YES
honoring all service personnel who served during WW2.....
The best way would be to get his service record. It can be obtained through the National Archives. There is an online form that can be filled out and they will tell you if the record still exists. The record should show the major campaigns he served in.
Address this question to the US Military Personnel Center in St. Louis, MO.
a type of service where the food is artfully set out on individual plates by the chef then served to seated customers.
yes , of course !Another View: Always after it has been served, but not necessarily prior to its service.
If the individual's service number is unknown, it can usually be located by specifying the individual's name, his command, and when he served in a letter to the Modern Military Branch, National Archives and Records Administration, 8601 Adelphi Road College Park, MD 20740. That office can usually discern the service number from the command's muster rolls or the list of officers in the deck log of a ship, if the individual served between 1941 and the 1970.
Honorable discharge papers. The primary record for your service and discharge.
Veteran is a term used for those that have served in the military. Enlisted refers to personnel that are not officers in the military. Once an enlisted man or officer leaves the service, they are veterans.
3,000
There are two good places. First depending on what information you have, you can contact the military personnel records in St Louis. MO. Second, you can contact the National Archives website and there will be a link to get those records.Navy personnel records from this period were fortunately saved from the '73 fire and are very complete. These are usually packed with information on the service member-duties, stations, and sometimes even a period photograph. Because the records center is deluged with requests they can often take months and months to turn around a request for a service record/personnel file. Your best bet is to google: "military research service". A private firm will be able to get you the service record within a week or two for about the same price as the records center will charge you.AnswerYou can research a soldier's records by reseaching the records of the unit he served in, if you know the unit. The National Archives(NARA) located in College Park, MD, has records for the units. If you are searching for a General Order(the Army's version of a memo) that issued a soldier his Bronze Star Medal, then you can research these files and possibly locate it.I collected the entire GO's for my Dad's artillery battalion. These memo's have names of soldiers who earned Good Conduct Medals and Driver's Certificates and the Purple Heart. Then there are other reports, such as Operational Reports, that will give details about the unit on a montly and daily basis which is valuable info.The NARA library is a very modern facility and is free to use. You can catch a free shuttle bus from the National Archives on the Mall in DC. Then you have to register and watch a video on the rules and regulations and they issue you an ID.NOTE: No books or folders or pens are allowed in the library. They issue you any paper you need and you can only use a pencil.
its a service were the food is artfully served in indivisal plate by the chef then served