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Preface to the following
NEWS RELEASE
Please note that that the following news release from the
Department of Defense excludes information most pertinent to the return,
identification and reburial of the bodies of the United States Marine
Raiders killed in action on Butaritari Island, Makin Island on the 17and18
August 1942.
It is the plan of the United States Marine Raider Association
to inter them together in a ceremonial burial at the Arlington National
Cemetary on the 59th anniversary of the Makin raid, 17 August 2001, with
and only with the consent of their next of kin.
Let us all remember that the nineteen Carlson's Second Marine
Raiders, joined the Raiders together; they fought together; they died
together; they were buried together; they were then found together and
identified and returned to the United States together. We firmly believe
it to be most appropriate, to honor their supreme sacrifice by burying
them together. Each with a separate grave, each with a seprate grave stone
with an appropriate memorial in the center of this group of fine lads.
Melvin D. Heckt
President, Elect
United States Marine Raider Association.
(9 December 2000)
N E W S R E L E A S E
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= OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
= (PUBLIC AFFAIRS)
= WASHINGTON, D.C. 20301
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= PLEASE NOTE DATE ====================================================
No. 714-00
(703)695-0192(media)
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 29, 2000
(703)697-5737(public/industry)
WWII MARINE RAIDERS IDENTIFIED, RETURNING HOME
The remains of 19 World War II Marine Raiders killed in
action on Butaritari Island (Makin Atoll) and listed as missing in action
since August 1942 were recently identified, and will be returned to their
families for burial.
The remains are those of:
Capt. Gerald P. Holtom, Palo Alto, Calif.
Sgt. Clyde Thomason, Atlanta, Ga.
FM1C. Vernon L. Castle, Stillwater, Okla.
Cpl. I.B. Earles, Tulare, Calif.
Cpl. Daniel A. Gaston, Galveston, Tex.
Cpl. Harris J. Johnson, Little Rock, Iowa
Cpl. Kenneth K. Kunkle, Mountain Home, Ark.
Cpl. Edward Maciejewski, Chicago, Ill.
Cpl. Robert B. Pearson, Lafayette, Calif.
Cpl. Mason O. Yarbrough, Sikeston, Mo.
Pfc. William A. Gallagher, Wyandotte, Mich.
Pfc. Ashley W. Hicks, Waterford, Calif.
Pfc. Kenneth M. Montgomery, Eden, Wis.
Pfc. Norman W. Mortensen, Camp Douglas, Wis.
Pfc. John E. Vandenberg, Kenosha, Wis.
Pvt. Carlyle O. Larson, Glenwood, Minn.
Pvt. Robert B. Maulding, Vista, Calif.
Pvt. Franklin M. Nodland, Marshalltown, Iowa
Pvt. Charles A. Selby, Ontonagon, Mich.
The Marines were members of the Marine Corps' 2nd Raider
Battalion, killed during the August 17-18, 1942, raid on Japanese-held
Butaritari Island, during which an estimated 83 Japanese soldiers were
killed. Lt. Col. Evans F. Carlson commanded the Raiders during the operation,
and President Franklin D. Roosevelt's son, Capt. James Roosevelt, was
the operation's second-in-command. Ferried to the island by submarine
and landing on and departing Butaritari by rubber boats, the Marines were
unable to evacuate the bodies of their fallen comrades. With the assistance
of island inhabitants, including a man who assisted in the burial of the
Marines in 1942, a recovery team from the U.S. Army Central Identification
Laboratory, Hawaii (CILHI) uncovered a mass grave and excavated the remains
in November and December 1999. That operation was preceded by an initial
investigation in August 1998 and an unsuccessful recovery effort in May
1999. The U.S. Marine Raider Association provided invaluable assistance
with firsthand information and documentation about their combat on Butaritari.
In late 1999, the CILHI began an exhaustive forensic identification process,
including the use of mitochondrial DNA, to confirm the identities of the
Marines. Marine Corps officials, using historical military records and
more modern search techniques, located the next of kin of each of the
Marines.
Arrangements for the transportation and burial of the Marines
are underway, in consultation with the families. The first burial is expected
to be that of Cpl. Yarbrough in Sikeston, Mo. in December. Among the remains
recovered are those of Sgt. Clyde Thomason, the first enlisted Marine
awarded the Medal of Honor during World War II. The identification of
these Marines contributes to the ongoing effort by the Department of Defense
to locate and identify more than 88,000 American service members who remain
missing in action from World War II, the Cold War, the Korean War and
the Vietnam War.
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