JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-RANDOLPH, Texas –
It's a common practice among Air Force members, both active
duty and civil service, to brag about how long they've been assigned somewhere,
and it's no different in Air Force Recruiting Service.
But for anyone who thinks they hold the record at AFRS, they
better check with John "Jack" Burns first. He retired July 1 with 60
years of service to the U.S. Air Force – 41 of those with recruiting.
Born and raised in Youngstown, Ohio, Burns enlisted Oct. 10,
1955 – before Alaska and Hawaii became states. It was also before then-Lackland
Air Force Base became the sole Air Force Basic Military Training base; he
completed his training at Sampson Air Force Base in Geneva, N.Y.
His first assignment was at Kinross Air Force Base in the upper
peninsula of Michigan where he served as an administrative clerk. Then it was
off to the U.S. Territory of Alaska at Eielson Air Force Base.
"Recently I viewed photos of Eielson Air Force Base and
the only building I recognized was the huge flight hangar. Unknown to us at the
time, it was the highly top secret U2 spy airplane that would land at night and
park in that hangar. During my two years assigned to Eielson and for many years
after, base Airmen never knew of this highly classified mission," Burns
said.
After reenlisting in 1959, he served at Selfridge Air Force
Base, Mich., and then to Minnesota, where he met his wife, Mary.
"I met Mary when I first got assigned to the air base
in Duluth, Minn., in April of 1961," Burns said. "Mary was a nurse who
worked at St. Mary's Hospital Emergency Room. We were married in 1964 and had a
wonderful 49 years and seven months of marriage until she passed in 2013."
Later assignments included Etain Air Base, France; Royal Air
Force Alconbury, England; and Minot Air Force Base, N.D., before he volunteered
for a one-year tour in Vietnam. He was assigned to the Military Assistance
Command, Vietnam – Construction Directorate adjacent to Tan Son Nhut AB on the
outskirts of Saigon.
When he returned stateside to K.I. Sawyer Air Force Base,
Mich. Burns volunteered for special duty with AFRS. He was selected to be an
administrative supervisor in Pittsburgh in August 1971, starting his
extraordinary 41-year stint with the command. Six years later, he was
handpicked for the position of executive assistant in the command section at
AFRS, Randolph Air Force Base.
"Back in 1977, Headquarters AFRS was located at the
back of the base where the base gym is now located. We were housed in five World War II open bay
barracks," Burns said. "When we moved the headquarters to its present
location in July 1978, we were impressed. I have probably worked in 20
different offices in the headquarters since 1978, all in the operations
division."
Burns retired from active duty in December 1981, then began
his civil service career in November 1982 with the Military Personnel Center at
Randolph. He rejoined AFRS in March 1984 and initially worked in the enlisted
accessions branch. A year later, he moved to officer accessions. In 1995, the
line officer and health professions officer accessions programs were combined,
and in 2003, he was assigned exclusively to processing applications for all
health profession programs.
"My strength is not high-tech, but I'm on Facebook and
the amount of data I have entered in the line officer and health professions
data bases is really impressive, even if I have to say so myself," he
said.
"Sixty years of service is hard to fathom for most of
us," said Col. Robert W. Trayers Jr., chief of the Operations and
Marketing Division at AFRS. "After a distinguished active duty career and
retirement, most move on to other things. Not Jack ... he loves his Air Force
too much to leave."
Trayers said it's been an honor to serve alongside Burns and
hear some of his great stories.
"We always say that the Air Force keeps right on
rolling when any of us leave or retire, but there is no doubt in my mind the
Air Force is losing a treasure next month," Trayers said.
But as many years as he served in recruiting, Burns consider
the most exciting day of his career was in the summer of 1956. He was only 17
years old.
"I was a clerk working for the chief of maintenance in
the fighter interceptor squadron. This lieutenant walks in my office and says
to me, 'Come with me. We are going for a ride.' He gets me issued a parachute,
get on a runway taxi and arrive at the T-33 trainer jet. Off we go into the
wild blue yonder," Burns remembered.
"For two hours and five, minutes we are flying all over
northern Michigan. We get up to 32,000 feet. When we dropped down to 28,000 the
lieutenant has me in control of the aircraft. That lieutenant's name was Pete
Knight. On Oct. 3, 1967, Pete Knight set a world aircraft speed record for
manned aircraft by piloting the X-15 to 5,520 miles per hour – a record that still
stands today," he said.
"He flew 257 combat missions over Vietnam and flew more
than 7,000 flight hours. I was Col. Pete Knight's co-pilot. It does not get any
better than that."
Burns' plans for retirement include traveling back to
Ireland; he and his wife visited there for two weeks in 1999. He also hopes to
visit family and friends all across the United States.
His eldest daughter, Ann Stefanek, did the honors of
retiring her father in a ceremony at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph July 10.
She is a senior civil service public affairs executive in the office of the
Secretary of the Air Force. She served nine years on active duty and recently
retired as a colonel from the Air Force Reserve.
His daughter, Diana, is a vice president at Randolph-Brooks
Federal Credit Union, and son, John, is a senior information technology
executive at USAA in San Antonio.
"My family and I are so proud of my dad for his six
decades of service to this great nation," Stefanek said. "His quiet
commitment and steadfast service have been an inspiration to us and the Airmen
he has helped over countless years in recruiting. His children, a host of my
ROTC brethren and many OTS selects are a testament to my dad's guidance and
counsel."
Stefanek said her father helped navigate many people through
their "firsts" in their military journeys.
"My dad's heart has always been in mentoring young
people, in the military and the Randolph community," she said. "I
don't think he will ever realize just how many lives he has touched."