By Herman Schwartz-O’Brien
According to a report by the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, the recently recovered remains of a U.S. Marine from Somerville killed in World War II came home for burial.
Earlier this month, the agency reported that the remains of Marine Pfc. John MacDonald, 19, were accounted for on Aug. 15, 2016 and was returned for burial in Bourne, MA, on June 22.
MacDonald’s company, from the 2nd Marine Division, landed in the Gilbert Islands in November 1943. The agency reported that Mac Donald died on the first day of battle, November 20, 1943, along with approximately 1,000 sailors a Marines.
In its report, the agency stated that the Battle of the Tarawa Atoll was “a huge victory for the U.S. Military.” Those who died during the battle were laid to rest in battlefield cemeteries on the island. MacDonald’s remains were not recovered in during the first attempts at casualty recovery and were designated as non-recoverable.
According to the agency, the non-governmental organization History Flight, Inc. recovered Mac Donald’s remains in 2015, as well as those of 34 other servicemen who fought during the Battle of the Tarawa Atoll.
The agency’s release stated that to identify MacDonald’s remains, scientists from DPAA used laboratory analysis, including anthropological analysis and dental and chest radiograph comparison analysis, which matched MacDonald’s records, as well as circumstantial and material evidence.
The agency further reports that nearly 73,000 soldiers from World War II are still unaccounted for.
“His Lord said to him, Well done, you good and faithful servant…” Matthew 25:21.
PFC John William MacDonald, F Company, 2nd Battalion, 8th Marines, was reported “Killed in Action” due to a gunshot wounds on 20 November 1943 on Tarawa. In 2011/2012, Chief Rick Stone, while a member of the Department of Defense (DoD), investigated all of the Tarawa MIA’s and concluded that PFC MacDonald was NOT a most likely match to any of the 103 Tarawa “Unknowns” buried in the Punchbowl Cemetery. On 26 November 2012, The Chief Rick Stone and Family Charitable Foundation, using advanced law enforcement investigative techniques and sophisticated technologies not available to DoD or to government contractors, submitted a report to the DoD concluding that PFC MacDonald was buried on Tarawa in Cemetery 27. In 2015, Cemetery 27 was discovered underneath a parking lot on Tarawa and PFC MacDonald was recovered by a “non-profit” corporation paid $1.5 million in 2015 to recover remains. His identification by the DoD was officially announced on 1 September 2016.
Welcome home Marine! We share the joy of your family in your return to Massachusetts! God Bless you and thanks to ALL who were involved in the process to find you and bring you home! We never forgot you and your service to our country!