Mary Hegar

Mary Hegar

TX, US
Combat Search and Rescue Helicopter Pilot, shot down in Afghanistan, returns home and crusades against the Secretary of Defense to repeal the discriminatory Combat Exclusion Policy...and wins!

Major Mary Jennings Hegar was commissioned into the Air Force through ROTC at The University of Texas in 1999.  She served on active duty as an Aircraft Maintenance Officer at Misawa Air Base, Japan, and Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri where she worked on the F-16 Fighting Falcon and the B-2 Stealth Bomber.  In 2004, she was selected for pilot training by the Air National Guard.  Upon completion of her training at the top of her class, she served three tours in Afghanistan flying Combat Search and Rescue as well as Medevac missions.  During her time in the Guard, in addition to the deployments to Afghanistan, Major Hegar flew marijuana eradication missions, wildfire suppression with buckets of water on cargo slings, evacuated survivors from hurricane-devastated cities, and rescued many civilians on civil Search and Rescue missions in California and out at sea.  On her third tour to Afghanistan on July 29th 2009, she was shot down on a Medevac mission and sustained wounds resulting in her being awarded the Purple Heart.  Her actions on this mission saved the lives of her crew and patients, earning her the Distinguished Flying Cross with Valor Device.  In 2012, Major Hegar filed suit against the Secretary of Defense asserting that the Combat Exclusion Policy was unconstitutional.  In 2013 when the Secretary of Defense repealed the Policy effective immediately.

Major Mary Jennings Hegar was commissioned into the Air Force through ROTC at The University of Texas in 1999.  She served on active duty as an Aircraft Maintenance Officer at Misawa Air Base, Japan, and Whiteman Air Force Base, Missouri where she worked on the F-16 Fighting Falcon and the B-2 Stealth Bomber.  In 2004, she was selected for pilot training by the Air National Guard.  Upon completion of her training at the top of her class, she served three tours in Afghanistan flying Combat Search and Rescue as well as Medevac missions.  During her time in the Guard, in addition to the deployments to Afghanistan, Major Hegar flew marijuana eradication missions, wildfire suppression with buckets of water on cargo slings, evacuated survivors from hurricane-devastated cities, and rescued many civilians on civil Search and Rescue missions in California and out at sea.  On her third tour to Afghanistan on July 29th 2009, she was shot down on a Medevac mission and sustained wounds resulting in her being awarded the Purple Heart.  Her actions on this mission saved the lives of her crew and patients, earning her the Distinguished Flying Cross with Valor Device.  In 2012, Major Hegar filed suit against the Secretary of Defense asserting that the Combat Exclusion Policy was unconstitutional.  In 2013 when the Secretary of Defense repealed the Policy effective immediately.