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Picture
Picture
Melvin Johnson's Death
Melvin Johnson's Death
WWII Roster
bigpigeon.us webpage WWII Roster > Roster Records, © 2023 by Robert A. Christiansen, updated  by RAC 30 Jan 2023.
Individual Records for Big Pigeon's Pottawattamie Area WW II Dead Roster Members

Roster Records - A    B     C     D    EF    G    H    IJ    K    L    M     NO    P    QR    S    TUV    WXYZ   
  • The roster includes over 600 records, one for each member. Because of its length, the list of roster records is broken into seventeen webpages, alphabetical by last name.
  • You can access a webpage by clicking ​an alphabetical hotspot above.
  • You can then browse through the roster records by clicking on the arrows in the upper-right of each roster record page.
  • Use the WWII Roster hotspot in the upper-right of this page to go to the lead webpage of Big Pigeon's WWII Roster module.
Understanding a Roster Record
Each roster member has a multi-line record consisting of three or four parts:
  • the initial line, which includes the member's service number.
  • personal data.
  • military data.
  • sometimes notes containing additional information.
​For brevity, I use many abbreviations in my roster and the associated lists. You'll find abbreviation explanations and other information herein.

The Initial Line.
Each roster record begins with †, followed by member's name, service number, service branch, county or counties where member lived. (In some sources, you'll see service branch abbreviations.):
  • United States Army (US Army or USA), included the National Guard after January 1941.
  • United States Army Air Force (USAAF or AAF), called Army Air Corps until 1941, became USAF in 1947.
  • United States Navy (USN), United States Navy.
  • United States Naval Aviation, primarily carrier and patrol aircraft.
  • United States Marine Corps (USMC), did not participate in the War with Germany.
  • United States Marine Corps Aviation, aircraft that supported ground troops and provided air cover.
  • United States Coast Guard (USCG), under US Navy control in WW II.
  • Merchant Marine, civilians who were not part of the military.
  • Civilian, several thousand US non-merchant marine civilians died in WWII from enemy action, friendly fire, and while in captivity.
​
Personal Data follows the initial line and includes as much of the following as I know :
  • birth date and place;
  • parents' names (w/ mother's maiden name);
  • family residential summary;
  • any marriage information;
  • service entry date and residence at time;
  • burial location, when available.
Personal Data Abbreviations:
  • Co. Bluffs – Council Bluffs, Iowa; Pott. Co. – Pottawattamie County, Iowa; Omaha – Omaha, Douglas Co., Nebraska.
  • b. (born) s/o (son of) ss/o (stepson of), gs/o (grandson of), b/o (brother of), m. (married), div. (divorced), d. (died), bur. (buried), bef. (before), aft. (after), abt. (about), hosp. (hospital), cem. (cemetery).
  • I use abbreviations like S and NE for compass directions.
  • I generally abbreviate months using three letters without a period, e.g., Jun = June.

Military Data follows the personal data and includes all or some of the following:
  • member's military unit or ship;
  • unit base, when applicable;
  • aircraft information, including tail number if known, if an aircrew member;
  • death code (e.g., KIA), death date, and death location;
  • sometimes death circumstances;
  • relevant webpage in WWII-Japan or WWII-Germany modules, sometimes preceded by the battle name;
  • BNR (Body Not Recovered) or BAS (Buried At Sea) if body found but not retained.
I use many abbreviations in unit names:
  • US Army and USMC:  Co. (company), Bn. (battalion), Regt. (regiment), Div. (division), Inf. (infantry), FA (field artillery), AAA (anti-aircraft artillery), Recon. (reconnaissance).
  • In some sources you may see Eng. (engineer) and Cav. (cavalry).
  • US Navy: For named ships, I use both the ship's name (e.g., USS Iowa) and the hull number (e.g., BB-61).
  • US Naval Aviation: NAS (Naval Air Station).
  • USAAF: Sqdn. (Squadron), Gp. (Group), AF (Air Force), Bomb. (Bombardment), Obs. (Observation), AAF (Army Air Field), AAB (Army Air Base).
  • C.O. means Commanding Officer. I generally don't include rank.
I use the following common death codes:
  • KIA – Killed in Action.
  • DOW – Died of Wounds.
  • DNB – Died Non-Battle, used for deaths caused by disease, accidents outside the combat zone, and other miscellaneous causes.
  • FOD – Finding of Death, sometimes used with those previously listed as missing.
Besides KIA, here are the common WWII casualty codes:
  • WIA - Wounded in Action.
  • MIA - Missing in Action - In WWII, most missing were declared dead after one year and assigned a death code from the above list.
  • POW - Prisoner of War.
Death locations:
  • I tend to use place names in use during WW II, rather than today's place names; for example, Dutch Indies instead of Indonesia, Formosa instead of Taiwan, Burma instead of Myanmar.

+=>=> Website Usage Tips.
  • Generally you can enlarge an image by clicking.
  • To search for the webpages that mention a roster member, e.g. Eldred Welbourn, use a search string like Welbourn Eldred or "Welbourn, Eldred" from the Home > Usage Hints webpage. ​Weebly's search feature is rather minimal.
  • The text within a webpage, within my reports, and within many of the sources I reference are also searchable; I use Cmd/F and Cmd/G on my Mac. ​

+=>=> ​To search the web for a death in service during WWII:
  • First, locate the decedent's service number.
  • Then do a google search with last and first name and service number, e.g.:  wwII newman shelby 351381. A middle initial and parentheses around the name are helpful, e.g.: wwII "brown ralph r"  17019024.
  • There is a good chance you will get some relevant hits.
  • Standard Army/AAF record name format is last first initial, e.g., Smith John J; don't use a middle name or a period.​

​Webpage Header Images - WWII Roster > The Roster webpage and its 16 subpages: ​​​
  • The webpage header photo, Melvin Johnson's Death, is courtesy of grandson Michael Ketchum and was found at http://www.worldwar2letters.com/ARTIFACTS/Western_Union_Death.pdf. In WWII, roster member Melvin Johnson's wife, like other next of kin, received sad news via Western Union telegrams.
  • A - Slapton Sands Tank, courtesy of https://www.submerged.co.uk/slapton/, was recovered from the sea by Ken Small in 1984. It serves as a memorial to the nearly 1,000 Americans, including my roster's Alvin E. Aid, who died during bungled training exercises on the south coast of England in 1944.
  • B - Cabanatuan List of Dead, courtesy of en.wikipedia.org. The three Bostedt brothers, Joe, John &​ Glen, died with other roster members at the Cabanatuan Prisoner of War Camp in central Luzon, Philippines.
  • C - 8th AF Base Duxford, courtesy of airspacemag.com. Duxford, England, south of Cambridge, has Europe's largest air museum and was a 8th Air Force base during WW II. At least 26 men in my roster died on 8th Air Force planes. One was a pilot, Irving Cohen, whose family ran the Iowa Clothes Shop in Council Bluffs. Irving died with his crew on their first mission.
  • D - Barak Obama at Midway Island, courtesy of Reuters News Service. Roster members Richard C. Decker & Robert E. Mowrey were killed during the Battle of Midway.
  • EF - Linz, E bank of Rhine, near Remagen, courtesy of en.wikipedia.org. Roster member Darrel Frost's unit was attached to the 9th Armored Division, which seized the railroad bridge at Remagen on 7 March 1945. Darrel crossed early on the 8th and was killed on the 10th, upstream a few miles near Linz. This photo points out the rugged topography near Remagen; the Remagen bridgehead was not conducive to a major breakthrough into the heart of Germany.
  • ​G - B-29 Over the Hump in Burma, courtesy of en.wikipedia.org. Operation Matterhorn in 1944 was the first attempt by the new B-29 very heavy bombers to attack the Japanese home islands. B-29s would fly over the Hump from their bases in northeastern India to forward bases in southern China, from which they would bomb the corner of Japan that was within range. The cost in resources for Operation Matterhorn were enormous, the results were meager. As soon as possible, the strategic bombing of Japan switched to new airbases in the Mariana Islands. Two roster members, August Davis and Robert Gidley, died in Operation Matterhorn.
  • H - Red Oak Victory, courtesy of https://redoakvictory.us. In February 1943, the National Guard company from the small Iowa town of Red Oak incurred large casualties when it was captured in Tunisia in the early stages of the Battle of Kasserine Pass. To honor Red Oak's losses, a Victory ship, one of the few surviving today, was named for Red Oak. Fortunately, most Red Oak casualties were prisoners of war who survived captivity and were released in April 1944. Dean W. Halbert of Red Oak, working as a forced laborer in northern Germany, was an exception. He was executed after failing to return promptly from a toilet break.
  • IJ - USS Arizona Memorial - Pearl Harbor, courtesy of visitpearlharbor.org. Roster member Robert W. Jackson died on the Arizona, while Charles V. Booton, & Bert E. McKeeman also died at Pearl Harbor.
  • KL - National D-Day Memorial, courtesy of cbs.com. This memorial, in Bedford, VA, lists all 4,400 Allied troops known to have died on D-Day. 19 were from the small town of Bedford. In my roster, Ross L. Kendle died in a tank on Omaha Beach, while Paul H. Fulk died inland with the 101st Airborne. Francis F. Arkfeld & Robert W. Saunders died offshore on landing craft.
  • M - Marines near Bairoko, New Georgia, courtesy of en.wikipedia.org. Twenty men in my roster died in or near the Solomon Islands, including Dale Maassen of rural Avoca who died in the assault on Bairoko on the north shore of New Georgia.
  • NO - Pacific War Memorial, courtesy of http://ttnotes.com/pacific-war-memorial.html. This memorial is on Corrregidor Island, which guarded the entrance to Manila Bay in the Philippines. Of the forty roster members who died in the 1944-45 liberation of the Philippines, one of the last was Merle Oltmans, the cousin and neighbor of my uncle, Oscar Torneton. 
  • P - Hiroshima Memorial was found at https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/775/.  All but two of roster member Roy M. Pedersen Jr.'s fellow crew members died in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima on 6 Aug 1945.
  • QR - Ploesti, 15th AF, courtesy of historynet.com. Several times from August 1943 to August 1944, 15th Air Force B-24 Liberator heavy bombers attacked oil production facilities in the Ploesti area in Romania, with the loss of hundreds of planes and around 1,800 men. Paul Rink, buried in Shelby, was killed on 17 August 1944 on one of the last raids. Shortly thereafter advancing Russian forces overran the Ploesti area.
  • S - Marine Corps Memorial - Arlington, VA, courtesy of wikimedia.org. This memorial depicts the second flag raising on Mt. Suribachi, Iwo Jima. Six men in my roster died on Iwo Jima, including Robert E. Schuelzky whose company provided most of the personnel for the Iwo flag raisings. All six were still alive when the flags were raised early in the battle.​
  • TUV - Battle of the Bulge Memorial, courtesy of dreamstime.com. The memorial is in Mardasson, just northeast of Bastogne, Belgium. One of the nineteen men from my roster who died in the Battle of the Bulge was Clifford Vanderpool, whose parents lived near Bentley in Pottawatamie County. The Vanderpool family had eleven children; Clifford was the only son.
  • ​​WXYZ - Twenty men in my roster died in or near the Solomon Islands, including Edmund Wunder of Harlan, lost when the destroyer USS Laffey sank during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal. At close quarters using its 5" guns, the Laffey raked the superstructure of the Japanese battleship Hiei, which was then disabled by a shell from the USS Helena, further damaged by naval aircraft, and finally scuttled. This was the first Japanese battleship loss of WWII
​
​Images not used:
  • QR - USS Indianapolis, courtesy of the National WWII Museum in New Orleans. Roy E. Rhoten from my roster was lost on the Indianapolis, which the Navy forgot was sailing without escort in the western Pacific. Four days passed between the torpedoing of the Indianapolis and the accidental sighting of survivors.
  • TUV - Wereth 11 Memorial, courtesy of http://lestweforget.hamptonu.edu. The Wereth 11 were eleven  members of the Black 333rd Field Artillery Bn., prisoners of war executed by German forces on the outskirts of Wereth, Belgium in the early stages of the Battle of the Bulge.
  • ​WXYZ - Okinawa - American Dead, courtesy of https://www.dvidshub.net, a Defense Department service.  All known dead from the Battle of Okinawa are listed on the panels at the Okinawa Peace Memorial Dead. Something like 200,000 military and civilians died, including 12,500 Americans.​
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