A stolen family treasure, missing for more than 60 years, found its way back home on Wednesday, ending a remarkable journey that included a stroke of luck, some dogged detective work and an unflinching belief that a soldier killed in the line of duty deserved to be honored, no matter how long it took.
William Johnson brushed away tears as he accepted the Purple Heart of his brother, George, who was killed in Korea as a 17-year-old soldier nearly 64 years ago.
"It was a complete surprise that it showed up again," said William Johnson, holding the medal in his lap. "It's amazing to come back, it's brought back home again." Belated Purple Heart stories usually involve some sort of lost paperwork or a bureaucratic snafu. But the story of George Johnson's missing Purple Heart takes a different turn.
Johnson was killed in a battle with North Korean forces on July 28, 1950, one of 53 American soldiers who died during what is now known as the Battle of Hwanggan.
His body was brought home and buried in Fulda, Minn., and his parents were presented with his Bronze Star Medal and the Purple Heart. George's father, Emil, kept the medals at a store he owned in Cambridge. The store was burglarized and the medals were stolen and never recovered. Emil died in 1977.
Last year, a couple were cleaning out a building on a 27-acre piece of property they recently purchased in Otsego, Minn. Its previous owner had been an inveterate collector, attending auctions and estate sales and filling sheds and buildings on the property with what he found.
In one box of junk in an abandoned building that was about to be torn down was a palm-sized leather case with gold embossing. Inside was a Purple Heart, slightly tarnished and its ribbon dirty from neglect. On the back of the medal was the name George J. Johnson.
The couple contacted a cousin, Al Zdon, who works with the American Legion. An old newspaperman, Zdon did what old newspapermen do.