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Harris Lawrence Nelson

Monuments

79th Infantry Division

 

Name:
Lawrence Nelson Harris
Rank:
Private First Class
Serial Number:
35273011
Unit:
773rd Tank Destroyer Battalion
Date of Death:
1944-10-09
State:
West Virginia
Cemetery:
Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia
Plot:
Section 60
Row:
Grave:
5735
Decoration:
Purple Heart
Comments:

Lawrence Nelson Harris was born on March 16, 1920. In late September 1944, their unit, the 773rd Tank Battalion, was clearing German forces out of the Parroy Forest near Lunéville. On Oct. 9, 1944, in the final battle for control of the region, Hellums, Harris and three other soldiers were attacked by enemy fire in their M-10 Tank Destroyer. Harris and Hellums were reported to have been killed, and evidence at the time indicated the remains of the men had been destroyed in the attack and were neither recovered nor buried near the location.

In November 1946, a French soldier working in the Parroy Forest found debris associated with an M-10 vehicle and human remains, which were turned over to the American Graves Registration Command (AGRC). The remains were buried as unknowns in the Ardennes American Cemetery in Belgium. A year later, the AGRC returned to the Parroy Forest to conduct interviews and search for additional remains. Investigators noted at that time that all remains of U.S. soldiers had reportedly been removed and that the soldiers were likely buried elsewhere as unknowns.

In 2003, a French citizen exploring the Parroy Forest discovered human remains and an identification bracelet engraved with Hellums' name. The information was eventually sent to the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command (JPAC). In April 2006, the man turned over the items to a JPAC team working in Europe.

Historians at DPMO and JPAC continued their research on the burials at the Ardennes Cemetery, and drew a correlation to those unknowns that had been removed from the 1944 battle site. In early 2008, JPAC disinterred these remains and began their forensic review.

Among other forensic identification tools and circumstantial evidence, scientists from JPAC used dental comparisons for both men and the Armed Forces DNA Identification Laboratory used mitochondrial DNA, which matched that of each soldier's relatives in the identification of their remains.

PFC Harris is now buried in the Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia, USA in a common grave with Cpl Hellums and Pvt Owens. He also has a cenotaph located in West Virginia National Cemetery, Grafton, Taylor County, West Virginia. Harris' name is also permanently inscribed on the Tablets of the Missing at the Epinal American Cemetery in France. A rosette is placed next to his name to mark that the he now rests in a known gravesite.

Source of information: www.findagrave.com, www.abmc.gov