John E. Davison

Advertisement

John E. Davison

Birth
Jamestown, Chautauqua County, New York, USA
Death
4 Jul 2002 (aged 73)
Claremont, Sullivan County, New Hampshire, USA
Burial
Boscawen, Merrimack County, New Hampshire, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section: 1L Row: K Grave #: 76
Memorial ID
View Source
A1C U.S. Air Force Korean War.
Born to to Harold and Ora Davison, his wife, Patricia predeceased him in 2001. After his service he worked as a truck driver.

He was one of four veterans whose abandoned remains had been sitting on a shelf in a New Hampshire funeral home.
For whatever reason, their remains had not been claimed and one of the veteran's remains had been sitting on the shelf since 1974.

Through the efforts of the Phaneuf Funeral Home and Roger Desjardin, Director of the New Hampshire State Veterans Cemetery, they were finally laid to rest on 22 August 2008 with full military honors. Hundreds of people, from several states, attended the service to honor these four forgotten veterans.

Two of them were Korea veterans, one was a World War II veteran, and one served between World War I and World War II.

Now this "band of brothers" will rest, not on a shelf but with the dignity and respect they deserve, in graves next to each other, never to be forgotten again.

The others are:

John A. Bissonette

Robert A. Caughey

William J. Mitchell

A1C U.S. Air Force Korean War.
Born to to Harold and Ora Davison, his wife, Patricia predeceased him in 2001. After his service he worked as a truck driver.

He was one of four veterans whose abandoned remains had been sitting on a shelf in a New Hampshire funeral home.
For whatever reason, their remains had not been claimed and one of the veteran's remains had been sitting on the shelf since 1974.

Through the efforts of the Phaneuf Funeral Home and Roger Desjardin, Director of the New Hampshire State Veterans Cemetery, they were finally laid to rest on 22 August 2008 with full military honors. Hundreds of people, from several states, attended the service to honor these four forgotten veterans.

Two of them were Korea veterans, one was a World War II veteran, and one served between World War I and World War II.

Now this "band of brothers" will rest, not on a shelf but with the dignity and respect they deserve, in graves next to each other, never to be forgotten again.

The others are:

John A. Bissonette

Robert A. Caughey

William J. Mitchell