Time flies so fast. Some people might have been aged and start to retire from their work. This case also happened to military officers who have serviced for the United States. However, many of them didn’t remember where they work and which department they came from. Naturally, many people are curious about it so they set about verifying someone’s military status. It could be their father, grandfather, or husband. It could be easy or difficult. We need to find some documents to do the verification.

army officer

The Records

If you want to find out your father or other family members’ military status, you can take a look at the timeline of their work histories. If you are a veteran or the next of kin of a deceased veteran, you will probably submit a registration request through the National Personnel Records Center. This service is absolutely free and very simple, either by e-mail, fax, or online. You can also ask their family or relatives, such as mother, father, or their children.

The Requirements

Our identity documents’ presentation gives us access to the commissioner’s office, where we made our national purchases. As children, we decided online judo lessons and participated in other students’ tournaments. The Navy was our world, and most of our classmates were allies in the army.

During the service period, the ships’ names changed as often as the cities’ names where Father was stationed. Judging the terms of these corresponding ships became difficult after the years spent with my father.

The information needed to consult the Official Military Personnel Registers (OMPF) contains the following:

  1. The social security number
  2. Branch of service
  3. Service brand
  4. Date and place of birth
  5. Exhaust position
  6. Entrance position for the ceremony, if known.

The Steps

When Dad talked about his time in the Navy, he fascinated the region with his experience and narrow escape routes. I have taken notes, but you will find job offers that I cannot fill with a quick phone call. Learning more about him during the official practices was an enlightening experience that allowed me to fill some of these gaps.

Since the standard 180 forms are filed with the department responsible for the branch of service, only a few pieces of information are needed to fill out the form, including the exact name of the veteran who was employed during the service, his social security number, date, and place of birth, the branch of service and date of leave from military service.

application interviewThe form asks if this person died and the date and if the person left military service. It contains a list of questions that can be asked, such as a type DD214 (it will be the “U.S. Military Separation Report”), a special form used to analyze military benefits and other small businesses.

The form does not ask its target when it receives these documents. Although the form’s response may be voluntary, it may result in a “faster response” when you respond. When I submitted my module 180, I expressed my interest in writing a timeline for the veteran’s descendants and publishing stories related to the military approach.

Your signature is required on the form, along with any evidence of death, such as a death certificate, along with your connection to the person doing military service, using an example, the next of kin. In my scenario, that would be the woman. I did not have a copy of the death certificate. Still, they confessed that the newspaper’s obituary, along with the funeral card, indicated the date of arrival and the veteran’s death date.

After preparing a copy of my application, I sent it on March 7, hoping that the package would be returned to me. On March 25, I called to follow up on the application. I contacted an efficient and well-trained official who immediately found my application and informed me that it was “in progress,” waiting for copies of some documents. He told me that I should expect to do something by mid-April.