CONNECTICUT STATUTES AND CODES
Sec. 27-120. Memorials for veterans buried abroad or missing.
Sec. 27-120. Memorials for veterans buried abroad or missing. If any person
who, in time of war, served in the military or naval forces of the English colonies in
America, prior to 1776, or of the state of Connecticut or in the armed forces of the United
States, and was credited to said colonies, state or the United States, died during such
service of disease or wounds, or was killed in action, died in prison or was lost at sea,
and whose body was never brought home for interment, or who was reported missing
in action and has not been heard from, the commissioner shall, upon proper application,
with satisfactory proof, made by the chief executive authority of the municipality of
which the deceased was a resident, as to his identity and honorable service, cause to be
erected in any cemetery or public place in such municipality, at a cost to the state of not
more than fifty dollars, a marker or soldier's headstone, having inscribed thereon the
name of such person, the organization to which he belonged, and the place of his death
or burial or when he was reported as missing in action or lost at sea.
(1949 Rev., S. 2942; 1957, P.A. 163, S. 32; P.A. 88-285, S. 17, 35.)
History: P.A. 88-285 replaced veterans' home and hospital commission with commissioner.
Cited. 124 C. 306.