The Homecoming Of Alex Bonneyman U.S.M.C. Poem by John F. McCullagh

The Homecoming Of Alex Bonneyman U.S.M.C.



My mother was a little girl when the Western Union man
Put the dreaded telegram in my grandmother’s hand.
It said that my grandfather would not be coming home.
It told her that she’d have to raise my mother all alone.
Grandfather was honored, in death, for his service overseas;
the Medal of Honor, we still have, awarded posthumously.

We thought that his remains were lost, committed to the sea.
Just one of many thousands who have died to keep us free.
Then recently, I traveled to the island where he died;
A mass grave had been discovered with some brave marines inside.
They found a tattered uniform that dressed grandfather’s bones.
Emotion overwhelmed me as I thought: “He’s coming home.”
In Sante Fe, New Mexico he’ll rest with all his kin.
Guns will fire in salute; they’ll fold a flag for him.
They’ll place it in my mother’s hands; his little girl grown old,
For her hero who died long ago on the Betio atoll.

POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
The battle of Tarawa took place in November 1943. When the marines attempted to land on Betio Island they faced fierce Japanese opposition and suffered as many casualties in three days as they had lost on Guadalcanal in six months. First Lt. Alexander Bonneyman of Sante fe, New Mexico fought and died there. Now Seventy two years later his grandson Chris Bonneyman Evans was on the expedition that recovered his remains and those of 35 of his comrades
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Paul Warren 04 July 2015

Vale a true hero from the greatest generation.

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