Never Forgotten

Sometimes a service member’s family has to wait through painful decades before they can finally lay their loved one to rest with the military honors they deserve. The sad reality is that when servicemen and women are involved in conflicts overseas and are killed or reported missing in action, there can be times when their remains cannot be accounted for and it can take years for their remains to even be located. Even after the remains are found, it can still take additional time to be able to identify the remains; sadly, sometimes identification is still not yet possible with our current knowledge. Through the painful of years waiting to find their service members’ remains, some families have held out hope that their loved ones could still be alive. At the end of World War Two there were about 79,000 American servicemen unaccounted for; today only 7,000 have been accounted for. At the end of the Vietnam War there was over 2,500 servicemen unaccounted for and today only 1,000 Americans killed in the war have been identified and returned to their families. In modern times DNA has improved and has given the U.S. the ability identify remains faster. However, without a relative present to provide a DNA comparison, it can be almost impossible to ever put a name with the found remains of America’s heroes. Here are the stories of servicemen whose remains took decades to be returned to their loved ones and finally laid to rest.
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Charles Bradley Sullivan was born on February 12th, 1920, in Fort Logan, Colorado. He grew up in Wyandotte, Kansas, with his father, mother, and two sisters.[1] Charles’ father, Charles E. Sullivan, was born in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1888.
Samuel Fred Thompson Jr. was born on April 16th, 1929, in Fall River, Kansas.[1] Fall River is a city in Greenwood County, Kansas. Its namesake comes from the river it’s situated on, and the area has very humid summers and generally mild to cool winters.
Born on April 16, 1894, in DeKalb, Illinois, Clarence Herbert Peterson was the son of a Danish immigrant and an Illinoisan.[1] Records show that in 1900, he had 3 siblings, an older brother, Evans, born in 1891, a younger sister Irene, born in 1896, and a younger brother Raymond, born in 1899.
Born in Georgetown, Indiana, on January 26, 1926, Elmer Lee Hamby, son of Agnes and Elmer Hamby, spent the majority of his childhood on his family's sugar beet, alfalfa, and cantaloupe farm in Rocky Ford, CO, accompanied by his younger sister Mary and his older sister Ione.[1]
Frederick A. Praeger was born in 1915, into a Jewish family as the only child of Max Mayer Praeger, an Austrian publisher and newspaper managing director, and Manya Praeger.[1] Growing up in Austria, he studied law and political science at the University of Vienna from 1933 to 1938 and also spent time at the Sorbonne in Paris in 1934.
Earl Wilford Thompson was born in 1946 in St. George, Washington County, Utah.[1] He was the son of Joseph Claude Thompson (1917–1982) and Helen Thompson (Leavitt) (1921–2011). The Thompson family were active participants in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. St. George, a Mormon church, in the late 1940s and 1950s.
Peter John Zamaites was born on October 19, 1911, in Worcester, Massachusetts, to parents George Zamaitis and Lucy Jankauskas.[1]From 1929 to 1931, Zamaites enlisted in the Marines and served as a Private for the 308th Company of the US Naval Reserve Armory in Worcester, the 307th Company in Los Angeles, California, and Company “L” of the Seventh Reserve Regiment in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.