Skip to content
Menu
  • Original Short Fiction
Menu

Military History: The Lost Doughboys of World War I

Posted on 10 March 2016 by The Tactical Hermit

Argone

The Hunt Continues for American MIAs from WW1

“Organizers hope that Doughboy MIA will help raise awareness of the sacrifices made a century ago by U.S. soldiers, sailors and marines during during the so called War to End All Wars.”

AS MANY AS 4 million American military personnel served in the First World War. More than 110,000 of them never returned; 4,400 are still listed as missing in action.

Now with the 100th anniversary of U.S. involvement in the Great War fast approaching, the Washington D.C.-based United States World War One Centennial Commission is hoping to shine the spotlight on these forgotten warriors with a new project: Doughboy MIA.

The online initiative, which is fully accessible to the public, is home to a number of useful resources. Among them is a complete database of every unaccounted for American soldier from the campaign in France and the war at sea, as well as MIAs from the lesser-known Allied interventions in the Russian Civil War from 1918 to 1920.

Organizers hope that Doughboy MIA will help raise awareness of the sacrifices made a century ago by U.S. soldiers, sailors and marines during during the so called War to End All Wars.

ph854-1

According to the project’s own founders, efforts to finally lay World War One’s missing combatants to rest have long since been overshadowed by MIAs from more recent American war: Vietnam.

“These days, when one speaks of soldiers missing in action, the first thought that comes to most people’s mind are those who were lost during the Vietnam War and the controversy that has long since surrounded them,” say organizers of the project. “Yet the truth is the issue didn’t start there. Far from it.”

For years following the 1918 Armistice, recovering the remains of unknown soldiers from the battlefields of France was the responsibility the U.S. Army Quartermasters Corps’Graves Registration Service. While scouring the terrain of the Western Front for more than a decade, investigators unearthed more than 1,600 fallen American soldiers – many of which were still never positively identified. Even so, the bodies were transferred to nearby military cemeteries like the ones at Meuse-Argonne and St. Mihiel. By 1932, the military officially suspended the search and transferred all outstanding cases to the American Battle Monuments Commission, the government agency that administers military cemeteries. Since then, the bodies of only 26 American personnel from the First World War have been recovered, the most recent of which was buried in 2009.

Doughboy MIA hopes that next year’s centenary of the U.S. declarations of war on the Central Powers will rekindle public interest in this forgotten sidebar of American history.

To visit the site yourself, CLICK HERE.

Read the Original Article at Military History Now

1 thought on “Military History: The Lost Doughboys of World War I”

  1. Rifleman III says:
    10 March 2016 at 03:58

    Reblogged this on Rifleman III Journal.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Tactical Hermit Substack

Recent Post

  • Drone Warfare: Drone Trumps Sniper
  • Croatian Day of Fascism
  • Don’t Be a Victim of Jugging
  • Stockpiling Ammunition: A Thorough Approach
  • “Joomteemf” Late Edition
General Franco (2008-2024)

Book of the Month

Fellow Conspirators

Area Ocho

American Partisan

Western Rifle Shooters Association

Brushbeater

Von Steuben Training and Consulting

CSAT

Politically Incorrect Humor and Memes

Freedom is Just Another Word

Prepared Gun Owners

Fix Bayonets

The Firearm Blog

BorderHawk

Cold Fury

Don Shift SHTF

NC Renegades

Big Country Ex-Pat

The Bayou Renaissance Man

Bustednuckles

The Feral Irishman

It Ain’t Holy Water

Evil White Guy

Pacific Paratrooper

Badlands Fieldcraft

Riskmap

Stuck Pig Medical

Swift Silent Deadly

Spotter Up

The Survival Homestead

Bacon Time!

SHTF Preparedness

Sigma 3 Survival School

The Organic Prepper

The Zombie Apocalypse Survival Homestead

Texas Gun Rights

The Gatalog

Taki’s Magazine

Defensive Training Group

The Trail Up Blood Hill

No White Guilt

Europe Renaissance

Vermont Folk Truth

The Occidental Observer

The Dissident Right

Daily Stormer

American Renaissance

Blacksmith Publishing

Arktos Publishing

Antelope Hill Publishing

White People Press

White Rabbit Radio

White Papers Substack

Viking Life Blog (Archived)

Identity Dixie

The Texian Partisan

Southern Vanguard

League of the South

The Unz Review

Dissident Thoughts

The Third Position

Renegade Tribune

COPYRIGHT NOTICE/DISCLAIMER & FAIR USE ACT

All blog postings, including all non-fiction and fictional works are copyrighted and considered the sole property of the Tactical Hermit Blog. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in the short stories and novelettes are entirely fictional and are of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or organizations or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental, The information contained in the articles posted to this site are for informational and/or educational purposes only. The Tactical Hermit disclaims any and all liability resulting from the use or misuse of the information contained herein.

The views and opinions expressed on this blog are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any of the companies that advertise here. 

Much of the information on this blog contains copyrighted material whose use has not always been specifically authorized by the rightful copyright owner. This material is made available in an effort to educate and inform and not for remuneration. Under these guidelines this constitutes "Fair Use" under Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. The publisher of this site DOES NOT own the copyrights of the images on the site. The copyrights lie with the respective owners.

© 2025 | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme