Obtaining Grandfather's WWII military records. Do I contact National Archives or whom?
obsessed with finding out my Granddaddy's military history. All I know he was in WWII and I have his medals. One of them is an Army of Occupation Medal for Germany. He trained at Ft Sill.
Do I contact National Archives or whom?
Start Your Military Service Record (DD Form 214) Request
How to Request Military Service Records, Military Personnel Files, Veterans Records, Discharge Papers, Separation Documents, DD214, or Prove Military Service
I appreciate everyone's input on this thread.
I will keep you posted and let you know what I discovered.
I requested my grandfathers records quite a few years ago before the internet (I know I am old). I did it all through the mail, although I can't remember everything I needed to send. I am sure the links from the other posts will help you. I did get his DD 214 and cherish it.
One thing I will tell you is that there was a fire in 1973 that destroyed 16-18 million records.
http://www.archives.gov/st-louis/military-personnel/fire-1973.html
I wish you the best and hope you find what you're looking for!
Information about military personnel records burned in the fire of 1973 at the National Archives, National Personnel Records Center, St. Louis, Missouri.
I'd love to have his records so I can recreate his rack and any unit patches he served under.
By the way, the gold item in the upper left of your grandfather's shadowbox is the Honorable Service lapel button, also known as the Ruptured Duck. The other medals from left to right are: the Good Conduct Medal, the Europe-Africa-Middle East Campaign medal, the WWII Victory medal and, of course, the Army of Occupation medal. The Army Meritorious Unit award is below the Ruptured Duck.
LTC Stephen F.
I can tell you that he was in the war earlier (maybe 1942-1943), as the European-Mediterranean-African Theater medal has 3 battle stars. (4 awards). I can't tell if there is an arrowhead, but if so, that would mean that he participated in the initial assaults.
He qualified with the Carbine, so he was some sort of specialty Soldier, not straight up infantryman. Still an enlisted. Do you have anything that has his ASN on it? I could tell you whether he was drafted or volunteered and the approximate area that he was selected from based on that information.
v/r,
CPT Butler
Attached is a link to the Wiki page, which lists the various offenses for the battle stars. There are more campaigns than I knew. Given that he was Germany occupation, it is possible that he came over in 1944.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European-African-Middle_Eastern_Campaign_Medal
v/r,
CPT Butler
European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal is a military award of the United States Armed Forces which was first created on November 6, 1942 by Executive Order 9265 [1][2] issued by President Franklin D. Roosevelt[3] The medal was intended to recognize those military service members who had performed military duty in the European Theater (to include North Africa and the Middle East) during the years of the Second World War.[4]