Print plaque Printing Tips

World War II Honoree

Killed in World War II

Robert Nicholas Walkowiak

Branch of Service

U.S. Navy

Hometown

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Honored By

Orville L. Kline

Branch Seal
Activity During WWII

Rank: Fireman Third Class. He was inducted into the United States Navy January 11, 1940 at Chicago, Illinois, with recruit training at the U.S. Naval Training Station Great Lakes, Illinois. Upon his graduation from boot camp and Fire Training, he was transferred to the USS Oklahoma Battleship, BB-37 for duty as a Fireman, and based at Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii. On Sunday Morning, December 7, 1941 the Emperor of Japan’s Naval Aviators launched a devastating, surprise attack on the U.S. Naval Base, and other military installations on Oahu. The Oklahoma moored on Ford Island along with her shipmates came under attack, and she sustained multiple torpedo strikes, which caused the warship to capsize. The Battle of Pearl Harbor took his life on the day of the attack, and interred as an unknown in the Oahu Nuuanu Cemetery, Territory of Hawaii. In remembrance of the brave, his name is permanently inscribed in the tablets of the missing, memorialized at the Honolulu National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific ‘Punchbowl’ Hawaii. After the cessation of hostilities with Japan, personnel from an American Graves Registration Company disinterred the unknown remains from the Oahu Cemetery, and laid them to rest in the Punchbowl Cemetery. In June of 2015, personnel from the Defense Prisoners of War/Missing in Action Accounting Agency in Hawaii disinterred an unknown from Punchbowl, and transferred the remains to their Honolulu’s laboratory for analysis, where he was identified. The family of this Seaman requested that his remains be reinterred at Punchbowl, and he was laid to rest with Military Honors April 28, 2017. This American Patriot was awarded the Purple Heart posthumously, for his ultimate sacrifice in defense of his country.