ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The remains of a Texas sailor who died in the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor are returning home. Nearly 430 crewmen were killed after Japanese warplanes launched torpedoes at the ship on Dec. 7,1941. In 2015, the…
The remains of a Texas sailor who died in the 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor are returning home.
George Anderson Coke Jr.’s remains were recently identified after his family provided DNA samples for testing, the Star-Telegram reported. Before then, his remains had been buried in a mass grave in Hawaii alongside other crewmen.
The Arlington man went into service in early 1941 and served aboard the USS Oklahoma. Nearly 430 crewmen were killed after Japanese warplanes launched torpedoes at the ship on Dec. 7,1941.
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Coke was one of almost 50 young Arlington residents who went off to war but didn’t come home, said Wanda Marshall, treasurer of the Arlington Historical Society .
In 2015, the Defense Department announced it would exhume the bodies of unidentified USS Oklahoma crew members and try to identify them.
Doland Maner is one of the few relatives left who knew Coke personally.
“We weren’t buddies, ” the 94-year-old said. “But he was an all-American boy. He was into a lot of devilment, but if you didn’t like George A nderson, you didn’t like anybody.”
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Coke will have a public memorial service with full military honors Saturday. He’ll be buried in Parkdale Cemetery, next to his parents George A. “Dutch” Coke Sr. and Julina Jane Tomlin Coke .
“It just gives you goose bumps that after all this time, he will be back in the hometown he loved and the people he loved, ” said Geraldine Mills, executive director of the Arlington Historical Society. “I think it is a fitting conclusion.”
Click through above to see Pearl Harbor, then and now.