The wooden crate, filled with rusty tools and firewood, had rested undisturbed in a dark corner of Jill Griffiths' garage ever since she purchased her century-old home in the Marcy-Holmes neighborhood of Minneapolis nearly 30 years ago.
A businesswoman, arts advocate and empty-nester mother of two, Griffiths started cleaning out the garage this fall, "shedding kids' bikes, sport equipment, extra hoses." In the process, she hauled out the old crate for the first time and flipped it over.
That's when she spotted the name "MYRON KUZYK" stenciled in white, along with a serial number and "LT. U.S.A."
"I thought, wow, this could hold real significance for a family," Griffiths said. "The box took on a new meaning and felt heavy and precious."
Griffiths plunged into the internet and learned that Kuzyk, the son of a Ukrainian immigrant who worked at a north Minneapolis box factory, was killed in action in Germany at 26 — just six weeks before the Allies declared victory in Europe during World War II.
Before joining the war effort, Kuzyk had served as social chair of the Ukrainian Folk Ballet of the Twin Cities, studied at what is now the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and attended the University of Minnesota, according to online newspaper archives.
With a little more computer sleuthing, Griffiths found a 1948 article about Kuzyk's remains being reburied at Fort Snelling National Cemetery. The story mentioned his brother Ernie, who was 15 when his only sibling was killed in action.
To her regret, Griffiths soon found out that Ernie, once co-owner of Franklin-Nicollet Liquors in south Minneapolis, died only three years ago at 89 in Milaca, Minn.