Records of U.S. Army officers and soldiers killed or wounded in the Korean War are now available on Fold3. Korean War Casualties is available free to any visitors to the site.
One quarter of the nearly 110,000 records in Korean War Casualties
connects to information about Army personnel who died during the war,
1950-1953, including those who died while a prisoner of war or missing
in action. The remaining three quarters are for nonfatal Army
casualties.
The Korean War Casualties database is from the
Records of the Adjutant General's Office, 1905-1981 (Record Group 407),
at the National Archives (NARA). It was compiled between 1950 and 1970,
and covers the period from the earliest casualty (February 13, 1950) to
the latest date in the date of disposition field, December 31, 1953.
The information on each casualty may include:
name, service prefix and number, grade, Army branch, place and date of
casualty, state and county of residence, type of casualty,
detail/previous casualty type, casualty group, place and date of
disposition, year of birth (for deceased casualties only), military
occupational specialty, organization troop program sequence number,
element sequence, unit number, race, component, and disposition of
evacuations.
Launch your search within the records from the Korean War Casualty title page or use the browse option and highlight the Korean War category. Records are ordered alphabetically. (NARA also provides a list of fatal casualties by state on its website.)
When you find a soldier in the Korean War
Casualties records on Fold3, you’ll link directly to a memorial page for that
soldier where we invite you to add stories, photos, documents, and other
information relating to that individual. Examples of two pages to which
newspaper articles were added include twice-wounded Purple Heart
recipient Dwight L. Huston, of Mt. Vernon, IL; and Pittsfield, MA, native Arthur A. Boland.
When added to the memorial pages, your stories
and photos help sustain the memories of United States heroes in the
Korean War and allow others to connect with and honor them.
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