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    KIA Korea

    I wanted to post this in remembrance of my uncle who I never met. He died in battle about a year before I was born.

    PFC John Camillo "Johnnie" Colonna








    Birth: Aug. 28, 1926
    Dallas
    Dallas County
    Texas, USA
    Death: Sep. 29, 1950, North Korea

    Son of Camillo Joe Colonna and Rosalee Hamilton.

    --------

    Marine's Casket Borne to Dallas

    Six white-gloved Marines carried a casket through the bright tunnels at Union Terminal Sunday.

    The body of Pfc. John C. Colonna of 615 Liberty Street, Dallas, was in the flag-draped casket.

    A Marine gunnery sergeant named Lawrence O'Malley cleared the way through gay Sunday train crowds.

    "What are the men carrying, Daddy?" asked a little girl.

    Colonna's pretty sister, Mrs. D. E. (Mary) Davis, followed, crying.

    Johnnie Colonna, 23, and already the owner of a Purple Heart with two gold stars, left a good job last summer to go back to the Marine Corps. The former Crozier Technical athlete died last September in a frontal assault on a Communist-held mountain in Korea.

    Colonna was the first of the Marine dead to reach the United States from Korea under a new reburial program.

    Gunnery Sergeant O'Malley escorted the body here from San Francisco. O'Malley, who won a Purple Heart at Iwo Jima, is a Marine who wears a black band on his sleeve most of the time. Since 1947 he has been escorting the bodies of dead Marines back to their home towns.

    "The saddest duty in all the Marine Corps," said the man who goes to three or four military funerals every month.

    Services for Johnnie Colonna will be at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Weiland-Merritt Funeral Church at 2909 Live Oak. Navy Chaplain Paul F. Bobb will be in charge of services. Burial will be in Grove Hill Cemetery.

    His other survivors are his father, Joe C. Colonna; two brothers, Billy (William Fred) Colonna and Joe Colonna Jr., all of Dallas; and two other sisters, Mrs. Pete (Mildred) Payne of Hearne, and Mrs. Calvin C. (Geneva Mae) Porter of Grand Prairie.

    Colonna was wounded twice in the Pelelieu invasion, one of the most savage operations of World War II, but he lived to fight all through the Okinawa campaign.

    He was with the 1st Marine Division on Pelelieu. He was still fighting with the 1st Division when he died on that Korean mountain.

    Colonna's pall bearers Tuesday will be Master Sergeants Peter Butz, Daniel Bowman and Herbert McQueen; Technical Sergeants Harry Polete and John Linyard, and Staff Sgt. Holon Wright.

    And standing by the grave will be Sergeant O'Malley, the man with "the saddest duty in all the Marine Corps."

    - Dallas Morning News
    April 2, 1951


    Parents:
    Camillo Joe Colonna (1887 - 1967)
    Rosalee Hamilton Colonna (1899 - 1947)

    Sibling:
    Geneva Mae Colonna Porter (1921 - 1978)*
    John Camillo Colonna (1926 - 1950)



    Burial:
    Grove Hill Memorial Park
    Dallas
    Dallas County
    Texas, USA

    Created by: Fluttergirl
    Record added: Nov 07, 2009
    Find A Grave Memorial# 44027577

    PFC John Camillo Johnnie Colonna
    Last edited by Rustyford; 05-29-2016 at 01:49 PM.

    #2
    Rest in Peace, Marine.

    Semper Fi.

    Comment


      #3
      Amazing article. RIP.

      Comment


        #4
        RIP PFC John Colonna. God Bless.

        Comment


          #5
          Rest in peace PFC Colonna.

          Comment


            #6
            Hand Salute...…………
            Ready.....…..
            Two...…….…….

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              #7
              Rest In Peace.. God Bless

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                #8
                Semper Fi devil dog.

                Sent from my SM-G955U using Tapatalk

                Comment


                  #9
                  I still remember

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Hero.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      A debt I can’t repay. Rest easy, Marine.


                      Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Thanks For Sharing. RIP PFC Colonna.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          What today is all about. I’m shocked and saddened by so many corporate accounts stating “Thanks to those who served.”

                          In remembrance of your Uncle and all who gave their life in service to America. RIP heros.

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                            #14
                            rip

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Thx for posting![emoji120]

                              Sent from my SM-N986U using Tapatalk

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