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FOX31 Denver
82 years later, remains of WWII prisoner from Colorado return home
By Jeremy Hubbard,
7 days ago
DENVER (KDVR) — He survived the Bataan Death March, only to die in a Japanese prison camp. Now, 82 years later, a Colorado World War II hero is finally back home.
The remains of Clifford Strickland of Florence, Colorado, arrived at Denver International Airport on Thursday, escorted by his great nephew, Air Force Capt. Daniel Strickland.
“When I was asked to do it, my first feeling was unworthy. That’s my honest feeling. But honored. Honored to be asked to do it and to have the opportunity to escort him home. A soldier of that generation who happens to be in my bloodline,” Strickland said.
Clifford Strickland was in the Army in the Philippines in 1942 when Japanese forces invaded. He was taken prisoner and subjected to the 65-mile Bataan Death March. He survived it, but then he died while in captivity at a Japanese POW camp. Strickland was buried in a mass grave and eventually moved to an American cemetery in Manila, where he was interred as “unknown.”
Clifford Strickland of Florence, Colorado, died in a POW camp during World War II. His remains were recently identified using dental records and DNA from relatives. He’ll be laid to rest on June 29, 2024, in Florence with full military honors. (Defense Department)
But the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, the military office charged with identifying the remains of service members, used dental and other analyses, including mitochondrial DNA supplied by relatives, to make a positive match.
“With modern DNA technology, they’re able to do that to a much better degree than they have ever done before,” said Steve Hayes of Post 209 of the American Legion in Colorado Springs, one of dozens of motorcyclists who escorted the hearse carrying Strickland’s remains through Denver and then to southern Colorado on Thursday.
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