Stone's journey to recovering the names began a year-and-a-half ago, during the Waitangi Tribunal's Military Veterans Kaupapa Inquiry. He was there to present evidence about his great uncle, Private Dooley Swann from Manutuke, a settlement to the west of Gisborne, who also never received his war medal.
"I was sitting with my dad one day and I said to him, 'Our uncle could not have been the only soldier from the whole East Coast who never got his medals'," he said.
"So I wrote in to the medals department and requested the files from Muriwai and Manutuke [both near Gisborne], which is where he was from, and sure enough he wasn't."
Stone eventually found two soldiers from Manutuke and two soldiers from Muriwai who never received their medals.
He decided to search even further, and requested the files for soldiers across all four Māori Battalion Companies.
He and his team looked through 103 files before realising they wouldn't be able to look through all 3600 files on their own.
"I wrote a memorandum to the chief judge of the Waitangi Tribunal to let him know I'd looked through 103 files and found 17 soldiers who had not received their medals, but that I couldn't look at every file. I proposed that he ask the Crown to do the research," he said.
"The Crown eventually came back saying that the Māori Battalion have a huge legacy, and all that sort of stuff, but they ended off declining the request. I was flabbergasted, and massively disappointed about that."
But Stone didn't give up. Instead, he decided to focus on soldiers who served in the battalion's C Company.
"We went through every file, from village to village, throughout the whole of the East Coast. We literally just finished two weeks ago," he said.
"The medals department triple checked our names, and we now have 134." Stone said there were a range of reasons soldiers never received medals.
"One of the reasons that I got from one of the children of these soldiers is that it was a tikanga issue. Soldiers felt as though the medals needed to be presented to them face to face, kanohi ki te kanohi, but the policy of the time was that you needed to write in to request your medals, and they would be sent out to you in the post.
"That's one of the reasons."
Stone will be at the C Company Memorial House in Gisborne from Wednesday 9 September to Friday 11 September with forms for descendants to fill out if they wish to claim a medal. He is working with the New Zealand Defence Force to organise a formal ceremony where the medals will be returned.
- RNZ