![]() Professional WW2 and Korean War Casualty Search USA Veterans Killed, Missing (MIA), and Prisoner of War (POW) |
|||
What We Do In The News Sample Reports Sample Analysis World War 2 Korean War Request a Quote Research Subject Database Testimonials Contact Us ![]() |
Bill Beigel's Bio I research the military records for those Americans that were casualties in World War 2 and Korea. By "casualties", I meant those who were killed, wounded, or made Prisoners of War. In WW2 alone, 406,000 were killed, over 600,000 were wounded, and about 150,000 were made POWs.Academic Background BA: History, UCLA, 1980 MA: Geography, UCLA, 1983 Career I perform this research evenings and at night, with one or two trips to academic institutions or archival collections a year. I am very passionate about this research (although yes, I do get paid!). My full time "day job" is as a Senior Contracts Specialist for ARINC, Inc (www.arinc.com). My office is in Marina del Rey, CA, and specializes in airport, harbor, and transit security systems and integration. World War 2/Korean War Research My interest in World War is of long-standing, for family reasons. When my father was 13 years old, his parents divorced. He went with his mother to live with her and her family in Detroit. This was in 1943, and housing conditions were tight in Detroit, due to all the war-time industrial production occurring there at the time. So, my father and grandmother ended up living with some cousins. In their cousin's family was a son, 19 years old. He became the "brother" my father never had. His cousin volunteered for the Army Air Corps (today known as the Air Force). His name was SSGT Morris Meyers, and he was selected for duty, and became a gunner on a B-17 (Flying Fortress) crew in the 385th Bomb Group. At the beginning of July, 1943, SSGT Morris' family received a letter stating that SSGT Morris was "Missing in Action" over Europe; about a month later, a telegram confirmed their worst fears; the status of SSGT Morris had been changed, and he was now considered deceased. The mystery haunted the family for decades. In the early 1990's, I was discussing the situation with my father. Using the research skills I had learned in college, and with some good luck, I found out more about the status of SSGT Morris than I could have ever imagine. Over the past ten years, I have worked for about 500 clients, nation-wide, as well as clients in Belgium, Denmark, England, Germany, Hong Kong, Luxembourg, and Turkey. |
||
Professional World War 2 (WW2) and Korean War Casualty Search (310) 791-3949 USA Veterans Killed, Missing in Action (MIA), Prisoner of War (POW) Send Email © 2003-2006 WW2USAKilledMissingPOW.com. All rights reserved. Maintained by ReaLife WebDesigns. |
|||