Remains of a U.S. Marine who was wounded on the Pacific Ocean island of Saipan during World War II have been identified and he will be buried in his hometown of Nashville, Tennessee, officials said.
Marine Corps Reserve Cpl. William R. Ragsdale, 23, is scheduled to be buried Aug. 6 in Nashville, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency said in a news release Friday.
Ragsdale was a member of Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 24th Marine Regiment, 4th Marine Division during the battle on Saipan in June 1944, the agency said.
Ragsdale was first reported as wounded in action. He was unable to be found during the chaos surrounding the battle and its aftermath. His status was changed to missing in action, and then later deceased, the agency said.
RELATED
Only six other private citizens have received the honor: civil rights icon Rosa Parks, the Rev. Billy Graham and four Capitol police officers.
Investigators searched on Saipan but could not find Ragsdale’s remains. He was declared nonrecoverable in September 1949.
Later, remains designated as Unknown X-6, 27th Infantry Division Cemetery, were recovered from Saipan and buried in the Philippines. Those remains were sent in 2020 to a Hawaii laboratory for dental, anthropological and DNA analysis,
The remains were found to be Ragsdale’s and he was officially accounted for in April, the agency said.
No U.S. troops or civilians were harmed in the operation.
The conspiracies about aliens out of Area 51 began more than 75 years ago.
Department leaders say the are confident the increases won't lead to longer wait times for appointments.
An airlift team quickly and successfully transported a premature baby from Kuwait to Germany for emergency medical care.
Northrop is wary of inflation and said more companies are pushing back on fixed-price contracts.
The National Institute for Innovation and Technology helps veterans find careers in high-tech fields such as semiconductors and nanotechnology.
Women are still in in the vast minority in the military, but experts say they are an important recruiting pool.
Department officials had set a goal of housing at least 38,000 veterans in need in 2022. They exceeded it.
"DoD’s implementation of this benefit is inconsistent with congressional intent," said one military family advocate.
On this episode of The Spouse Angle podcast, a bronze statue will be the first public memorial to honor the advocacy and sacrifices of military spouses.
Load More