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Thread: In Memoriam

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  1. #1
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    World War II


    Missing World War II Soldiers Indentified

    The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced Monday that the remains 12 U.S. servicemen, missing in action from World War II, have been identified and are being returned to their families for burial with full military honors.

    They are Army Air Forces

    1st Lt. Jack E. Volz, 21, of Indianapolis;
    2nd Lt. Regis E. Dietz, 28, of Pittsburgh, Pa.;
    2nd Lt. Edward J. Lake, 25, of Brooklyn, N.Y.;
    2nd Lt. Martin P. Murray, 21, of Lowell, Mass.;
    2nd Lt. William J. Shryock, 23, of Gary, Ind.;
    Tech. Sgt. Robert S. Wren, 25, of Seattle, Wash.;
    Tech. Sgt. Hollis R. Smith, 22, of Cove, Ark.;
    Staff Sgt. Berthold A. Chastain, 27, Dalton, Ga.;
    Staff Sgt. Clyde L. Green, 24, Erie, Pa.;
    Staff Sgt. Frederick E. Harris, 23, Medford, Mass.;
    Staff Sgt. Claude A. Ray, 24, Coffeyville, Kan.;
    and Staff Sgt. Claude G. Tyler, 24, Landover, Md.


    The remains representing the entire crew will be buried as a group, in a single casket, Aug. 4 in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C. Eight of the airmen were identified and buried as individuals during previous ceremonies. Shryock, Green and Harris were also individually identified and will be interred individually at Arlington on the same day as the group interment.

    These 12 airmen were ordered to carry out a reconnaissance mission in their B-24D Liberator, taking off from an airfield near Port Moresby, New Guinea, on Oct. 27, 1943. Allied plans were being formulated to mount an attack on the Japanese redoubt at Rabaul, New Britain. American strategists considered it critical to take Rabaul in order to support the eventual invasion of the Philippines. The crew’s assigned area of reconnaissance was the nearby shipping lanes in the Bismarck Sea. But during their mission, they were radioed to land at a friendly air strip nearby due to poor weather conditions. The last radio transmission from the crew did not indicate their location, and in the following weeks, multiple searches over land and sea areas did not locate the aircraft.

    Following World War II, the Army Graves Registration Service conducted investigations and searches for 43 missing airmen, including these airmen, in the area but concluded in June 1949 that they were unrecoverable.

    In August 2003, a team from the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) received information on a crash site from a citizen in Papua New Guinea while they were investigating another case. He also turned over an identification card from one of the crew members and reported that there were possible human remains at the site of the crash. Twice in 2004 other JPAC teams attempted to visit the site but were unable to do so due to poor weather and hazardous conditions at the helicopter landing site. Another team was able to successfully excavate the site from January to March 2007 where they found several identification tags from the B-24D crew as well as human remains.

    Among other forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists from JPAC and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory used mitochondrial DNA—which matched that of some of the crewmembers’ families—in the identification of their remains

    Of the 16 million Americans who served in World War II, more than 400,000 died. At the end of the war, the U.S. government was unable to recover and identify approximately 79,000 Americans. Today, more than 73,000 are unaccounted-for from the conflict.

  2. #2
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    Interesting to watch and listen to what really happened, and why so many lives were just thrown away.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F67C8yzww_Y


    "I'm Back !!"

  3. #3
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    Poland

    Polish Army Lance-Corporal Paweł Poświat was killed in Ghazni province on 28th July 2011 when a road mine detonated beneath his armored patrol vehicle. L-Cpl. Poświat, age 29, was driving the vehicle at the time of the explosion.

    Seriously injured, he was evacuated by helicopter to the Polish military base hospital in Ghazni. Sadly, doctors were unable to save his life.

    L-Cpl. Poświat, a bachelor, joined the Polish Army in 2003 and served with the 17th Wielkopolska Mechanized Brigade.


  4. #4
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    29 July 2011

    22-year-old Oklahoma Army National Guardsman, Augustus 'Augy' Vicari was killed in action on Friday 29th July 2011 when his patrol vehicle struck a roadside bomb. He had deployed to Afghanistan in June.

    The soldier, who graduated from Lowell High School, Indiana, in 2008 was married and lived in Oklahoma. He joined the Oklahoma National Guard in 2009. He and his wife, Holly, would have celebrated their first wedding anniversary in September.

    A "quick wit and ready smile" is how family and friends are remembering Augustus Vicari, one of five children.

  5. #5
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    29 July 2011

    US Army officer 2nd Lieutenant Jered W. Ewy was one of two Oklahoma National Guardsmen killed in action on 29th July 2011 when a bomb detonated as they were on patrol in Paktia, Afghanistan.

    2nd Lt. Ewy, age 33, was serving with the 1st Battalion, 279th Infantry Regiment, 45th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.

    Also killed in the same incident was Spc. Augustus Vicari


  6. #6
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    "The Last of the First"
    The first offensive action of the United States during World War II was on Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands by the United States Marine Corps.
    August 7, 1942.The First Marine Division fought on Guadalcanal, Tulagi, Cape Gloucester,New Britian, New Guinea, Peleliu, Okinawa.
    There is a bottle of 1st Grand Cru Cognac, (circa 1920-25) that is to be opened by the last survivor among the Marines and sailors who served in combat with the division during WW II. It was estimated that it would be opened by 2010. It is in the Marines' Memorial Club in San Francisco and is in the custody of the First Marine Division Association.
    Navy Pharmacist Mates served side by side with the Marines. Wore out uniforms but with their insignia. They were our beloved "Corpsman".
    136 KIA with the 1st Division.
    Who knows? Maybe I will be the one to raise the glass in a toast to a truly great Division.

    Fideli Certa Merces - To the faithful there is just reward
    Semper Fidelis -Always Faithful
    To be a Marine is enough
    Pfc. Thomas C. Reedy, Jr.
    566495Company C, 1st Battalion,
    7th Regiment First Marine Division
    United States Marine Corps 1944-46


    "I'm Back !!"

  7. #7
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    31 July 2011


    Hawaii-based US Army Sergeant William B. GrossPaniagua, from Daly City, California, was killed in action on 31st July 2011 in Kunar province, Afghanistan, when an insurgent bomb detonated against his patrol vehicle.

    28-year-old Sgt. GrossPaniagua served with the 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, based at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii.

    Sgt. GrossPaniagua enlisted in the U.S. Army in September 2005 as a Combat Engineer. He previously served in Iraq in 2008 and this was his first deployment to Afghanistan.

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