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Messages - ChiefRickStone
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« on: November 21, 2025, 10:23:05 am »
On the 82nd anniversary of the Battle of Tarawa the following update is presented by the Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation ( www.ChiefRickStone.com): Number of missing ("Unaccounted For") from Tarawa: 358
Number of Tarawa "Unknowns" recovered by DPAA but not yet identified: 49
Number of Tarawa missing identified by DPAA in 2025: 0VETERAN'S DAY 2025 UPDATE: WHAT THE CHIEF RICK STONE AND FAMILY CHARITABLE FOUNDATION HAS ACCOMPLISHED 803 Family Reports (Most recent: 2nd Lieutenant John Shores) Number of comprehensive "Family Reports" prepared upon request by the family members of missing American servicemen and servicewomen. The purpose of this research is to promote the education of family members and others by aiding in the recovery, identification, and return of these missing heroes. __________________________________ HEROES HOME AT LAST 253 MIA's Identified & Returned Home (Most recent: Seaman 1st Class Wayne Newton) Number of missing American servicemen and servicewomen who have been recovered, identified, and returned home to their families after Foundation case investigations were completed on their cases. You may see specific information on MIA cases that were the subject of investigations by researchers and investigators at the Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation and who were recovered and returned home at https://www.chiefrickstone.com/?page_id=53454__________________________________ NO HOME FOR HEROES PODCASTS 87 Podcasts On the Air Most recent: "Why Can't Jack Come Home?": The Case of Tarawa MIA PFC John Cecil DeLillis Number of podcast episodes of "NO HOME FOR HEROES" that have been produced and made available to YOU for FREE access on the internet. To access all available episodes click on https://www.chiefrickstone.com/?page_id=125087 __________________________________ THE POST- JOURNAL NEWSPAPER, STOW, NEW YORK EDITORIAL August 23, 2025: "THANK YOU, RICK STONE, FOR RESTORING JOHN MANN'S NAME" This wonderfully written editorial opinion about just one of our MIA cases, really brought home what YOU can be proud of when you support our efforts. To access a transcription of the newspaper article, click on https://www.chiefrickstone.com/ and scroll down the page.
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« on: November 22, 2024, 12:12:57 pm »
*** FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE *** November 20, 2024 Department of Defense Confirms Identification of Tarawa MIA Whose Case was Investigated by the Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation Eighty-one years ago today, Marine Sergeant Robert Fred Van Heck from Chicago, Illinois was a crew member of an amphibious tractor landing on Tarawa’s Red Beach 1. His craft was designated “Number 13”, which he and another crew member, Corporal Claire Goldtrap, dubbed “Wrabbit Twacks” after a popular 1940’s Bugs Bunny cartoon. They also painted “1/2” after Number 13 to ward off any bad luck. During the first wave on 20 November 1943, “Wrabbit Twacks” was bracketed by Japanese mortar fire and both were killed instantly. CPL Goldtrap and SGT Van Heck were reportedly buried in Cemetery 11 on Tarawa but after the war neither body could be identified. While at the Department of Defense in 2011/2012, retired Police Chief Rick Stone prepared investigative reports on all of Tarawa’s MIAs using the Random Incident Statistical Correlation (RISC) System, which he had created as a member of the Dallas Police Department. Chief Stone discovered that both CPL Goldtrap and SGT Van Heck were “Most Likely Matches” to “Unknowns” buried in Honolulu, Hawaii. In 2017, six years after Chief Stone recommended the Tarawa Unknowns be exhumed and identified, the Department of Defense (DoD) began disinterring the "Unknowns” from Tarawa. The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation continued to investigate both CPL Goldtrap’s and SGT Van Heck cases. The analysis indicated CPL Goldtrap was “Unknown X-277” and SGT Van Heck was “Unknown X-265.” On 1 June 2018, the DoD officially announced CPL Goldtrap’s identification as Unknown X-277. Confirmation of SGT Van Heck’s identification as Unknown X-265 from DoD was received today on the 81st anniversary of his loss. SGT Van Heck finally arrived home to Chicago for his hometown burial last month, almost thirteen years after Chief Stone’s original investigative report on his case. Chief Stone stated: “The crew of Wrabbit Twacks is finally re-united again on American soil after over eight decades of separation from their family and friends. A special thanks to retired Marine SGT Ed Gazel, who recently passed away at age 100 but not before he gave us the clue to finding “Goldy” Goldtrap. Credit also the persistence of our Foundation team who used the same clue to also find SGT Van Heck.” The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation is a non-profit, 501 c 3, private foundation located in Glen Rose, Texas. For more information on this case or the Foundation’s activities, visit the website at www.ChiefRickStone.comThanks goes out to all who worked on this case, including the staff at the National Archives and the FOIA analysts in the Office of the Secretary of Defense who helped acquire research documents for the investigation. And, of course, all who provided financial support for our Foundation’s activities. The Foundation investigations referenced in this release were not accomplished in partnership with the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency. If you are interested in assisting the Foundation’s mission to help bring home our missing American heroes, please go to our web site’s “Make A Difference” link at: www.chiefrickstone.com/?page_id=123644NOTE TO MEDIA: For more information, please contact the public affairs volunteer of the Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation via email to Foundation@ChiefRickStone.com
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« on: November 05, 2024, 10:36:52 am »
*** FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE *** November 5, 2024 The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation Announces It Has Located the Remains of a Missing Medal of Honor Recipient from WWII Marine Corporal Louis James Hauge Jr. was a 20-year-old from Ada, Minnesota when he found himself on a ridge overlooking Wana, Okinawa as a member of C Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marines on 14 May 1945. His posthumous Medal of Honor citation describes his actions on that day: Alert and aggressive during a determined assault against a strongly fortified Japanese hill position, Cpl. Hauge boldly took the initiative when his company's left flank was pinned down under a heavy machine-gun and mortar barrage with resultant severe casualties and, quickly locating the two machine guns which were delivering the uninterrupted stream of enfilade fire, ordered his squad to maintain a covering barrage as he rushed across an exposed area toward the furiously blazing enemy weapons. Although painfully wounded as he charged the first machine gun, he launched a vigorous singlehanded grenade attack, destroyed the entire hostile gun position, and moved relentlessly forward toward the other emplacement despite his wounds and the increasingly heavy Japanese fire. Undaunted by the savage opposition, he again hurled his deadly grenades with unerring aim and succeeded in demolishing the second enemy gun before he fell under the slashing fury of Japanese sniper fire. By his ready grasp of the critical situation and his heroic one-man assault tactics, Cpl. Hauge had eliminated two strategically placed enemy weapons, thereby releasing the besieged troops from an overwhelming volume of hostile fire and enabling his company to advance. His indomitable fighting spirit and decisive valor in the face of almost certain death reflect the highest credit upon Cpl. Hauge and the U.S. Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life in the service of his country.” After the battle, CPL Hauge’s body could not be identified and he was declared “Missing in Action.” The Battle of Okinawa produced almost 50,000 American casualties. There were only 24 Medal of Honor recipients from the battle. Corporal Louis James Hauge Jr. remains the only Medal of Honor recipient missing from the Battle of Okinawa. In September and October 2023, family members of CPL Hauge contacted the Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation requesting an investigation of his case using the Random Incident Statistical Correlation (RISC) System, which retired Police Chief Rick Stone had created as a member of the Dallas Police Department. During the Foundation’s investigation, investigators used the Freedom of Information Act to obtain documents and also purchased copies of historical files from the National Archives which indicated that the body of CPL Hauge had been recovered long after his death and buried as an “Unknown” in an American military cemetery. The investigation identified the “Unknown” believed to be CPL Hauge “beyond a reasonable doubt” and located the specific Plot, Row, and Grave number of CPL Hauge’s interment as an “Unknown” in 1950. The Foundation has repeatedly offered to work with the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) in the recovery and identification of CPL Hauge. To date, DPAA has not indicated an agreement to work with the Foundation on bringing CPL Hauge home. Chief Stone stated: “It is inconceivable to me that an American governmental agency would not do everything possible to bring home one of this country’s most heroic of all missing American servicemen…a recipient of the Medal of Honor who was left behind on the field of battle and later buried as an “Unknown.” CPL Hauge has been waiting over eighty years for his name to be restored and returned home to his family.” The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation is a non-profit, 501 c 3, private foundation located in Glen Rose, Texas. For more information on this case or the Foundation’s activities, visit the website at www.ChiefRickStone.comA special thanks goes out to all who worked on this case, acquired research documents for the investigation, or provided financial support for our Foundation’s activities.
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« on: June 11, 2024, 09:12:03 am »
*** FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE *** June 6, 2024 Foundation’s “NO HOME FOR HEROES” Podcasts Surpass 10,000 Downloads "NO HOME FOR HEROES" explores history's military mysteries regarding lost service men and women who were classified as "Missing In Action.” Each podcast features information from the actual investigative case files of the Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation who is committed to providing information to the families of America's long forgotten MIA's. For the past twelve years, thousands of supporters have followed the Foundation’s investigations into missing American service members probably know we have now completed over 700 comprehensive case reports requested by the families of these MIA’s…all at absolutely no cost to the families and with absolutely no government funding. The incredible stories to be found in each case often go untold outside a very small group but in 2019, the Foundation began producing a series of trademarked podcast episodes of “NO HOME FOR HEROES - History’s Military Mysteries: Missing In Action.” Many of the episodes feature MIAs from the Battle of Tarawa. And, after a yearlong absence while our Founder was on assignment with United States Navy in 2020, the Foundation renewed production with all new episodes of “NO HOME FOR HEROES” in 2021. We have just been informed by our hosting platform that over 10,000 of the current 87 episodes have been downloaded worldwide, including in SIXTY-THREE (63) foreign countries! Fifty (50) episodes that have been downloaded over 100 times each including Episode 29: A Cook Who Refused to be Left Behind (which has 230 downloads and prompted a Sacramento news story which was a 2020 Edward R. Murrow Award Winner), Episode 36: Love and Loss in the South Pacific now has OVER 335 downloads! Episode 67: A Pearl Harbor Mystery That Had Even the Navy Confused now has OVER 225 downloads! Episode 47: MIA Ghosts Trapped On the Bottom of Pearl Harbor has OVER 200 downloads? ...and, our all time most popular production is: Episode 70: Lost At Sea for Over 75 Years? No, Not Really with almost 400 downloads!!!! Listeners may access “NO HOME FOR HEROES” on the Foundation’s website at: www.ChiefRickStone.com…or platforms such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Music Play, Blubrry, Stitcher, iHeart Radio, or just about any other favorite podcast site. The episodes are FREE and contain NO advertising or commercials. The Foundation receives absolutely no financial compensation from the broadcasts. The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation is a private non-profit charitable foundation whose mission, in part, is to promote education by providing information to the family members of missing American servicemen and service women. Rick Stone is a retired Dallas Police Commander and Chief of Police in Wichita, Kansas and Hollywood, Florida. A Medal of Valor recipient with the Dallas, Texas Police Department and former national “Law Enforcement Officer of the Year” as Police Chief in Wichita, Chief Stone previously served as the Deputy Chief of the World War II Research and Investigation Branch at the U.S. Department of Defense’s Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC) in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii and the Chief, Naval Historian at the U.S. Navy’s Naval History and Heritage Command on the Washington Navy Yard. He currently serves as the Chairman, Board of Directors, for the Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation.
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« on: January 13, 2024, 01:46:32 pm »
After five years, the Department of Defense finally acted on Chief Rick Stone's original recommendations ,while a member of DoD, and began exhumation of the Tarawa "Unknowns" from the Punchbowl on 2 October 2016. Disinterment of the Tarawa Unknowns was completed on 27 March 2017. To date, 49 Unknowns have been identified from the Punchbowl and 54 sets of remains recovered from the Punchbowl are stored in cardboard boxes on shelves at the DPAA Laboratory awaiting identification.
The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation was informed in December 2023 that another one of the Tarawa "Unknowns" from the Punchbowl Cemetery, whose case we investigated, has been identified by the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory. The identity of the "Unknown" is not being released pending official notification of the family by DPAA. This can take more months or even years to accomplish.
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« on: November 26, 2023, 08:08:46 pm »
Source: DPAA Website TOTAL NUMBER OF WORLD WAR II IDENTIFICATIONS 47 TOTAL NUMBER OF TARAWA IDENTIFICATIONS 1 TOTAL AMOUNT OF GOVERNMENT FUNDING $150,000,000 to $185,000,000 *************************************************** FOUNDATION UPDATE: NOVEMBER 20, 2022 thru NOVEMBER 20, 2023 Source: The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation www.ChiefRickStone.comTOTAL NUMBER OF TARAWA MIAs REMAINING 368 TOTAL NUMBER OF MIA INVESTIGATIVE REPORTS PROVIDED TO FAMILIES 105 TOTAL AMOUNT OF GOVERNMENT FUNDING $0
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« on: July 02, 2022, 08:50:52 am »
In honor of Independence Day, a special encore presentation of Episode 26 of NO HOME FOR HEROES - History's Military Mysteries: Missing In Action is now available at your favorite podcast site and featured on TuneIn Radio. This is just one of many Tarawa episodes and is titled "A MIA Born On the Fourth of July" as hosted by Chief Rick Stone. Episode 26 is now posted at: https://content.blubrry.com/nohomeforheroes/Episode_26.mp3For a full list of all 85 episodes of NO HOME FOR HEROES: https://blubrry.com/nohomeforheroes/This episode of NO HOME FOR HEROES and many more episodes are available FOR FREE on Apple podcasts or any other popular platform where you like to listen to podcasts or on the web site at ChiefRickStone.com Enjoy!
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« on: March 06, 2022, 10:41:28 am »
Tennessee Marine killed in WWII to be laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery BY BEN BENTON • CHATTANOOGA TIMES FREE PRESS, TENN. • MARCH 5, 2022 World War II veteran Marine Corps Cpl. Thomas H. Cooper’s remains were accounted for on Aug. 9, 2019, by the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency after being identified from among remains of 94 Tarawa unknowns disinterred from the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. World War II veteran Marine Corps Cpl. Thomas H. Cooper’s remains were accounted for on Aug. 9, 2019, by the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency after being identified from among remains of 94 Tarawa unknowns disinterred from the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific. (DPAA)
(Tribune News Service) — Chattanooga resident and Marine Corps Cpl. Thomas H. Cooper’s journey from a World War II battlefield cemetery on a tiny island in the Pacific Ocean back to his family in the U.S. will end with his burial with full honors at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia on Thursday.
His family called him by his middle name, Harley, and many of his relatives will come together at Arlington to honor him, some meeting each other for the first time.
Cooper was killed at 22 in the Central Pacific in November 1943, a member of Company A, 2nd Amphibious Tractor Battalion, 2nd Marine Division, Fleet Marine Force, which landed against stiff Japanese resistance on the small island of Betio in the Tarawa Atoll of the Gilbert Islands, according to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency.
Over several days more than 1,000 marines and sailors were killed, including Cooper, and more than 2,000 were wounded in what was deemed a U.S. military success, according to the agency.
Cooper’s family now is scattered and disconnected, and those who knew the young corporal have passed away.
Daughter
To Cooper’s daughter — Laguna Woods, California, resident Virginia Cooper Frogel — her father is a mystery, someone she never met. The upcoming service at Arlington is a source of uncertainty for her.
“It’ll be very meaningful for my kids,” Frogel said Tuesday telephone interview. “I think that it’s closure and history, family history, and I think it’s important to them to know that a member of our family lost his life in a war that happened before I was born and way, way before they were born.”
As for herself, she said, “it’s kind of an emotional upheaval because I never knew my father. He was killed in November and I was born in March, so I really had no ties.
“I didn’t know him, I didn’t know any stories about him, my mother knew very little about him,” she said.
It’s a loss that cuts deeply, even 78 years later.
“I have a lot of anger about war,” Frogel said.
War takes so much from everyone, it seems an unfair burden on humanity, she said.
“I just feel like war shouldn’t happen and here we’ve got another one in the Ukraine right now,” she said. “I feel for all the families who have lost their loved ones to war.”
Granddaughter
The pandemic created a hitch in plans in 2020 and led to the cancellation of a couple of funeral dates, Rachel Frogel Lukens, 45, of San Diego, California, said Wednesday in a telephone interview. Lukens was born in Chattanooga and is Cooper’s granddaughter.
She said she and her brother, Jason Frogel, pressed for the service at Arlington.
“When the news arrived, I was ready to get on the plane for Chattanooga to try to track down all these people I really have never known about before, then it all came to a screeching halt as everything shut down with the pandemic,” Lukens said. “I hadn’t really revisited anything until Arlington gave us a new date, and it all came together rather quickly. And now it’s like, OK, here it’s finally happening.”
As tentative plans were made since 2020, Lukens enjoyed reconnecting with family in Tennessee, she said.
“It’s been nice. My second cousin, Kim McCormick, and I have been communicating over the past couple of years. That’s been a treat,” she said. “I’m really excited to meet her.”
Half-brother
Like Frogel, Cooper’s only living sibling, a half-brother, has no memories of Harley Cooper because of the timing of his birth.
“I was a baby when he was alive, so I didn’t really know him,” the corporal’s half-brother, Apison, Tennessee, resident Larry Cooper said Wednesday in a telephone interview.
Larry Cooper remembers his mother and father talking some about the brother who never came home, but it’s a distant, far away memory.
“I don’t remember a lot,” the 82-year-old said.
But Larry Cooper said the family left behind by his half-brother was well-known in East Chattanooga in the middle of the last century.
“My father owned a restaurant in Chattanooga for years before he sold it. It was called ‘Mickey’s Place.’ It was at Fourth Avenue and 23rd,” he said. The place is now the Hunan Wok.
Larry Cooper said the father rarely spoke of the missing son, but the weight of not knowing what happened to him was apparent.
“I know the family cared about him, and he was missed,” he said.
Thursday’s service at Arlington will be a fitting farewell, he said, and he wished he could attend.
Cooper’s death, 1943
Cooper was born Nov. 2, 1921, in Omaha, Nebraska. His remains were accounted for on Aug. 9, 2019, by the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency after being identified from among remains of 94 Tarawa unknowns disinterred from the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu, according to a statement the agency released in February 2020.
Cooper enlisted in Nashville on Sept. 18, 1940, according to the East Tennessee Veterans Memorial Association. He died in “an undisclosed theater of operations,” according to his death notice in the Dec. 25, 1943, edition of the Chattanooga News-Free Press.
The confirmation of his death, published on the front page on Jan. 11, 1944, listed the family’s home in the 2600 block of East 46th Street in Chattanooga and noted Cooper once worked at Richmond Hosiery Mill.
He was the son of Thomas G. and Alline Patterson Cooper and the brother of Katherine Brogden, Betty Sue Huckabee, Mickey and Jerry Cooper, all of Chattanooga, and Bobby Cooper, who at the time was serving in the U.S. Navy, the notice states. He also was survived by half-brother Larry Cooper.
Harley Cooper and his wife, Rachel Campbell Cooper, who was from Wellington, New Zealand, met at a dance at the Jewish Community Center there while he was on a stopover, according to Frogel.
Sister-in-law
Ringgold, Georgia, resident Marjorie Cooper, 87, who was married to Harley Cooper’s younger brother, Jerry, said she remembers how the missing brother weighed on the family he left behind.
“They all stressed over it, of course, and talked about it through the years, but they didn’t have that much time with him either; he was so young when he went in,” she said. “I know it grieved his father really bad.”
At one point, she remembered, there was a family story of military officials contacting the Coopers to offer some kind of “remains” but there was no certainty at all of who it really was, she said. The family wasn’t interested, she said. It had to be certain.
It was a phone call from a cousin of the Cooper brothers that changed everything.
“His cousin Larry Ward is the one that really got it going,” she said. “Jerry got a phone call from him and they were talking constantly and Larry was constantly getting this paperwork, forwarding on to Jerry.”
The government officials wanted DNA.
“Jerry was ready to do that,” she said. “He gave the DNA, and that’s when they said it was a match.”
Sadly, Jerry Cooper died in 2015 before his older brother was officially accounted for.
Cousin provides link
Ward, 79, who lives in Colorado, said by phone on Friday that a military family group called Chief Rick Stone & Family Foundation put him in touch with Marine Corps officials in Washington, D.C., several years back. The officials said they thought they had identified a family member’s remains in Hawaii. He knew there were family members in the Chattanooga area, so he called them.
“Harley at the time had one full brother, Jerry,” Ward recalled. “I told Jerry, if he would, they needed his DNA, and I sent mine in.”
Ward said that was the last he heard from the Marine Corps but he was glad to learn later that he’d help make the link.
It’s been decades since Ward and the family’s “ Chattanooga group,” as he referred to it, had been together.
“I met that group in 1957 or ‘58 when we took a trip down from Colorado to Florida to see Uncle Grady, my grandmother’s brother, and that’s when I met the group in and around Chattanooga,” Ward said. “Then Larry Cooper made a trip to Colorado to visit us. I want to say that was in the 1980s or early-’90s.”
Ward said he is happy the service at Arlington will reunite some of the family, though he won’t be there.
More to the story
Cooper was Nashville resident Kim McCormick’s great uncle, she said Tuesday in a telephone interview. She’s excited to meet some her family and hopes to catch up.
“I knew Harley Cooper’s father, he was my great-grandfather, and he died when I was little. He kept looking for [Harley] for decades. I know mother said he’d talk about Harley all the time,” McCormick said, noting there were family ties all around Chattanooga in those days.
She said Mickey Cooper’s restaurant, “Mickey’s Place” — which existed in the years after Cooper was killed — was eventually sold to become the iconic “ Holder’s Restaurant,” owned for more than 30 years by George Holder, who died in 2010.
McCormick said she wishes Jerry Cooper was alive to see his brother honored at Arlington.
Some other gaps and details in Cooper’s history were filled by research performed by New Yorker Geoffrey Roecker, who has an online site dedicated to U.S. Marines missing in action and their stories. The site, missingmarines.com, details some portions of Cooper’s life and service.
According to Roecker’s research, Cooper, his older sister Katherine and his parents moved frequently early on, first living in Georgia and then in Tennessee. Roecker used military records, National Archives and talked to family members when the identification was made in 2020.
Once enlisted, Cooper was sent to Parris Island for training, then to the Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Florida, but instead of flight school, Cooper “worked as a specialist carpenter and painter, feet planted squarely on the ground,” Roecker wrote.
“In late 1941, around the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Cooper was transferred to Dunedin, Florida, for training as an amphibian tractor crewman,” Roecker wrote. “He first learned the craft of a gunner, but showed some mechanical aptitude and in January 1942 was promoted to corporal and, possibly, reassigned as a driver. Corporal Cooper’s Company A would ship overseas in July 1942 and be among the first ‘alligator’ Marines to see combat during the Guadalcanal landings the following month.”
Roecker also uncovered some details about Cooper’s romance that followed the end of that fighting.
“When the campaign ended, they traveled to New Zealand for training, rest and recreation. Many Marines fell for the local ‘Kiwi’ girls, and Cooper was no exception,” Roecker wrote. “He married his girlfriend in 1943.”
Science brings Cooper home
In November 1943, Cooper was fighting on the small island of Betio in the Tarawa Atoll in an attempt to secure the island, according to the accounting agency. The Japanese were virtually annihilated in the fighting.
Despite the heavy casualties suffered, military success in the battle of Tarawa was considered a huge victory for the U.S. because the Gilbert Islands provided the Pacific Fleet a platform for launching assaults on the Marshall and Caroline islands, advancing their Central Pacific Campaign against Japan, according to agency officials.
In the immediate aftermath of the fighting on Tarawa, officials said, U.S. service members who died in the battle were buried in a number of battlefield cemeteries on the island.
The 604th Quartermaster Graves Registration Company conducted remains recovery operations on Betio between 1946 and 1947, but Cooper’s remains were not identified then, officials said.
In March 1980, the Central Identification Laboratory, a predecessor to the accounting agency, sent officials to Betio Island to receive skeletal remains recovered during a construction project, officials said. Of the three sets recovered, two were identified.
The third was declared unidentifiable and buried in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu. Cooper lay unaccounted for again, but his brother’s DNA would finally come into play.
In 2016, the accounting agency disinterred the remains of 94 Tarawa unknowns from the Honolulu cemetery for identification. The remains were sent to a laboratory for analysis, officials said. In 2019, advances in forensic techniques led to the identification of that third set of remains as Cooper.
Arlington
Lukens said she hasn’t attended a military funeral but sought out some videos online after her children asked what the service would be like.
“I definitely got choked up just watching any footage that we saw, even not having a connection to the person,” she said. “I can’t even fathom what it’s going to feel like to know that we’re actually connected to this person that’s being honored.”
Lukens said her mom — Harley Cooper’s only daughter — has the courage to go to Arlington to face the past.
“My mom is definitely a very stoic person and has been my whole life,” she said. “She’s very upbeat and positive and doesn’t want to focus on emotional things. I think this is going to kind of force her to look into that hole in her life.”
Cooper’s service at Arlington is set for 10:30 a.m. Thursday.
___
(c)2022 the Chattanooga Times/Free Press (Chattanooga, Tenn.)
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