Author: Hondo

  • Three Return Home

    DPAA has identified and accounted for the following three formerly-missing US military personnel.

    From World War II

    PVT Arthur H. Kelder, Medical Corps, 2nd General Hospital, US Army, was lost on 7 May 1942 in the Philippines. He was accounted for on 26 May 2015.

    2nd Lt. Robert W. Ward, 387th Bombardment Group, 9th Air Force, US Army Air Forces, was lost on 23 December 1944 in Germany. He was accounted for on 7 May 2015.

    From Korea

    PFC Charlie Wilcher Jr., Company A, 9th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Division, US Army, was lost on 30 November 1950 in North Korea. He was accounted for on 7 May 2015.

    You’re no longer missing, my elder brothers-in-arms. Our apologies that it took so long.

    You’re home now. Rest in peace.

    . . .

    Over 73,000 US personnel remain unaccounted for from World War II; over 7,800 US personnel remain unaccounted for from the Korean War; and over 1,600 remain unaccounted for in Southeast Asia (SEA). Comparison of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from recovered remains against mtDNA from a matrilineal descendant can assist in making a positive ID for unidentified remains that have already been recovered, or which may be recovered in the future.

    TAH reader HMCS(FMF) noted in comments elsewhere that DPAA’s web site now has what appears to be a decent “Contact Us” page. The page doesn’t have instructions concerning who can and cannot submit a mtDNA sample or how to submit one, but the POCs listed there may be able to point you in the correct direction if you’re interested.  If you think you might possibly qualify, please contact those POCs for further information.

    If it turns out you qualify to submit a mtDNA sample, please arrange to submit one. By doing that you just might help identify the remains of a US service member who’s been repatriated but not yet been identified – as well as a relative of yours, however distant. Or you may help to identify remains to be recovered in the future.

    Everybody deserves a proper burial. That’s especially true for those who gave their all while serving this nation.

     

     

  • You Say, “Pix or It Didn’t Happen”? Here Ya Go.

    Well, the road trip is over. But on the way back, I had a chance to verify something.

    I previously posted an article about an, um, “interestingly-named” town in Florida. Well, in case anyone thought I – or Google Maps – might be pulling yer leg, here ya go: photographic proof.

     

    Yeah, the picture sucks, and is fairly blurry. Sorry – but YOU try driving in traffic with one hand while snapping a photo of a smallish road sign with the other.  At the time, stopping in the middle of the road to get a better shot was NOT a viable option. It’s at least fairly readable.

    As I said previously: only in America!

  • A Couple of Doobies . . . .

    . . . really helps pass the time on the road. (smile)

    I’ll be finishing up a longish road trip tomorrow. This time I decided to do some Doobies while driving to help pass the time.

    No, I’m not talking about the kind of doobies Colorado recently made legal. Geez.

    I’m talking the musical Doobies – AKA the Doobie Brothers.

    I have to admit I’d forgotten how good those guys were. Before Michael McDonald arrived and turned the group into essentially a backing band for his version of blue-eyed-soul, their music was quite different. Their earlier incarnation could rock with anyone.

    Here are two often-overlooked gems from the Doobies. Both are from their “The Captain and Me” release.

    The first is a reminder of just how well the band could rock. It’s titled “Without You” – and it’s nothing like the Badfinger tune of the same name made famous by Harry Nillson. You might want to grab a good set of headphones to listen to this one – so you can crank it up.

     

    The second tune which follows is one of my personal favorites by the band. It’s a reminder of how well the guys clicked when they slowed things down and stepped out-of-character as rock-n-rollers. I think most of our male readers will be able to identify with this one.

     

    That’s all for now. I still have a few hundred more miles before this trip ends, but I thought this was apropos today.

  • No Longer Missing – A Rather Special Case

    A soldier’s remains will be interred with full military honors during July. They will be interred long after his demise.

    That, unfortunately, is not terribly uncommon. But this case is, for two reasons.

    First: the individual – SGT Charles Schroeter, US Army – was a recipient of the Medal of Honor. It’s relatively rare to see a MoH recipient interred long after his demise.

    Second: the man received his MoH in 1870 – for gallantry in action the previous year. His heroism occurred during an engagement with the Apaches in Arizona during the Indian Wars.

    That engagement occurred during SGT Schroeter’s second enlistment. He had previously served in the Union Army during the Civil War, which began shortly after he immigrated to this nation from Germany.

    SGT Schroeter’s remains were unclaimed after his death. His remains were cremated; the ashes were stored for a long period in a basement at Greenwood Cemetery in San Diego. Some years ago, they were interred in a communal crypt in that cemetery’s mausoleum.

    Enter CAPT Bill Heard, USN (Ret).

    CAPT Heard learned of SGT Schroeter’s remains being buried in that communal crypt. He researched the man’s history.

    With substantial assistance from both the Congressional Medal of Honor Society and the San Diego History Center, CAPT Heard was able to determine that this was the same SGT Charles Schroeter who had been awarded the MoH. After additional effort, CAPT Heard was able to convince the National Cemetery Administration of that fact.

    SGT Schroeter’s remains were removed from the communal crypt containing them. They will be properly re-interred will full military honors at Mirimar National Cemetery on 9 July 2015. (The article gives more of his history, and is IMO well worth the time to read.) He will be the first MoH recipient interred at that cemetery.

    Rest now in peace, my elder brother-in-arms.

    And thank you, CAPT Heard.

  • RIP, Beau Biden

    Dead of brain cancer at age 46.

    I didn’t agree with his politics, or care much for his dad. Regardless, reportedly Beau Biden was a decent fellow and a good man. He was an officer in the Army National Guard.

    RIP, Mr. Biden. Gone far too soon.

  • From the Road

    I’ve been on the road for a few days, and will be on the road and kinda busy for a few more.  Comm is a bit spotty.

    I’ve posted an earlier photo from the trip in a previous article because it seemed apropos.  I thought I’d post this one today – mostly as a way to send a couple of DRC members my “best regards” (think of the Boy Scout Sign together with the phrase “read between the lines”).

    Some TAH readers may know where this is.  It’s actually a pretty nice place to visit from time to time.

  • Facade, and Substance

    Today is Memorial Day.  Well, this is my Memorial Day article.

    It’s probably somewhat different than the norm.  Maybe you’ll read it and think this is appropriate for today; maybe you’ll think I’m out to lunch.  Or maybe you’ll think I might be both.

    Here goes anyway.

    . . .

    Jonn wrote an article some time back regarding the now commonly-used phrase, Thank you for your service – and how it rubs some people the wrong way.  Poetrooper followed up a couple of days later with his own article.  Both made the point that this pop-culture phrase which is popular today beats the heck out of what we saw some decades ago.

    Yeah, I’ve heard that phrase directed towards me a few times.  And what Jonn and Poetrooper say is certainly true.  It’s far better than being cursed (or worse), being treated like a leper, or being treated shabbily in those multitude of other ways those returning from Vietnam had to endure.

    But I guess you can count me among the curmudgeonly group.  Having someone tell me that bothers me a bit.

    I guess it’s because I find being thanked by complete strangers for doing nothing more than what I signed up to do . . . somewhat embarrassing.  It grates.

    I chose to serve.  I knew what I was doing; my eyes were wide open at the time.  I was fortunate enough to end my service mostly intact – unlike those we remember today.

    To one extent or another, everyone who served has a variant of this story.  Even those who were draftees had options: resisting, leaving, falsely claiming to be a “conscientious objector”, or outright refusal – though most would call such acts dishonorable.

    And yet with rare exceptions those who were drafted served. They too answered when the nation called.

    It’s called “doing one’s duty”.  Being thanked for that by a stranger just strikes me as being out of place.  YMMV.

    Remembering and honoring those who didn’t come home?  Different story.  That’s proper – and necessary.

    . . .

    Nonetheless, for whatever reason some people apparently have a need to thank vets and/or serving members of the military they barely know for serving.  Its a free country, so I guess they can if they like.

    But as far as I’m concerned, here’s how they could better do that.  It doesn’t require saying a word.

    • Be a productive member of society.  Raise your kids to be productive members of society also.

    • Be honest and trustworthy; pay your debts; have a sense of civic duty, and of honor.  Do the best you can to raise your kids to be the same.

    • Be self-reliant; take care of yourself and your family.  Raise your kids to be self-reliant as well.

    •  Help others in need, but in a way that doesn’t make them permanently dependent.  Give helping hands – not handouts.  Teach this to your children by example.

    •  Finally, and perhaps most importantly:  love and respect this nation.  Raise your kids to do the same.  And encourage them to serve the common good – in some capacity, as a civilian or in uniform – for at least a part of their life.  Each of us owes this nation that much for the incredible privilege of being born free citizens.  That freedom alone is worth more than any of us can possibly repay.

    If someone does those things . . . well, as far as I’m concerned, that’s the best thanks.  It’s far preferable to some halfhearted, mumbled platitude from a stranger.

    I’d say doing that is also a fitting tribute to our fallen, too.  Because I’m convinced that if enough people do those things, the nation our fallen died defending will endure long after we’re all gone.

    And that . . . matters.

    . . .

    Even so:  some people nonetheless apparently still have a burning need to tell somebody, “Thank you for your service”.  So, let me suggest a way that anyone who feels such a need can do so that’s IMO more apropos than offering some vet or serving member of the military they barely know or just met – a halfhearted and trite platitude.

    More precisely, let me suggest two possible ways.

    •  Option One:  find a local cemetery, preferably one that’s not maintained by a well-funded government, religious, or private entity.  Visit it; find the graves of some vets who are buried there.

    In mid-May of each year, set aside a few dollars.  Use that cash to get a small US flag or two, and maybe also the same number of small artificial wreaths or bouquets.

    On the last Monday in May, go to that cemetery and look for a veteran’s grave bereft of flag or flowers.  If you find one that’s bare, place your flag and flowers on that grave.

    Then mentally tell the soul/memory of the man or woman buried there, “Thanks.”  And if so inclined, say a prayer to the Almighty for his or her soul.

    If all of the vets’ graves are properly remembered, that’s great.  Keep the flag and flowers for the following year.  Or go to a different cemetery and do the above.

    If for some reason May is a NO GO, then perhaps do it on the 11th of November  instead.  That’s also acceptable.

    •  Option Two: on that same Monday – or, alternately, on the 11th of November if schedule makes late May a NO GO – go spend some time visiting with an aged vet at a local nursing home or a VA hospital/other care facility.  On that day, he or she will probably be feeling both their years and somewhat down; it’s also entirely possible they’ve outlived their family.  They just might enjoy some company.

    If someone really want to say “thanks” – make one of these an annual event.  Get someone else to join in doing the same. Begin a chain, then keep it going.

    Why? Because those vets now in their twilight years served well before most living today were old enough.  They deserve – and in some cases, need – thanks far more than most.  Maybe thanking them would be a more apropos way to show gratitude than some trite platitude offered to an individual barely known or just met.

    Doing either those things would also IMO be a fine way to remember our fallen, too.  Because without their efforts and sacrifice – along with the service of those aged vets now in their twilight years – we might not have very much today worth celebrating.

    . . .

    Just my $0.02 worth, and YMMV.  I’m guessing for some reading this it does.

    I’m fine with that.  It’s still a free country.

    Anyway:  I hope everyone reading this enjoys their holiday today.  But while you’re out and about – or are at your home, or the home of friends or family – please take a moment to remember the reason behind today’s holiday.

    So long as we remember them, they’re not completely gone.

  • Lest We Forget

    Saw this while beginning segment 2 of travels this morning.  Thought it was apropos for this weekend, so I got a quick photo. A full-resolution copy can be viewed here. It’s somewhat backlit due to time of day, unfortunately. Oh well.

     

     

    May the fallen rest in peace. May the nation be worthy of their sacrifice.