History News
Helpful Tools
DNA used to identify WWI one soldier
The remains of a soldier who fought and died in the First World War have been identified using the latest DNA technology.
The remains of a soldier who fought and died in the First World War have been identified using the latest DNA technology.
Private Jack Hunter was 29-years-old when he died on the battlefield at Passchendaele in the arms of his younger brother Jim and his body has now been recovered 90 years after he fell, having been found by workers laying a gas pipeline in Westhoek, near Ypres, last year.
Jim Hunter buried his brother in a shallow grave on the front line and searched for the place he laid his brother to rest until he died in 1977 at the age of 86, the Telegraph reports.
One of the first soldiers to be identified using groundbreaking genetic profiling techniques, Jack Hunter will now be buried with full military honours at a war cemetery in Belgium. Private Hunter's 81-year-old Mollie Millis will attend the service having provided her DNA for the profiling.
Hundreds of casualties of war are expected to be identified using DNA techniques, with thousands of soldiers still missing from the First World War. A mass grave unearthed near Lille this year contained the bodies of 239 British and 160 Australian soldiers.
The British government has started to collect DNA samples from the relatives of missing soldiers and the US military has carried out a similar programme since 1992, storing blood samples from relatives of soldiers lost in World War II, the Cold War, Korea and Southeast Asia at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Maryland.
Private Jack Hunter was 29-years-old when he died on the battlefield at Passchendaele in the arms of his younger brother Jim and his body has now been recovered 90 years after he fell, having been found by workers laying a gas pipeline in Westhoek, near Ypres, last year.
Jim Hunter buried his brother in a shallow grave on the front line and searched for the place he laid his brother to rest until he died in 1977 at the age of 86, the Telegraph reports.
One of the first soldiers to be identified using groundbreaking genetic profiling techniques, Jack Hunter will now be buried with full military honours at a war cemetery in Belgium. Private Hunter's 81-year-old Mollie Millis will attend the service having provided her DNA for the profiling.
Hundreds of casualties of war are expected to be identified using DNA techniques, with thousands of soldiers still missing from the First World War. A mass grave unearthed near Lille this year contained the bodies of 239 British and 160 Australian soldiers.
The British government has started to collect DNA samples from the relatives of missing soldiers and the US military has carried out a similar programme since 1992, storing blood samples from relatives of soldiers lost in World War II, the Cold War, Korea and Southeast Asia at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology in Maryland.
Our Programmes
A History Of Britain
| Britain’s Best
| Churchill’s Bodyguard
| Himalaya With Michael Palin
| Seven Wonders Of The Industrial World
| Sex Love And War
| The Naked Archaeologist
| The World At War
| What The Egyptians Did For Us
| What The Industrial Revolution Did For Us
| What The Romans Did For Us
| What The Tudors Did for Us
| What The Victorians Did For Us
| V For Victory
In UKTV History
20th Century
| Ancient Britain
| British History
| Egypt
| Exploration
| Genealogy
| The Romans
| Kings and Queens
| Profiles
| Programmes
| The 60s
| The Crusades
| Warzone



















