Sam
Johnson returned home to Texas
after serving in the U.S. Air Force for 29-years as a highly decorated fighter
pilot.He flew combat missions in both
the Korean and Vietnam Wars and was a Prisoner of War in Hanoi for nearly seven years.
After
his distinguished military career, Johnson started a home-building business from
scratch and served in the Texas
legislature.In 1991, he embarked on a
new mission of service to his country - representing the people of Texas’ Third District in
the United States Congress.
A
vocal advocate of less government and lower taxes, Johnson sits on the
prestigious Ways and Means Committee.Johnson
serves as the Ranking Member on the Social Security Subcommittee and is one of
the few Members of Congress to have his own plan to strengthen Social Security
with personal accounts.
One
of a handful of combat veterans in Congress, Johnson has led the charge to
stand up for the troops on the ground – regardless of the political posturing
in Washington, DC.
Earlier
this year, Johnson authored a proposal to fully-fund all troops in harm’s
way.In fact, Johnson spent the
anniversary of his homecoming from captivity, February 12, 2007, pleading with
a House panel to include his measure as part of the House debate on the future
of the troops in Iraq.Johnson insisted, “I know what it’s like to
be far from home and hear that your country AND your Congress don’t care about
you. Our troops stand up for us every minute of every day.We must stand up for them in Congress.To our troops, we must remain always faithful.”
After growing up in Dallas
and graduating from SMU, Johnson began his 29-year career in the U.S. Air Force
at the young age of 20.Johnson served
as director of the Air Force Fighter Weapons School (Top Gun) and was one of
two authors of the air tactics manual revolutionizing military air dominance by
incorporating three-dimensional flight.
During
the Korean War, Johnson flew 62 combat missions in his F-86, stationed just 25
miles away from the front lines.In his
plane, Shirley’s Texas Tornado, Johnson scored one MiG fighter kill, one
probable and one damaged.While Johnson
took his share of enemy gunfire and flak, he emerged from the war
unscathed.
Back
at Nellis AFB in Nevada,
Johnson flew the solo and slot positions for the world-renowned Air Force
Thunderbirds precision flying demonstration team in the F-100 super sabre.
In the Vietnam War during his first tour of duty, he worked at Military
Assistance Command in Vietnam (MACV) headquarters in Saigon,
helping coordinate the first B-52 strikes under General Westmoreland.
During
Johnson’s second tour, he flew F-4 Phantom combat missions with the 8th
Tactical Fighter Wing in Thailand.During his second tour of duty, Johnson flew
his 25th combat mission on April 16, 1966. Shot down at dusk over North Vietnam, Johnson suffered a
broken right arm, dislocated left shoulder and a broken back.It was these injuries that the enemy captors
would use in their constant efforts to glean information from Johnson.
Johnson
spent nearly seven years as a prisoner of war, 42 months in solitary
confinement.Forced into solitary when
his captives labeled him a “die-hard,” Johnson committed 374 names to memory
from tapping a special code on the prison wall. “We were all trying to memorize
names in case anybody got out,” Johnson remembers.
While
held in the infamous Hanoi Hilton, Johnson spent 72 days in leg stocks.A day after that torture ended, his captives
forced him into leg irons for 2 ½ years.Weighing
200
lbs when shot down, an emaciated Johnson got down to an estimated 120 lbs while
barely surviving on the occasional “meal” of weeds from the river, pig fat, white
rice, or pumpkin soup.
Fellow
POW Capt. James Mulligan, USN (Ret.) recalled the day Johnson was allowed to
return to a joint cell. He walked into the room with the two other detained
American officers, “stood at attention with tears in his eyes, and said simply,
‘Lieutenant Colonel Sam Johnson reporting for duty, sir’…after he had not
talked to or directly been with an American for three and a half years.”
Johnson
chronicles his POW experience in solitary confinement in his autobiography, Captive Warriors.The book details the stories of eleven of the
self-named “Alcatraz Gang,” including great American patriots, such as Jeremiah
Denton, Jim Stockdale and Jim Mulligan.
Other
career highlights include:attending army
jump school during the Cuban Missile Crisis and experiencing five nuclear bomb
explosions at the Nevada
test site.Johnson flew through one
nuclear explosion to gauge the effects to the plane, later joking, “Why didn’t
they want to know the effects on the pilot?”A graduate of the National War College,
Johnson served as Wing Commander of the 31st Tactical Fighter Wing at Homestead
AFB in Florida flying F-4s and Air Division
Commander at Holloman AFB in New
Mexico flying F-15s, where he retired a Colonel.
A
decorated combat veteran and war hero, Johnson was awarded two Silver Stars,
two Legions of Merit, the Distinguished Flying Cross, one Bronze Star with
Valor, two Purple Hearts, four Air Medals, and three Outstanding Unit Awards.
Sam Johnson is married to the former Shirley L. Melton of Dallas. They are proud parents of three
children and grandparents to ten.