Another World War II MIA Returns
DPAA has announced the identification and accounting for of the following formerly-missing member of the US military.
From World War II
• 1st. Lt. Leonard R. Farron, 67th Fighter Squadron, 347th Fighter Group, 13th Air Force, US Army Air Forces, was lost on 15 October 1942 on Guadalcanal. He was accounted for on 9 December 2015.
You’re no longer missing, elder brother-in-arms. Our apologies that your return took so long.
You’re home now. Rest in peace.
. . .
Over 73,000 US personnel remain unaccounted for from World War II; over 7,800 US personnel remain unaccounted for from the Korean War; and over 1,600 remain unaccounted for in Southeast Asia (SEA). Comparison of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from recovered remains against mtDNA from a matrilineal descendant can assist in making a positive ID for unidentified remains that have already been recovered, or which may be recovered in the future.
DPAA’s web site now has what appears to be a decent “Contact Us” page. The page doesn’t have instructions concerning who can and cannot submit a mtDNA sample or how to submit one, but the POCs listed there may be able to refer you to someone who can answer that question – or may be able to answer the question themselves. If you think you might possibly qualify, please contact one of those POCs for further information.
If your family lost someone in one of these conflicts and you qualify to submit a mtDNA sample, please arrange to submit one. By doing that you just might help identify the remains of a US service member who’s been repatriated but not yet been identified – as well as a relative of yours, however distant. Or you may help to identify remains to be recovered in the future.
Everybody deserves a proper burial. That’s especially true for those who gave their all while serving this nation.
Category: No Longer Missing
Welcome home
Welcome home, LT.
Rest well.
Welcome home, Lt. Rest in Peace.
Welcome Home…
RIP
Welcome Home Warrior, Rest In Peace.
God bless the men who went to war in inferior aircraft such as the P-39. From a 1941 article…
Full-Blooded Indian Pilot of Fighter Plane TACOiMA, Wash. (UP)—Leonard Farron, a full-blooded Puyallup Indian, has gone on the warpath for Uncle Sam in a speedy fighter plane. Farron, who majored in aero-nautical engineering at the University of Washington, has been commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air force. The lieutenant is a great grandson of A. V. Kauzt, who once served; as a general in the Unfon army. His grandfather, Augustus Kautz, was one of the original 18 iPuyallup Indians to enter the Indian school at Forest Grove, Ore., forerunner of the Chemawa Indian school.
Welcome home.
Rest in Peace you are home Brother.