Advertisement

World War II veteran's medals returned to family in Marion

World War II veteran's medals returned to family in Marion
Advertisement
By West Kentucky Stat Staff
8 hours ago | MARION, IL
By West Kentucky Stat Staff Aug. 22, 2025 | 01:55 AM | MARION, IL
Illinois Treasurer Michael Frerichs Thursday returned a lost Purple Heart medal to the grand-niece of a World War II veteran who earned it while fighting in Italy.

Frerichs reunited Army Private Stephen J. Grabowski's military medals with grand-niece Chrystal Cantrell during a ceremony at VFW Post 1301 in Marion.

It is the 16th lost medal Frerichs has returned as part of Operation Purple Heart, an unprecedented mission to reunite lost medals with the rightful owners. The iconic military honor is given to individuals wounded or killed during military combat.

"Private Grabowski sacrificed a great deal to stop an evil dictator and ensure a free world," Frerichs said. "It is never too late to honor the sacrifices of the Greatest Generation."

On April 15, 1945, during the closing days of active fighting in Europe, Grabowski and thousands of others participated in Operation Grapeshot, the final Allied attack during the Italian Campaign. Grabowski was a rifleman in Company B, 473rd Infantry.

He was 27 and serving in his third year in the military when a German grenade struck his bunker and buried him under debris as his unit advanced in Italy. Grabowski was paralyzed from the waist down.

A few weeks later, Germany surrendered to Allied Forces on May 7, 1945. Three months later, Japan fell, and the war ended.
 
Grabowski, the son of Polish immigrants in Chicago, returned home the following year and lived at Hines VA Hospital, where he died in 1974 of kidney failure at age 56.. 

Treasurer Frerichs also returned Grabowski's Bronze Star; European, African, Middle Eastern Campaign medal; Good Conduct medal; American Campaign medal; and World War II Victory medal.

The medals were in a bank safe deposit box owned by Grabowski's oldest nephew, who is in poor health and lives in a nursing home in Chicago. 

"Knowing the sacrifices my great uncle and so many others made on behalf of this country is amazing," Cantrell said. "We must always remember we enjoy the freedoms we have because someone else stood up and did the right thing."

The contents of the safe deposit box were turned over to the Illinois State Treasurer's Office in 2010 after it had not been touched for several years. Safeguarding unclaimed property until it can be returned to its owners or heirs – no matter how long it takes - is a core function of the state treasurer's office. 
ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisement

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT