How do I find someone who was a Marine?
How do I find someone who was a Marine?
How to Locate U.S. Military Personnel and Veterans
- By phone at 1-877-272-7337.
- Through an online request (You’ll first need to create an account.)
- Using its Hero Care app on your mobile device.
Can grandchildren request military records?
All requests must be signed and dated by the veteran or next-of-kin. If you are the next of kin of a deceased veteran, you must provide proof of death of the veteran such as a copy of death certificate, letter from funeral home or published obituary.
How do I find a Marine veteran?
Veterans Directories and Locators from other Organizations
- Interactive Vietnam War Memorial.
- Selected Veterans Service Organizations.
- Directory of Veterans Service Organizations.
- VetFriends.com (fee required for locator services)
- Military.com.
- Military Connections.
How can I find out if someone served in the Marine Corps?
How To Request Military Records From The NPRC
- Step 1: Visit the National Personnel Records Center official website.
- Step 2: Download and print a copy of the SF-180.
- Step 3: Fill out the form SF-180.
- Step 4: Mail the form SF-180 to the National Personnel Records Center. (
How do I reconstruct the timeline of my father’s military service?
Filling in the gaps as I reconstruct the timeline of my father’s military service assignments was definitely easier with help from the Naval Archives. Here is the criteria for requesting records: If you are a veteran or a deceased veteran’s next of kin, you can submit a request for records through the National Personnel Records Center.
Can I Find my dad’s military records?
Military records are available to relatives wishing to discover their family history. I always intended to ask my Dad for the name of the ships where he was stationed during his twenty-four years in the U.S. Navy. Unfortunately, I waited too late. But all was not lost.
When did the Marine Corps start recording military records?
127.9 Records of Marine Units 1914-49 127.10 Cartographic Records (General) 1883-1944 127.11 Motion Pictures (General) 1939-60 127.12 Sound Recordings (General) 1942-43 127.13 Still Pictures (General) 1870-1968 Established: Under joint administrative control of the U.S. Army and the U.S. Navy, by an act of July 11, 1798 (1 Stat. 594).
How do I get a copy of my DD214 from the Marines?
Marines requesting a copy of their service record, DD 214 or any other documents who were discharged from the Marine Corps after 1999 must write to MMSB at the following address: Marines wanting a copy of their medical records must write to the following address: