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World War II Enlistment Records Available Online

The following is a press release from the U.S. National Archives and Archives and Records Administration: National Archives Makes World War II Enlistment Records Available Online

College Park, MD… World War II enlistment records for over nine million Army soldiers are now available online, the National Archives and Archives and Records Administration (NARA) announced today. The records are in the World War II Electronic Army Serial Number Merged File available through the Access to Archival Database (AAD) section on NARA’s web site (www.archives.gov/aad ). AAD is the first publicly accessible application developed under the auspices of NARA’s Electronic Records Archives (ERA) Program.

The National Archives scanned War Department microfilmed punch cards on enlistments to support the reconstruction of the military personnel records at its National Personnel Records Center. Because of the age of the microfilm, approximately 1.5 million records could not be scanned. Scanning problems also created some errors in the digital records that present unique searching challenges. To help minimize these problems, NARA staff developed a set of Frequently Asked Questions especially for the Army Serial Number File. Despite these challenges, information about a majority of sixteen million World War II servicemen and women is available via the web site. Each record may have the enlistee’s serial number and name, state and county of residence, place of enlistment, date of enlistment, grade, branch, term of enlistment, place of birth, year of birth, race, education, civilian occupation, marital status, and component. Because the records are for Army enlistments during World War II, the file does not include records for Army officers, members of other services or enlistments for other time periods. However, it does contain information on more than 130,000 women who enlisted in the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps.

This is the latest of the “born digital” data records related to World War II that the National Archives preserves in a contemporary digital format and makes available through its Access to Archival Databases online resource. The Japanese-American Internee File, 1942 – 1946, has records with personal descriptive data about nearly 110,000 Japanese-Americans whom the War Relocation Authority placed in relocation centers. Another file is the World War II Prisoners of War File, ca. 1942 – ca. 1947, that identifies 143,000 U.S. military officers and soldiers and American and Allied civilians who were prisoners of war and internees. Finally, the Records of Duty Locations for Naval Intelligence Personnel, 1942 – 1945, contain limited data about the military intelligence personnel attached to Naval Group China during World War II.

*****The preceding article is from Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter and is copyright 2004 by Richard W. Eastman. It is re-published here with the permission of the author. Information about the newsletter is available at www.eogn.com.

After reading Dick’s newsletter, I decided to look up the military enlistment records for my father, Howard N. Detling, who enlisted in Los Angeles, California, on August 8, 1942, about two months after his marriage to my mother, Wilma Wells. I knew the date and place of enlistment because my mother had saved my dad’s military records. But I wanted to try the site to see how easy it was to find. It only took a minute, and the basics of the enlistment record appears in my web browser. If you have a relative who enlisted to serve in World War II, you can check out the enlistment using the link above.

 

Posted in Detling Family History, Genealogy Web Sites, Older Posts.


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