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In this Dec. 8, 2017 photo, ...
Chris Carola, The Associated Press
In this Dec. 8, 2017 photo, World War II veteran Wilfred “Spike” Mailloux looks through a series of sketches of U.S. Army 27th Infantry Division soldiers while visiting the New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. They were done in Hawaii by Stan Dube in 1943, a year before the 27th Division fought in the Battle of Saipan. Now his son, Ira Dube, is hoping to identify the men, so he has donated his late father’s 15 sketches to the museum.

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. — More than a dozen sketches of American soldiers who served during World War II have been posted on a New York museum’s website in the hopes the men can be identified.

The sketches made by Stan Dube (doob) were posted Tuesday on the website of the New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center. Dube drew portraits of 17 fellow soldiers while serving with the Army’s 27th Infantry Division in Hawaii in 1943. He died in 2009.

His son Ira, of Woodland Park, Colorado, discovered the sketches among his father’s possessions last year and recently donated them to the museum.

The soldiers in two of the sketches have been identified and the artwork was sent to relatives. The IDs of the other 15 remain a mystery.

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