I want to find details of person buried in Veterans Cemetery in Long Island. His name is Patrick Joseph Cullen, born 14/03/1906 died Jan5 , 1967
I want to find details of person buried in Veterans Cemetery in Long Island. His name is Patrick Joseph Cullen, born 14/03/1906 died Jan5 , 1967
You would know more than I, but I would think Patrick Joseph Cullen is a relatively common name. Can't really be sure, but the one interred in LI National that I think may be him shows up in a number of records, for instance:
1940 Draft Card - the WWII draft began on 1 Oct 1940. He was living in Detroit where he registered as required on 16 Oct. He was 34 at the time (the draft law required all men 21- not yet 36 to register), and had a wife, Ann Cullen.
1940 Census - living in Detroit, wife Ann and two children, Patrick Jr (4) and Margarite (2)
1950 Census - Still in MI but now Dearborn, four children, Patrick Jr (14), Margarite (12), Carol Ann (8), Mary (2). However, states under "Veteran", NO
I believe Ann, his wife died in 1960. Perhaps His daughter, Carol Ann is the Ann De West in the cemetery record? She would have been 27 and maybe she went by "Ann", and De West was her married name? But then she definitely would have been an NOK, hmmm??
Didn't see anything so far on parents or siblings. Also, I'm thinking he ENLISTED in 1942 as they were not drafting married men at the time, especially 36-year-olds with two kids! 1944, yes!
OH, just noticed, his 1934 marriage cert indicates Father's name - Hugh Cullen, Mothers maiden name Ellen Burns! Does that help?
Perhaps others can add more, or comment.
The issue is, why did he enlist in Pennsylvania in 1942 if he was living in Detroit in 1940?
Why does it say "No" for Veteran?
Where does it list place of birth? We know the one we are looking for should say "Ireland."
If the Carol Ann listed as a daughter is the Ann De West, why would she list "none" for relationship if she was his daughter?
I think this individual is the wrong person. The information appears to be a match but doesn't withstand close scrutiny.
FOIA sent me a 12 page document from cemetery. Lots of blank spaces which I am appealing. Cemetery does have a lot of info. Seems he was married. NOK not related, not named. Frustrating that information is there and I can’t get it.
So was he the sergeant?
Donald, I don’t know. They withheld a lot of information. Did not say if he was Irish, no address. Said he was married but no name of wife. NOK not related but not named. Gave details of when he joined army and left. Also his funeral casket!! Very disappointing reply. Will appeal their withholding of information.
Well, now compare what you've gotten from other sources to what they gave you. Next of kin not related--that's what Trajan said, as well, based on his source. Was the source not there, or was it redacted (removed)? Because he gave you a name--does the other information he provided line up with what you've got on the new record?
If you're having trouble understanding the forms, you could always post it as an attachment and we could take a look at it and see what we could figure out, even absent the redacted information. Living in the states, we might understand things that might not be obvious to you.
Donald, the new record just gave me his name, date of birth and death. It said he was married. Wife not named. NOK not named. It did say not related. I understand the information perfectly, They did not tell me if he was Irish or give any address. Privacy issue. The person I thought was Patrick was single when he enlisted in 1942. Those dates were the same. Perhaps he was divorced. I don’t know. I do not understand why they would not give me information about him. They gave me Funeral details. I rang the Funeral company, now run by different family person and they do not have records for that long ago. Record did have same serial number on his form. Feeling very tired.
Hope I sent complete photo of some of the texts. Most pages were blank as information not given. Not sure if Command Unit Conv Hosp is where he died. Also something dated 09Jan1967?? Thanks Liz
So, do the dates of enlistment and discharge line up with the Patrick Cullen we've been looking at, the one we KNOW was born in the Irish Free State? Because this could just further collaborate that the man buried there is your uncle, even if they did redact a lot. It's the whole trail of breadcrumbs I've been talking about. Three or four pieces of data match the PA application, and the final pay worksheet, and the enlistment record, and the enlistment record, and the draft card (maybe even more than one), and you've got your evidence. Or if enough of the available data matches what Trajan told you to confirm what he said, it could also confirm it.
Did they say his rank was a sergeant?
Did he enlist on 8 September 1942?
Was he discharged on 1 March 1946?
Was his birthdate 14 March 1906?
These are the data points you want to compare to the other data points in your file, because they can be compared with known datapoints form other documents. And no other men named Cullens in the military service of the United States was born on 14 March 1906, so if you know your uncle was born then, you don't necessarily have to have his birthplace--everything else potentially locks it in.
So, do the dates of enlistment and discharge line up with the Patrick Cullen we've been looking at, the one we KNOW was born in the Irish Free State? Because this could just further collaborate that the man buried there is your uncle, even if they did redact a lot. It's the whole trail of breadcrumbs I've been talking about. Three or four pieces of data match the PA application, and the final pay worksheet, and the enlistment record, and the enlistment record, and the draft card (maybe even more than one), and you've got your evidence. Or if enough of the available data matches what Trajan told you to confirm what he said, it could also confirm it.
Did they say his rank was a sergeant?
Did he enlist on 8 September 1942?
Was he discharged on 1 March 1946?
Was his birthdate 14 March 1906?
These are the data points you want to compare to the other data points in your file, because they can be compared with known datapoints form other documents. And no other men named Cullens in the military service of the United States was born on 14 March 1906, so if you know your uncle was born then, you don't necessarily have to have his birthplace--everything else potentially locks it in.