Donald Thomas Steinbrunner (April 5, 1932 – July 20, 1967) was an American footballoffensive tackle who was one of only two American professional football players to die in the Vietnam War.
Steinbrunner was selected in the sixth round of the 1953 NFL draft by the Cleveland Browns. He was an offensive tackle with the Browns in 1953,
initially cut in training camp but brought back after the fourth game,[4] and the Browns won the Eastern Conference with an 11–1 regular season record. Steinbrunner played in the 1953 NFL Championship Game at Briggs Stadium in Detroit, but the Browns lost 17–16 to the Lions.[5][6]
Military service
Steinbrunner left his professional football career in 1954 after only eight regular season games to fulfill his military requirement. With a lingering knee injury from his collegiate days and the Browns winning consecutive NFL titles in 1954 and 1955, he later opted to stay in the service.[7] He joined the U.S. Air Force, first in the air police and later as a navigator, and in between was an assistant footballcoach for four seasons at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs.[1][7]
Steinbrunner was sent to Vietnam in 1966, and after an injury was offered a safer assignment, which he refused. Major Steinbrunner's plane, a C-123 Provider, was shot down by small-arms fire on July 20, 1967, during a defoliation mission spraying Agent Orange on the jungle forest canopy, killing all five crewmen aboard. He was posthumously awarded a Purple Heart and the Distinguished Flying Cross.[1]