


Albert Estrada, an athletic and charming teen, knelt in his living room as his mother blessed him repeatedly and prayed for his safe return.
Estrada hungered to consume the world’s sights and wonders. But his parents, Mexican immigrants in the Bracero program, labored in Woodland fields with no means to send Estrada, one of 15 children, to college. They encouraged him to join the U.S. Army in 1950, and the service-minded 17-year-old agreed.
Estrada — called Junior by his family — had worn a uniform for less than a year when his mother received a telegram declaring him missing in action as he fought in the Korean War. When the conflict ended, family members gathered around a radio to hear the list of prisoners of war. As the announcer said Albert, they leaned closer holding their breath.
But the surname was never Estrada.
For 75 years, the family wondered what happened to Junior, who always kept his shoes shiny and once recorded himself singing for his baby sister.
On Wednesday, he reunited with his mother after the Army positively identified his remains. Now he rests next to his mother at St. Joseph’s Cemetery in Woodland.
“I never gave up hope,” Ruth Tucker said in an interview.
Estrada served with about 30,000 United Nations soldiers and faced off for months against the Chinese Communist Forces, including the Battle of Chosin Reservoir, one of the most brutal battles of the Korean War, according to the U.S. Department of Defense.
Snow-capped peaks surrounded troops in the Chosin Reservoir in the Korean peninsula as more than 120,000 Chinese forces swept into the valley for a fight that lasted from November to December 1950, according to the DOD.
The thousands of soldiers and Marines evaded a bloody death, but would succumb in frigid weather as the brutal fight made it difficult to recover bodies, according to the DOD.
But Estrada survived. His commander ordered troops in the 31st Regimental Combat Team to head to a Marine base in the village of Hagaru-ri, about eight miles away and south of the Chosin Reservoir, according to a report Tucker said she received from the U.S. Army.
As the troops withdrew on Dec. 1, 1950, Chinese forces fired relentlessly, according to the report. Some United Nations troops broke off from the convoy and crossed the frozen reservoir to the Marine base’s safety.
Over the next couple of days, soldiers filtered into the Marine base. Just 1,000 of 2,500 with the 31st Regimental Combat Team survived. Estrada was one of 385 people still considered “able-bodied,” according to the report.
But the fight continued. Chinese troops attacked the Marine base for days and breached its perimeter, according to the report. It was during these battles Estrada died.
Junior, 18 at the time, was reported missing in action on Dec. 6, 1950.
“He fought until the end,” Tucker said.
In 2018, President Donald Trump and North Korea leader Kim Jong Un met in Singapore, where North Korea promised to repatriate remains from their archives and sent 55 boxes with remains. Estrada was among that group.
On Wednesday, Tucker and her three sisters walked solemnly across the Woodland cemetery grounds with their brother in a casket covered with an American flag.
Estrada always asked his mother to iron his Levi’s to have a clean, pressed fold in the middle. He wrote in letters about the girls he liked, and who he hoped would wait for his return from war.
After his death, he was promoted to the rank of corporal and posthumously awarded several medals, including the Purple Heart.
But Estrada’s spirit is not gone, said his nephew Jason Estrada. His uncle inspired scores to serve others, either by joining the military, volunteering or simply helping out a neighbor.
“This is the life of Albert,” Jason Estrada said, “and we will carry it on.”