The Columbus Dispatch

Remains will return home for Barberton WWII sailor

- Alan Ashworth

Almost 80 years after he died in the attack on Pearl Harbor, a Barberton sailor is finally set to return home.

Navy Seaman 1st Class Buford H. Dyer, 19, died with 428 crewmen in the Dec. 7, 1941, surprise attack, which led to the U.S. entry into World War II the next day.

Dyer served on the USS Oklahoma, which was moored at Ford Island, Pearl Harbor. The battleship was hit by multiple torpedoes and capsized, and later became a widely recognized part of U.S. history.

Although some crew members survived by jumping into the harbor’s waters, Dyer perished and his remains were buried in Hawaii.

Dyer was a Barberton High School student as war tensions were growing prior to the Pearl Harbor attack. A newspaper account from the time lists his age as 20 and his address as Canal Street. One of Dyer’s younger brothers, Jay, enlisted in the U.S. Marines a few days after the attack.

The newspaper account also lists another brother, Chester, who was 16 at the time.

According to honorstate­s.org, a website that lists the achievemen­ts of U.S. military veterans, Dyer was posthumous­ly awarded a Purple Heart and several other medals for his service.

Dyer was born in Tennessee and later moved to Barberton with his mother,

Thena Cromley, and his siblings.

In 1947, the American Graves Registrati­on Service disinterre­d his remains and those of other unidentified casualties in an effort to identify them. The remains were taken to Schofield Barracks in Oahu, Hawaii, but only 35 individual­s from the Oklahoma could be identified at the time.

The Graves Registrati­on Service buried the unidentified remains at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, and in 1949, a military board classified those who could not be identified as non-recoverabl­e, including Dyer.

But with the advent of DNA techonolog­y, that would change for the Barberton sailor and his crewmates.

Between June and November 2015, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency personnel exhumed the unidentified Oklahoma crewmen from the cemetery for analysis.

Scientists from the agency were able to identify Dyer using dental, anthropolo­gical and DNA analysis. He was the 350th Oklahoma crew member identified by the agency’s USS Oklahoma Project.

Dyer’s name is recorded on the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, along with the others missing from WWII.

Dyer will be buried in April at the Western Reserve National Cemetery in Medina County.

Leave a message for Alan Ashworth at 330-996-3859 or email him at aashworth@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @newsalanbe­aconj.

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