"Makes me feel full gratitude that he is buried, not only as a veteran, but he's actually reunited with his wife after 111 years," Reisdorph said. Reisdorph feels a proper burial for Kinkead is the least a community can do to say "thank you" and to finally "rest in peace."
"History doesn't stop or begin with one particular person, it's only a benchmark of where we are, and we can look at these benchmarks and judge who we become based on where those benchmarks are," Pauly said. "When his remains showed up here after 105 years of sitting on a shelf, as veterans, we felt compelled to find a final resting place for him," Pauly said.įor Pauly this procession gives us a telescope into our own history. "It wasn't until the Missing in America group found his ashes, found out the resting place for his wife, and they returned the ashes here to Plattsmouth," Pauly said.Īmerican Legion members like Pauly and Kermit Reisdorph felt compelled to honor a hero who was dedicated to keeping this nation together. They were never collected or sent back to Plattsmouth for burial since his wife was laid to rest at Oak Hill Cemetery. "He had a career in house painting, his wife died and suddenly, in 1910, he immigrated to Seattle to live with his grown children and by 1916 had succumbed to low-bar pneumonia," Pauly said.įor reasons unknown to anyone his cremated remains stayed in Washington at a funeral home. Kinkead and his wife had two daughters and moved to Plattsmouth. "And in 1864, and by 1871, had met and married his wife, Cynthia. "He returned to Marietta, Ohio," American Legion Post 56 member Michael Pauly said. During the War, he got shot, injured and captured. Kinkead fought in the Union Army during the Civil War, participating in iconic events like the Battle of Shiloh.