Remembering those who served

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Allie Galetti displays the Purple Heart awarded to her uncle, Harold (Joseph) Lucas after he was killed during World War II. Galetti keeps his Purple Heart along with photos and other military memorabilia of both her family and her husband, Jim Galetti’s, family. (BCR photo/Barb Kromphardt)
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“The cousins and my aunt thought that it should come to me instead of any of the other relatives because I was interested,” Galetti said.

Galetti said she was overwhelmed when her cousin called to say they had decided the items should go to her.

“I started crying, and I said, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me,’” she said. “It just means the world to me.”

Galetti said she feels a special connection to the uncle who died when she was only a few years old.

“That’s another connection because I was told that I was his favorite niece,” she said.

Galetti said her love of family history probably comes from attending Memorial Day services as a child.

“We’re brought up as kids with that,” she said.

But it also probably dates back to a piece of petrified wood given to her by her father, James Lucas.

“Like right now, there were no jobs, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt had jobs for different people,” Galetti said.

Lucas was sent to Portland, Ore., as part of the Civilian Conservative Corps to build roads, and he returned home with the piece of wood. His photo also hangs in a place of honor on Galetti’s wall.

“Yes, I think it probably all started with my father’s petrified wood,” Galetti said.

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