06-15-2009, 09:46
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#1
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Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: The Nam
Posts: 777
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Korean War: SFC Lincoln C. May finally laid to rest!
Rest in Peace, SFC May. Thank you for your service.
Quote:
MIA Korean War Veteran's Body Returned After 50 Years
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,526245,00.html
BRISTOL, Conn. —
When the Chinese army surged into Korea shortly before the winter of 1950 in a bid to salvage the communist regime, the first American military unit to feel the brunt of its attack hunkered down in the mountains and fought back with legendary fierceness.
Caught in the hail of bullets and bombs, a Plainville soldier, Sgt. 1st Class Lincoln Clifford May, lay among the mounds of the dead.
Declared missing in action after the Nov. 2, 1950 battle that wiped out most of his unit, May's remains lay somewhere in Unsan, North Korea for the next 43 years.
But in 1993, the North Koreans handed over 208 boxes of bones from U.S. soldiers who perished in that bleak landscape.
Using DNA provided by May's two nephews, Glenn and Cliff Block of Bristol, some of the bones have been identified after all these years by military experts as belonging to the long-dead Plainville soldier.
May will be buried June 26 in a Plainville cemetery where many of the people the 22-year-old once knew are also interred.
"My uncle's finally coming home," said Cliff Block, a Bristol city councilor who was named for his uncle several month's before the Plainville soldier vanished.
Glenn Block said that when he got a phone call months ago informing him that his uncle's body had been found, "I cried like a baby in my office."
Though Glenn Block has only the dimmest recollection of his uncle, he remembered his grandmother, Clara May, kept a framed photograph of her youngest son in his uniform on a table beside her rocking chair until her own death in 1990.
Cliff Block recalled that as a youngster, he would point to the picture and tell his grandmother, "That's me before I died."
Cliff Block said the long saga of his uncle's return makes for "a great story," but also a sad one because "everyone else is dead" for whom it would bring some peace except for him and his brother.
Glenn Block, who served in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War, said he wants a full military funeral for his uncle.
Chief Warrant Officer 2nd Class Peter Coppola, who is assisting the family for the Connecticut National Guard, said that funerals for soldiers whose remains are recovered decades after their deaths are "a rare event" and will be done right.
"This is kind of a chance to make it right," said Glenn Block.
May arrived in Korea in August 1950 with U.S. forces who made a desperate stand to prevent the entire peninsula from being overrun by communist forces.
He was wounded near Pusan by a grenade the following month, Cliff Block said, but recovered enough to join his unit pushing north toward the Chinese border.
According to a newspaper clipping from the old weekly Plainville News, May carried shrapnel in his back as he headed out, sending a letter to his mother insisting he was no longer in danger.
The day before his death, the clipping said, May wrote to his fiancee in New Britain, whom he had planned to marry in October 1950, to say he was going out on "a big push."
That was the last time anyone at home heard from him.
May, called "Cliff" by friends and family, enlisted in the Army in 1948. He became a military police officer and served in Georgia, New Jersey and Massachusetts before getting shipped out to Korea.
After May's death, the Army sent the family his possessions a cap, an MP armband and tiny jackknife. They also sent two medals, a fraction of what he earned. Coppola said he's working on getting the rest.
Glenn Block said he hopes his uncle's story will make people think about the sacrifices that the military can require.
"We're talking about people here who gave all. It's that simple," he said.
The remains of more than 8,000 Korean War soldiers have not yet been recovered, according to the U.S. Department of Defense's office for prisoners of war and missing personnel.
The O'Brien Funeral Home in Bristol is handling the arrangements. A wake is planned but hasn't been finalized. The funeral is scheduled for June 26 at Plainville's West Cemetery.
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I hope I didn't post this in the wrong area.
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A tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny ~ Aesops Fables; The Lamb and the Wolf
Am fear nach gleidh na h-airm san t-sith, cha bhi iad aige 'n am a' chogaidh
"He that keeps not his arms in time of peace will have none in time of war" Old Gaelic
Arms discourage and keep the invader and plunderer in awe, and preserve order in the world as well as property... Horrid mischief would ensue were the law-abiding deprived of the use of them. Thomas Paine
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Saoirse is offline
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06-15-2009, 10:18
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#2
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: NorCal
Posts: 15,370
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Lest we forget - no other country on this planet goes to the lengths we do to resolve and recover our MIA. Welcome home, SFC May...and RIP, Soldier.
Richard's $.02
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“Sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than a whisky bottle in the hand of (another)… There are just some kind of men who – who’re so busy worrying about the next world they’ve never learned to live in this one, and you can look down the street and see the results.” - To Kill A Mockingbird (Atticus Finch)
“Almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.” - Robert Heinlein
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Richard is offline
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06-15-2009, 10:19
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#3
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Quiet Professional (RIP)
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Carriere,Ms.
Posts: 6,922
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RIP, Warrior...............
GB TFS
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I believe that SF is a 'calling' - not too different from the calling missionaries I know received. I knew instantly that it was for me, and that I would do all I could to achieve it. Most others I know in SF experienced something similar. If, as you say, you HAVE searched and read, and you do not KNOW if this is the path for you --- it is not....
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SF is a calling and it requires commitment and dedication that the uninitiated will never understand......
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SFA M-2527, Chapter XXXVII
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greenberetTFS is offline
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06-15-2009, 11:15
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#4
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Northeast
Posts: 150
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RIP, sir.
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Never do anything you wouldn't want to explain to the Paramedics.
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ACE844 is offline
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06-15-2009, 11:48
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#5
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Occupied America....
Posts: 4,740
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Rest in Peace...
Welcome Home.
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"There are more instances of the abridgment of freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations"
James Madison
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Ret10Echo is offline
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06-15-2009, 17:20
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#6
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Area Commander
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Midwest
Posts: 7,134
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Welcome home SFC May, may you Rest in Peace.
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My Heroes wear camouflage.
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Gypsy is offline
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