click here to return to the Class of 1954 homepage
 

MA writing guidelines

self-written MA format

NOK approval form

funeral attendee form

A-1

B-1

C-1

D-1

E-1

F-1

G-1

H-1

I-1

K-1

L-1

M-1

A-2

B-2

C-2

D-2

E-2

F-2

G-2

H-2

I-2

K-2

L-2

M-2

 
Rufus D. Hutcheson

Rufus D. Hutcheson

No. 196043 Aug 1931 – 4 Dec 2001

Died: Died in Leesburg, VA
Inurned: Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, VA


RUFUS DANIEL HUTCHESON was born 3 Aug 1931 in Barre, VT. He grew up in the small town of Atkinson, NH, with one older and two younger brothers and a sister. His father worked as a farmer, accountant, and realtor, and his mother was a school teacher. Dan, as he was called by his family, was an excellent athlete; in fact, he played on the high school baseball team when he was in the seventh grade. He then attended Phillips Exeter Academy, where he wrestled and played squash and tennis. At West Point, he played varsity squash and tennis all four years, was captain of the squash team, and was a member of the winning intercollegiate squash doubles team. He was commissioned in the Air Force upon graduation in 1954.

Following graduation, Dan married Euphemia “Chris” Finlayson and soon thereafter earned his wings as a fighter pilot. In his first assignment, he flew the F-89s of the “Flying Tigers” squadron based at Presque Isle, ME. There, the young pilot’s exploits included sneaking up behind a fog-bound commercial airliner to identify it and then turning on the afterburner right next to it. He also buzzed the family house and once almost hit his father, who was fishing from a canoe in the lake near the family camp. Those pranks had some repercussions: the airliner pilot launched an official complaint, his mother called the base to report a pilot having airplane trouble, and the man in the canoe was not his father!

In 1960, Dan earned a master’s degree in Aeronautical Engineering at the Air Force Institute of Technology and was elected to Tau Beta Pi, an honor society. At that time, he also was considered for the space program. After a tour at Hanscom Field, MA, where he worked on future aerospace surveillance systems, he attended the University of Michigan, earning a professional degree in aeronautical engineering in 1965. He then was assigned to Andrews Air Force Base, MD, where he had particular responsibilities for wind tunnels and flight dynamics laboratories.

In 1967, Dan went to Viet Nam as a flight commander in the 16th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron, based at Ton Son Nhut, flying RF-4Cs. While there, he flew more than 200 missions, including 48 involving combat. He was awarded a Silver Star for one particularly dangerous low-level mission under intense anti-aircraft fire. He also was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, ten Air Medals, the Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross, the Legion of Merit, and the Air Force Outstanding Unit Award. Upon returning to the States, he was assigned to Headquarters, U.S. Air Force. There he was responsible for the technical and fiscal aspects of the Air Force’s rocket development programs. Beginning in 1972, Dan was the system program director for the Combat Grande program, the aircraft control and warning system for the Iberian Peninsula. He was responsible for the design, development, production, installation, checkout, and maintenance for the $180 million system. For his work, he was awarded the Cross of Aeronautical Merit by the government of Spain. In 1972, Dan was assigned to the Pentagon as chief of the Electronic Systems Division, responsible for 37 development and acquisition programs with a total annual expenditure of about one billion dollars. In 1978, he retired as a colonel.

Dan then joined the MITRE Corporation as an information systems engineer, working on a project to install 160 weather radars in the U.S. and overseas. He later joined Westinghouse to work on a new air traffic control system. He moved to Hughes/STX in 1982 and in 1989 was named manager for Air Transport Control Development Programs—Europe for Hughes, with his office in Brussels. He helped establish Hughes as a viable air traffic control system competitor in Europe. In 1993, he retired from Hughes.

Chris and Dan’s children always loved to ride horses. In 1971, they bought a large farm in Aldie, VA, and thus Misty Brae Horse Farm was born. It grew until it had 50 horses and an indoor riding arena that was, at the time, the largest facility without internal supports in the area. Chris continued in Pony Club leadership roles, and Dan organized and helped train international tetrathlon (riding, running, shooting, and swimming) teams. Dan and Chris—and their two sons and two daughters, all of whom lived in or close to the old farmhouse—managed the farm and various careers as a large, loving family, complete with children and grandchildren of all ages. Dan also was very active in the Boy Scouts and his church. His whole extended family and a wide circle of friends and neighbors counted him as a most successful, caring, and dedicated husband, father, and friend.

For many years, Dan fought a long and valiant fight with cancer, volunteering for research programs and studies. He died 4 Dec 2001 and was buried at Arlington with full military honors.  

Chris, family, and
brother COL (Ret.) Philo A. Hutcheson ’50

Originally published in SEPTEMBER / OCTOBER 2006 TAPS

class of 1954 home «    “grip hands” home «    eulogies «