Did you know I’ve been researching genealogy (family history) for more than 20 years? Though to be honest I know more about my client’s families than my own at this point, as I spend more time researching for them. One thing that the genealogy community encourages people to do is research the collaterals. For readers unfamiliar with this concept, let me explain.
Joseph and Majdalena Kokoska, my great great grandparents, came to Chicago from Bohemia in 1880. To my current knowledge and research, they had no family here, so the reason they chose Chicago over another location where Czechs were settling is unknown. They had 11 children, 10 of which survived beyond infancy. They lived on 18th Place in Chicago, which was in a Czech neighborhood. To learn more about them, I used the usual records – census, vital record, military draft cards, etc. I also searched the collaterals when I could not initially locate them in the 1920 census.
Searching the collaterals meant looking at who their neighbors were. If I could locate them in the census, chances are I would locate my family as I had other proof they had not moved. Examining the records of the neighbors lives, might lead to a connection that went back to Bohemia. It may have also linked to occupation and organization involvement in Chicago. In rural areas, genealogists may look at many families in a town or county, as it was common for groups of families to migrate from one place to another. When we can’t find a family in one place and a census shows other families are gone, tracing those families may help us locate ours.
How does this apply to military research?
Often when we receive military records for our soldier, airman, sailor, or Marine, we focus so much on the individual and the details we can find on him or her, that we ignore the rest. What would happen if we shifted some focus to those who served with our soldier or were declared MIA or KIA the same day they were? What might we learn?
In one example, I have been reviewing the IDPF for Col. John A. Gillies, who died when the Russian plane he was on with two other Americans, crashed over Iran on 29 Feb 1942. Col. Gillies was part of the Corps of Engineers at that time stationed in Iraq and the Americans he was with, along with many Russians, were handling aspects of the Lend-Lease agreement. While the IDPF is VERY complete and there are many descriptions of the plane crash, photographs, and a detailed description of the recovery efforts, searching other records and the collaterals is important.
I searched Ancestry.com for two men, Roland L. Spencer and Gustave A. Goesele and found a database I don’t remember seeing before. If I had, it didn’t pertain to the research I was doing so I overlooked its significance. This is the Reports of Deaths of American Citizens Abroad, 1835-1974. In this database I found roughly 10 pages that pertained to Spencer and more than 50 pertaining to Goesele! In these records was information about the plane crash and loss of the men, financial information, and occupational information. Gillies was mentioned in these reports as well. They provided yet another source of information to his life.
Exploring offline archives for additional records, especially occupational records to see how these men were connected prior to the war may also prove useful in compiling their life stories.
For European grave adopters, there is always a concern of how much will it cost to obtain records. In Europe many records are digitized, and available free or at low cost, in archives. The same is not true for U.S. archives. Online resources are the primary way grave adopters locate information. Yet as I have explained in my Why WWII Research Isn’t Free article, most of the information you need to tell the full story, not just the end, is not online. When you read the IDPF you are getting the end of a soldier’s story and his final unit, which often is not the only unit in which he served and not the only war experience he had. To learn his full story you have to use offline records.
I encourage everyone to explore these other individuals connected to your soldier. You may be surprised at what you discover about them, their living family members, and even locate photographs.
Do you need help obtaining records? Would you like an individual consultation in the Netherlands? Contact us for details on research projects.
Have you searched the collaterals for your service member? What discoveries did you make?
© 2017 World War II Research and Writing Center
Barb says
After learning in mid-July that the OMPF of my late uncle was destroyed in the 1970s fire in St Louis, I dug in on ancestry.com for other crew members and his now-deceased wife. I learned that one of the crew member’s remains were brought home. Then on 8th Air Force FB groups, I learned 6 of the 10 were brought home.
Then I began what I had considered the daunting task of cataloging all the letters Richard sent home 1942-1944 and there was much more there than I remembered from my 2004 reading of them when I received them.
Not sure what to do next. I did meet with Richard’s cousin in August. She loved him so, as did all who knew him.
May just start writing with what I have now. Any advice? (I do have your book.)
Jennifer Holik says
Hi Barb. I sent you an email about this.
carol says
My uncle was a Marine Raider killed in the Solomon Islands during WWII. Two decades ago, when we started doing some research on his war experience, we reached out to “collaterals” – other men in his unit – and received several personal narratives of his last day (including one fellow Raider who questioned the official story of “killed by enemy sniper”). Researching collaterals can lead to invaluable information. (And I still need to request his IDPF!)
Jennifer Holik says
Hi Carol.
Thanks for commenting. Yes, the IDPF is valuable and his OMPF will be fully intact as it was not affected by the fire in 1973. Also, there is no Next Of Kin requirement on these records.
Jennifer