Monday, Jul. 08, 1946
The 400,000
The War Department released all-but-final figures on the casualties of World War II: 176,432 killed in action; 26,422 dead of wounds or injuries received in combat; 19,481 missing and declared dead; 1,424 missing, not yet declared dead.
Besides these combat losses, 85,219 had died from other causes (illness and rear-area accidents). The awesome total: 308,978. The latest Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard figures show 87,659 dead and missing, for a U.S. armed forces total of 396,637.
The states with multimillion populations made remarkably equal sacrifices. New York lost 31,215 in the Army (or 23.2 men per 10,000 of population, against a national average of 23.4). Pennsylvania lost 26,554 (26.8 per 10,000); Illinois, 18,061 (22.9); and Texas--which many Texans thought had suffered more heavily --15,764 (24.6).
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.