Eagle Biography
Jeremiah A. Denton, Jr.
Prayer and covert communication were the biggest weapons we had," declared Jeremiah
A. Denton, Jr., former prisoner of war. Born in Mobile, Alabama in 1924, Denton attended
McGill Institute and Spring Hill College. In 1946, Denton received his commission from
the U.S. Naval Academy and soon entered pilot training. Early in his career he served as
a flight instructor and test pilot, and in 1957 was credited with revolutionizing naval
strategy and tactics for nuclear war as architect of the "Haystack Concept." A
graduate of the Armed Forces Staff College, Denton served on the Sixth Fleet staff and
later commanded Attack Squadron (VA) 75, the "Sunday Punchers," flying the
Douglas A-1 Skyraider.
After graduating from Naval War College and earning a
Master of Arts in International Affairs from George Washington University, he was
selected to command VA-75 again, this time during the transition to the Grumman A-6
Intruder. On 18 July 1965, 3 days before he was scheduled to assume command, Denton
was leading a group of 28 aircraft from the USS Independence near the Thanh Hoa
bridge in North Vietnam when he was shot down and captured. He spent the next 7 years
and 7 months as a prisoner of war, frequently serving as the senior-ranking American
officer in various camps and becoming the first U.S. military captive subjected to 4
years of solitary confinement. In 1966, his name came to the attention of the American
public during a forced television interview.
Tortured to condemn his country, he defied
his captors by publicly supporting his government during the interview while covertly
revealing that American POWs in Vietnam were being tortured. Denton was released on 12
February 1973 and later chronicled his experience in his 1976 book, When Hell Was in
Session. Denton retired from the Navy in 1977 as a Rear Admiral following 34 years
of service. Returning to his home state, he was elected to the U.S. Senate in November
1980, becoming the first retired flag officer ever voted into that august body. While in
office, he established the acclaimed Denton Program, authorizing space-available
military transportation and worldwide delivery of humanitarian aid.
In 1983, he founded
the National Forum Foundation, which now oversees TRANSFORM, a unique humanitarian aid
delivery system, and "One Nation Under God," a program devoted to rededicating
our nation to that original concept. Denton's many military and civilian decorations and
awards include the Navy Cross, the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Navy League's John
Paul Jones Award for Inspirational Leadership, and the Poverello Medal for exemplary
Christian life. He and his wife, Jane, reside in Mobile, Alabama.
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2002
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On 18 July 1965, Jeremiah A. Denton, Jr., was shot down and captured by North
Vietnamese troops. He earned national attention during a 1966 television
interview arranged by his captors. Despite the application and explicit
threats of torture to ensure "proper and polite response" to
questioning, Denton remained steadfast in his allegiance to the U.S., and
repeatedly blinked his eyes in Morse code, spelling out a covert message:
"T-O-R-T-U-R-E." Denton's heroism and leadership earned him the
U.S. Navy's highest award, the Navy Cross.
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