[Pages S7325-S7326]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




             TRIBUTE TO STAFF SERGEANT HAROLD GEORGE DANLEY

<bullet> Mr. NELSON of Nebraska. Madam President, today I wish to 
recognize a man who died in the service of his country 64 years ago but 
never received the proper recognition he was due.
  Harold George Danley was one of four brothers from Lincoln, NE, who 
joined the armed services during World War II. Three of those brothers 
returned home to their families; Sergeant Danley, who was 22 years old, 
did not.
  Sergeant Danley was serving in the 18th Army/Air Force Anti-Submarine 
Squadron aboard a B-24D Bomber, which crashed while patrolling the east 
coast of the United States somewhere

[[Page S7326]]

near the Virginia/North Carolina shoreline on April 21, 1943. Despite 
the efforts of search parties, his body was never recovered; therefore, 
no memorial service was ever performed on his behalf. It was some time 
later that the family was notified that Sergeant Danley was officially 
listed as FOD, ``Finding of Death.''
  Sergeant Danley left behind his wife Thelma; his daughter Merriam, 
who was born several months after her father's death; his father 
Harrison, and stepmother Anna; three brothers, Lieutenant Colonel Earl 
E. Danley, Sergeant Bob E. Danley and Sergeant Lloyd K. Danley, now 
deceased; and three half-siblings, Marvin, Delores and Betty. His 
mother Ella preceded him in death.
  On May 18, 2007, a memorial service was held at Arlington National 
Cemetery to honor Harold G. Danley as a son, brother, husband, and 
father, as well as a man who made the ultimate sacrifice in the service 
of his country. My thoughts are with the Danley family as they honor 
the memory of Staff Sergeant Danley, a Nebraska hero from the second 
World War.<bullet>

                          ____________________