Gold Star Veterans : Alabama : Missing in Action

1,606 Results : page 36 of 81

Page Navigation:
Name State Date War Branch
701
Olen H Isbell
AL 05-24-1945 WW II Army
702
John P Isom
AL 01-13-1943 WW II Army
703
Charles A Jackson
AL 11-13-1942 WW II Navy
704
Eugene Jackson
AL 08-30-1942 WW II Navy
705
Robert Jackson
AL 04-30-1944 WW II Army AF
706
William B Jackson
AL 01-26-1944 WW II Army
707
Frankie W Jacobs
AL 02-03-1945 WW II Army
708
Ransom S Jacobs
AL 12-22-1943 WW II Army AF
709
Harry G Jacobson
AL 05-17-1945 WW II Army AF
710
Arthur James
AL 11-13-1942 WW II Navy
711
Grady James
AL 01-26-1944 WW II Army
712
Roosevelt James
AL 12-27-1944 WW II Navy
713
Solomon James
AL 08-09-1942 WW II Navy
714
John C Jarnagin
AL 05-05-1946 WW II Navy
715
Romie Lloyd Jeffreys
AL 02-11-1942 WW II Navy
716
Eugene Jemison
AL 05-08-1942 WW II Navy
717
Tildon Dale Jenkins
AL 11-27-1943 WW II Army AF
718
Willie E Jenkins
AL 02-08-1944 WW II Marines
719
Vaunel Jernigan
AL 07-04-1944 WW II Marines
720
John H Jobson
AL 06-20-1945 WW II Army AF
Page Navigation:
MIAs from Alabama by War:
Guardians of Honor Credits
Organizational Supporters - HonorStates.org and the National Unified Archive of American Gold Star Veterans is stringently curated. This attention to quality extends to our supporters program. We carefully research and screen prospective organizations we perceive as being suitably aligned with our mission
USS Midway Museum 75th Pearl Harbor Wall of Honor U-Haul Supported National Memorial Day Parade San Diego Coin & Bullion American Veterans Center 75th D-Day Congressional Reception
Research Contributors - Groups and individuals who have been directly responsible for curating content. Some are experienced historians and archivists, others are enthusiastic members of the public who have suggested content additions or corrections.
Honor States Admin Roy "Joker" Sarah Jo "Lady Chaos"
Primary Sources - These are repositories for artifacts, documents, diaries, manuscripts, and other information that serve as original and authoritative sources of information.
National Archives (NARA) Library of Congress (LOC) Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) Findagrave.com Ancestry.com
honoring our fallen healing together Honoring our fallen. Together. Uniting us in meaningful common cause. When we work together to honor our Gold Star veterans, we heal our nation together. It's a team effort. Everyone's invited to join as a Citizen Historian and Guardian of Honor. - learn more
Here is Some Important Information!
featured supporter
National D-Day Memorial
Dedicated on June 6th, 2001 by president George W. Bush, the National D-Day Memorial was constructed in honor of those who died that day, fighting in one of the most significant battles in our nations history.
Featured National Supporter
Our Supporters are Essential Team Members! - learn more
thank you
We appreciate the generous help + encouragement from our research teams, volunteers, and foundational supporters. Each of them are essential team members contributing to the archive building progress.
progress
Honor States and the National Unified Archive of American Gold Star Veterans has an established policy of developing "most complete" datasets. These are groups, campaigns and actions of special historical significance. Some notable examples include:
impact
It's required 8+ years, 1000s of skilled labor hours, scores of active contributors, and millions of visitors to realize the value in the National Unified Archive of American Gold Star Veterans. We have not satisfied everyone. That's impossible, considering the unique + personal needs of individuals. However, our annual positivity ratings exceed 95%. It's tough to get that many people to agree on anything. So, we do seem to be on the right track.
honor
None of us would be who we are, or have what we have, if not for the strengths and sacrifices of others. Most of us enjoy lives of relative freedom. Our freedom has come at enormous cost. The price paid by those who gave their all. In service to their country, states and communities. Each of them a beloved member of our global family.
states
You meet a new friend. Common question. "Where are you from"? Alabama. Ohio. California. Grew up in the Bronx. Family lives in Pasadena. Went to school in Boston. Worked in Chicago. We have roots everywhere. These state and community identities are foundational in defining who Americans are at heart. It's the who and what we fight for when pressed.
Laura - I'm proud of their military service and the ultimate contribution for my freedom. It does help me get through tough times.
Grace - Thank you for this tribute to our fallen veterans. They were wonderful young men who died way too young. It is sad.
Suzanna - I commend you for creating this resource. And thanks to the volunteers for providing the extra support in crunch time:)
Barb - Just the other day I was telling some friends about Honor States. It's a site I visit often. Such a wonderful project!