A memorial to those who served in the 116th Infantry Regiment, "The Stonewall Brigade"
Tuesday, November 29, 2016
PVT Walter Karl Marks Kaal
Walter entered Army service on 23 Dec 1943 and after his training was sent to Europe. He was transferred from the replacement depot to A Company 116th Infantry on 17 Jul 1944. Walter was wounded on 30 Jul 1944 and did not return to the unit from the replacement depot until 15 Nov 1944. On 20 Nov 1944 he was again transferred, this time to B Company 116th Infantry. PVT Kaal was killed in action on 29 Nov 1944.
PVT Kaal was repatriated and is buried with family in Mount Hope Cemetery in Chicago, Illinois.
Monday, November 28, 2016
PFC Albino Castro Hernandez
Albino entered the service and was sent to England. We believe he was assigned to G Company 116th Infantry prior to 6 Jun 1944 and participated in the D-Day amphibious assault on Omaha Beach. He was wounded 8 Aug 1944 and sent to the hospital. He did not return to the unit, from the replacment depot, until 14 Nov 1944. PFC Hernandez was killed in action just 2 weeks later on 28 Nov 1944.
PFC Hernandez was repatriated in 1948 and now rests forever in San Fernando Cemetery #2 in San Antonio, Texas.
SGT Marvin Herbert Scharf
Already in the U.S. Army reserves, Marvin was called to active duty in March 1943. After infantry training he was eventually sent to the European theater. PFC Scharf was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry on 22 Jul 1944 to serve as a rifleman despite at least some previous medical training. He was promoted to SGT on 1 Nov 1944. SGT Scharf then served as a squad leader in G Company in the fighting at Baesweiler, Setterich, Ungerhausen, Englesdorf, and finally, Koslar. It was on 28 Nov 1944, the day that Koslar was officially declared captured/secured that SGT Scharf was wounded later dying of his wound(s) on that same day.
SGT Scharf was repatriated and re-interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.
PVT David Buroker Moore
David was drafted in April 1944 and after his basic training was sent to Europe. PVT Moore was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry on 26 Oct 1944. PVT Moore was killed in action on 28 Nov 1944.
PVT Moore was repatriated and re-interred in Ferncliff Cemetery in Springfield, Ohio.
Sister, Millicent Eloise Moore Noll, was an early female pilot flying cropdusters in the 1920s and 1930s and she flew for the Red Cross during WW2.
Sunday, November 27, 2016
SGT Martin Benson Love
Martin was drafted in February 1942 and was sent to England in October 1942. He was then assigned to H Company 116th Infantry. He trained with that unit for the amphibious assault on French beaches in Normandy for the invasion of Hitler's "fortress Europe". PFC Love fought with the unit from 6 Jun 1944 through 25 Jul 1944 when he was promoted to SGT. He was wounded on 6 Aug 1944 and evacuated to hospital. It may have been in this action that SGT Love carried a wounded comrade 300 yards to the rear, under fire, to ensure that he got life-saving care. It was for that act that SGT Love was awarded the Silver Star posthumously. SGT Martin returned to the unit from the replacement depot on 27 Oct 1944. He was killed in action one month later, on 27 Nov 1944.
SSG Leo was repatriated and buried in the Saint Leo Cemetery in Leominster, Massachusetts. Older brother Joseph Andrew Love also served in the Army during the war, in part at Camp Swift, Texas.
PVT Kermit Joseph Robey
courtesy of Frogman |
Kermit was drafted in March 1944. After completing his basic military training he was sent to the European theater arriving sometime in October 1944. On 25 Oct 1944 he was transferred from the replacement depot to B Company 116th Infantry to serve as a rifleman. PVT Robey was killed in action on 27 Nov 1944 in the vicinity of Koslar, Germany.
PVT Robey was repatriated and re-interred in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.
PFC Woodrow William Crabtree
Woodrow was drafted in April 1941. He was assigned to I Company 116th Infantry and participated with that unit in the D-Day landings. He was wounded on 8 Jun 1944 to hospital. On 21 Jun 1944 he was dropped from unit rolls. On 16 Nov 1944 he was transferred from the replacement depot to I Company and then on 21 Nov 1944 transferred to B Company 116th Infantry. On 27 Nov 1944 PFC Crabtree was killed in action.
PFC Crabtree is buried in the Russell Memorial Cemetery in Lebanon, Virginia.
PVT Charley Montgomery Wilkinson
PVT Charley Montgomery Wilkinson was born 5 Feb 1914 in Mabelvale, Arkansas which is now part of Little Rock. He was the 3rd of the 5 children born to George Isaac Welch and Margaret Leona (Smith) Wilkinson. He also had 3 older half-siblings from his mother's first marriage some of whom lived with the family, particularly when Charley was younger. George was a minister who pastored several churches over time and did other work to support his family. The family lived in several places in Saline County, Arkansas before moving to Cordell, Oklahoma. Charley apparently entered the work force after completing the 8th grade. By 1932 Charley had moved to Smith County, Texas where he met and married Florence Omen Grimes. Over the next 7-years the couple would have 2 sons and a daughter. In 1940 Charley was working for the Works Progress Administration but despite working full-time in 1939 he reported an income of only $250 for that year. The family was renting their home in Cherokee County, Texas for $3 a month.
Charley was drafted in April 1944 initially training at Camp Wolters, Texas before being sent to the European theater. PVT Wilkinson was transferred from the replacement depot to L Company 116th Infantry on 26 Oct 1944 while the unit was in action against German forces near Aachen, Germany. PVT Wilkinson then fought with the unit until he was killed in action on 27 Nov 1944.
PVT Wilkinson was repatriated in 1949 and re-interred in Jacksonville City Cemetery in Jacksonville, Texas.
Charley is shown in the photo above with his wife and children shortly before he left for Europe. Younger brother James Leon Wilkinson served in C Company 9th Infantry before being commissioned and eventually serving as a CPT in the U.S. Air Force.
PVT John Benavidez Rodriguez
courtesy of Des Philippet |
Although he had registered for the draft in 1940, John wasn't drafted until March 1944 and was working as a farm hand at that time. After his basic military training he was sent to the European theater. PVT Rodriguez was transferred from the replacement depot to B Company 116th Infantry on 25 Oct 1944 and participated in the fighting at Baesweiler, Setterich and Koslar before being killed in action at Koslar on 27 Nov 1944.
PVT Rodriguez rests forever in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PFC Robert P. Gandara
After entering the service, Robert was sent to Europe and was transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 19 Jun 1944. He was killed in action with that unit on 27 Jun 1944.
PFC Gandara was repatriated and is buried in Cavalry Cemetery, in Los Angeles, California.
We do not know the details of his military service. He may have served with the 335th before or during his overseas deployment.
PFC Tony Andrew Molea
courtesy of BitsyBee |
Tony voluntarily enlisted in October 1942. We next see that he was transferred from the replacement depot to B Company 116th Infantry on 13 Jun 1944. Due to the tremendous losses suffered by A Company on 6 Jun 1944 in the Omaha Beach landings, a number of soldiers were "cross-leveled" into A Company from other companies and PVT Molea was one of those soldiers. He was transferred from B Company to A Company on 15 Jun 1944. He fought with A Company until wounded by artillery fire on 22 Jun 1944 when he was evacuated to hospital. He was returned from the replacement depot to A Company on 7 Aug 1944 to serve as a light machinegunner. On 23 Aug 1944 PVT Molea was again transferred, this time to C Company 116th Infantry to serve as a rifleman. He then fought with C Company until wounded on 16 Sep 1944 and evacuated to hospital. PFC Molea returned to C Company from the hospital on 4 Oct 1944. PFC Molea was transferred yet again on 6 Nov 1944 when he returned to A Company 116th Infantry to serve as an ammo bearer. He then fought with A Company until killed in action on 27 Nov 1944.
PFC Molea was repatriated and re-interred in Maple Hill Cemetery in Hibbing, Minnesota.
His only brother, Frank Joseph Molea, also served during the war as a Military Policeman in Fort Mason, California.
PVT Carl Franklin Wilson
courtesy of Michael Beach |
Carl was not drafted until April 1944. After completing his basic military training which began at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, he was sent to the European theater. PVT Wilson was transferred from the replacement depot to L Company 116th Infantry on 26 Oct 1944. The unit was already in Germany at that time. He then fought as a rifleman with the unit until he was killed in action on 27 Nov 1944.
PVT Wilson rests forever in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
Younger brother, Walter Forest Wilson, served as a MM3c in the U.S. Navy aboard several different ships during the war.
PVT Tony Heede
PVT Robert Jackson Hugentobler
When he was drafted in September 1943, Jack was working as a gas station attendant. His sister, Irene Hugentobler, died 28 Mar 1944. He was sent to Europe after his basic training and on 19 Jun 1944 transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry to serve as a rifleman. PVT Hugentobler was wounded for the first time on 16 Jul 1944 and evacuated. He did not return to the unit from the replacement depot until 29 Oct 1944. PVT Hugentobler was killed in action on 26 Nov 1944.
We don't know where Jack was buried but he is not currently buried in one of the overseas American cemeteries so we are certain that he was repatriated. It is likely that he was buried in a cemetery, perhaps the same one at which Robert Hugentobler was sexton, near Miamitown, Ohio where the family lived.
Saturday, November 26, 2016
PVT Ralph Leonard Erickson
Drafted in Sep 1943, Ralph was working as a lumberman in Warren County, Pennsylvania. After training he was sent overseas and sometime prior to 6 Jun 1944 he was assigned to Headquarters 3rd Battalion 116th Infantry. He went to hospital for an injury on 2 Sep 1944 and returned to the unit from the replacement depot on 19 Sep 1944. He was killed in action on 26 Nov 1944.
PVT Erickson was ultimately laid to rest in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PFC Charles Thomas J Fletcher
Charles was drafted in June 1943. After training he was sent overseas and was assigned to H Company 116th Infantry in time to participate with that unit in the D-Day amphibious assault in which he was seriously wounded and evacuated to hospital. On 5 Aug 1944 he was transferred from the replacement depot back to H Company. On 11 Aug 1944 he is recorded on the morning report as being promoted to PFC. On 26 Nov 1944 PFC Fletcher was killed in action.
A note on Charles' rank. As mentioned above the morning report notes his promotion. The headstone application was completed using the rank PFC which was crossed out and "corrected" to PVT and as you can see that is what is on the headstone. I believe this is another one of those errors that seems to have commonly occurred where the personnel action was taken but for some reason the paperwork wasn't preserved/forwarded/recorded at higher headquarters or in personnel records. We are certain that Charles thought he was a PFC at the time he was killed.
PFC Fletcher is buried in Oak Hill Memorial Park in Kingsport, Tennessee.
PVT Robert Brant Allen
Drafted in September 1943, he was assigned to G Company 116th Infantry. This was likely before D-Day. On 13 Jul 1944 he was wounded and evacuated to the hospital. On 4 Nov 1944 he returned to the unit from the replacement depot. On 26 Nov 1944 PVT Allen was killed in action.
PVT Allen was repatriated, probably in 1948, and is buried in Somerset County Memorial Park in Somerset, Pennsylvania.
We have to note that while the grave marker indicates his rank as SGT (Sergeant) there is no record of him ever being promoted to that rank. All the documents we can find note his rank as PVT (Private).
PFC Edward Jacob Lippert
Edward had 1 year of college and was working as a cashier when drafted in December 1942. After training he was sent to the European theater and transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry on 3 Jul 1944. Edward was wounded on 18 Jul 1944 and evacuated to hospital. He returned to the unit from the replacement depot on 13 Nov 1944. PFC Lippert was killed in action on 26 Nov 1944.
PFC Lippert was repatriated in 1948 and buried in Mascoutah City Cemetery in Mascoutah, Illinois.
PVT Murrell Lavelle Wood
Murrell was drafted in April 1944 and in-processed at Camp Wolters near Mineral Wells, Texas. After completing his basic military training he was sent to the European theater and was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry on 26 Oct 1944. PVT Wood was killed in action near Koslar, Germany on 26 Nov 1944.
PVT Wood was repatriated in 1948 and re-interred in the Van Alstyne Cemetery in Van Alstyne, Texas.
SSG Louis Thompson Weess
courtesy of Cathy Libby Small |
SSG Louis Thompson Weess was born in Hillsboro, Illinois on 21 Jan 1920. He was the 2d of 3 children of Louis Weess and his 2nd wife, Frances Lydia (Thompson) Weess. His father worked in a coal mine in Hillsboro for many years. The senior Louis Weess died in 1939. Louis joined the Civilian Conservation Corps earning $150 in 1939. His mother and sisters went to work for the Work Progress Administration (WPA) as seamstresses earning a combined $710 for the same period. They were fortunate that they owned their home at 1607 Benton Street in Johnston City, Illinois. The home was valued at $500 in 1940. By 1941 Louis was able to find work with W. D. Hord in Rockford, Illinois working as a bookkeeper.
Louis was drafted in October 1942. After completing his basic military training he was sent to England and assigned to G Company 116th Infantry. He trained with the unit for the amphibious assault in support of the liberation of France and PFC Weess landed with the unit on D-Day, 6 Jun 1944. He was wounded and evacuated to hospital on 3 Sep 1944 in the middle of the battle for Brest, France. PFC Weess was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company again on 29 Oct 1944 and promoted to SSG on 1 Nov 1944. SSG Weess was wounded on 26 Nov 1944 and evacuated to hospital but died of his wound(s) that same day.
SSG Weess was repatriated in 1948 and re-interred in Lakeview Cemetery in Johnston City, Illinois.
PFC Harvey Roy Corum
Harvey was living in Cuyahoga County, Ohio when he was drafted in June 1943. After training he was assigned to H Company 116th Infantry and landed with that unit on D-Day. He was lightly wounded on 6 Jun 1944, by a bullet in the chin, but remained on duty. On 12 Jun 1944 he was promoted to PFC. On 26 Nov 1944 PFC Corum was killed in action.
PFC Corum was returned to the states and buried in Marietta National Cemetery in Marietta, Georgia.
Geneva remarried in 1950. The daughter has passed away.
PFC Roy Carl Meier
courtesy of Fred |
Roy was drafted in August 1943. After his training he was sent to the European theater and on 19 Jun 1944 was transferred from the replacement depot to K Company 116th Infantry where he served as a rifleman. Roy fought with the unit without apparent injury until killed in action on 26 Nov 1944.
PFC Meier's body could not be recovered and he is memorialized on the tablets of the missing at the Netherlands American Cemetery and Memorial.
PFC Joseph John Fanello
Joseph was drafted in May 1942. At some point in time he was assigned to Headquarters 3rd Battalion 116th Infantry, probably before the D-Day landings. PFC Fanello served with the unit until 26 Nov 1944 when he was killed in action.
PFC Fanello is buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PFC John Joseph Masnica
courtesy of Des Philippet |
John was drafted in March 1943 working in a job producing leather goods. After training he was sent to the European theater and on 22 Jul 1944 was transferred from the replacement depot to H Company 116th Infantry. PFC Masnica was killed in action on 26 Nov 1944.
PFC Masnica was buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
2 of his brothers also served during the war. Stephen Andrew Masnica served in the 1942-1945 and Paul Stephen Masnica served in the Army 1942-1945.
CPL Sherman Luther Ayars Jr
In May 1942 Sherman enlisted. He was assigned to Cannon Company 116th Infantry before D-Day. On 28 Aug 1944 he was promoted to Corporal. He was killed in action 26 Nov 1944.
CPL Ayars is buried in the Fort Snelling National Cemetery.
PFC Sebastian Salvatore Faggione
Sebastian still had only a grammar school education and was working in textile manufacture when he was drafted in December 1942. After training he was assigned to H Company 116th Infantry and was with that unit on D-Day. On 12 Jun 1944 he was promoted to PFC. Sebastian was killed in action on 26 Nov 1944.
PFC Faggione was repatriated in 1948 and is buried in the Saint Sebastian Cemetery in Middlefield, Connecticut.
PVT Murrell D. Ivens
Murrell was drafted in June 1943. After basic training he was sent to Europe and on 24 Oct 1944 was transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry. PVT Ivens was killed in action on 26 Nov 1944.
PVT Ivens was repatriated in 1949 and is buried in the Lynnhurst Cemetery in Knoxville, Tennessee. Brother Ray also served in the Army during the war.
PFC Floyd Franklin Skinner
After Floyd was drafted, probably in late 1943, he was eventually sent to the European theater. PVT Skinner was transferred to H Company 116th Infantry on 21 Jul 1944 to serve as a heavy machinegunner. He fought with the unit at Vire, Brest and into Germany. Promoted to PFC on 11 Aug 1944, following the liberation of Vire, he was killed in action in the attack on Koslar, Germany on 26 Nov 1944.
PFC Skinner was repatriated in 1949 and re-interred in Oak Hill Cemetery in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
Friday, November 25, 2016
PFC Donald Eugene Hunter
photo by Doc Wilson |
Donald began his service in June 1943. After training to be a rifleman he was sent to Europe and transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 24 Oct 1944. PFC Hunter was killed in action on 25 Nov 1944.
PFC Hunter is buried at the Netherlands American Cemetery. His father served as a CPL in L Company 61st Infantry, 5th Division during WWI.
2LT Elmer Raymond Koontz
courtesy of Nancy Ann Mull Buchanan |
Elmer was drafted in June 1942. After initial training he was identified as a candidate for officer training which he attended. 2LT Koontz was sent to Europe and on 24 Oct 1944 was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry to serve as a platoon leader. 2LT Koontz was killed in action on 25 Nov 1944.
2LT Koontz was repatriated and now rests forever in Wilson Cemetery in Newark, Ohio. He and Fern had no children and she re-married in 1947 to Glenn Edward Werts, a career Navy Warrant Officer. They have passed on and are buried together in Arlington National Cemetery.
PVT Thomas Edward Govero
courtesy of Laura |
Thomas was apparently drafted in January 1944. We don't know when he was assigned to G Company 116th Infantry but he was killed in action while serving with that unit on 25 Nov 1944.
PVT Govero is buried in Blackwell Masonic Cemetery in Washington County, Missouri. Victoria re-married and had 2 more children. Their son also had children who are still living.
2LT Joseph Albert Snedorf Jr.
Joseph in 1929 |
Joseph was drafted in June 1942. He took his basic military training at Camp Swift, Texas with the 379th Infantry in the 95th Infantry Division before going to Fort Benning, Georgia for Officer Candidate School. He then served at Camp Kohler, California and Camp Hood, Texas. Sometime in this period he married a local woman, Mildred R. Havel, and the couple established a home at 3425 Cuyler Avenue, Cicero. Unfortunately, 2LT Snedorf spent little if any time there as he was sent to the European theater in July 1944. He was transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 24 Oct 1944. 2LT Snedorf served as a platoon leader in fighting through Baesweiler and Setterich until he was killed in action in fighting in Koslar, Germany on 25 Nov 1944.
2LT Snedorf was repatriated and re-interred in Woodlawn Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.
PFC James Wythe Brummett
When he was drafted in April 1943, James as working as a miner in Logan County, West Virginia. Sent overseas he was assigned to M Company 116th Infantry on 28 Aug 1944. On 1 Nov 1944 he was promoted to PFC. He was killed in action on 25 Nov 1944.
PFC Brummett is buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
CPL Joseph Vega
Joseph was drafted in February 1943 and after completing his basic military training was sent to England. PFC Vega was transferred from the replacement depot to M Company 116th Infantry on 28 Jun 1944 to serve as a light mortar crewman. He was promoted to CPL on 19 Aug 1944. He continued to serve with M Company until killed in action on 25 Nov 1944 near Engelsdorf, Germany.
CPL Vega was repatriated and re-interred in Long Island National Cemetery in East Farmingdale, New York.
SGT Andrew Lawrence Hauser
Andrew was drafted in December 1943. He was sent overseas and on 9 Aug 1944 was transferred from the replacement depot to E Company 116th Infantry. On 11 Aug 1944 PVT Hauser was again transferred, this time to F Company 116th Infantry. On 14 Sep 1944 he was promoted to SGT. SGT Hauser was killed in action on 25 Nov 1944.
SGT Hauser is buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PVT Grady Andrew Sigmon
Grady didn't register for the draft until 1943 and he was drafted in April 1944. After his basic military training he was sent to the European theater in October 1944. On 25 Oct 1944, PVT Sigmon was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry to serve as a rifleman. He was killed in action 1 month later on 25 Nov 1944 in the vicinity of Koslar, Germany.
PVT Sigmon was repatriated in 1948 and re-interred in the Sigmon-Shively Cemetery in Ferrum, Virginia.
Brother, Gail Edwin Sigmon, also served in the U.S. Army during WW2. Great-grandfathers Andrew Jackson Sigmon (for whom his father was named) and Thomas W. Sigmon both served as PVTs in G Company 37th Virginia Cavalry Battalion during the Civil War. Great-grandfather Jacob Gusler served as a PVT in the 11th Virginia Infantry Battalion.
PFC Duke Hopper Rodenhizer Jr.
Duke was drafted in November 1943 and after completing his military training was sent to the European theater. PVT Rodenhizer was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry on 22 Jul 1944 where he served as a rifleman. He was promoted to PFC on 24 Jul 1944. PFC Rodenhizer was wounded in the attack on Brest on 5 Sep 1944 and evacuated to hospital. He didn't return to the unit until 13 Nov 1944 when PFC Rodenhizer was again transferred from the replacement depot. PFC Rodenhizer was killed in action on 25 Nov 1944.
PFC Rodenhizer rests forever in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PFC William Peter Kotchick
William was drafted in March 1943. After his initial training, William was sent to Europe. He was already a PFC when transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 24 Oct 1944. PFC Kotchick was killed in action one month later on 25 Nov 1944.
PFC Kotchick is buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PFC Wilhelm Arthur Hilse
courtesy Russ Pickett |
Wilhelm was drafted in March 1943 at which time he was working as a farm hand. After his initial training he was sent to Europe and on 24 Oct 1944 was transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry. PFC Hilse was killed in action on 25 Nov 1945.
PFC Hilse was re-interred in the Baltimore National Cemetery in 1948.
SSG Raymond G. Jahns
When drafted in March 1941, Raymond had been working as a farm hand. After his initial training, he was eventually sent to Europe. PVT Jahns was transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 22 Jun 1944. SSG Jahns (we do not know when he was promoted) was wounded on 31 Jul 1944 and evacuated. He did not return to the unit, again from the replacement depot, until 28 Oct 1944. SSG Jahns was killed in action on 25 Nov 1944.
SSG Jahns was repatriated in 1948 and is buried in Saint John's Evangelical Lutheran Cemetery in Slades Corners, Wisconsin.
PVT Fred Lee Morton
courtesy of T. McManaway |
Fred was single and working for other farmers as well when he was drafted in September 1943. Sometime after that, perhaps after his basic training but before he was sent to the European theater, he married Constance "Connie" Williams of Marshville, North Carolina. PVT Morton was transferred from the replacement depot to G Company 116th Infantry on 26 Oct 1944. He fought with that unit for almost a month before he was killed in action on 25 Nov 1944.
PVT Morton was repatriated and re-interred in the Smith Grove Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery in Oakboro, North Carolina.
Son, Fred Lee Morton Jr., was born in March 1945. Brother, Jason Crowel Morton, was in training at Camp Blanding when Fred was killed.
PFC Joseph Rupinski
Joseph was probably drafted in early 1944. After his basic training he was sent to the European theater. PVT Rupinski was transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 5 Sep 1944 while the regiment was engaged in the fight to liberate Brest, France. He was promoted to PFC on 21 Sep 1944. PFC Rupinski fought with the unit in the attack on Aachen, Germany and beyond and was killed in the fighting at Koslar, Germany on 25 Nov 1944.
We are certain that PFC Rupinski was repatriated and re-interred with family members in the New York City area but do not know the location of his final resting place.
Joseph's brother Walter also served in the U.S. Army during WW2.
PVT Emilio Garza Cabrera
After entering the service, Emilio was assigned to F Company 116th Infantry from the replacement depot on 24 Oct 1944. PVT Cabrera was killed in action one month later on 24 Nov 1944.
In 1949, PVT Cabrera was repatriated and buried in the Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery in Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
Thursday, November 24, 2016
PVT Donald Otto Stauder
Donald was drafted in June 1943. It was probably while home on furlough after completing his basic military training at Fort McClellan, Alabama that Donald married Violet M. Kinzel in December 1943. We don't know where he went before being sent to the European theater. PVT Stauder was transferred from the replacement depot to L Company 116th Infantry on 27 Oct 1944 to serve as a heavy machine gunner. PVT Stauder was killed in action near Koslar, Germany on 24 Nov 1944.
PVT Stauder is buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
Donald and Violet had no children and Violet re-married and had children with her second husband. Brother, William Howard Stauder served in the Navy and left service as a Ptr1c serving in the South Pacific aboard the USS Kankakee and Patuxent.
CPL Edward Charles Wallace
Edward was drafted in May 1943. After his basic military training he was sent to the European theater in September 1944. CPL Wallace was transferred from the replacement depot to E Company 116th Infantry on 24 Oct 1944. He was killed in action just 1-month later on 24 Nov 1944.
CPL Wallace was repatriated in December 1948 and re-interred in the Morrisville Cemetery in Morrisville, Pennsylvania where he will rest forever with his parents and other family members.
PVT Carl W. Flack
Carl was drafted in June 1943 and after training was sent overseas. It is likely that he served with another unit before being sent to the replacement depot and transferred from there to E Company 116th Infantry on 24 Oct 1944. He was killed in action on 24 Nov 1944.
PVT Flack is buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PVT Samuel F. Heller
In November 1943, Samuel was drafted and after his training was sent overseas. On 24 Oct 1944 he was transferred from the replacement depot to E Company 116th Infantry. One month later, on 24 November 1944, PVT Heller was killed in action.
PVT Heller is buried in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PFC Tillman Howard Flader
PFC Charles Robert Endres Jr.
When drafted in February of 1943, Charles had completed 3 years of high school and was working as a shipping clerk. Completing his army training, Charles was sent overseas and sent from the replacement depot to E Company 116th Infantry on 24 Oct 1944. He was killed in action a month later on 24 Nov 1944.
PFC Endres was repatriated and is buried in Greenmount Cemetery in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
2LT Emerson Marvin Visch
home on leave before OCS |
2LT Emerson Marvin Visch was born 11 Nov 1915 in Zeeland, Michigan. He was the only child of John Garrett and Carrie (Riemersma) Visch. His father worked as a foreman in a furniture factory operated by the Zeeland Furniture Company and, beginning in 1927, for the Wilcox-Gray Corporation in Charlotte, Michigan. Emerson lived with his family at 503 Lovett Street and 404 Warren Avenue in Charlotte while attending Charlotte High School. He graduated in 1934. He also worked for Wilcox-Gray before he found work at Miller-Jones Shoe Store in Charlotte and became an assistant manager there. Unfortunately, his mother had heart disease and died in January 1936. Emerson reported a 1939 income of $400 and was still living with his father in 1940.
Emerson was drafted in January 1941 and initially went to Fort Custer, Michigan. He was then assigned to Jefferson Barracks in Missouri where he was promoted to SSG in the US Army Air Corps. He was assigned there when the photo shown here was taken while he was home in Charlotte on leave. SSG Visch had been identified as a possible officer and was sent to the officer candidate course from which he successfully graduated and he was commissioned as a 2LT. After several stateside assignments he was sent to England in April 1944. We don't know where he was in the interim but 2LT Visch was transferred from the replacement depot to I Company 116th Infantry to serve as a platoon leader. He was wounded in action on 13 Jul 1944 and evacuated to hospital in England. 2LT Visch was returned to his unit, transferring from the replacement depot on 30 Oct 1944 to again serve as a platoon leader. 2LT Visch was killed in action on 24 Nov 1944 at Koslar, Germany. 2LT was reportedly posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for "extraordinary heroism" on 24 Nov 1944 in staving off a German counterattack while armed only with a sub-machine gun. The citation says that "so vicious were his actions that 50 of the enemy threw down their arms in surrender." European Theater of Operations, US Army, General Orders No. 52 dated April 5, 1945. From 29 Let's Go - A History of the 29th Infantry Division in World War II had this to say about the incident in the muddy of trenches before Koslar:
"Lt. Emerson M. Visch, of I Company, had one of these normally operating guns - a submachine gun. When his company became engaged in a fire fight with the enemy in the trenches, the small-arms fire the men were able to deliver with their poorly working weapons was light and ineffectual. Aware of this, Lieutenant Visch assumed a daringly exposed position and sent a demoralizing volume of fire at the enemy position with his own gun. This was apparently all that was needed to break the enemy spirit. They called 'Kamerad!' Then fifty of them came over and surrendered. for this action Lieutenant Visch, who was later killed in the Koslar battle, was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross posthumously."
2LT Visch was repatriated in 1948 and re-interred in the Zeeland Cemetery in Zeeland, Michigan.
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
PFC John Rodriguez Velasquez
courtesy of Clifton Baccus |
John was drafted in January 1944 and after completing his basic military training was sent to the European theater. PVT Velasquez was transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 5 Sep 1944 while the unit was involved in the fighting with Nazi forces at Brest, France. He was promoted to PFC on 21 Sep 1944 having survived that fight. PFC Velasquez continued to fight with F Company as the regiment moved into Germany and was killed in action in the vicinity of Koslar, Germany on 23 Nov 1944.
PFC Velasquez was repatriated in 1949 and re-interred in Port Lavaca Cemetery in Port Lavaca, Texas.
SSG Chester John Marciszewski
Chester was drafted in January 1943. After his training he was sent to Europe in May 1944. He was transferred from the replacement depot to K Company 116th Infantry on 5 Jul 1944. PFC Marciszewski was wounded on 11 Jul 1944 and evacuated to hospital. He was promoted to SGT on 17 Aug 1944. SGT Marciszewski was sent to hospital again on 9 Sep 1944, this time as a non-battle casualty, and returned to duty the next day. Chester was reduced in rank to PVT on 21 Sep 1944 for reasons unknown to us. His son was born in October 1944. He was promoted to SSG on 1 Nov 1944. SSG Marciszewski was killed in action on 23 Nov 1944.
SSG Marciszewski was awarded the Silver Star posthumously.
"For gallantry in action against the enemy in Germany, near Baesweiler, when the advance of Company K was impeded by flanking fire from an enemy machine gun. Sergeant Marciszewski, amidst heavy enemy artillery fire, seized an automatic rifle from a casualty and voluntarily charged the machine gun. Without assistance, he assaulted the position, firing his weapon from the hip, capturing the gun and three members of the crew. As a result of his aggressive and heroic actions, the company was able to advance from underneath the enemy artillery barrage and secure its objective."SSG Marciszewski was interred in the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PFC Edward Michael Lanza
Edward was drafted in April 1943. After basic training, Edward was sent to Europe and transferred from the replacement depot to K Company 116th Infantry on 3 Sep 1944. PFC Lanza fought with the unit until 23 Nov 1944 when he was killed in action. However, his body was not recoverable. PFC Lanza is recorded on the tablets of the missing at the Netherlands American Cemetery.
PVT Robert Zibulsky
PVT Robert Zibulsky was born 27 Mar 1924 in Brooklyn, New York. He was the youngest of William and Luba (Schaeffer) Zibulsky's 3 children. His father was a pharmacist earning about $1500 in 1940. William Zibulsky was a Polish Jew from Ostroleka, Poland and had immigrated at the age of 11 in 1902. William and Luba had lost their 2nd child in infancy before Robert was born. The family lived at 50 Montrose Avenue in Brooklyn. Robert graduated high school at age 16 and found work at the West End Country Club in Loch Sheldrake, New York.
Robert was drafted, probably in early 1944 and after completing his basic military training was sent to the European theater. PVT Zibulsky was transferred from the replacement depot to I Company 116th Infantry on 29 Oct 1944. He was wounded on 22 Nov 1944 near Setterich, Germany and died the next day of his wound(s).
PVT Zibulsky was likely repatriated and re-interred in the New York City area perhaps in the Beth David Cemetery in Elmont, New York.
PVT Charles Herlien
Charles went into the service in June 1943. After completing his training he was sent to Europe. We don't know what other unit(s) to which he may have been assigned but he was likely assigned to 415th Infantry, 104th Division before going to and then being transferred from the replacement depot to F Company 116th Infantry on 24 Oct 1944. PVT Herlien was killed in action on 23 Nov 1944.
PVT Herlien was repatriated in 1949 and is buried in Forest Home Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.
Charles had 2 older brothers who served during the war, Lambert and Siebert both served in the Army.