![]() Laboratory analysis and circumstantial evidence have established that the remains unable to be matched with individual Sailors have been designated as group remains and are attributed to all USS Oklahoma casualties. Through all identification efforts, including historical and modern day, DPAA and its predecessors individually identified 396 USS Oklahoma Sailors and Marines. In October 1949, a military board classified those who could not be identified as non-recoverable.īetween June and November 2015, DPAA personnel exhumed the USS Oklahoma Unknowns from the Punchbowl for analysis. The AGRS subsequently buried the unidentified remains in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific (NMCP), known as the Punchbowl, in Honolulu. ![]() The laboratory staff was only able to confirm the identifications of 35 men from the USS Oklahoma at that time. casualties from the two cemeteries and transferred them to the Central Identification Laboratory at Schofield Barracks. personnel in the Pacific Theater, members of the American Graves Registration Service (AGRS) disinterred the remains of U.S. In September 1947, tasked with recovering and identifying fallen U.S. The attack on the ship resulted in the deaths of 429 crewmen.įrom December 1941 to June 1944, Navy personnel recovered the remains of the deceased crew, which were subsequently interred in the Halawa and Nu’uanu Cemeteries. ![]() ![]() The USS Oklahoma sustained multiple torpedo hits, which caused it to quickly capsize. 7, 1941, these Sailors were assigned to the battleship USS Oklahoma, which was moored at Ford Island, Pearl Harbor, when the ship was attacked by Japanese aircraft. The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) announced today that 33 Sailors from the USS Oklahoma killed during World War II were accounted for on Oct. ![]()
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