
In Honor To Those Comrades Taken Prisoner of War and Those Still Missing-In-Action
Prisoners of War
| Name | Rank | Unit | POW Camp |
| Ruggles, David Colden |
MAJ |
Danville, Virginia |
Civil War
| Name | Rank | Unit | POW Camp |
| Shirley, Robert H. |
MAJ |
HQ Special Troops/Division |
World War II - German Prisoner of War
World War II - Japanese Prisoners of War
| Name | Rank | Unit | POW Camp |
| Ker, Donald Edward |
PFC |
24 Purs Gp 20 Purs Sqn | Fuk-17-Omuta |
| Kozlowski, Chester P. |
MSG |
Nag-03B-Funatsu | |
| Kuykendall, Arthur Greenwell |
SSG |
Tok-13B-Omi (Aomi) | |
| Long, Paul Leroy |
SSG |
Phil Dept Finance | |
| McElfish, Roy Edgar |
LTC |
Phil Dept Hq | Rokuroshi |
| McMurray, Welborn Goulding |
LTC |
USAFFE Hq | Cabanatuan |
| McPherson, Nelson E. |
SSG |
Phil Dept Hq | Nag-09B-Jinzu (Toyama Iwase) |
| Miller, Donald S. |
MSG |
4th E | Nag-09B-Jinzu (Toyama Iwase) |
| Miller, Paul Henry |
PFC |
Sen-06B-Hanawa | |
| Morton, William Harrison |
PFC |
Ft McKinley Fin Dept | Tok-13B-Omi (Aomi) |
| Moyer, Paul F. |
SSG |
||
| Muir, Cecil L. |
SSG |
Phil Dept Hq | Bilibid |
| Norris, Charles H. |
SSG |
60th CAC Hq | |
| Olson, Kenneth Sharp |
LTC |
V-M Force Hq | Davao Penal Colony #502 |
| Pratt, Robert H. |
1LT |
45th Inf Regt (PS) | Dansalan |
| Pressman, Aaron A. |
SSG |
en route Tottori | |
| Ragland, Charles William |
SSG |
Tok-13B-Omi (Aomi) | |
| Sayler, Ira William |
SSG |
Phil Dept Fin | Os-04B-Ikuno |
| Searcy, Irle D. |
PFC |
Bilibid | |
| Thompson, Ross H. |
SGT |
||
| Underwood, Melvin E. |
LTC |
Davao Penal Colony #502 | |
| Van Wie, George I. |
MSG |
Os-10B-Maibara | |
| Vonderheide, George F. |
TSG |
||
| Walker, Russell Harvy |
MSG |
Os-05B-Tsuruga | |
| Wangler, Ambrose J. |
1LT |
Phil Dept Hq | Cabanatuan (GS) |
| Wernher, Walter A. |
SSG |
Phil Dept Fin | Cabanatuan |
| Wilkes, Joseph E. |
SSG |
||
| Williams, Harold M. |
SSG |
||
| Wills, Carl A. |
SSG |
Mukden |
| Name | Rank | Unit | POW Camp |
| Adams, Hoyett |
WOJG |
Phil Dept Fin Hq | Bilibid |
| Ashdown, Robert James |
SSG |
Davao Penal Colony #502 | |
| Baker, Lloyd |
CAPT |
Phil Dept Fin Hq | Rokuroshi |
| Ballew, Herbert K. |
PFC |
Phil Dept Fin Hq | |
| Beard, Paul S. |
LTC |
Davao Penal Colony #502 | |
| Beason, Benjamin Franklin |
TSG |
Palawan Massacre ex Batangas | |
| Bibee, Raymond Earl |
CAPT |
Fuk-01-Main | |
| Boyd, Ralph Edwin |
TSG |
Phil Dept Fin Hq | Tok-05B-Niigata |
| Brinkmeyer, John E. |
MAJ |
||
| Brodsky, Theodore |
PVT |
Phil Dept Fin Hq | Hir-06B-Omine (Yamaguchi) |
| Caster, Charles Francis |
MSG |
HDM&SB Fin | Sen-06B-Hanawa |
| Cavanagh, James Bernard |
MSG |
II Phil Corps G2 | Karenko (Hualien) |
| Coennen, George A. |
1LT |
||
| Cohen, Robert L. |
PFC |
||
| Curtis, Frank N. |
MSG |
Bilibid | |
| Cyr, Leonard E. |
TSG |
||
| Davis, Roy Howard |
TSG |
Ft Mills Finance Office | Tok-13B-Omi (Aomi) |
| Dizon, Jose G. |
TSG |
||
| Doyle, Robert |
SGT |
HD Fin Dept | Cabanatuan (GS) |
| Dugan, John E. |
PFC |
Cabanatuan (GS) | |
| Edwards, Leroy M. |
LTC |
Phil Dept Ft Mills | Bilibid |
| Enos, William A. |
COL |
V-M Force Hq | Mukden |
| Franks, Stephen R. |
CAPT |
V-M Force Hq | Davao Penal Colony #502 |
| Gard, Dwight Ethan |
MAJ |
US Fin Svcs | Jinsen Korea |
| Hankins, Wallace B. |
PVT |
59th G | |
| Hiller, Howard H. |
MSG |
Os-05B-Tsuruga | |
| Hough, Meridith L. |
SSG |
Phil Dept Hq | |
| Inghram, Alvin T. |
PFC |
Phil Dept Fin | Nag-02B-Narumi |
| Kabakow, James |
CAPT |
Phil Dept Finance | Davao Penal Colony #502 |
Korean War
| Name | Rank | Unit | POW Camp |
| Smith, Vernon Dean |
SGT |
Company G, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division |

Missing in Action
World War II
| Name | Rank |
| Olson, Kenneth Sharp | LTC |
| Sherbondy, Harry Jenkins | PVT |
| Thompson, Ross H. | SGT |
| Underwood, Melvin B. | LTC |
| Wernher, Walter A. | SSG |
| Williams, Harold M. | SSG |
| Name | Rank |
| Eddy, Ellery Wilbour | MAJ |
| Name | Rank |
| Ashdown Robert James | SSG |
| Ballew, Herbert K. | PFC |
| Benedict, Edward Richard | TSG |
| Chipley, Simon Buckner | 1LT |
| Cohen, Robert L. | TSG |
| Devera, Raymundo | TSG |
| Name | Rank |
| Smith, Vernon Dean | SGT |
| Name | Rank |
| Eliopoulos, George E. | PVT |
| Felipe, Amado | TSG |
| Franks, Stephen R. | CAPT |
| Hough, Meridith L. | SSG |
| Long, Paul Leroy | SSG |
| Moyer, Paul F. | SSG |
Korean War
Civil War
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The Missing Man Ceremony is a dignified and solemn moment in many formal dinners and other occasions. There have been many different narratives written for the ceremony, but the symbolism is quite constant.
The Missing Man Ceremony usually follows the "Posting of the Colors" and the "National Anthem in the order of the program.
The Ceremony
Moderator:
As you entered the dining area, you may have noticed a table at the front, raised to call your attention to its purpose -- it is reserved to honor our missing loved comrades.

Set for six, the empty places represent our men missing from each of the five services - Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Coast Guard - and civilians. This Honors Ceremony symbolizes that they are with us, here in spirit.
All Americans should never forget our brave men and women who answered our nation's call and served the cause of freedom in a special way.
As the Honor Guard places one of the five service covers or a civilian cap on each empty plate, I would like to ask you to consider their sacrifices, followed by a moment of silent prayer.

Honor Guard:
(In silence or with dignified, reverent music as background, the Honor Guard moves into position around the table and simultaneously places one of the service covers, of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force and Coast Guard, or a civilian hat, on each empty dinner plate at each table setting. The Honor Guard then departs.)

Moderator:
Please be seated…..I would like to explain the meaning of the items on this special table.
The table is round - to show our everlasting concern for our men still missing.
The cloth is white - symbolizing the purity of their motives when answering the call to duty.
The single red rose, displayed in a vase, reminds us of the life of each of the missing, and their loved ones and friends who keep the faith, awaiting answers.
The vase is tied with a red ribbon, symbol of our continued determination to account for our missing.
A slice of lemon on the bread plate is to remind us of the bitter fate of those captured and missing in a foreign land.
A pinch of salt symbolizes the tears endured by those missing and their families who seek answers.
The Bible represents the strength gained through faith to sustain those lost from our country, founded as one nation under God.
The glass is inverted - to symbolize their inability to share this evening's toast.
The chairs are empty - they are missing.
Let us now raise
our water glasses in a toast to honor America's POW/MIA's and to the success of
our efforts to account for them.
