On Friday, August 22, Phaneuf Funeral Homes along with the NH Veterans Cemetary organized a special Veterans Memorial Service. The Union Leader's full article on the event follows:

Four veterans finally get last honors
By ROGER AMSDEN
New Hampshire Union Leader Correspondent
BOSCAWEN – Four servicemen whose cremated remains went unclaimed for years at a New Hampshire funeral home were laid to rest with full military honors at the New Hampshire Veterans Cemetery yesterday.
More than 250 people representing all branches of the armed services and a variety of veterans organizations turned out on a hot August afternoon for the service organized by Richard Fredette, retired Army master sergeant and military forces honor guard coordinator, and Commander David Kenney, U.S. Navy Reserves.
Buried were John A. "Jean" Bissonnette, an Army veteran who served from 1924 until 1929, whose cremated remains had been at the Phaneuf Funeral Homes & Crematorium in Manchester since 1974; Robert A. Caughey, who served with the U.S. Army in 1941 and died in 1989; John E. Davison, an Air Force veteran of the Korean War who died in Claremont in 2002; and William J. "Jack" Mitchell, an Army veteran of the Korean War who died in 2005.
The Rev. Gary Rolph, chaplain at the VA Medical Center in Manchester, presided at the service in which urns containing the remains of the servicemen were escorted by a color guard to the center of the site with wrapped American flags, which at the conclusion of the ceremony were presented to representatives of the armed services.
Rolph said that he hoped the service would bring an awareness to other funeral homes and veterans organizations across the state that each and every member of the military is entitled to full honors for their service to their country.
"They have reached their final resting place in a ceremony which was final, solemn and reverent," said Kenney at the conclusion of the service. "We hope that this ceremony will help us reach out to others in a similar situation.''
Roger Desjardins, New Hampshire Veterans Cemetery director, said that the idea for the service came from a chance conversation with Arthur "Buddy" Phaneuf, owner of Phaneuf Funeral Homes & Crematorium in Manchester.
Phaneuf had told Desjardins about his efforts to track down relatives of those whose remains were at the home and Desjardins offered to help find military records that would show that some of them were honorably discharged veterans, making them eligible for free burial in the state Veterans Cemetery.
Desjardins credited Joyce Morton, staff person at the cemetery, with making all the phone calls and doing months of research that provided the proper documentation for the burial of the four veterans.
He said that in recent weeks at least 10 families who still had the cremated remains of veterans have come forward to arrange for funerals for them, including some cases in which the families have kept the remains for at least two generations.
"We're hoping to get the word out so that these veterans, who are our comrades, can have a honored place in this cemetery,'' said Desjardins.