Most of the people at Stanley Galaszewski鈥檚 burial ceremony never knew him.
He died more than 80 years ago.
Still, the crowd on the crisp November afternoon swelled with extended family, leather-jacketed Patriot Guard Riders, a group of quiet school children.
Together, they bowed their heads in prayer to honor the fallen World War II sailor.
He was one of 鈥 sailors, soldiers, civilians 鈥 who lost their lives on Dec. 7, 1941 during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
After decades of being listed as missing, he鈥檚 finally back in the place he called home: Steubenville, Ohio.
The sailor鈥檚 service
Galaszewski was 28 years old in 1940. He became a Seaman 2nd Class and was stationed on the USS California.
Just weeks before the bombing of Pearl Harbor, he wrote a letter to his sister.
Her granddaughter, Deb Conti, still has it.
鈥淗e writes how much they don't need to worry about him,鈥 Conti said. 鈥淚t seems like they were all close. They were two years apart, so I know he was important to my grandmother and they were worried about him.鈥
Six weeks later, the Japanese military attacked the U.S. naval base. The was slammed with torpedoes and bombs. It caught fire and slowly sank.
![A wreath with a red ribbon displays a photo of Stanley Galaszewski](https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/46d94f5/2147483647/strip/true/crop/1929x1512+0+0/resize/880x690!/quality/90/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fnpr-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F07%2F5c%2F803edfe646698fe71ff14b810cbc%2Fwreath.jpg)
Like so many people in Pearl Harbor that day, Galaszewski was listed as missing. His family never knew for sure what happened to him.
Until this September.
That鈥檚 when Deb Conti got a phone call from the Navy.
鈥淚 thought it was a hoax,鈥 Conti said. 鈥淚 really didn't understand.鈥
Decades after he died, the Navy had identified Galaszewski鈥檚 remains.
The process of identifying long-fallen servicemen
Captain Jeff Draude, the director of Navy Casualty, said identifying long-dead servicemen like this isn鈥檛 easy.
were on board some of the ships that sank during the attack on Pearl Harbor. Their remains were recovered in the months that followed and interred at the Halawa and Nu鈥檜anu cemeteries in Hawaii.
But only relatively recently 鈥 with the advancement of DNA technology 鈥 has the Navy been able to identify some of those remains.
Now, Draude鈥檚 team is going through them one by one.
鈥淪ince they can get the DNA from these remains and we know who was on the ship, we can reach out to their living relatives,鈥 Draude explained. 鈥淭heir DNA reference samples go to the lab and then they're all cross-referenced, so that鈥檚 how they鈥檙e able to get these matches nowadays from so many years ago.鈥
鈥淚 always remembered my grandma saying she wished she could have brought him home."Deb Conti
The Navy has been doing this work since 2015, but there鈥檚 still more to go. Draude says they won鈥檛 be finished until each missing serviceman is identified.
鈥淭hese are sailors and marines that paid the ultimate sacrifice for service to their country,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here's no statute of limitations on that.鈥
Each time an ID is made, a member of Draude鈥檚 team personally reaches out to their family.
鈥淲e're not talking about a son or daughter or a spouse anymore because it's been so many years,鈥 Draude said. 鈥淏ut we'll have anything from, 鈥榤y family was always hoping that they weren't really on the ship that day鈥 [to] relief to finally have that closure.鈥
Sitting beside her cousins, her children and her grandson, Conti finally felt that closure for her great-uncle, Stanley Galaszewski. Like many families, she chose to have his body moved from its resting place in Hawaii to a location closer to home.
鈥淚 always remembered my grandma saying she wished she could have brought him home,鈥 Conti said.
With Draude鈥檚 help, she has finally fulfilled that wish.
Stanley Galaszewski is now buried behind his parents at the Mount Calvary Cemetery in Steubenville.