The Military Chapter

Their service, honored as a chapter. Not a record dump.

Price
$59
Delivery
48 hours
What You Provide
Name, dates, branch, conflict, and any service detail you have — DD-214, photos, family stories
What You Receive
A ~20-page designed PDF. Six narrative sections, theater map, Service Summary card, era-specific visual artifacts, archive search guide
What This Chapter Is

A focused narrative grounded in evidence

A Military Chapter takes what you know about an ancestor's service — sometimes a name and a war, sometimes a full DD-214 and a stack of photographs — and turns it into a designed narrative chapter you can read aloud, print, frame, or pass down.

It is not a record lookup. It is not a Wikipedia summary with their name pasted in. It is what their service meant — situated in the conflict they fought, the theater they served in, the unit they belonged to, and the home they returned to or did not.

Every claim is graded by evidence tier. Where the records are rich, the chapter goes deep. Where the records are sparse, we say so plainly and hand you the archive list to fill in the rest.

Scope: The Military Chapter currently focuses on US military service. The archives, casualty figures, and post-service procedures referenced throughout (NARA, the American Battle Monuments Commission, the Purple Heart, the 1973 NPRC fire, etc.) are US institutions. For ancestors who served in non-US forces, please contact us before ordering — we'll discuss whether the chapter will serve your needs.

Two Paths Through the Same Chapter

Whether they came home or not.

The Military Chapter takes one of two shapes depending on the ancestor's story. Both are honored in full.

If They Were Killed In Action

A chapter built around the family's experience of the loss.

For ancestors who did not come home, the chapter centers on what most descendants have never been told about how a death in service was handled, honored, and remembered:

  • The Western Union telegram and its standardized opening
  • The decision about repatriation or burial overseas
  • The 13-fold flag ceremony and the words spoken at presentation
  • The specific decoration awarded — what it meant, how rare it was
  • The American Battle Monuments Commission's free Photo of Grave service (most families have never been told this exists)
  • Survivor benefits the family was entitled to: Death Gratuity, Servicemen's Indemnity, Dependency and Indemnity Compensation, the War Orphans' Educational Assistance Act
  • The Gold Star tradition and the local memorials that may still bear their name
If They Came Home

A chapter that situates their service inside the larger war.

For ancestors who served and survived, the chapter places them in their conflict, theater, and unit, then carries the story through homecoming:

  • The conflict at a glance — duration, U.S. entry, casualty figures, theater-specific statistics
  • The theater they served in, with a period map
  • The unit or ship — class, role, captain, deployment record (when documented)
  • What the role typically asked of someone in their rank
  • The cultural silence around the era — including the 1973 NPRC fire that destroyed roughly 80% of Army records 1912–1960 (the institutional reason your records request comes back empty)
  • What changed when they came home — anchored in the postwar facts you provide
  • An archive guide pointing to the next records to request
What We Promise — And What We Don't

Where the records are richer, the chapter goes deeper.

A Military Chapter is grounded in evidence. Every claim is tagged Documented (in the records you provide), Probable (a reasonable inference from rank, era, theater), or Contextual (era-typical patterns explicitly framed as such).

When you give us a DD-214, a unit name, a service number, a photograph, or a stack of family stories, the chapter goes deeper. The narrative names specifics. The visual artifacts (theater map, ship's vital statistics, era-appropriate telegram, cemetery imagery for those killed in action) attach to a real moment in your ancestor's life.

When records are sparse — when you have a name and a war and not much else — we do not pad. The "what came after" section is short and honest, the archive guide is detailed, and we point you to exactly which records are most likely to fill the gap (the OMPF at NARA, muster rolls, ABMC, Honor States, Find a Grave). The chapter still earns its place on a family shelf, but it does not claim to know what it cannot.

What we will not do: invent units. Invent ships. Invent decorations. Place an ancestor at battles they could not have witnessed. Speculate about combat experiences without evidence. The honest framing is part of the value.

What's Inside the PDF

Six narrative sections. Designed to be kept.

01
The Service Record

Branch, dates, rank, unit, theater. The factual anchor. A Service Summary card and (when documented) a Ship's Vital Statistics callout for naval service.

02
The War They Walked Into

The conflict at a glance — casualty figures, major campaigns, the theater they served in. Includes a period theater map.

03
The Shape of a Day

What service in this rank, this unit, this theater typically asked of a person — environment, rhythm, stressors. Framed as context, not invented biography.

04
What Service Asked of Them

The cost, the command structure, the camaraderie. The emotional weight of service — without exaggeration.

05
The Silence and the Record

Why veterans of their era often did not speak of their service. Includes the 1973 National Personnel Records Center fire — the institutional silence behind so many "no record found" replies.

06
What Came Home — or What Was Left Behind

For survivors: the homecoming and the postwar arc. For those killed in action: the telegram, the burial, the flag, the medal, the benefits, the Gold Star — the procedural reality of a death in service that most families have never been told.

Plus three reflection questions, archive guide ("Where to Look Next"), pull quotes, and "Did You Know" factoids.

Your veteran's actual records appear in their chapter. Documents you upload — discharge papers, photographs in uniform, headstone applications — are sepia-toned, captioned, and embedded directly inside the narrative. Sensitive data (Social Security numbers, residential addresses, third-party names on group records) is automatically redacted before the PDF is built.

We protect your family's records the way the National Archives does.

Sample

See what arrives in your inbox

A page-flip preview of a real Military Chapter — the look, the depth, the design — plus three passages from inside. The full story stays for the family that orders it.

View the sample preview →

Order the Military Chapter — $59

Delivered as a designed PDF within 48 hours. Yours to print, share, frame, or pass down.

Order The Military Chapter — $59

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