interesting Times
Obituary for Col. Ben H. Swett, U.S. Air Force, Retired
Col. Ben H. Swett, Ret., passed away on July 20, 2019 in MedStar Southern Maryland Hospital. He had been a resident of Temple Hills, Maryland since 1971.
He was born on September 3, 1934 at Saint Agnes Hospital, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, son of Herbert Elbridge and Marcia Harriet (Fadner) Swett. Though originally named Herbert Benjamin, he always used Ben H. as his first and middle names.
Ben H. Swett attended grade schools in Wisconsin and Colorado, and graduated from Pasadena, Texas, High School in 1951. In 1955, he graduated from the University of Arkansas with a B. A. degree in Government, was commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force, and married Wyneth June Haskins at First Christian Church in Ponca City, Oklahoma.
He served in the Air Force for more than 30 years. As a junior officer, he served as a navigator on B-47 jet bombers in the Strategic Air Command (SAC), as a SAC avionics maintenance supervisor, and as a scientific specialist doing original research in the field of long-range forecasting. He also completed an M.A. degree in Political Science at the University of New Hampshire.
In 1970, he served as Wing Navigator and Civic Action Officer for the 315th Tactical Airlift Wing at Phan Rang, Vietnam, receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross, five Air Medals, and several other awards. During this time, he worked to aid and support Americas Montagnard allies in the Central Highlands.
During the 1970s, he served as a development engineer and research director at Air Force Systems Command headquarters at Andrews AFB in Maryland, and at the Pentagon as Assistant for Reliability and Maintainability in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. In the latter role, he wrote and coordinated the Department of Defense Directive on Reliability and Maintainability of systems and equipment. This Directive led to significant improvements in the U.S. military as later seen in the first Persian Gulf War. In 1981, the Institute of Environmental Sciences named him as an Honorary Fellow for scientific study and analysis of the deficiencies in military hardware reliability development and the courageous pursuit of corrective action on both technical and administrative fronts.
His final Air Force assignment was as Director of Engineering and Standardization at the Defense Industrial Supply Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he created a new initiative to reduce the amount of fraudulent and sub-standard materials purchased by the Department of Defense.
After retiring as a Colonel in 1985, he served as a government and industry consultant. Both during and after his service, he studied religion and spirituality, writing papers and hosting seminars on these subjects, and wrote poetry. A number of these works are posted at bswett.com.
During retirement, he did genealogical research. In the early 1990s he created the website www.swett-genealogy.com, which is now the leading source of information on the Swett family.
He was a long-time member of Bethany Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in Fort Washington, Maryland, serving for many years as the Chairman of Elders, as a financial officer, and as a teacher. He will be remembered for the many lives he touched as a son, brother, husband, father, grandfather, colleague, spiritual mentor, and friend.
He is survived by his wife, Wyneth H. Swett; two sons, Scott L. Swett of Falls Church, Virginia and Bruce A. Swett of Fulton, Maryland; a sister, Mrs. Carol M. Downie of Rochester, Minnesota; four grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.
A memorial service will be held at 11:00 a.m. Saturday, August 3 at Bethany Christian Church, with burial at a future date in Arlington National Cemetery. Memorials may be sent to Bethany Christian Church at 7128 Allentown Road, Fort Washington, MD 20744.
Condolences to you and your family.
Dear Scott, I’m so sorry for your loss. Seeing his history, there’s a high probability he and my dad knew each other in high school. Small world.
You and your family are in my thoughts and prayers.
BTTT
So sorry to hear of your loss. Your father sounds like a very good man. Reading over his diary, I recognized two places where my late husband was stationed when he was in Vietnam. Once again, sorry for your loss and may the Lord comfort you and your family at this time.
I’m so sorry. Prayers for family and friends. God bless.
Sorry to hear your dad has taken his final flight. He will truly be missed. Deepest Condolences.
“...Not looking back to ask the reason why
Our plane is set along this course,
Gladly we shall go, unsullied by remorse;
Nor blaming now the mundane evils of the past
Or that idolatry which planned our flight; we die
To live enthroned forever with the fold
That dwells immortal in the Halls of great Valhalla.
Long-dormant Viking hearts awake at last -
We take in hands as bold as those of old
The helm of our own destiny; and for our vast
Ocean of adventure, instead of waves, the boundless sky.
Once more, inviolate, erect and proud
As those who never down to tyranny have bowed.
On wings of valour. Woden-borne, we fly. “
(Wings of Valour - Anon)
I am sorry.
That’s a tough road to walk.
So sorry for your loss.
May you and your mother find consolation in the sure knowledge that his was a life well lived.
Sorry for your loss my friend.
What a lot of honorable acomplishments he filled his life with.
Condolences to you on your loss.
Your dad was a great man. worthy of veneration.
It sounds like he probably was inspired by the Great Generation, those who served in WWII.
Thank you for his Vietnam diary link.
My condolences to your family.
Condolences, good guy.
More a lurker here anymore, but he was fine and that life of his, definitely a well lived one.
Glad your parents had you and that you’re here.
So sorry for your terrible loss.
Our hope is in the Lord that
one day we will all be reunited
in heaven where every tear will be
wiped away and there will be
no more suffering.
God Bless you and your entire family.
7
Prayers up for the repose of his soul. Prayers up for you and for all who loved him.
Where did he serve in B-47s?
So sorry for your loss. Prayers up for you and your loved ones.
Thank you, GF.
What an impressive life he had. May he Rest In Peace. Prayers being said for him, and you and your family as well.
Viking Kitties are requested to render honors to one of our own. Much respect for the man.
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