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NOW-PUBLIC MILITARY FILES REVEAL PRIVATE LIVES --
"I love what I do. Helping somebody learn about a
relative's
information they didn't know before is really a
service."

Gretchen Shoemaker works on papers
she says were probably "burned, then wet, then squished, then
shoveled off the roof." A fire on July 12, 1973, ruined 80% of
records for Army personnel discharged between Nov. 1, 1912, and Jan.
1, 1960, and 75% of Air Force records from Sept. 25, 1947, to Jan.
1, 1964. (photo: David Kennedy for USA TODAY) |
For more about military records, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits
.org/sessearch.php?q=military+records&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.usatoday.com
/news/nation/2007-11-06-veterans-records_N.htm
Story below:
Learn
More about how to get a VA Loan today -- Click Here

-------------------------
Now-public military files reveal private lives
By Andrea Stone
USA TODAY
OVERLAND, Mo. — This was the moment Frank Smith
had waited for since he was 12 and first held his great-uncle's World War
II Purple Heart. Finally, he would get a look at the Navy file of Glen
Ray, a radio operator killed at 22 when his patrol plane was shot down by
the Japanese over the Aleutian Islands in 1942.
Smith, a military memorabilia collector, had driven more than 2,100 miles
from his home in Edmonds, Wash., to the federal government's massive
military personnel records repository in this St. Louis suburb. Now, as he
carefully unfolded the first paper in the brown folder, he smiled. It was
Ray's application for enlistment. The date was Oct. 14, 1940.
"My grandfather always told me he joined the day after Pearl Harbor" in
December 1941, said Smith, 39, who grew up inspired by Ray's patriotism. A
few days earlier, he had recalled the family lore that Ray joined the Navy
as "the right and noble thing to do. I found that so unlike the generation
I was in."
Yet next to Ray's fingerprints was his real reason for enlisting. The high
school dropout wrote that he wanted "to learn a trade."
The four words were clear. "I was growing up with a fib," Smith said.
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If his family's history wasn't all it had seemed,
Smith wasn't disappointed Monday as he became one of the first people to
look through a few of the 6-million-plus military personnel files of those
who served before 1946 that were made public last week by the National
Archives. Ray's documents had been untouched by a devastating fire in 1973
that damaged or destroyed 18 million Army and Air Force files.
Part of the second phase
The newly released records are a treasure trove for veterans' families,
historians and genealogists. They arrive as the nation prepares to observe
Veterans Day on Sunday and amid renewed interest about World War II
sparked by filmmaker Ken Burns' recent documentary The War. Most of the
opened files are from World War II, although some date to 1885.
They are part of the second phase of a program to gradually open more than
57 million individual military files stored here at the National Personnel
Records Center, the largest National Archives facility outside the
Washington, D.C., area. In June 2005, the agency released 1.2 million
records for Navy and Marine Corps veterans who served from 1885 to 1939.
Privacy concerns had kept the files sealed except to veterans, their
immediate families or historians and others with special permission. A
2004 agreement with the Pentagon allows the National Archives to release
personnel files to anyone 62 years after a servicemember leaves the
military.
The last paper files will be released in 2067, 62 years after the Air
Force became the last military service to digitize its records.
The personnel files, among 1.5 million boxes that would stretch nearly
from New York to Pittsburgh if lined up end to end, contain all the
bureaucratic trappings of military service. There are unit assignments,
evaluations, awards and decorations, education and training records,
physical exams, disciplinary actions and even photos and official
correspondence.
Sorting through the 'B files'
The records "provide the spine for military history in the United States,"
says historian Douglas Brinkley. He used records here for a book on
President Carter, who gave him permission to see his Navy files. "It's
people's history. … All sorts of amazing facts leap out from an average
GI's record."
Take the file of 2nd Lt. Robert Andrino of Monterey Park, Calif., an Army
Air Corps pilot shot down over Normandy, France, in August 1944. Tucked
amid dozens of pages singed by fire is a claim letter from his widow on a
$10,000 insurance policy. It notes that Andrino originally wanted his
mother to receive $9,000 in the event of his death and his wife just
$1,000. But after learning his wife was pregnant in June 1944, he made her
his sole beneficiary. Andrino died two months later. He never met his
child.
"You see all sorts of things," says Ashley McLendon, 29, a preservation
technician restoring Andrino's file. She's been surprised at the number of
soldiers who deserted during training.
"It makes you realize that people were people back then," she says. "You
look at World War II in such a romanticized light. People didn't want to
fight in that war either. They were just scared."
McLendon is one of 15 technicians who try to restore "B files" — or burnt
files — such as Andrino's that were on the top floor of the drab green and
gray records center here when the fire broke out shortly after midnight on
July 12, 1973. The flames and the millions of gallons of water used to put
them out destroyed 80% of the records for Army personnel discharged
between Nov. 1, 1912, and Jan. 1, 1960, and 75% of Air Force discharge
records from Sept. 25, 1947, to Jan. 1, 1964.
It was the biggest loss of archival material in U.S. history.
Used to verify military service
The center receives 1 million requests a year from veterans or their
families seeking verification of service for medical care or benefits. Of
those, 150,000 involve records that were stored on the ruined sixth floor
of the now five-story building. As many as 300 requests a day seek proof
of service so a loved one can be buried in a veterans cemetery.
Sometimes, that proof is inside one of 147,000 boxes from the fire area
that are now kept in the climate-controlled basement of the center. Often,
it is not.
Workers have used muster rolls and unit reports from the Pentagon, medical
and benefit records from the Department of Veterans Affairs, state
archives and other sources to verify military service for 6.5 million
veterans or their families when records were missing. Since the
preservation lab opened here in 2002, previously unusable records have
been salvaged. Still, finding records is often a matter of luck.
This reporter's request for the records of relatives who served in World
War II turned up mixed results. Nothing was found for my father or an
uncle, presumably because their files were lost to fire.
Archivists did find what spokeswoman Deborah Hilton called "an exceptional
record for a burn file" for my mother's cousin, Philip Artin. There, on
brittle pages scarred by water stains and pitted with rusty staple holes,
was not the mild-mannered Bronx grocer I knew before he died in 1977.
There was a married man whose first taste of combat came as an Army ammo
carrier during the bloody Battle of the Bulge. He fought only four days
before being captured by German troops.
There is the "statement surrounding disappearance of missing personnel"
describing how his unit, Company C of the 157th Infantry, moved to take a
hill near Lichtenberg, France, and was "probably captured" on Jan. 17,
1945. There is a copy of a Feb. 8 letter from the Army adjutant general to
his wife, Rose, reporting him missing in action and extending "my
heartfelt sympathy during this period of uncertainty." There is even a
German POW card with faded red ink from Stalag 11B Fallingbostel, the
Prussian work camp where the 26-year-old was imprisoned until freed on
April 30. Artin's story continues with a request for a combat
infantryman's badge and a 1950 claim for dental care at a VA facility.
For preservation technician Gretchen Shoemaker, 33, the records mean
others could "look past the forms and see into the man's life." They also
remind her that her own grandfather had fought in the Battle of the Bulge
but that his service records burned in the fire.
As brimming as Artin's folder was, Shoemaker turns to a more typical file
on her workstation. "This poor gentleman has this," she says, pointing to
a charred, mangled brick of fused paper belonging to a soldier named Ralph
Lomma. "This is a result of being burned, then wet, then squished, then
shoveled off the roof," she says.
Still, Shoemaker goes to work. She gently wields a small surgical vacuum
to suck up dried mold. She uses a paint brush and sponge to remove soot.
Then, using a micro spatula, she gingerly unfolds and separates the melded
pages.
"It's coming," she says as the fragile pages reveal Lomma was from
Scranton, Pa., and enlisted at 18 with an eighth-grade education. And that
was about all that could be learned. "This whole seam is burned,"
Shoemaker says. "We can't mend a burn like this."
Nevertheless, the lab workers aren't easily deterred. Documents warped and
made brittle by water damage are placed in humidifying bins to become more
supple, then pressed to straighten. Pages that have flaked to pieces are
reassembled on rice paper with special adhesives. Fire-blackened papers
are scanned onto a computer and digitally enhanced to bring out writing
invisible to the naked eye.
"I love what I do," Shoemaker says. "Helping somebody learn about a
relative's information they didn't know before is really a service."
Portrait of a sailor
Smith learned a lot about his great-uncle Ray as he pored over his record.
He was an "average student" who earned a grade of 3.06 out of 4 at Navy
radio operator school. He was "a model sailor," according to conduct
reports.
From a tiny photo negative, Smith discovered a "puffy"-haired recruit
posed in front of a height chart that pegged him at 6-feet, 1-inch. A pink
carbon copy of a death certificate said Ray weighed 146 pounds. "I wish I
had his build," said Smith, an unemployed banker who planned to stay here
until Thanksgiving to research 300 military records for himself and
others. "A string bean."
Smith even solved the family mystery of the missing Purple Heart letter.
For more than 20 years he had searched for the document that came with the
medal engraved with his great-uncle's name. He found it in Ray's personnel
folder. His grandfather had mistakenly sent it back to the Navy with a
return receipt Smith found in the file.
With the certainty that thousands of others may soon feel as they plumb
the depths of the records here, Smith declared quietly, "This explains
everything."
HOW TO OBTAIN RECORDS
The National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis has opened the military
records of more than 6 million servicemembers who were discharged or who
retired or died before 1946.
� To view original records, visit the center in person; call ahead to
check whether records are intact. For an appointment, call 314-801-0850.
� To obtain copies of records, write to the center at 9700 Page Ave., St.
Louis, Mo., 63132, or fax a request to 314-801-9195. Requests also may be
submitted online at www.vetrecs.archives.gov . There may be a charge for
copies.
Source: National Archives and Records Administration
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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