CHICAGO – Ahead of the Independence Day holiday, Illinois State Treasurer Michael Frerichs returned a missing Purple Heart medal to the family of a late Army Air Corps veteran from Park Ridge.
The medal, given to those wounded or killed in military combat, belonged to Jerome Even, who served in the U.S. Army Air Corps and rose to the rank of Master Sergeant. Even put the medal in a bank safe deposit box. He died in April 2014, at age 92, and the contents of the safe deposit box ended up at the State Treasurer’s Office, which works to reunite people with unclaimed property.
“Jerome Even was a true hero, part of the Greatest Generation, who bravely served his country at such a crucial time in our nation’s history,” Frerichs said. “We honor his sacrifice. I am grateful we returned his Purple Heart to his family, where it belongs.”
The medal was returned as a result of Operation Purple Heart, a mission to return Purple Heart medals to their rightful owners. In May, Frerichs unveiled a web page listing Purple Heart medals the Treasurer’s Office is seeking to return.
Jim Even, one of Jerome Even’s sons, said about a dozen people who had seen coverage of Frerichs’s news conference reached out to him asking if the medal might belong to his family.
“I said, ‘Oh my goodness.’ I didn’t know he had anything left in that safe deposit box. It was a shock. We were very surprised and happy,” said Jim Even, who then contacted the State Treasurer’s Unclaimed Property team. “The people there are just wonderful and just walked me through everything with the forms. I couldn’t wait to share this whole story with my siblings when we all get together.”
Master Sergeant Even was awarded the Purple Heart by Headquarters, 7th Bombardment Group on Feb. 3, 1942, according to military paperwork in the safe deposit box. Jim Even said his father told him the Purple Heart was earned during the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor.“My recollection is that he was doing guard duty overnight. He and his fellow soldiers saw planes flying over the island going toward the harbor that had rising suns on the tail, which was the Japanese Zeros insignia,” Even said his father told him.
“Bombs started falling and he realized, ‘Oh my gosh, this is for real.’ He went into the barracks where he was guarding the officers. He said, ‘Air raid,’ and they didn’t hear it because it was from far away and the sound hadn’t traveled. They didn’t believe him and started throwing shoes at him. And then a bomb hit close, and everyone ran for shelter. And that’s how he was wounded in the back of his leg during the bombing,” Even said his father told him.
Jim Even said he found letters from his grandmother to his father from Dec. 8 and Dec. 12 asking if her son was alive. His father didn’t get the letters until a week later, and he was able to telegraph that he was OK.
Master Sergeant Even also earned numerous other awards during World War II, including an Air Medal, Good Conduct Ribbon, and the Asiatic Pacific Campaign Ribbon with four battle stars.
Frerichs has now returned 11 Purple Heart medals to their rightful owners, the most by any administration in Illinois, but there is still more work to be done.
“Our ask is simple. If you recognize a name, then reach out to them or their family because maybe we have their Purple Heart,” Frerichs said. “You also can reach my office through operationpurpleheart.org.”
A full list of unclaimed Purple Hearts is available online.
Military medals are among the most difficult items to return because neither the Armed Forces nor the federal government maintains a comprehensive list of awardees.
A thorough vetting of inquiries will occur once an electronic claim is made at icash.illinoistreasurer.gov.