BRIGADIER GENERAL ROBIN
OLDS
Retired June 1,
1973. Died June 14, 2007.
Brigadier General Robin Olds is the director of
aerospace safety in the Air Force Inspection and Safety Center, a
separate operating agency and an organization of the Office of the
Inspector General, Headquarters U.S. Air Force. General Olds has
worldwide responsibility for the development and implementation of
policies, standards and procedures for programs in safety education,
accident investigation and analysis, human factors research, and
safety inspection to prevent and reduce accidents in Air Force
activities.
General Olds was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, the
son of Army Air Corps Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Robert Olds. He spent his
boyhood days in the Hampton, Va., area where he attended elementary
and high school. He graduated from the U.S. Military Academy, West
Point, N.Y., and was commissioned as second lieutenant in June 1943.
A member of the academy football team, he was selected as
All-American tackle in 1942. He completed pilot training in 1943.
General Olds is rated a triple ace, having shot down a total
of 17 enemy aircraft during World War II and the Vietnam War. He
began his combat flying in a P-38 Lightning named "Scat 1" during
World War II, and at the end of the war he was flying "Scat VII," a
P-51 Mustang, and was credited with 107 combat missions and 24.5
victories, 12 aircraft shot down and 11 1/2 aircraft destroyed on
the ground.
During the Vietnam War in October 1966, General
Olds entered combat flying in Southeast Asia in "Scat XXVII," an F-4
Phantom II. He completed 152 combat missions, including 105 over
North Vietnam. Utilizing air-to-air missiles, he shot down over
North Vietnam two Mig-17 and two Mig-21 aircraft, two of these on
one mission.
General Olds was wing man on the first jet
acrobatic team in the Air Force and won second place in the Thompson
Trophy Race (Jet Division) at Cleveland in 1946. He participated in
the first one-day, dawn-to-dusk, transcontinental roundtrip flight
in June 1946 from March Field, Calif., to Washington, D.C., and
return.
His duty assignments in England, Germany, Libya,
Thailand and the United States have included positions as squadron,
base, group and wing commander; staff assignments in a numbered Air
Force, Headquarters U.S. Air Force and the Organization of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. He is a graduate of the National War College, 1963.
In February 1946 General Olds started flying P-80 jets at
March Field, Calif., with the first squadron so equipped. In October
1948 he went to England under the U.S. Air Force - Royal Air Force
Exchange Program and served as commander of No. 1 Fighter Squadron
at Royal Air Force Station Tangmere. The squadron was equipped with
the Gloster Meteor jet fighter.
He assumed duties as
commander of the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing at Ubon Royal Thai Air
Force Base, Thailand, in September 1966. He returned to the United
States in December 1967 and served as commandant of cadets at the
U.S. Air Force Academy through January 1971.
General Olds
assumed the position of director of aerospace safety in the Air
Force Inspection and Safety Center at Norton Air Force Base, Calif.,
in February 1971.
His military decorations and awards
include the Air Force Cross, Distinguished Service Medal, Silver
Star with three oak leaf clusters, Legion of Merit, Distinguished
Flying Cross with five oak leaf clusters, Air Medal with 39 oak leaf
clusters, Air Force Commendation Medal, British Distinguished Flying
Cross, French Croix de Guerre, Vietnam Air Force Distinguished
Service Order, Vietnam Air Gallantry Medal with Gold Wings, Vietnam
Air Service Medal, and the Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal. He is
a command pilot.
He was promoted to the temporary grade of
brigadier general effective June 1, 1968, with date of rank May 28,
1968.
(Current as of June 15,
1972)
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