[Vision2020] Idaho Buries 11 Servicemen
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Sat Nov 8 06:36:40 PST 2008
>From today's (November 8, 2008) Spokesman Review -
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Idaho buries 11 servicemen
Unclaimed remains found at Lewiston funeral home
BOISE Eleven veterans from three branches of the military were laid to
rest Friday at a state veterans cemetery, thanks to the efforts of a
project that matches records of those who served their country with
unclaimed remains in funeral homes.
In this case, the cremated remains of all 11 came from a single funeral
home in Idaho. The veterans had served in three different wars. One of
them, Sgt. James Overton, served in World War I and died Nov. 14, 1939.
"It's sad to think they were lost in some funeral home," said Sharon
Bowman, a 57-year-old state employee with the Idaho Department of Health
and Welfare in Nampa.
Bowman was among a small crowd that gathered at the Idaho State Veterans
Cemetery to honor the veterans, who were identified through the Missing in
America Project, a nonprofit organization that locates the unclaimed
remains of veterans with assistance from state and federal agencies.
The unclaimed remains of 50 servicemembers have been found since 2005 in
Idaho, where efforts at the state veterans cemetery inspired the creation
of the nationwide Missing in America Project, Fred Salanti, a 60-year-old
Vietnam veteran and director of the organization, said in a telephone
interview.
Nationwide, the Missing in America Project has coordinators in 45 states
who have identified the cremated remains of nearly 500 soldiers. About 350
have been laid to rest in veterans cemeteries.
"We are their family," Salanti said. "We stand in and sign documents at
the national cemeteries and the state cemeteries so they can receive those
honors."
The 11 veterans honored in Boise were from Idaho, California and
Washington state, said Zach Rodriguez, director of the Idaho State
Veterans Cemetery. The servicemen have been identified as veterans from
the U.S. Army, Air Force and Marine Corps. They served in the Vietnam War,
World War I and World War II.
The remains were identified earlier this year at a Lewiston funeral
home. "Once they've been abandoned for more than a year, there's a state
statute that allows us to go recover the remains," Rodriguez said.
Members of the Missing in America Project crosscheck data on U.S.
servicemembers from a national data center with names and birthdates on
unclaimed remains at funeral homes.
D.J. Stephens, a 51-year-old Marine veteran from eastern Idaho, said he
didn't know any of the soldiers, but wanted to pay his respects at the
cemetery Friday.
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Pro patria,
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
"Patriotism is not a short and frenzied outburst of emotion but the
tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime."
-- Adlai E. Stevenson, Jr.
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