Posted on Jul 9, 2015
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From: Yahoo News
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The bodies of 36 US Marines have been found on a remote Pacific island more than 70 years after they died in a bloody World War II battle, a member of the recovery team said.

The remains of the men were discovered after a four-month excavation on Betio Island in Kiribati, director of US charity History Flight Inc., Mark Noah, told Radio New Zealand.

Noah, whose organisation worked with the US Defense Department on the project, said the men were killed during the Battle of Tarawa in 1943.

"(They) had an expectation that if they were to die in the line of duty defending their country they would be brought home... that was a promise made 70 years ago that we felt should be kept," he said late Tuesday.

While the remains have not been formally identified, Noah said they almost certainly include those of Lieutenant Alexander Bonnyman, who posthumously received America's highest military accolade, the Medal of Honor, for conspicuous gallantry.

Bonnyman's citation says he led a series of assaults when Marines stormed the island, finally falling when he attacked a bombproof installation that was hampering the advance.

A statement on History Flight's website said Bonnyman’s daughters had decided to have his remains interred in a family plot in Knoxville, Tennessee, next to his parents, with a public funeral service planned.

Overall, more than 1,000 Americans died at Tarawa, while the entire Japanese garrison of 4,800 was wiped out.

Noah said the remains would be repatriated this month and identified using a combination of dental records and DNA comparison with surviving relatives.

He said the bodies of several hundred American soldiers still lay in makeshift, unrecorded graves where they were buried after the battle.

Noah said efforts would continue to ensure that the bodies were returned home.

"There's a lot of work to be done on the island," he said.

http://news.yahoo.com/bodies-wwii-us-marines-recovered-pacific-075205962.html
Posted in these groups: Ega Marine CorpsWwii logo WWII World War Two
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Responses: 15
SCPO David Lockwood
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I agree. Keep bringing them home until all are back on American soil.
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SSG Izzy Abbass
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RIP brothers and happy to hear you have been located
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SFC Joseph Bosley
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Glad to see these men are finally returning home. Special thanks need to go out to the people that made it possible. Keep up the good work!
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"Bodies of WWII US Marines recovered in Pacific"
LTC John Shaw
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Heart breaking to hear that we are finding mass casualty remains 70 years after the War ended!
I can't imagine the pain the families have gone through.
RIP my brothers in arms.
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SSG John Erny
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Until they come home they are still serving in spirit.
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Capt Lance Gallardo
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It is hard to believe we left so many Marines on Tarawa, including a Medal of Honor recipient, Lieutenant Alexander Bonnyman, Jr.. His story is pretty incredible. He enlisted as a PVT in the Marines in July 1942 despite having two years of college at Princeton University, and was field promoted to 2nd Lt, and then 1st Lt. His combat initiative on Tarawa is legendary. He was also pretty old at 33 (compared to most of the young men he fought with who were in their early twenties or late teens), years when he died on 22 November 1943, the third and last day of fighting on Tarawa, before the island was secured. He also saw some combat in Guadalcanal, near the end of the campaign.
http://www.mcu.usmc.mil/historydivision/Pages/Who%27s%20Who/A-C/Bonnyman_A.aspx
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Capt Lance Gallardo
Capt Lance Gallardo
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"At the outbreak of the war, Bonnyman was exempt from any military obligation due to his age and role in running a company producing strategically vital material for the war effort. Nevertheless, he enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps as a private at Phoenix, Arizona. Bonnyman received his recruit training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, California." Bonnyman could have played it safe at home with his draft exemption due to age and Role ion industry, instead he felt compelled to ENLIST in the Marine Corps. His character was set and developed before he was awarded the Medal of honor for his actions on Tarawa on November 1943. "Bloody Tarawa" is what the Marines still call the three day fight for the Battle for Tarawa that cost the Marines a thousand Killed in Action.
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Capt Lance Gallardo
Capt Lance Gallardo
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"With the Marines at Tarawa" is generally considered one of the best WWII documentaries that came out of WWII and was shot entirely by embedded US Marine Corps Camera Men during the Battle. It also won an Academy Award in 1945 for best short documentary. You can watch it for free with an Amazon Prime Membership or buy the DVD. http://www.amazon.com/With-Marines-Tarawa-Louis-Hayward/dp/B000R9AKKE
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Capt Lance Gallardo
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My mother's father John V. Gallardo is still buried in the Philippines, KIA March 14th, 1945. Earl O Brake of Alabama was killed with him repelling a Jap Dawn banzai Attack. Earl was awarded the DSC Posthumously.
http://valor.militarytimes.com/recipient.php?recipientid=6498 All families of the fallen should have the type of closure that our families had. The families never really get over their loss of their love one. I know that neither Earl's family in Alabama or my family has ever really stopped missing a son, a father, a grandfather, or a brother. Earl's family reached out to my family 65 years after their deaths and it was very special. Southern families don't forget their war dead, whether they are Confederate dead from the Civil War or WWI or WWII or Korea, Vietnam, and now Afghanistan and Iraq. This is something my family found out when Earl's niece presented my family a ringed binder full of first-hand accounts of the men in their platoon and company who knew Earl and my grandfather and how they met their end defending their company's strong point, armed with two BARS and grenades. The platoon commander put two of his best men in that fighting hole, because he knew if the Japs attacked, that is where the company defensive perimeter would get hit first and hardest. He needed two men who would not run, but would fight until they could not fight anymore. He was right. Both men died where they were placed and accounted for close to a hundred dead Japs. Earl's family spent 60 years trying to get Earl upgrade to the Medal of Honor. No matter. We know what my grandfather and Earl did, that day in the jungle hills outside of Manila.
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Capt Lance Gallardo
Capt Lance Gallardo
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Just trying to honor the memory of my dead Grandfather. Semper Fidelis to you as well GySgt Belanger!
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SFC Teaching Staff
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There should be no time limit on "what's right" with our servicemen and women that sacrificed their lives in the line of duty. If we have the means, no question!
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Cpl Wesley Nail
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This is amazing. Bring our fallen brothers and our hero's home. My grandfather fought on Iwo Jima and if he would been lost there, I would thank God for his return. Now finally, maybe the families can have some closure. God Bless and Semper Fi
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SFC Jim Ruether
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They deserve to rest in America, the country they were defending when they died in battle!
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