The Denver Post

Remains identified as Denver man killed in action

- By Lauren Penington lpenington@ denverpost. com

Nearly 80 years after being killed in action in Germany during World War II, a Denver man’s body finally will return home.

Harold Schafer, 28, was hit by enemy machine gun fire and killed in action during a battle in Dillingen, Germany, on Dec. 10, 1944, according to a Thursday news release from the Defense POW/ MIA Accounting Agency.

Schafer officially was declared non-recoverabl­e in November 1951 — now, three- quarters of a century later, he’s set to be returned to and buried in Wheat Ridge, officials announced Thursday.

Schafer’s body was not recovered initially because of intense fighting against heavily reinforced German forces, the release stated. When American troops were ordered to retreat from the Dillingen area on Dec. 21, 1944, he was one of many casualties left behind.

After the war ended, t he American Graves Registrati­on Command began investigat­ing and recovering missing American soldiers in Europe, according to Thursday’s release. The organizati­on conducted several investigat­ions in the Dillingen area between 1946 and 1950 but was unable to recover or identify Schafer’s remains.

A defense agency historian studying the unaccounte­d-for American soldiers lost at Dilling en discovered in 2018 that Schafer could be connected to human remains buried in the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville- sur- Mer, France, officials said Thursday.

Federal scientists identified the body as Schafer using anthropolo­gical analysis, DNA testing, dental work and circumstan­tial evidence, the news release stated.

Schafer’s name is recorded on the Wall soft he Missing at Lorraine American Cemetery, an American Battle Monuments Commission site in St. Avold, France, along with the others still missing from World War II. A rosette will be placed next to his name to indicate he has been accounted for.

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