I was at my veterinarian about a year ago and on the wall in the waiting room was an old picture of a young Marine along with an ensamble of ribbons and medals. I asked my vet who that was and he told me it was his father, William Kuhl. He began to tell me a couple of stories about his father in the corp and I found them interesting, among the most interesting was a couple things, the fact his father served on the USS Yorktown when it was sunk and a story of his father's long lost sea bag. A couple weeks later, I stopped back in and he said he brought some things from his house to show me. He had an old foot locker and an old worn, tattered cardboard box. He said his aunt (his father's sister), had kept newspaper clippings of things that had concerned his father and articles in which his father was mentioned. Dr. Kuhl started to show me pictures and newspaper articles that indeed varified his father was on the USS Yorktown. One newspaper article had even metioned how he had shot down a Jap zero. To make a long story somewhat shorter. Dr. Kuhl told me he had no idea as to what to do with all these articles as there was no one left in his family that was much concerned with them. I told him I had an idea and I would get back with him in a couple of days. I went home and contacted the Marine Corp Museum in Virginia and they in turn immediately contacted Dr. Kuhl. He sent them some pictures of some of the items, and their response was if everything he said he had was verified, that these items would make a one of a kind display at the museum. So Dr. Kuhl signed the property over to the museum and hopefully soon they will have a special place there. I mentioned earlier a newspaper article about his father's lost sea bag, so I have included here a copy of that article and a picture of his father with his sea bag. They are pretty self explanitory, so I will leave you now to enjoy. But in closing, I would like to say that as a thank you to me from Dr. Kuhl, he gave me his father's K-bar that had seen action at Guedalcanal, Iwo, and several other places along with his father's brass E.G.A. belt buckle.
Wm. "Doc" Cottrell
FMF Doc
It's God's job to forgive bin Laden.
It's the U.S. Marines job to arrange the meeting.
Corporal Kuhl was my uncle. He was one of the coolest people I’ve ever known. Someday I hope to visit the Marine Corp Museum in Virginia and see the display of “Uncle Bill’s” artifacts.