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Sailor killed at Pearl Harbour to be buried 76 years later

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The funeral for a recently identified Kentucky sailor who was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour 76 years ago is bringing his family together for the first time in decades.
T he funeral for a recently identified Kentucky sailor who was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour 76 years ago is bringing his family together for the first time in decades.
Fred Crowder said he and his brother are visiting their uncle’s home in Louisville and meeting their Kentucky cousins for the first time as the family comes together to honor the memory of Navy Fireman 1st Class Samuel Crowder, whose remains were recently identified with DNA.
Crowder’s remains will be interred Saturday at Resthaven Memorial Park in Louisville beside his mother. The 35-year-old was among 429 crewmen on the USS Oklahoma who died when the battleship was hit with torpedoes and capsized Dec. 7,1941.
Most of the crew’s remains couldn’t be identified at the time. They had been buried in 46 plots at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu before being disinterred in 2015 in an effort to make identifications.
Fred Crowder, of Tigard, Oregon, said he grew up in Aberdeen, Washington, where his grandfather, Samuel’s father, moved after he and Samuel’s mother divorced. Crowder said his father was a younger half-brother to the sailor.
He said he found out he had half-cousins in Kentucky after including his uncle’s name on a family tree posted on the internet. He said that led to an email exchange and phone calls that have continued since then.
“We found this out back in 2000 and this is the first time we’ve met, right now,” he said Thursday while visiting with some of those family members in Louisville. “This happening has brought us together.

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