WORLD WAR II
HONOR LIST
OF DEAD AND MISSING
STATE
OF
NEW YORK
WAR DEPT June 1946
The Honor List of Dead and
Missing for the
State of New York
Is published by the War Department for the information of public officials,
the press, the radio and interested organizations. It contains the latest and
most complete data available on all military personnel who were killed or died,
or became and remained missing, between the President's declaration of unlimited
national emergency on May 27, 1941, and the cut-off date of this report, January
31, 1946, and includes both battle and non-battle dead or missing. The complete
work, of which this volume is a part, contains about 300,000 names of men and
women who gave their lives while serving in the Army of the United
States.
As in any of this scope, errors will occur. Careful checks by the
Casualty Branch of The Adjutant General's Office and by Machine Records Units
have reduced these errors to a minimum, but publication of the preliminary
report at this time makes it inevitable that mistakes and omissions will be
found herein. Use of the most advanced type of tabulating and recording machines
has reduced the factor of human error to a minimum, but errata originally
introduced into the machine records cards will be reflected in the final lists.
To cope with this possibility, all lists have been carefully proof-read after
preparation. It is planned to publish a complete and final list of deaths at
some time in the future, and errors discovered herein will be corrected in that
list.
The STATE OF NEW Y ORK contained 10.04 per cent of the population
of the United States and possessions (excluding the Philippine Islands) is 1940
and contributed 11.09 per cent of the total number who entered the Army. Of
these men and women of NEW YORK who went to war, 2.81 percent failed to return.
This figure represents 10.10 per cent of the Army's total dead and
missing.
The number of missing persons is being reduced daily through
operation of Army Search Teams in all theaters of operations.
Under the
provisions of Public Law 490, 77th Congress, as amended by Public Laws 848, 77th
Congress, and 408, 78th Congress, changes of casualty status are currently being
made. This law and its amendments provide for the payment of pay and allowances
to missing persons, and for the administrative finding of death of those persons
in whose cases there is an absence of presumptive proof of continued existence.
The Secretary of War is empowered by the Congress to make such findings of
death, and the Secretary's findings in such a case is equivalent to a legal
statement that such a person is in fact dead. Wills are probated, insurance
becomes payable, debts are settled and government gratuity benefits are paid on
the basis of the administrative finding of death. Thus it becomes obvious that
such findings must be made only with the greatest of care, if only because of
the legal involvements, not to mention the effects of such findings on
next-of-kin.
Findings of death under Public Law 490 and its amendments
are made in the case of persons when - and only when - there is either
conclusive proof that the person is dead or equally overwhelming evidence that
under the circumstances the person could not have remained alive. These findings
are made only after review and after a lapse of at least one year from time of
disappearance.
Most of the persons listed herein as missing disappeared
less than a year prior to January 31, 1946, the cut-off date mentioned above. As
time passes the fate of some of these missing will become known and others will
be declared dead in the absence of hope that they are living. A few - too small
a number to be considered as a percentage of the missing - fall into a third
category: persons who intentionally deserted the service and are bending every
effort to avoid repatriation. Cases of this type have been discovered in the
past but the number of these cases is exceedingly small.
The physical
search for missing persons, which went on all during the war, has been expanded
and extended since the collapse of enemy resistance. Experts in all fields of
investigation and identification have been sent into areas where missing persons
were last seen. Through conferences with local officials and clergymen and by
means of checks of rosters and other military lists, the bodies of missing
persons are being recovered and identified daily. Though the loss of official
records, as at Corregidor in 1942 and during the Ardennes counteroffensive of
1944-45, has increased the difficulties encountered by the search teams, the
scope of the teams' work has been so broad in the past eight months (in the case
of Japan) to one year (in Germany) that the War Department is reluctant to hold
out hope to next of kin that any missing personnel are still alive.
No
civilians are included in this report. Red Cross personnel and other civilians
serving with the Army became casualties during the War, but procedure for
reporting civilian personnel differs from that for reporting military
individuals.
The following pages show a breakdown by counties and types
of casualties, followed by a breakdown alphabetically by counties, the counties
themselves being listed in alphabetical order.
In the preparation of
these lists, it was necessary to establish a set of criteria on which the proper
location of each individual's name would be determined. The following procedure
was set up:
(1) If an individual gave an address as his home when he
entered the Army, his name is listed in the county in which this address was
located.
(2) If he gave no home address, but designated a beneficiary or next
of kin either of whom must be a relative in limited degrees of kinship - or in
the absence of relatives in an emergency addressee who may be a friend, his name
will appare in the county in which the address of the beneficiary, next of kin
or emergency addressee is located.
(3) If neither home nor emergency address
was given (this was the case in rare instances where aliens were without family
or residence in this country) the county of the draft board of origin is the one
in which he is listed.
(4) In the case of certain Regular Army personnel who
moved their homes from place to place according to the exigencies of the
service, the only address available is "The Adjutant General," and these
personnel will be listed in the District of Columbia booklet.
(5) A very few
cases exist in which none of these four criteria obtains. It is impossible to
determine the county in these cases and such individuals are listed in some
state volumes under "State at Large," a listing following the last county
listing in the book. No instances have been found wherein it is impossible to
locate a person as to state except as mentioned in (4) above.
The lists
which follow contain information as to individuals in the following order: Name,
Army serial number, grade and status of casualty. A word of explanation of
methods of listing and symbols used follows:
NAME: because of
standardized usage for names in the Army, some individuals listed herein may not
be shown under the name by which they were called in civilian life. For
instance, a man listed herein as "Smith, William P." may have been known to his
friends as "Paul Smith" because in civilian life he did not choose to use the
name "William." In Army usage the first name is used in full and other given
names follow in order as initials. Names prefixed with "Mc" are listed between
names beginning "Ma" and those beginning "Me," and similarly names beginning
"Mac" will be found after "Mabry" and before "Madison." Because of a peculiarity
of the machines used in these tables, prefixed and hyphenated name do not always
appear in strict alphabetical order, and absolute correctness, in the order of
alphabetizing names does not govern after the tenth letter of a name. However,
for all practical purposes the names will be in alphabetical order and cases
will be extremely rare where a name will be more than one or two lines out of
place.
ARMY SERIAL NUMBER: because of the tremendous number of
individuals who has passed through the Army, serial numbers are given to prevent
confusion. Using the name "William Smith" without respect to initials. In
attempting to identify one of those number much confusion could arise, and this
is obviated by the use of a serial number.
Serial numbers are assigned
with great care and according to a set of regulations. Consecutive serial
numbers, for example, are not assigned to twins since this might cause
confusions of identity between two persons with the same birth date and same
general physical characteristics.
Generally speaking, numbers fall into
two broad categories: simple seven or eight digit numbers (in a few cases fewer
digits) for male enlisted personnel, and prefixed serial numbers for other
personnel. Regular Army enlisted men who entered the service before the outset
of Selective Service bear seven-digit or lower serial numbers, usually beginning
with "6" or "7", as 6794426. Men who enlisted in the Army of the United States
have eight-digit numbers beginning with "1", the second digit indicating the
Service Command of origin. For example, the serial number 14066025 would
indicate that the men enlisted in the Army of the United States in the Fourth
Service Command (Southeastern U.S.), Men called into federally recognized
National guard service received eight-digit numbers beginning with "2", the
third digit representing the Service Command: 20107656 indicates a National
Guardsman from New England (First Service Command). Men inducted or enlisted
through Selective Service were given eight-digit numbers beginning with "3" or
"4", the second digit representing the Service Command. The prefixed serial
numbers for other than male enlisted personnel carry a designated letter: 0- (as
in 0-1574257) for male commissioned offices; W- for male Warrant officers; T -
for Flight officers of the Army Air Forces; L - for commissioned officers of the
Women's Army Corps; V- for WAC Warrant Officers; A - for WAC enlisted women, R-
for Hospital Dietitians, and M- for Physical Therapy Aides.
GRADE: This
is synonymous with the misnomer "rank," and the abbreviations which may be found
in this book are as follows: GEN, General (four star); LT G, Lieutenant General,
(three star); M G, Major General (two star); B. G. Brigadier General (one star);
COL, Colonel; LT C, Lieutenant Colonel; MAJ, Major; Capt, Captain, 1 LT, First
Lieutenant, 2 LT, Second Lieutenant, C WO, Chief Warrant Officer, WOJG, Warrant
Officer, Junior Grade; FLO, Flight Officer, AV C, Aviation Cadet, M SG, Master
Sergeant, 1 SG, First Sergeant, T SG, Technical Sergeant; S SG, Staff Sergeant,
TEC3, Technician Third Grade, SGT, Sergeant, TEC4, Technician Fourth Grade; CPL,
Corporal; TEC5, Technician Fifth Grade, PFC, Private First Class, and PVT,
Private.
TYPE OF CASUALTY: This is indicated by the symbol at the far
right of each column. An individual who was killed in action, whether at the
front or by enemy action in the rear areas, or if a prisoner of war, whether by
air bombardment of his prison camp or by being shot while escaping, is
designated "KIA". Persons who were wounded and later died are marked "DOW" -
died of wounds. Those who suffered fatal battle INJURIES as opposed to WOUNDS,
in combat or in combat areas, and died in a line-of-duty status, are designated
"DOI" - died of injuries. Other line-of-duty deaths, such as from sickness,
homicide, suicide or accidents outside combat areas (including training and
maneuver deaths) are listed "DNB" - died, non-battle. Individuals who were
determined to be dead under Public Law 490 are designed "FOD" - finding of
death. Missing persons are marked with the single letter "M".
Only those
persons who died in a line-of-duty status are listed herein. Individuals who
were not in line of duty at the time of their deaths are not so listed. Though
personnel not in line of duty are not listed, failure to find in these lists the
name of a person known to be dead should not be taken as prima-facie evidence
that such person died not in line of duty.
Because of the large number of
names included in this work - the total for all states and territories will take
up about 1,700 pages - it has been deemed impracticable to include the name and
address of the next of kin or to break down the residence units smaller than
counties. Counties were selected as the unit of breakdown for two reasons:
information media rarely circulate in areas smaller than counties, and draft
boards are located on a county-population basis. It was felt that coordination
between newspapers and other media on the one hand and draft boards on the
other, a coordination which has existed through nearly six years of Selective
Service, could be achieved more easily in cases where questions as to identity
arise than could coordination between newspapers and any larger instrumentality
of the government.
It should be pointed out that this work is published
solely as a public service and in response to demands from interested persons.
The possibility that these lists might fall into the unscrupulous persons is
inevitable, and it is pointed out that misuse of these lists for gain could
redound only to the sorrow of the bereaved. While is it neither the policy nor
the desire of the War Department to discuss the ways in which these lists will
be used once they are released for publication, it is the sincere hope of the
War Department that persons responsible for their dissemination will be governed
by good taste and consideration for the feelings of next of
kin.
Patriotic organizations will find these lists of value in
establishing or checking honor rolls in their communities. In this connection,
it should be emphasized again that these lists are preliminary and will one day
be superseded by a list which can be considered final. Changes in status may
occur between the time of publication of these lists and preparation of new
ones, and actuarial tables indicates that new names will be added. In some rare
cases names of persons already dead may have been eliminated inadvertently from
these lists.