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Dover-Foxcroft soldier who died in Japanese prison camp is coming home

By Christopher Burns, Bangor Daily News Staff

A Dover-Foxcroft soldier who died during World War II after the Imperial Japanese Army captured the Philippines is finally coming home.

U.S. Army Pvt. Willard D. Merrill, 21, was serving in the 2nd Observation Squadron in late 1941 when the Japanese army invaded the Philippines, according to the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency.

Merrill was among the U.S. and Filipino soldiers captured after the surrender of the Bataan Peninsula on April 9, 1942.

Photo courtesy of the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency
PVT. MERRILL — U.S. Army Pvt. Willard D. Merrill, 21, of Dover-Foxcroft was among 2,500 prisoners of war who died at a Japanese camp in the Philippines during World War II.

Merrill endured the Bataan Death March, which began the next day. Seventy-eight-thousand prisoners marched 65 miles, during which they endured abuse and executions. By some estimates, around 3,000 prisoners died before reaching their final destination.

He was held at the Cabanatuan POW camp, where Merrill died on Nov. 14, 1942, and was buried in a common grave, the DPAA said April 23.

That common grave was exhumed after the war, and in 1947, officials began work to identify all the remains. But after that initial work, the identities of three sets of remains remained unknown and were buried in the Manila American Cemetery and Memorial, where he remained until January 2019.

Those three sets of remains were exhumed again, and after using dental, anthropological and DNA analysis, as well as circumstantial evidence, scientists identified Merrill among those remains.

He will return to Maine, where he will be buried in Dover-Foxcroft in June.

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