INDIANAPOLIS — 86 veterans ranging from 70 to 100-years-old spent their Saturday in Washington, DC for the 33rd Indy Honor Flight.
The last Honor Flight was on October 26, 2019. The organization takes Indiana military veterans to DC to visit war memorials.
Byron Temple, a Vietnam Air Force veteran who currently lives in Beech Grove, is on the trip.
"There's nothing I enjoy more than meeting with other veterans and you don't see that many of them anymore. More and more of them are dying every day it seems like, so I always love the opportunity to get together with a veteran and exchange stories and so forth," Temple said.
He tells WRTV he loved to travel and through the Air Force he went to places like the Arctic Circle for NATO training. Until he graduated from high school and joined the Air Force in 1962, he had never traveled outside his home state of Michigan.
This flight included:
- 4 WWII Veterans
- 1 WWII/Korea Veteran
- 16 Korea Veterans
- 4 Korea/Vietnam Veterans
- 61 Vietnam Veterans
Indy Honor Flight says more than 1,000 veterans are on a waitlist for the trip. Two additional Honor Flights are planned for May and June.
-
How can Indy keep money flowing into downtown during the workweek?
While Indianapolis is known for hosting big events, many downtown business owners would like to see improvements in the workweek economy.Indianapolis school teaching students the importance of tech-free learning
During November, the Oaks Academy is conducting the 1 Million Minutes challenge. The goal is to go tech-free and have students spend time doing things like reading or art with their parents.Explosion in Louisville leaves at least 11 injured, officials say
An explosion in Louisville has left at least 11 injured, officials say. Overhead news video footage showed an industrial building with a large hole in its roof.IMPD searching for wanted suspect for his role in Oct. shooting
Elijah Miller is wanted for Battery by Means of a Deadly Weapon. Anyone with information on his whereabouts is asked to contact IMPD at 317-327-3475 or Crime Stoppers at 317-262-8477.