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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68333 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68333)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The history of Company B, 311th
-Infantry in the World War, by B. Allison Colonna
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The history of Company B, 311th Infantry in the World War
-
-Editor: B. Allison Colonna
-
-Contributors: Bert W. Stiles
- David Gardenier
- Charles Peter
- Tracy S. White
-
-Release Date: June 16, 2022 [eBook #68333]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: David E. Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF COMPANY B,
-311TH INFANTRY IN THE WORLD WAR ***
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Capt. Colonna and Lt. Foulkes at Camp Dix, 1918.]
-
-
-
-
- THE HISTORY
- OF
- COMPANY B, 311th INFANTRY
- IN THE
- WORLD WAR.
-
- Edited by
- B. A. Colonna
- with contributions by David Gardenier, Charles Peter,
- and Tracy S. White.
-
- Statistics compiled by Bert W. Stiles.
-
- FREEHOLD, N. J.
- TRANSCRIPT PRINTING HOUSE,
- 1922
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922,
- BY B. A. COLONNA AND B. W. STILES.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Page
-
- Introduction 5
-
- Chapter I--Madison Barracks 6
-
- Chapter II--Camp Dix 7
-
- Chapter III--The Cruise of the “NESTOR” 11
-
- Chapter IV--The English Sector 16
-
- Chapter V--The American Sector 32
-
- Chapter VI--St. Mihiel and Limey Sector 40
-
- Chapter VII--Meuse-Argonne 67
-
- Chapter VIII--Flavigny-sur-Ozerain 74
-
- Chapter IX--Homeward Bound 76
-
- Alphabetical Roster of Officers 81
-
- Alphabetical Roster of Enlisted Men 83
-
- Classified Rosters 108
-
- Number of Officers and Men by States 111
-
- Lists of Casualties 112
-
- Decorations 114
-
- Extracts from General Orders No. 6 115
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-You, my comrades of the past two years, for whom this history is
-written, know that I have but small gift of expression at any time,
-and least of all for the things closest to my heart. At your request,
-however, made when we parted for the last time, I am writing the
-story of our company. I shall do my best to put down everything as it
-occurred, so far as my knowledge and memory will serve; and I trust
-that if the matter is true, you will overlook crudeness in the form.
-
-“Company B, 311th Infantry”--Only a letter and a number? Only one
-company out of the hundreds in the National Army? Yes, to outsiders;
-but to me, and I trust and believe to you, Company B was a living and
-vital being, composed of part of what was best in each of us. Its
-official life was twenty months; in that time it was born, grew to
-full strength, was trained, travelled some 7500 miles, fulfilled its
-destiny--fought, suffered, lost; and finally returned to its birthplace
-and was mustered out. But the spirit of B Company is still with each of
-us, and not a man but has carried away more than he gave.
-
-Relatively, B Company was a very small part of the army. But to us,
-it was the army; just as we shall always think of the war in terms of
-St. Mihiel and the Argonne. We have heard of the Marne, Ypres, Verdun,
-Chateau Thierry; but every man sees the war through his own eyes.
-
-For this reason, I am writing in the first person. The best I can do
-is to relate things as I saw them so I shall not take refuge behind an
-artificial impersonality. Probably a good many things were pulled off
-that I did not know anything about. And then you may discover that I
-knew more about some little matters than you thought I did.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-MADISON BARRACKS
-
-
-On May 5, 1917, I reported for duty at the Officers’ Training Camp at
-Madison Barracks, New York, with a commission as Second Lieutenant of
-Infantry in the Reserve Corps. My call to active duty had cut short my
-law course at Columbia University two months before I was to take my
-degree.
-
-Having graduated three years before from the Virginia Military
-Institute, and served there a year as sub-professor of German and
-tactics, I had some idea of the fundamental principles of military
-training; but, like almost all the other reserve officers, army paper
-work and administration was a closed book to me.
-
-A few days later I was told off to report to Capt. Haynes Odom, U.
-S. R., commanding Co. 5 of the 2d Provisional Training Regt. Capt.
-Odom was already conspicuous among the batch of reserve officers for
-his efficiency and tireless energy and industry. The tall, upstanding
-figure, with the mark of the regular army man indelibly stamped upon
-him; the head carried well back; the weather-worn, sun-wrinkled face,
-the hooked nose, cool hazel eyes; the smile that accompanied alike
-a friendly greeting or a merciless balling out; the soft Southern
-accent indescribably harshened by thousands of commands given--do you
-recognize the Major, boys?
-
-The three long, hot, arduous months of training at Madison Barracks
-can be passed over briefly. My cot in the long frame barrack was next
-to that of a tall, lithe, black haired lad from Rochester, N. Y., with
-the merriest, keenest, black eyes I ever saw. Before a week went by he
-stood out above the average candidate. He was young, just twenty-one--I
-was at the venerable age of twenty-two. But he had the keenest,
-quickest, practical mind I have ever met, and the gift of natural
-leadership, which is compounded of courage, intelligence, unselfish
-sympathy, and a sense of humor. He had graduated from Cornell in 1916.
-Later you knew him as 1st Lieut. Louis Sinclair Foulkes, the best
-officer in “B” Company; the best officer it was my fortune to come in
-contact with during the war.
-
-One of the training companies was organized as a cavalry troop. We saw
-them now and then being led in physical drill by a handsome, muscular
-young chap, so alive and vibrant with nervous energy that it was good
-to watch him work. He was Roy A. Schuyler, of Schenectady, a graduate
-of Union College, and a descendant of that General Schuyler whose
-record in the Revolutionary War makes so bright a page in American
-history. Brilliant, impulsive, generous, full of the joy of life,
-passionately eager to serve; he was a worthy descendant of a long line
-of fighting patriots.
-
-In Co. 9 was an earnest, dignified, hard working reserve first
-lieutenant, one of the most capable of the reserve officers on the
-post. He was a prominent lawyer of Utica, N. Y., and one of the leaders
-in the Plattsburg movement. Though well over the draft age, he had
-given up his large practice and had gone into the service at the first
-call. This was Russell H. Brennan, the first commander of “B” Company.
-
-At last our course drew to a close; the commissions were announced and
-we departed for ten days’ leave before reporting to Camp Dix for duty.
-Will we ever forget those ten golden August days? The world was ours,
-and life was sweet. No one knew what lay ahead, but we all made the
-most of our last taste of the old life for some time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-CAMP DIX
-
-
-Most of you saw it for the first time when you rolled into the long
-train shed, and hiked up to your barracks through a mile or more of
-company streets, in a city of forty thousand men, the hundreds of large
-barracks already weatherbeaten with the snows and rains of winter.
-
-We, however, after changing trains several times, finally rolled up
-to what was apparently a piano box in a lumber yard, and were there
-assured by the conductor that this was Camp Dix. We tumbled off, and
-trudged away through six inches of New Jersey dust toward the only
-building in sight with a roof on it--camp headquarters. Our bags became
-heavier and heavier; our new uniforms were fearfully hot; our new shoes
-and puttees, with which we had been dazzling admiring womenfolks and
-causing menfolk to grunt with assumed indifference, were abominably
-tight and pinchy.
-
-Finally we straggled in to headquarters, to indulge for a couple of
-hours in that amusement so familiar to every man in the army--standing
-in line for an hour to do two minutes of red tape. When our turn was
-over, we went over to a partially completed barracks, where we were
-each allowed to appropriate 1 cot, iron. This was the limit of our
-accommodation--those who couldn’t get away to some nearby town slept on
-the soft side of a piece of bristol board. We walked to the ether side
-of camp for all our meals--about two miles, if you didn’t lose your way.
-
-The next morning we attended a rollcall at 9 A. M. There we met Col.
-Marcus B. Stokes, the commanding officer; and Lt. Col. Edgar Myer,
-second in command. We found that the officers from Madison Barracks,
-Cos. 5 and 6, with half of the Troop formed the nucleus of the new
-regiment.
-
-Capt. Odom was Regimental Adjutant and to my horror I was at once made
-Regimental Supply Officer. The following officers were assigned to “B”
-company:
-
- Capt. Russell H. Brennan, commanding company,
- 2d Lt. Roy A. Schuyler,
- 2d Lt. Fred S. Fish,
- 2d Lt. Wm. D. Ashmore.
-
-For a month the regiment went through the agonies of organization.
-Supplies came in by driblets; transportation there was none, save for
-two hopelessly over-worked motor truck companies, which put in half
-their time trying to separate their trucks from the sacred soil of
-Jersey. A great swarm of civilian workmen were toiling feverishly to
-get up the barracks. The regiment was moved four times in as many
-weeks. The roads were six inches deep in mud or dust.
-
-The first enlisted men in the regiment were three former candidates at
-Madison Barracks, who, through no fault of their own, had not received
-commissions, but who wouldn’t leave the bunch, and enlisted in the
-regiment,--Dave Gardenier, Art McCann, and Jimmie Hooker. McCann and
-Gardenier were made regimental sergeants major, and Hooker was my
-regimental supply sergeant.
-
-In about a week a number of men came in from various Regular Army
-regiments, to form a nucleus of N. C. O.’s. “B” company received
-Ertwine, Robbins, and J. M. Newell. These men were shortly afterward
-made corporals on recommendation of Capt. Brennan.
-
-From Sept. 19th to Sept. 22d, the men of the first draft came in.
-As Supply Officer, my own troubles kept me pretty busy during those
-strenuous days. I knew “B” company, however, as a good outfit. Capt.
-Brennan’s steady, methodical, tireless work, and the energy and
-devotion of his three lieutenants showed results from the first. Lt.
-Fish, a former National Guard officer, was an old hand and steadied the
-younger officers.
-
-After two months of hard work, the companies began to round out into
-some sort of shape. The non-commissioned officers were selected,
-with as much care as was possible in the limited time allowed for
-observation of the new men. The first top sergeant of “B” Co. was
-Eilert, a sturdy and sterling product of the first draft, who had
-been a foreman in a large factory. The “top” is, absolutely, the most
-essential man in a company. His position is such that he has to see to
-the carrying out of all the disagreeable orders, and making the details
-for all the dirty jobs, while at the same time he is not protected by
-any barrier of rank. He is usually cordially detested and thoroughly
-respected by the men, and is about as useful to the officers as a right
-hand. We never had a top in “B” Co. who was not absolutely loyal to
-the service and to the company commander; never one who shrank from
-the most disagreeable duty, nor who gave a thought to his personal
-popularity. They were human, of course, and made mistakes like the rest
-of us; and sometimes they couldn’t help being placed in a bad light to
-the men. But you men--some of you, even, who beefed most against the
-tops--if you only knew how many times that same top came to the company
-commander or other officers to help out this fellow or that, to suggest
-some way of making things easier for the whole company; if you knew
-how hard and thankless a job they held; possibly you would have been a
-little more lenient in your judgments.
-
-James McC. Newell was the first supply sergeant, and got away with
-everything not nailed down. Samuel Tritapoe was Mess Sgt. until Lt.
-Wagner recognized his ability and took him for a regimental supply
-sergeant, and Warren Sculthorp succeeded to this thankless but highly
-important job. The other sergeants, as well as I remember, were
-Ertwine, Perry, Anness and Robbins. Joe Levy was soon drafted by
-Newell to make the accounts balance; Harold Sculthorpe started on his
-culinary career; Sweeney, Rogers, Tom Viracola, Howard Lehy, Hayden and
-Long Bill Reid were corporals. Sutton and Weber were detailed at the
-regimental exchange where they were a great factor in making it the
-best in the division. And last, but not least, deBruin was man of all
-work and plumber-in-chief. Red Sheridan also started his lurid career
-with “B” Co., and helped deBruin and “Bugs” Wardell to dispose of the
-vanilla extract rations.
-
-Toward the middle of October, Lt. Foulkes arrived from Cambridge,
-Mass., where he had been sent for a special course in trench warfare.
-He was assigned to B Co., and remained as second in command until he
-was made battalion adjutant in July 1918.
-
-Now started in the era of transfers. New drafts were constantly coming
-in; and as soon as we would get them uniformed and able to negotiate a
-“Squads Right” without losing each other, they would be drawn away to
-fill up some other division destined for overseas duty before the 78th.
-Not once, but a dozen times between September and May did this happen,
-leaving the company with its officers and a skeleton of N. C. O.’s,
-cooks and orderlies.
-
-On December 6th, Capt. Brennan and I were interchanged, he taking over
-the Supply Company and I, “B” Co.
-
-The winter wore on, and spring was upon us, and we seemed no nearer
-France than before. Changes took place in officers as well as enlisted
-men. Lt. Ashmore went to “A” Co.; Lt. Fish to the Supply Co.; 2d Lts.
-Dunn and Merrill and 1st Lt. Vanderbilt took their places with “B”
-Co. The time was filled with training and equipping the ever changing
-quotas of recruits and drilling them in fundamentals; for the training
-cadre of officers and N. C. O.’s there were special courses in bayonet
-fighting, bombing, trench digging--how many cold and weary hours were
-swallowed up in that trench system east of the regimental area!--and
-ever and always wind, mud and snow, or wind, sun and dust.
-
-When the March drafts came in, rumors took a new lease on life. The
-77th division was being equipped to leave Camp Upton; our turn would
-probably come next. The transfers went out now to fill up, not other
-divisions, but our own artillery regiments across the parade ground.
-Work on the target range was increased. Ah, the joys of being routed
-out of the hay long before daybreak, snatching a hasty breakfast, and
-hiking off through the cold dawn, five miles through the barrens to
-that wind-swept waste with the long rows of targets.
-
-1st Sgt. Eilert and Supply Sgt. Newell had been selected to attend the
-officers’ training school. Sgt. Ertwine, who had shown exceptional
-ability while in charge of the recruits’ barracks, was made 1st Sgt.,
-and Joe Levy, of course, became Supply Sgt.
-
-It was not all work and no play, though. At night there were movies at
-the “Y” huts; the Post Exchange for those who had something left from
-insurance, allotments and other ornaments of the pay roll,--or who were
-gifted enough to fill a full house or roll a “natural” consistently.
-And on Saturday afternoon and Sunday the lucky 25% would be off for
-a few precious hours at home or in the city, while the camp would be
-filled with visitors to the less fortunate.
-
-April passed, and May arrived with green trees and warm days. We bought
-baseball equipment, and each company had a team (I wonder who got hold
-of all that stuff finally?). The April drafts had brought the companies
-above normal strength. Tents were put up in the company streets to
-accommodate the overflow.
-
-These were busy days for Supply Sgt. Levy and Cpl. Jimmie Jones,
-Company Clerk. There was a continuous procession in and out the
-door of the squad room where Levy had established his headquarters;
-recruits going in with blissful visions of emerging in the likeness of
-a magazine ad. soldier; departing with murder in their hearts because
-their trousers bagged at the knees. And Joe, who remembered last
-September when recruits would bum around for a month before getting a
-sign of a uniform, had scant sympathy with them.
-
-This was also an era of reports. Reports on how many men we had;
-how many shirts each man had; how many extra shoe-laces were in our
-possession; how many men had W. R. insurance; how many were yet to be
-inoculated and how many times. Twice a day did I have to report for
-officers’ meeting; twice a day would the Colonel hold forth on the
-reports the general wanted, which company commanders would prepare at
-once, personally, in writing; then the adjutant would begin on the
-reports the colonel wanted; then the supply officer would chime in with
-a few more that he had to have by six o’clock at the latest. Life was a
-veritable nightmare of typewritten figures. The supply sergeant of “L”
-company actually lost his mind under the strain. Drill was carried on
-in the intervals of lining up for another check or inspection. And the
-men, quite naturally, looked upon the officers as a set of lunatics who
-didn’t know their own minds for ten minutes at a time.
-
-About May 1st, an advance party of some 25 officers and men left
-the regiment, so we knew we were soon to follow. Lts. Schuyler and
-Merrill were in this party. They attended the A. E. F. Schools at
-Chatillon-sur-Seine, and rejoined us about July 1st.
-
-At last the company was filled up to war strength, and equipped down
-to the last shoe lace. On Friday, May 17th, all visitors were excluded
-from camp. That evening I assembled the company and put the proposition
-up to every man in it whether he wanted to go to France or not,
-offering to leave anyone behind who wished to remain. I am proud to say
-that not a man applied to be left.
-
-Saturday was a hectic day of last preparations. The barracks were
-stripped down to their last mattress and swept out. The typewriters
-clicked busily until the last minute. Tom Viracola, one of our best
-sergeants, who had been tripped on a slight disability by the medicos
-at the last minute and was nearly heartbroken, was to be left in charge
-of barracks.
-
-About nine o’clock the company was formed for the last time at its
-old home. Packs were heavy with the regulation equipment, tobacco,
-and gifts from home. As I was signing some last papers under the arc
-light, “C” company moved out silently. I gave “Squads left, march,” the
-company wheeled out and we were off for the station.
-
-The road was lined with soldiers from the Depot Brigade as we passed.
-Here and there we saw a familiar face, and though the movement was to
-be kept as quiet as possible, there was many a husky “so long, fellows”
-and “good-bye, 311, good luck,” to cheer us on our way.
-
-Packs were heavier every step, and what with the extra rations,
-typewriter, etc., we were glad to have a half hour’s rest at the
-station. Then the word came to fall in again--how many times were we
-to hear those weary words, “Fall in”--and the company filed along to
-the day coaches awaiting them. Equipment was removed, and all made
-themselves as comfortable as they could for the night.
-
-Early in the morning the train pulled out. As dawn broke, we made out
-the names of some of the New Jersey towns we passed through. Many a
-lad saw his home town for the last time as we rolled through it in the
-chill of that May morning.
-
-At Jersey City we detrained and passed through the station to the
-ferry. Several civilians asked us where we were going; but the men
-realized the importance of secrecy, and all the curious ones got was a
-gruff invitation to “put on a uniform and find out.”
-
-Then we were jammed on a ferry boat. It was some jam, too, leaving
-those who hadn’t been trained on the subway gasping.
-
-Down to the street, on between the great warehouses, and into a
-spacious covered pier. Here was the point of embarkation, where we
-had been told every service record was examined, every man inspected;
-the focus of all the red tape that had been driving us insane for the
-past two months. To our very agreeable surprise, however, the loading
-was handled by two or three business-like men in civvies, who merely
-checked each company on the boat by the passenger lists as fast as the
-men could hike up the gangplank.
-
-We were met by Lt. Gibbs, battalion adjutant, who led us below, pointed
-out three decks each about the size of our Camp Dix orderly room, and
-announced that these were B Co.’s palatial quarters. I gasped, and
-remarked that we were much obliged, but suppose someone should want to
-turn around, where would he be, and howinell was Geoghegan going to get
-in one of those little canvas napkins they called hammocks, anyhow? He
-replied that I ought to see “C” company’s place, and melted away in a
-fashion peculiar to Bn. Adjts. when leaving Co. Cmdrs. S. O. L. A few
-moments later we heard him consoling Capt. O’Brien on the deck above by
-telling him that he ought to see “B” Co.’s place.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE CRUISE OF THE “NESTOR”
-
-
-By the time the space and hammocks were assigned to platoons and
-squads, the ship was under way. Orders were to keep below decks until
-out of the harbor; and for many, their last look at America was a
-glimpse of the harbor front through a port hole.
-
-At this point Lt. Gibbs reappeared, with the cheerful order that
-life preservers would be donned at once, and kept on for the rest
-of the voyage. For the next ten days all waddled about feeling like
-motherly hens. The apparatus I drew seemed particularly dirty, and most
-unbecoming to my figure, which is built close to the ground anyway.
-
-Breakfast had been nothing more than a cracker and bully beef, snatched
-at odd moments. The good ship hadn’t started to roll much yet, so all
-looked forward to dinner with a robust interest. Then it evolved that
-this was an Australian transport, the “Nestor;” and as such, sailed
-under the British flag; and hence and therefore, the next meal would be
-tea at 5 o’clock. Eternity passed, and about half an hour thereafter
-the steward came around, and in queer, clipped cockney English
-introduced us to “dixies” and “flats.” Another half hour, and the first
-messes to be served saw their hash-grabbing detail returning, bearing
-through aisles of famished Yanks--bread and cheese and tea! A planked
-steak would have been more to the point, we felt, and a towering,
-raw-boned countryman in a corner,--Lory Price, I imagine--opined
-dismally that we were being mistaken for an orphan asylum. However,
-what there was aroused the boys sufficiently to take a less morbid
-view of life, and as the officers departed to the cabin, cards and
-books appeared, and the mystic words were softly chanted: “Natural,
-bones”--“Read ’em and weep.”
-
-But there was not what you might call a festive air to that first
-evening; nor to many thereafter. Of course, for some fellows who had
-no one dependent on them, who were setting out foot loose for a great
-adventure, there was nothing to interfere with the thrill of the
-unknown before them. But the majority of these men had been taken out
-of their civilian life but two or three weeks before; they were among
-strangers, and in an absolutely foreign environment; their new uniforms
-still uncomfortable and scratchy, and army regulations and discipline
-an incomprehensible set of shibboleths. Far down in each heart the
-love of their country burned, steadily enough for the most part; white
-hot in some; in others, but recently kindled. All hid it diligently,
-of course, from the general view. They had been so fed up with windy
-orators, with politicians waving the flag with one hand and keeping
-the other on exemption certificates, that the real thing was jealously
-concealed.
-
-As I made my final inspection that night, looking out from the
-companion-way over the rows of close slung hammocks, I wondered what
-their occupants were thinking; what forms of dear ones were present to
-their minds; to what homes their thoughts went back--a Harlem flat,
-a Jersey farmhouse, a great hotel, a tiny pair of rooms in Jersey
-City; comfortable, well-off American homes; tenements in the foreign
-districts--each one dear for its memories, each one the home to fight
-for. Would we have time to train these men into a fighting machine, or
-would we be thrown in at once to stop the great Hun drive in Flanders,
-then at its height? How many of us would see these homes, these dear
-ones again?--But a company commander has little time to indulge in
-reflections; and thoughts of the morning report, and how to distribute
-the chow more evenly, and a large budget of orders I had to read, soon
-chased away everything else.
-
-The NESTOR carried the 1st and 2d Bns. and Headquarters Co. of the
-311th Inf., a Machine Gun battalion, and Brig. Gen. Dean, our brigade
-commander, and his staff. Our colonel was in command of the troops on
-board, such things being below the dignity of general officers. He was
-in his element; he had an officers’ meeting the first thing, and dished
-out about 4 square acres of orders to be read and put into effect at
-once.
-
-[Illustration: 1st Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.]
-
-Now no one knows better than I how many orders you men received, and
-how it was often beyond human power to obey all of them. But I call any
-company commander to witness that we got them coming and going. The
-Co. Cmdr. is the one man who can’t pass the buck on responsibility.
-We had to take the bushels of orders we received, eliminate those
-utterly impossible, select from those remaining what seemed essential
-and what we thought the Major and Colonel would deem essential, and
-then get those things done by the company--that is, issue orders to the
-1st Sgt. for details, Supply Sgt. for supplies, Mess Sgt. for mess,
-officers for drill and instruction, company clerk for paper work, and
-then see to it that the whole is carried out. And then one usually
-amasses a balling out for something or other that he has left out.
-
-One of these orders was the censorship order, of which we had heard so
-much. Instead of having all letters censored at post offices by clerks,
-some genius had decided to follow the British plan of having officers
-censor their own men’s mail. Thus at one brilliant stroke a situation
-was created which embarrassed men and officers alike, imposed an
-irksome and continual task on over-burdened officers, delayed the mail,
-and was in every way sweet incense in the nostrils of the little tin
-gods of the red tape; the exponents of the theory of How Not to Do It.
-
-The principal morning sport on the trip was the ship’s inspection. The
-holds of that old tub received such a scrubbing and cleaning as they
-had never had before. In spite of the close quarters, everything was
-kept quite fresh and clean. It gave me a vast respect for the women who
-do such work all day for paltry wages. At 10:00 A. M. the call would be
-sounded, and all except the day’s orderlies would be massed on decks in
-their boat drill stations, and a merry little crush it was. Then the
-lords of the earth would solemnly parade along in single file, preceded
-by a bugler, who blew a seasick “Attention” at each deck. Everybody
-would then step on everyone else’s feet, and make a little lane for the
-procession. The adjutant, the ship’s captain, the colonel, the ship
-supply officer--poor old Gibbs was the goat for that job--would play
-“follow my leader,” and look into corners, and sniff importantly, and
-everything would be very formal and terrible, and grand.
-
-The rest of the day would be taken up with physical drills--one company
-using the deck at a time--and fire and boat drills. It was given out at
-first that four long blasts of the boat’s whistle would be the signal
-for “Abandon ship.” This was changed later by the ship’s captain, but
-somewhere along the line there was a hitch, and the information never
-got down to the company commanders. About five nights out, at about
-10:30 P. M., the whistle began to toot, once--twice--heads began to
-appear over the hammocks; thrice--the hammocks began to be agitated;
-four times--two hundred and thirty odd hearts gave a leap, four
-hundred and sixty feet hit the floor, and B Company started up the
-gangway, with three sergeants, who shall be nameless, leading the way
-to victory. Lt. Foulkes, who was on fire watch, judged hastily that it
-must be all a mistake somehow, and calmed the riot with his .45 and a
-few choice remarks in the vernacular.
-
-Then the chow--oh, the chow; oh, the Gawd-forsaken chow. It was doled
-out as breakfast, dinner, and tea. It was none too much in quantity.
-There were here and there newly made n. c. o.’s who were not above
-holding out more than their share. And our American stomachs were
-several times abruptly introduced to strange dishes. First it was a
-weird looking mess that tasted like an explosion of mustard gas. How
-did we know it was currie? Few had sufficient faith in human nature
-to down their portion. Then one day a ghastly odor tainted the noonday
-air, and we were introduced to tripe. The latter was finally buried
-with military honors, and I arrived on the scene just in time to save
-the ship’s cooks from being the star actors in a similar ceremony.
-
-“Tea” was bread and cheese and tea. We thought of the days of plenty at
-Camp Dix and reflected that the culinary end of this war business was
-hardly a success so far.
-
-The officers were fed well and in civilized fashion in the cabin,
-which didn’t help matters much for the men. Also some members of the
-boat’s crew took advantage of the situation by running a sub-rosa
-restaurant in the forecastle, gouging such as had the price. Of course
-the Americans thought right away that they were holding out part of our
-rations for this purpose, and international relations began to get very
-strained. The officers were finally informed, and the practice stopped.
-
-There were ten or twelve other ships in the convoy, which was headed by
-the battleship Montana. At last one morning the latter was missing, and
-we knew that we must be nearly across. Precautions were redoubled and
-life preservers were not removed even at night.
-
-On the morning of May 31st we sighted land--a welcome sight indeed.
-Capt. Breen at once identified it as dear auld Ireland, and was much
-disgusted when we learned later that it was Scotland. We had sailed
-around the north of Ireland, and were dropping down the Irish sea to
-Liverpool.
-
-This was the submarine zone indeed. Destroyers appeared from the
-horizon and hovered on the outskirts of the convoy. A great silver
-dirigible swung lazily from the clouds and floated along above us. The
-Irish coast came into view on our right.
-
-At about 2:00 P. M. there was a scurry among the destroyers. The
-dirigible descended above a spot some half mile off our port bow. Guns
-began to speak from the transports and destroyers. It only lasted for
-about five minutes, however, and we couldn’t see any visible results.
-But we were told that a sub had been spotted and destroyed.
-
-Late that night we took the pilot aboard and proceeded up the Mersey.
-Few of us slept a wink. After the long strain it was good to see
-ourselves surrounded by the lights of shipping, and to see the shore
-on either side, though as few lights as possible were shown even then.
-However, we could open the portholes, and the long, long line of docks
-slipped by until we wondered if this great harbor had any end. At last,
-about 2:00 A. M., we docked and settled down to wait until morning for
-a glimpse of Merry England.
-
-The next day we waited around until 1:30, when we disembarked. We were
-marched about half a mile through the streets to a railroad terminal.
-The people hardly glanced at us. They were well used to soldiers by
-that time. Not a cheer, not a sign of curiosity. Another herd for the
-slaughter house. A few wounded soldiers, in their flaring “blues,”
-looked us over with some professional curiosity.
-
-At the railroad station we were halted on a cobbled street for a weary
-three hours’ wait. There was an English-American Red Cross canteen
-there, and we bought them out of buns in short order and distributed
-them to the companies. An aviator appeared on the scene and amused us
-for a while by doing all sorts of acrobatics--loops, whirls, twists
-through the air--such as we had never seen before.
-
-Finally we were formed and marched into the station, and boarded
-the funny little English coaches, and were locked up in different
-compartments. Canteen girls gave each of us a printed letter of welcome
-from King George, and finally we jolted out of the station, rolled
-along between factories and munition plants--manned mostly by girls and
-women--and so out into the countryside.
-
-That was a wonderful ride through England on the last day of May. It
-was a perfect evening, the air soft and balmy; light until ten o’clock.
-It was like a toy country to us, beautifully ordered and groomed, with
-little villages here and there, and green hedgerows, and usually one or
-two Tommies on leave walking down the lane with their sweethearts--that
-made us homesick already. And the train sped along, stopping only once
-for us to get out and have some coffee and a drink of water; and we
-were all thrilled and excited and felt a little tickly in the stomach,
-as you do before a big football game. We were fast drawing near the
-greatest game, now being played to a finish.
-
-As the night wore on, and it became dark, and we couldn’t look out the
-windows any more, our cramped quarters were anything but comfortable.
-Also, sanitary arrangements on European trains are conspicuous by their
-absence. When at last, at 2:00 A. M., we were told to detrain, we were
-pretty thoroughly uncomfortable.
-
-After the usual hubbub of detraining--“which way’s comp’ny form?”--“I
-dunno”--“First squad”--“Ninth squad”--“Where’s me bayonet?”--“Oh,
-thanks”--“D’ja get the can open all right?”--We departed into the
-night, filing past a little station out into a dark road, and then at
-a good round pace on through silent, dark streets, for about a mile.
-There we were introduced to our first billet.
-
-It was a large empty stone house in a row of similar ones. Bare
-floors, bare walls, but clean, and not so bad. After a vast amount of
-unnecessary fussing about the company got itself settled. Sixty men
-were to leave at six o’clock under Lt. Foulkes.
-
-That night and early the next morning we heard for the first time the
-distant rumble of the guns in France.
-
-In the morning we discovered that we were in an embarkation camp at
-Folkestone, near Dover. A beautiful place it was, something like
-Atlantic City, only everything seemed more permanent, and the boardwalk
-was lacking. The camp was a section of the town set apart for the
-purpose. Everything was well ordered. These Englishmen had been at
-the game a long time, and after some chafing and fussing around
-we discovered that though no one displayed any particular “pep,”
-nevertheless things really got done quite well; in the British way, of
-course. But woe be unto the ambitious Yank who sought to alter anything.
-
-Most of the company had not even been in the service long enough to
-master the manual of arms, and part of the day was used in instilling
-the rudiments of this essential into them. Time was still left for
-a short ramble about Folkestone, however; and the promenade, town,
-pubs, Tommies and Waacs were all investigated enthusiastically and as
-thoroughly as time and opportunity permitted.
-
-The next morning the battalion was formed at 6 A. M. and marched
-along cobbled streets to the pier, where we were sardined into a fast
-channel steamer, and donned those confounded lifebelts again for a
-short farewell wearing. Then, with an American destroyer racing along
-on either side, we slipped swiftly down under the Dover Cliffs, then
-swerving out and across the channel to Calais. A dock, a Red Cross
-train on the other side of it, a fisherman in a little boat alongside
-us--France at last.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE ENGLISH SECTOR
-
-
-The company filed off the boat, and crossing the dock stumbled into
-formation down the railroad track by the hospital train, and was
-introduced to a bit of backwash from the drive. Some English wounded
-were being carried from the train to the boat by German prisoners. We
-looked curiously at the latter. These were the Huns we were taught to
-hate, whom we were to kill. They were husky, blonde chaps, in faded
-greenish gray uniforms, with their little flat caps. They paid scant
-attention to us, but carried the English very carefully and gently.
-Maybe the Tommy who walked near by with fixed bayonet had something to
-do with it. At any rate, I didn’t feel any very lusty rage or horror
-at them, and though one or two of our men cursed at them under their
-breath, it didn’t seem at all convincing, but rather forced. Most of
-the wounded men whose faces I saw glared at us with the usual British
-“What the devil do you mean by looking at me, sir?” so I suppose they
-were officers. I don’t blame them for not liking to be stared at. One
-or two fellows couldn’t help groaning when their stretchers were lifted.
-
-But “C” Co. is moving off, and we swing into column of squads and
-hike off behind them, our great heavy packs, religiously packed with
-all the items prescribed for us and much besides, getting heavier
-and heavier. It was a beautiful, sunny day. Calais was quiet; the
-cobbled streets apparently peopled only by a few little gamins of
-both sexes who greeted us with the cries that accompanied us through
-France--“Souvenir,” “Bis-keet,” “Chocolat.”
-
-We passed through the outskirts of the town and into a dusty, sandy
-road between green dikes or ramparts dotted with anti-aircraft guns.
-Then we passed by a group of weather-worn barracks, dusty and dreary,
-labeled--doubtless by some wag, we thought--“Rest Camp,” surrounded by
-wire fences.
-
-We cross a canal, turn to the left, and pass along to another--“Rest
-Camp No. 6.” The leading company turns in at a gate in the wire fence;
-we see American uniforms and campaign hats; one or two officers in
-overseas caps, strange looking to us then; then we pass in through the
-gate and realize that this is our temporary destination.
-
-We were billeted in tents, about 12 feet in diameter--and about 20 men
-to a tent. Sand everywhere. A hideous open latrine next to the mess
-hall. After the usual hurly-burly and confusion, we finally kick other
-companies out of our tents, are in turn kicked out of theirs, and,
-after a long wait, get--“tea.” Oh, how Americans did love that word!
-
-The officers were lodged in luxury--the five of us had a whole tent,
-with some boards to sleep on. We ate at the British officers’ mess,
-where meals and very good beer and wine were served by Waacs. The next
-thing was an officers’ meeting, and that night a talk by an English
-major. He cheered us up by telling us that very few ever came back, and
-narrated several choice tales of sudden death in unusual and gruesome
-forms. He was apparently bent on removing from our minds any impression
-that we were in for a pleasure trip. We afterwards heard that he was
-severely criticised by other British officers for trying to get our
-wind up first thing.
-
-The next morning our equipment was cut down. We could only keep what
-we could carry on our backs. The contents of our barrack bags, the
-extra equipment, the complete outfit that had been subjected to so many
-inspections, upon which we had turned in reams upon reams of reports at
-Camp Dix, were ruthlessly collected, dumped into trucks and carted off
-to Heaven knows where by a Q. M. 2nd Lieutenant. No count was taken, no
-papers signed. The omniscient powers, who had deviled our lives out to
-collect this stuff, hadn’t told us anything about this little ceremony.
-So underwear, socks, extra pairs of shoes were a drug on the market;
-and we simply couldn’t give the cigarettes away. A great quantity were
-turned over to the Y. M. C. A. canteen. Of course, we never saw our
-barrack bags again.
-
-The next day we formed with rifles, belts and bayonets, and marched
-about four miles out into the flat, flat country; past windmills
-and hedges and a little estaminet here and there, until we came to
-a British gas house. Here some English and Scotch sergeants issued
-English gas masks, and after a couple of hours gas mask drill we went
-through the gas house, and started back to camp. On our way we stopped
-by at an ordnance hut where our American Enfields were exchanged for
-English Enfields, with their stubby looking barrels and heavy sight
-guards. In our army issuing or exchanging any piece of ordnance
-property is like getting married, and when a rifle is involved it is
-like five actions at law and a couple of breach of promise suits.
-Here we filed in one door, shoved our rifle at a Tommy, beat it for
-the other door, grabbed an English weapon and bayonet, and the deed
-was done. I happened to be in command of the battalion that day, and
-somewhere I suppose the British government has a couple of grubby slips
-of paper on which I’ve signed for 1,000 gas masks, rifles and bayonets.
-The transaction would probably have been a fatal blow to a U. S.
-ordnance officer. Being only a reserve officer of infantry, it seemed
-to me pretty sensible.
-
-Back in camp we were pretty much left alone, and some there were who
-lost no time making an acquaintance with the estaminets of Calais. In
-thirty-six hours we had learned enough English to discourse glibly of
-“tuppence ha’ penny,” and I even overheard Price offer to “Shoot you a
-bob,” and somebody promptly took “six penn ’orth of it.” But this was
-nothing compared to our excursions into the unexplored fields of the
-long suffering French language. By that evening most of the men seemed
-quite proficient in a few such indispensable phrases as “Vin rouge tout
-de suite” or rather “Van rooge toot sweet,” “Encore,” “Combien,” and
-“Oo la la, ma cherie.”
-
-The next morning--Wednesday, June 5th--we left Rest Camp No. 6, and
-glad we were to leave it, for a dirty, hot hole it was. We hadn’t
-been bombed, though the town got its usual raid, and the camp was
-complimented the next night by the Boche.
-
-The hike to the station was long and hot and made without a rest. Of
-course, not knowing as much as they would later, the men’s packs were
-tremendous. The overcoat, blanket, 100 rounds of ammunition and extra
-shoes and rations alone are a good load, and when one adds several
-suits of underwear, extra toilet articles, Jenny’s sweaters, Aunt
-Sarah’s wristlets, a couple of cartons of cigarettes and pipe tobacco,
-and some chocolate, it gets tremendous. Little Effingham’s pack as
-usual, was down to his heels, but he stoutly refused assistance, also
-as usual. The company arrived at the station feeling like a dyspeptic
-bear with scarlet fever.
-
-We were forthwith introduced to the famous “Hommes 40, Chevaux 8.” It
-was seldom that bad, but even 25 or 30 men are a tight fit in those
-little cattle cars, as you all can testify.
-
-We rolled out of Havre, pursued to the last by the children and orange
-sellers, who seemed to spring up from the ground everywhere in Northern
-France.
-
-This first trip was short. We passed from the low country into a gently
-rolling terrain, and at about 1 o’clock arrived at Marquise, where we
-detrained.
-
-We were met by a couple of Scotch officers from the 14th Highland
-Light Infantry. They guided us up the road to the village where we
-were billeted, about two miles away. On the way one of them, Captain
-“Jimmie” Johnston, told us that their battalion was detailed to act as
-instructors for the 311th Infantry.
-
-The first little crossroads village was our billet--Rinxent. The
-command “Fall out t’ right of th’ road” sounded quite welcome to the
-overloaded marchers and we watched the rest of the battalion march by
-enroute to their billets at Rety, two kilos further.
-
-The company was scattered along the road in small billets of from
-ten to forty men. Company headquarters was established in the corner
-estaminet. This was our first introduction to French billets. The usual
-procedure consisted of:
-
-1. Protest to billeting officer or N. C. O. at putting human beings
-into such a place. Unsuccessful.
-
-2. Long argument with house holder, he speaking French very fast and we
-speaking American very loud. Usually ended by the argument of a five
-franc note to the frugal French peasant.
-
-3. Cleaning out the stable, chicken house, or barn, with voluble
-protests from f. F. p.
-
-4. Making sundry discoveries during the first night.
-
-5. Pitching pup tents in nearest field.
-
-We got permission to use a field about 100 yards square for a drill
-ground and two platoons pitched pup tents there.
-
-The first night a few of the boys became slightly excited over the
-privilege of visiting the estaminets, and tried to drink up all the vin
-rouge and cognac at once. The consequence was that the dispensers of
-good cheer were put under the ban for several days.
-
-Now the training of the company began in earnest. The majority of the
-men had had only the most hasty smattering of the elements of squad
-drill; many could not shoulder arms properly. Two platoons would use
-the drill field while two drilled on the roads outside. The training
-schedules called for a good nine-hour day of drill and ceremonies,
-varied occasionally by short practice hikes by company or battalion.
-
-Lewis guns were issued to us here. A few officers and n. c. o.’s
-had taken courses in the use of this weapon at Camp Dix; company
-and battalion schools were at once started, the latter conducted by
-Scottish n. c. o.’s from the 14th H. L. I.
-
-In addition, there were battalion, regimental and corps schools for
-bayonet, gas defense, liaison (for the runners), bombing, rifle
-grenade, musketry and several more. From this time until we left
-France there were always a number of men away at schools. Of course
-this was necessary, but it broke up the training of the company as a
-whole. Also, we were brigaded with the British, and some men would go
-to a British school and qualify as instructors, only to come back and
-find that the American system was being used, and vice versa. Both
-systems might have their good points, and did have, but the rate at
-which orders and instructions and ways of doing things changed from
-day to day was enough to bewilder old hands at this game; and we were
-greenhorns.
-
-“Jimmy” Johnston helped a lot. He was in command of what was left of
-the 14th battalion, Highland Light Infantry--about four squads. Of
-medium height, rather stocky build, with a bonny, handsome face and
-bright blue eyes under his Scotch cap, Jimmy was one of the finest
-fellows and best officers that ever stepped. He had been through the
-Gallipoli expedition, and two years on the Western front; had been
-reported killed in action, and gone home on leave to be greeted as one
-risen from the dead.
-
-Jimmy had been through the mill. He knew. Always with a word of
-encouragement, to avoid dampening our American energy, he would help
-along with quiet hints and canny suggestions that were worth their
-weight in gold. When we came staggering along under heavy packs, he
-said nothing, but strolled along with his little cane and admired
-the landscape. When orders would come in thick and fast, each one
-contradicting the last, and all to be executed at once, Jimmy would
-intimate verra, verra cautiously, that if we used our own judgment we
-should get along somehow, and that C. O’s and chiefs of staff had to
-keep themselves busy, and what they didn’t know wouldn’t hurt ’em. Like
-most Scotch officers he seemed to live mostly on whiskey, and throve on
-the diet.
-
-On June 11, Major Odom went to a Corps school, and I was left in charge
-of the battalion. Of course, that evening orders came in to move next
-morning. We had just begun to get in our English transport--the little
-limbers and the cranky rolling kitchen with which we were to become so
-familiar later. Up to then we had cooked on our American field ranges.
-
-At 7 o’clock next morning we pulled out and marched down to Rety.
-There we fell in behind the 2d battalion, and started on our first
-full day’s hike. The packs were still heavy, and those full cartridge
-belts--Lord, how much 100 rounds of ammunition can weigh after a
-while! As usual with green troops, the leading element set too fast a
-pace. Rests seemed but a minute. Finally, on a long, long up grade, we
-halted for lunch. After chow and an hour’s rest, we pulled on, picking
-’em up and putting ’em down. On, over broad white roads; turning off
-into narrower roads shaded by rows of tall trees, turning into the
-highroad again. We passed stragglers from the 309th and 310th Infantry,
-so knew that the whole 78th Division must be in France and on the move
-near us. The hills were higher, the women were older. We came to a
-village; three estaminets, two stores, a school house, a blacksmith’s
-shop, a sign. “Brunembert.” Regimental Hdqrs. and Supply Co. are halted
-there. We keep on; on the other side of town “C” and “D” companies meet
-their advance party guides and turn off; we hike on half a kilometer,
-half way up a hill, turn off to the right, hike around the hill, and
-finally, at about 3 P. M., plumb tuckered, the company is split, two
-platoons going to one farmhouse, the other two to another, at Haute
-Creuse.
-
-Haute Creuse itself was only a crossroads, with one poor cottage.
-Battalion headquarters was there. The company billets were a good
-quarter of a mile apart. In addition, when I inspected the billet
-assigned the 3rd and 4th platoons, I found a remarkably dirty old
-barn, with a cesspool and manure heap outside that was awful, even
-for France. The only spring was near the pool. So the next morning we
-moved these platoons over to the other billet, pitching pup tents in a
-beautiful field just on the other side of the barnyard.
-
-That afternoon an old duffer in an English major’s uniform came ambling
-along. He expressed great anguish at our not using the billets assigned
-to us. It meant nothing to him that our comfort, health, convenience
-were served by our using our own tents. The plan was that that lousy
-old typhoid trap should be occupied, and so it must be done. And he, it
-appeared, was the “area commandant.”
-
-So I said “Yessir,” and tipped Sgt. Ertwine off to have some men make a
-great show of striking tents, and resolved privately to take a chance
-yet. Jimmy Johnston came along later and told me that area commandants
-were a tribe of dud officers who were given that job to keep ’em out of
-mischief.
-
-I was hauled over the coals three or four times about it. The old Major
-wrote to his General Hdq., and they wrote to our hdq., and it came down
-the line to our Colonel, whose soul shivered before the wintry blast.
-But finally Lt. Col. Myers took it up and obtained permission for us to
-stay where we were.
-
-At Rinxent a number of second lieutenants, just commissioned at the
-Officers’ Training Camp at Langres, had joined us. We had a captain
-and five or six second lieuts. attached to “B” Co. The captain, who
-was commanding the company in my absence at bn. hdq., was a peculiar
-individual, with very fierce and imposing mustachios, and a manner to
-match; but an absurdly incongruous weak and husky voice, due to throat
-trouble. The lieuts. were rather a good bunch; men who had been n. c.
-o.’s in outfits that had come over during the preceding year, and some
-of whom had been in the trenches already. We were fortunate in keeping
-one of them, Lieut. Bivens Moore, in the company; the others we lost by
-transfers from time to time.
-
-Training was resumed again; schools ran in full force. Officers and
-men were continually going off to sundry corps or army schools in the
-vicinity; at St. Omer or points near by. Harold Sculthorpe went off
-to a cooks’ school, and we didn’t see him again for many a month. Sgt.
-Peterson was made Brigade Postal N. C. O. We received our first mail
-from home, and nobody can ever tell how welcome it was. Letters were
-the one slender thread that connected our new life with the old. A
-bit of mail cheered up a soldier for days; a disappointment when mail
-came in without one for him made him blue for a week. It was pleasant
-to see the earnest faces of fellows like Sgt. Schelter, and Corporal
-DeGrote beaming when they heard from their wives and little ones.
-With the impatience and eagerness of the newlyweds, I was of course
-sympathetic. And as for the majority, who were waiting for letters from
-the best little girl in the world, they were either insufferable in
-their glamourous egotism, or serio-comic in their suffering, according
-to whether the lady had seen fit to be kind or cool when she took her
-pen in hand. Certain ones, too, who shall be nameless, would receive
-letters in sundry handwritings, with a variety of post-marks. Don
-Juans, these; gay and giddy Lotharios in the old home town.
-
-We were billeted at a typical French farm of the larger type. As you
-turned in off the road through the gateway, a black dog chained in a
-little stone dungeon just inside barked fiercely. This poor beast had
-been chained in that one place for so long that he knew nothing else.
-He was half blind; and one day when I unchained him and took him for a
-walk down the road, he was desperately frightened; and as soon as he
-got back he made a dash for his kennel, and refused to come out.
-
-The long, two story house took up most of the left hand side of the
-courtyard. The officers had two rooms here, one of which we used for
-a mess. The family lived mostly in the big kitchen, where a little
-fire burned on the great hearth. On the other two sides were stables,
-some of which were used as billets, storeroom and orderly room. The
-manure heap adorned the center of the courtyard. Behind lay a small
-but important yard, which in turn opened on the big field where two
-platoons were in pup tents around the border, and where the company
-formed.
-
-The people here were dull, homely, grasping and churlish. I do not
-recollect ever having been given a pleasant word by one of them; but
-of complaints and claims for damages there was no lack. They seemed to
-resent our presence from the very first; we were apparently as much
-intruders to them as German troops could have been.
-
-The men soon began to resent this attitude, and to reciprocate in kind.
-Soldiers are apt to be heedless, and are of course a nuisance to the
-people they are quartered on; but at Rety they had greeted us in the
-main as friends, and we in turn tried to give as little trouble as
-possible. Here our notions of being the welcome young warriors got a
-good severe jolt.
-
-We on our side took some time to learn how to conduct ourselves. How
-were we to know that a French peasant would far rather have you walk
-over him than over one of his fields? Why was it a crime to cut down a
-stunted dead tree for the company kitchen? And where, oh, where were
-the pretty mademoiselles?
-
-But even in Northern France all the people were not like this. Remember
-the old woman just down the road, who lived with her daughters in the
-cottage which was battalion headquarters? They were very poor, and
-worked very hard; all the long summer day--and it was light from 4:30
-A. M. to 9:00 P. M.--they were busy, indoors and out. Her three sons
-were in the army, one a prisonier de guerre, two at the front. When one
-of them, only a young lad, came home for a few days’ permission, he
-went out every morning at 6:00 o’clock and worked until dusk. How many
-of us would have done as much? And the old lady and girl always had
-a smile and cheery word, and would give soldiers a drink of milk and
-insisted on having officers going to bn. hdq. stop for a cup of coffee.
-Even the pretty little goat in the yard grew friendly with olive drab,
-and would romp with us like a dog.
-
-For several days we used whatever little fields we could for drill;
-every square foot of land that was suitable seemed to be under
-cultivation. This was unsatisfactory, to say the least. Finally Col.
-Meyers arranged for us to have the use of the top of the great hill. It
-was a splendid place to drill--after you got there. But oh, that hike
-up that young mountain and down again, twice a day! Will we ever forget
-it?
-
-When we had been here about a week, Major Odom returned, and a day
-or so later Lieuts. Schuyler and Merrill rejoined the company. They
-were all primed with the new wrinkles they had picked up at school at
-Chatillon, and took over the first and third platoons respectively.
-Schuyler’s conscientiousness, high spirits and inexhaustible energy
-made him a great asset to the company. Merrill was an equally hard and
-willing worker, and though young, was one of the brightest men in the
-regiment. He had graduated from the school at the head of his class,
-which included majors, captains and lieuts. from all over the A. E. F.
-
-We were stationed about 50 kilometers behind the lines; and had the
-Germans made one more drive on Calais that summer we should have
-undoubtedly gone into action. No lights were shown at night, and it was
-seldom that we did not hear the droning buzz of the great Boche bombing
-planes winging their way to bomb Calais or Boulogne, or maybe some
-nearer town, Desvres or St. Omer.
-
-At the beginning of July details of officers and n. c. o.’s were
-sent up to the front lines for four day tours of observation. Sgts.
-Ertwine, Perry and I went on the first one, and were in the line with a
-battalion of the King’s Own Scottish Borderers. Our experiences, while
-interesting, hardly belong here. Lieut. Foulkes went up the next week
-and landed in the midst of an attack, so he saw plenty of action. Then
-Lieut. Schuyler went up with an Australian outfit, who didn’t let him
-pine for excitement during his stay. It was an excellent system, and we
-saw at first hand how things were really run in the trenches.
-
-When I returned from my tour, an orderly brought around late that night
-some red covered books and leaflets, and we were told that these would
-be put into effect the next day. These were the new system of combat
-formations, involving an absolutely new extended order drill, and
-formation of the company. Lieut. Moore had drilled a few times in these
-formations; the rest of us knew no more about them than the company
-cooks did. So next morning we sallied forth, books in hand, and worked
-the formations out step by step. Everyone was quick to see that this
-was something like business, as of course our old army regulations
-were absurd when it came to using the new special weapons, such as
-automatic rifles, hand and rifle grenades, and so on. So the new
-formations were mastered remarkably quickly.
-
-A bayonet course with trenches, “shell holes” and dummies was
-installed, and a sergeant of the Northumberland Fusileers was
-instructor. He was a good one, too; but as usual, we were up against
-it, as he taught some things slightly differently from the American
-methods.
-
-It was while going over this course that Gustave Fleischmann stepped in
-a hole and broke his leg. It was a bad break, for I saw his foot and
-lower leg go out sideways at a right angle, in spite of his leggings.
-He was game enough, though, and smoked a cigarette while waiting for
-an ambulance and surgeon. We heard from him several times from English
-hospitals, but he was never able to rejoin the company.
-
-We also lost another very valuable man in Corporal Edward Johnson.
-This man could have claimed exemption for either dependents or a weak
-heart. He refused to do either, and we managed to get him passed by
-the medicos for foreign service. The daily hike up that hill, however,
-and the strenuous life generally, were too much for him, though he
-kept at it until he was worn down to a very dangerous point. I made
-him go before the surgeon, who at once ordered him transferred to a
-depot brigade. I know that Johnson was not liked by some of you men
-on account of his conscientiousness. I believe, however, that when
-you look back upon it you will appreciate his honest, unselfish and
-unceasing labor for his squad, platoon, and company.
-
-That countryside was beautiful at this time. It rained often, but in
-showers; not the continuous drizzle that came later. Maybe it was
-because we took more notice of such things than usual, not knowing if
-we would see another summer, but the green fields, fresh in the early
-morning and cool and sweet at night, and the hedges, and the pretty
-little bits of woodland along the creeks and ravines, all seemed lovely
-as never before.
-
-In the next town, just over the hill, was an Australian rest camp. We
-got along with the Aussies much better than with Tommies, and every
-night numerous visitors went down to cultivate the entente cordial with
-the assistance of the town estaminets.
-
-Our first payday in France came about this time, and what with back pay
-coming in, and the high rate of exchange, and being paid in francs,
-some of the boys waxed rather too exuberant over the flowing bowl. What
-with Janicki and Effingham trying to clean up Brunembert, starting in
-with a couple of Tommies and ending with an abrupt thud when they got
-around to “D” Co. headquarters; and sundry members of the Irish brigade
-making a Donnybrook Fair out of the highways and byways, I had a busy
-night.
-
-Another night we shall remember is that of July 4th. Sgts. Ertwine,
-Perry and Anness were going up for commissions at the Officer
-Candidates’ School at Langres, and the officers gave them a farewell
-supper that evening. The company was, I understand, also celebrating
-the national holiday conscientiously. When the festivities were at
-their height, we heard the squealing of bagpipes, and the curious
-bump-bump-bumpetty-bum of the Scottish drummer, that nobody on earth
-but a Jock can keep step with. The band of the H. L. I. had been
-serenading the Col. and were going back to their billets.
-
-All turned out to see them pass, and as they swung up the road, Lt.
-Foulkes, in an inspired moment, detailed Supply Sgt. Levy to bring ’em
-back for “B” Co.
-
-In five minutes the pipes returned, with Joe marching at their head
-twirling the drum major’s baton. They turned into the courtyard, and
-were taken into our midst with a mighty burst of cheers, skirling
-of pipes, and thunder of the drums. That was a scene I shall never
-forget--a wonderful setting for a musical comedy. The dark courtyard,
-fitfully illumined by the glare of a few lanterns and torches--the
-crowd of olive drab figures around the Scotties in their kilts, with
-one in the center doing a Highland fling. The visitors were already
-fortified, but additional liquid refreshments were hastily procured for
-them, and a testimonial taken up in the way of a collection. In the
-meantime the drummer, well on the shady side of sober, rendered several
-ballads. We reciprocated with Irish songs by Peter and others, and a
-breakdown by Kitson. It was well on towards midnight when they left;
-and next morning the Major wanted to know “what the hell was B Company
-up to last night?”
-
-Another pleasant time was had by all one day while I was at the
-front. Someone at staff hdq. felt an idle curiosity to see how fast
-the division could turn out, if it had to. Accordingly the order went
-forth--march at 2:00 P. M. Thinking the Boches had broken through and
-we were “for it,” there was a mad scurry and scramble; the kitchen
-pulled to pieces; rations hastily issued; and the company, under Lt.
-Dunn, reported to the Brunembert road about half an hour after the time
-set, and about two hours sooner than had seemed possible that morning.
-After fussing about a bit, the companies were marched back to their
-hastily abandoned billets.
-
-All the time we were in the English area, rations were short. The
-British ration must have been much smaller than ours, or else there
-was a hitch somewhere. Our men were used to three square meals a day.
-The British only had porridge, tea and bread and jam for breakfast; a
-regular meal--stew or meat and vegetables--in the middle of the day,
-and tea and bread and cheese at night. This didn’t go far to relieve
-the aching void that every American soldier cherishes under his belt.
-We spent thousands of francs from the company fund buying potatoes and
-whatever else we could to eke out the ration. But even so, there was
-never any difficulty in following the advice of those doctors who say
-to stop eating while you still feel hungry.
-
-July 14th was Bastile Day. We were turned out for a ceremony to
-celebrate it. The ceremony consisted of marching to Brunembert in
-the rain, squads left, right dress, present arms, order arms, squads
-left, and hike back in the rain. I can’t say my bosom dilated with
-enthusiasm, nor did the spectators--a dozen children, two estaminet
-keepers and the usual “orangee” girls--emit any rousing cheers.
-
-I see by the Regimental History that the Duke of Connaught and General
-Pershing “honored us with a visit” at this time, but said visits were
-practically painless for “B” Company, as we didn’t even see the dust
-from their automobiles.
-
-By this time the regimental transport was complete--or as nearly so
-as it ever was; all furnished by the British. Each battalion was now
-functioning as a separate unit, and Lt. Gibbs had his hands full
-with the supply and transport. He was accordingly made bn. transport
-and supply officer, and the Major selected Lt. Foulkes as battalion
-adjutant. So we lost the best officer in “B” Company, and I believe
-the best line subaltern in the regiment. I know he hated to leave the
-company, and there wasn’t a man but missed him from that time on. He
-always had a soft spot in his heart for us, as Bn. Adjt. and later
-as Regimental Adjt. Foulkes was one man I was never disappointed in.
-McMahon, his striker, went with him. Mac was a good scout too.
-
-By July 18th we had skirmished over every inch of the big hill; hiked
-over all the roads within a six mile radius; bayoneted about 500
-“Boche” gunnysacks apiece, and made ’steen triangles at musketry drill.
-We got another march order, and after the usual bustle of cleaning up
-we pulled out with full equipment on July 19th at 9:00 A. M.
-
-It was only a four mile hike this time, to Lottingham, the nearest
-railway depot. There we were parked in a little yard off the road,
-and saw the 309th and 310th Inf. go by to entrain. We waited about an
-hour, and I broke up a very promising crap game, to my secret regret.
-I afterward chucked the bones out of the car window, much to Dunn’s
-disgust.
-
-At 11:30 we were packed into a train, which rolled off in the usual
-nonchalant manner, at an average speed of six miles per hour. We passed
-through some pretty enough country during the afternoon, and speculated
-wildly on our destination, as usual missing it completely.
-
-At 8:30 P. M. we pulled up at Ligny alongside an American Red Cross
-train, with a couple of real American nurses in it. How good they
-looked to us! The car windows were nearly all shattered, and the cars
-scarred with bullets and shrapnel. This was a bit of the real thing.
-
-The battalion detrained, formed on the road, and we hiked off through
-the long summer twilight, guided by Vafiadis, our advance party detail.
-We were being introduced to the Arras-St. Pol road, with which we were
-to become well acquainted shortly. We went on, over the railroad tracks
-at Roellecourt, stopped for a ten-minute rest at dusk and watched the
-cows come home down the hill--another homesick sight for the country
-lads--and hiked on and on. At last, well after dark, we turned off up
-another road; past a bit of woods, then off to the right past a large
-farmhouse, and Vafiadis pointed out a little plot about as big as a
-Harlem flat and said we were to billet there. I remarked “likell” and
-pushed ahead into a nice grassy field where we pitched pup tents for
-the night. I knew there would be an awful yowl from the owners in the
-morning, but let it slide.
-
-Next morning we found that this was St. Michel, and that St. Pol, quite
-a sizeable town, was only a quarter of a mile away. Pup tents were
-pitched up the hill from the field, in the woods, along a rough lumber
-road. The kitchen was installed under some trees near the farmhouse,
-which was deserted. We found a lot of kitchen utensils--the place had
-been an estaminet--and put some of ’em to use. The day was spent in
-resting and getting cleaned up and settled. In the evening some went
-into St. Pol.
-
-That night we found out why the place was deserted. St. Pol was a
-railroad center, and quite convenient for the Boche bombers. No bombs
-landed in camp that night, but they were hitting all around, with a
-roar and a jar that gave a fellow a queer sensation in the stomach.
-Being bombed is such a helpless, hopeless sort of process.
-
-Earlier in the war St. Pol had been under long range artillery fire;
-and between that and the air raids there were plenty of shell holes all
-around. There were some among our pup tents, and a couple of huge ones
-just across the road in the woods.
-
-Company headquarters was established in the attic of the farmhouse,
-battalion headquarters being on the first floor. Regimental Hdq. was at
-Foufflin-Ricametz, about 4 kilos away.
-
-In a couple of days a vitriolic and voluble French woman descended
-upon us. It appeared that we had broken into the house, used her
-things without permission, taken eggs the hens had laid, used several
-priceless old boards from the barn to make a mess table, walked on the
-grass, and disturbed the manure pile. I never did believe she and her
-husband ever lived there; but we put everything back, and ate in the
-mud until Thompson and Farry found some boards elsewhere. These two
-French people made life as miserable as they could for us while we were
-there, continually claiming damages and protesting at everything we
-did, it seemed.
-
-Most of the inhabitants of St. Michel and St. Pol slept at night in
-long dugouts tunnelled underneath the hills. They were very damp, foul
-close holes, with little cubicles scratched out of the walls to sleep
-in. They weren’t taking any more chances with H. E.
-
-Our “intensive training” was continued here. We were rejoiced that we
-hadn’t that awful hill to climb, and somehow we got away with using the
-field to drill on. The mornings were taken up with problems, and before
-long we were well acquainted with those woods; then there was bayonet
-drill, bombing, the everlasting gas mask drill, musketry, physical
-drill, and so on. The afternoon was devoted to special drill for Lewis
-gun, V. B. and hand bombers, runners, etc., while the rest of the
-company did problems or musketry. We stood retreat and reveille along
-the lumber road--oh, yes, and that 15 minutes of manual of arms before
-retreat every night.
-
-Usually it rained here. Drill went on just the same, though. We could
-hear the thunder of the big guns at night, and the crash and roar from
-the droning bombing planes let us know that this was in grim earnest,
-and it behooved us to make the most of our time.
-
-Regimental, brigade, and divisional problems began to be all the
-rage. Since nobody below majors ever get any information as to what
-these are all about, the troops were usually represented by flags.
-In good weather these things are just a bore; when it rains, they’re
-considerably worse.
-
-On August 3d, the H. L. I. detachment left us, and we completed our
-training on our own.
-
-About two weeks after our arrival at St. Michel, the word was passed
-that Elsie Janis was coming to visit the division. Of course that
-afternoon was marked by a good old Northern France soaker. How it
-rained! We hiked about three miles through it, and were packed into a
-courtyard with five or six thousand other shoving, soaking doughboys.
-Miss Janis had our band to help her out, and a little platform with a
-bit of canvas overhead, which kept off a little of the rain. Half of us
-couldn’t see her except for occasional glimpses; officers and men were
-drenched right through and through. Besides, Miss Janis was physically
-about all in from overwork, and had a peach of a cold--a real A. E. F.
-cold, not the kind that amateur singers always use for an alibi. The
-bunch was sore at being hauled out in this weather for anything short
-of going into action.
-
-And yet, from the first moment that girl stepped on the platform, she
-had the crowd with her. We were fed up, lonesome in a strange land,
-sick of hearing a foreign tongue, longing to see a regular girl again.
-And here was a bit of real America before our eyes; pep incarnate--a
-snappy, clean cut, clean girl from home, laughing with us, making us
-laugh at ourselves and in spite of ourselves, jazzing it up in the
-rain. And we sloshed and squnched back to St. Michel, singing:
-
- “Beautiful Elsie, beautiful Elsie,
- “You’re the only, only girl that I ado-o-re.”
-
-On August 5th the battalion left St. Michel at 9:00 A. M. in full
-marching order. We were going to occupy a trench sector for a practice
-tour.
-
-As you all know now, the trench systems of each side during the war
-were in triplicate, or maybe quadruplicate. There was the system
-actually being occupied against the enemy. A couple of miles back was
-another complete system, to be defended in case the first was taken;
-and, if time permitted, yet another behind this.
-
-We were to take over a sector of the G. H. Q., or second system, just
-behind Arras. While this was partly a regular item on our training
-schedule--the last one before actually going into the line--it was also
-contemplated that in case the Boche uncorked another drive on Arras, we
-should occupy this line and bar the road of the enemy should he break
-through, as he had done in the spring further north.
-
-After a long 12 mile hike up the Arras road, we turned off to the
-right, past a long train of British motor lorries, of which there
-seemed an inexhaustible supply. On through roads ever rougher and
-narrower we went, and halted at last in a clearing in a patch of woods.
-The officers went out to reconnoitre the sector and have their company
-sectors assigned, and the company stacked arms in the wet woods--it was
-raining, of course--and wondered if we’d get any chow.
-
-It was dark when we had had supper from our one lunged rolling kitchen
-and filed off to take up our position. “B” Co. was battalion support.
-The trenches were only dug about waist high; there were no dugouts or
-cubby holes to sleep in; not even a firing step to keep you out of the
-mud. We splashed and squatted through the pitchy blackness; no lights
-were allowed, of course. We reached our post finally, and settled down
-in the bottom of the trench in abject misery. The only lights were from
-the star shells that the Germans were sending up from their real lines,
-only a few kilos away; and the rumble of artillery fire there ahead
-reminded us that we were pretty close to the real thing.
-
-While I was making my final inspection, I saw a light come flashing
-down the communication trench towards us. This was against all orders,
-so I snarled out a peremptory command to put it out. The light didn’t
-pay any attention. This was the last straw; I thought that so long as
-we had to go through this performance it was going to be done right,
-with nobody privileged to cross their fingers and say they weren’t
-playing. I wallowed off in the direction of that flash light, wet
-through and getting pretty sore. I hailed it; I adopted a false,
-feigned politeness; I remarked that this was not puss in the corner,
-nor was I talking for my health, and if they couldn’t douse that glim
-I had a .45 that could. The light went out abruptly. I asked if he was
-simulating a steamboat on the Mississippi. I finally got quite near and
-demanded whoin’ell that was anyhow. And it was the Colonel. Yes, of
-course.
-
-The best of it was that he had issued the order against lights himself
-about two hours before, and couldn’t very well blame me.
-
-An order came round to send a detail after some corrugated iron at
-point “G24a7.3.” I stumbled around until I walked on a sergeant, Bill
-Reid, and so I made him the goat, and told him to take a detail and
-go to it. The place was about 300 yards away over a couple of fields.
-Bill and his detail floundered off, and roamed about until 3:00 A. M.,
-when they hailed a figure in the darkness as “Hey, buddy.” It was Lt.
-Col. Myer, at regimental hdq. at Hermaville, a couple of kilos away. He
-steered Bill back to the company, where he arrived at dawn--without the
-iron.
-
-During the day the sun shone at intervals, and we scraped out cubbies
-in the side of the trench, and tried to get a little dry. Barney
-O’Rourke, who had been missing since the night before, showed up under
-guard, somewhat the worse for wear. He had wandered off to Hermaville,
-met an Irish Tommy, found a hospitable estaminet, and subsequently
-had severely rebuked an officer from Rgt’l. Hdqrs. who undertook to
-reprove him. Regt’l Hdq. was all for having Barney shot at sunrise or
-something, and of course I got a call. At the courtmartial, though,
-we got him off with a month’s hard labor and a $10.00 blind, which
-was really quite all that happy-go-lucky, golden-hearted son of Erin
-deserved. He never did the month at that, or rather we all did. But he
-dug me a company headquarters when he came back, and it would have been
-fine only someone walked through the roof.
-
-We were relieved that night by “E” Co., 24 hours before we expected. We
-marched back to the clearing in the woods, had supper at the rolling
-kitchen, pitched pup tents and had a comparatively dry night’s sleep.
-Jerry came over and tried to drop an ash can on the kitchen, but didn’t
-succeed.
-
-They let us sleep late next morning, and we started for our billet at
-10:00 A. M., leaving the 2d bn. to the joys of make-believe trench life.
-
-Right here I want to say a word about our experience with
-court-martials. There has been much criticism of military justice as
-administered in the A. E. F., but the 78th Division was fortunate in
-having as Judge Advocate a most capable, honest, experienced, broad
-minded man, Major George G. Bogert, formerly Professor of Law at
-Cornell, I believe. His assistant, Lt. John J. Kuhn, was an equally
-fine type of lawyer and gentleman. I know of no accused man who did not
-get an absolutely square deal from them, and from the courts-martial
-before which they appeared.
-
-Well, here we are back in St. Michel, rocked to sleep every night by
-the free fireworks from our aerial visitors. We had hardly rested from
-our trench experience before I was ordered to take details from each
-company to the rifle range. Part of “B” company had gone a week before,
-and their tales of woe had in some measure prepared us.
-
-We had no guide. As we hiked through Foufflin-Ricametz, I stopped off
-and Capt. Wagner showed me our destination on a map. We plodded on
-and on, through about 20 villages, all alike, and all with a maze of
-crooked little streets that weren’t on any map. We passed by a lot of
-Canadian artillery back for a rest. The Canadians had been badly shot
-up before we got to France, and were being reorganized and recuperating
-that summer. They, the Anzacs, the Australians, the Scotties, and the
-Guard regiments were the shock troops of the British Army.
-
-Finally we came upon a welcome sign, “Target Range,” and we bivouacked
-in woods behind the slope whereon the targets were. The next day we
-plugged away at 200, 300 and 500 yards at four rickety swivel targets.
-It rained, of course; but we finished in the afternoon, and hiked back
-to St. Michel. It seemed even longer than before, though we took a
-short cut by a back road; and we were for once glad to see the lonely
-tower of St. Michel rising above the woods outside St. Pol.
-
-I returned to find Major Odom on the eve of departure for another
-school. From this time, then, until he returned on August 20th, the
-company was commanded by Lt. Schuyler, who carried out his additional
-duties with characteristic energy and conscientiousness.
-
-On August 12th, the whole regiment was on the move; and this time
-we were leaving St. Michel for good, though a small detail was
-left to guard the baggage. Sgt. Haynes, who had hurt his leg in
-bayonet practice, was left behind with water on the knee, and never
-succeeded in rejoining the company. Our faithful company clerk, too,
-Cpl. Jimmy Jones, broke his ankle, and was sent to a hospital in
-England. Fortunately for me, we had Cpl. Stiles ready to step into
-his shoes. From this time on Stiles handled the company paper work
-in a most efficient and conscientious fashion. Most fellows never
-have any idea of the long hours, day and night, that a company clerk
-puts in, struggling with the labyrinth of forms, records, reports
-and correspondence that are vital to the running of the company.
-The greater part of the paper work that was done at Camp Dix by the
-officers and Co. Cmdrs. was turned over to the Co. clerks in France,
-and many a night Stiles and Jones have pored over that field desk, by
-the light of a candle, keeping us straight with the authorities. If
-records ever went astray, or passes went awry, it was not their fault.
-“B” Company was certainly most fortunate in its company clerks.
-
-It was a long, hot march that sunny August day up toward the front, and
-the company pulled into Lattre St. Quentin pretty well tuckered. I had
-been taken up in a British staff car as we passed through Regt’l Hdq.,
-and, with the other two battalion commanders, was taken to reconnoiter
-the sectors of the front line which we were to take over. Each
-battalion was to be brigaded with an English regiment, and to hold the
-front lines for a regular tour of duty as the last step in the training
-schedule.
-
-The 1st Bn. was to go in with the 1st London regiment. The officers
-of this brigade and regiment received me very cordially. Our proposed
-battalion sector was just outside Arras. The town itself was within
-the English lines, which ran along the eastern outskirts. The position
-was well organized, and the trenches were in good shape, as this part
-of the line had been practically stationary for a year. The outfit we
-were to relieve were in high glee, as they had been in the trenches for
-8 months straight. It was a “quiet” sector, but Jerry buzzed a few
-shells quite unpleasantly close while I was roaming about.
-
-I rode back in luxury in the staff car to find the battalion billeted
-and asleep. We had arranged for officers and platoon sergeants to go up
-in a couple of days to reconnoiter their respective positions.
-
-Lattre St. Quentin was a village of some sixty houses, about 20 kilos
-from Arras. “B” Co. was billeted in the barn behind the house where Bn.
-Hdq. was located, and in the house next to it down the road.
-
-During the next few days we had a platoon competition in the battalion.
-“B” Co. was represented by the 4th platoon. The event was won by the
-“C” Co. 3d platoon, but all the contestants did well.
-
-There was a nice “vacant lot” by the billet, and we had some good fun
-kicking a football and staging several baseball matches there. The
-weather was fine, and we were in great fettle.
-
-On August 14th orders arrived promoting Lt. Col. Myer to Colonel and
-putting him in command of the 129th Infantry. This was a great loss to
-the regiment. Myer was the best officer we had, thoroughly efficient,
-devoted to his profession, always on the job, an excellent judge of
-men, and an adept at picking out the essential things that counted. He
-placed the good of the service first, and himself last, and he had the
-trust and respect of every officer and man in the outfit.
-
-The officers and platoon sgts. left on the evening of the 15th for
-the front line via a little narrow gauge railway, returning the next
-morning. All was now in readiness.
-
-But at noon on the 16th, orders arrived postponing the relief. On the
-17th, rumors began to fly that we were to go to another part of the
-front. Then we were ordered to turn in the Lewis guns, with which we
-had become quite familiar. Somehow it leaked out that we were to go
-South to the American sector. This rumor became a certainty when we
-turned in all our British rifles and ammunition, receiving instead
-American Enfields. Our overcoats and other supplies that we had left at
-St. Michel were brought over in motor trucks. The details guarding them
-said that Jerry had bombed the old billet to a fare-you-well the night
-after we left it.
-
-Our joy at moving was heartfelt and unbounded. Those who had been south
-to schools or on other duties told us what a “bon secteur” it was.
-And the prospect of drawing American rations and being with American
-troops and transport again was welcomed with acclaim. To tell the
-truth, we were rather fed up with being under the wing of our British
-Allies. Their ways were not our ways; we would feel better when with
-our own kind. Theoretically, we were brothers in the great cause.
-Practically, in the mud and sweat and thousand petty aggravations and
-misunderstandings, we had undoubtedly gotten upon each other’s nerves.
-The average Tommy looked upon us as a bunch of greenhorn Yankees, who
-had all made fortunes during the first three years of the war and were
-now over in France three years late spending them and raising the
-price of vin rouge and “oofs.” We looked upon the average Tommy as a
-degenerate, tea drinking, saluting bellyacher. The Australians and
-Canadians were our sworn buddies, however, and we liked the Scotties.
-Maybe this was because the only British combat troops we had been in
-touch with were these organizations. To me, the few English combat
-troops that I encountered seemed a fairly decent bunch.
-
-[Illustration: 2d Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.]
-
-It was with light hearts, then, that we pulled out of Lattre St.
-Quentin on a beautiful summer morning, at 10 o’clock, August 20th. It
-was only an 8 mile hike to Tinques, a rail head on the Arras road. We
-turned into a big held and I halted the battalion while I went to find
-the R. T. O. in charge of entraining.
-
-All was bustle and hurry. Things were being rushed through in the
-American fashion. Nobody knew where the R. T. O. was; everybody was too
-busy to know anything. At last I saw Lt. Gibbs on top of a flat car
-loading wagons. He shouted that our train was across the platform and
-was due to leave in 20 minutes. I dashed back to the battalion, hurried
-it across the tracks, entrained them and sure enough the train pulled
-out just as I got the outfit aboard. As I was finishing, a dapper U. S.
-Major of the Division Inspector’s Dept. toddled up and said it was the
-worst entraining he had ever seen, and why weren’t the men marched up
-to the cars in column of squads? I saluted the boob wearily and swung
-aboard just as the train pulled out.
-
-Now came our longest rail journey in France. For two days we bowled
-along pretty steadily. We swung around by St. Pol, with a farewell
-glimpse of our old billet, and then south, through Amiens, up to the
-outskirts of Paris. Hearts beat high, and had the train stopped for
-five minutes at a likely looking place, I was prepared to see the
-battalion make a break for la vie Parisienne. The only stop, however,
-was for a few minutes to get routing orders from a business-like
-French R. T. O. From these orders I learned that our destination was
-Passavant. It might as well have been Timbuctoo for all that meant to
-me; but I had learned by this time that these French trains, with all
-their misery and sin, did get you to the proper place at last, so I
-didn’t worry.
-
-The houses of Paris fell behind, and we rolled east along the famous
-Marne river. At Haute Creuse and St. Pol we had read in the Paris
-editions of the “New York Herald” and “Daily Mail” of the desperate
-fighting along here in July, in which the mettle of our American
-regulars and marines had been put to so stern a test; and the next
-morning, a beautiful, bright day it was, too, we began to pass through
-towns whose names were yet ringing all over the world. The familiar
-signs of nearing the front began to appear--the roofless houses, shell
-holes, and so on. Then we began to see debris lying about--discarded
-bits of equipment and uniform, empty bandoliers, then here and there a
-new grave, marked by a helmet, and sometimes a little cross. Presently
-we went right through Chateau Thierry--one of the first trains since
-the battle. From our cars we saw the little firing posts that the
-Americans had scratched out in the side of the railroad embankment.
-Here and there a grave showed where one had died where he fought. Some
-German helmets over graves on the south side of the river showed where
-perhaps some of the enemy had gotten across before they fell under the
-fire of the Springfields.
-
-But the most impressive and inspiring sight of all to Americans were
-the hills that stretched up to the North of the river. A long steep,
-smooth, stretch broken only enough to allow of cover for reserves and
-machine guns--a position that looked absolutely impregnable if defended
-by modern weapons. And up these heights, defended by the flower of the
-German army, flushed with recent success, our countrymen had swept
-forward, carried the position, and hurled the foe back. It must have
-been some scrap.
-
-The Marne here is about as large as a good-sized American creek. There
-were quite a few dead horses and men still bobbing around in it. The
-countryside had not been under fire for very long, compared to the
-Arras section; some crops were still standing, and a few people at
-work reaping them already. I am sorry to say that one of our men was
-thoughtless enough to grab a pile of new cut hay from a field during
-a stop. I happened to see him and of course he put it back, and got a
-summary out of it. I mention this to remind you that in most of our
-trouble with the French peasants we were at fault to some extent. Of
-course, it isn’t pleasant to sleep for several nights on the floor of a
-jolting cattle car. But neither is it enjoyable for poor Jacques to see
-his hay miraculously preserved from the H. E.’s, laboriously gathered,
-and then have a doughboy coolly annex it and roll away in a train.
-
-We rolled on through the sunny August day, east to Chalons-sur-Marne,
-then southeast, away from the battle front. Night came on, and dragged
-along toward dawn. At about 2:00 A. M. we stopped at a little way
-station for hot coffee, ready for us in great G. I. boilers. The French
-corporal in charge of the station gave me a cup out of his own private
-pot, cooking over a smelly little oil stove, thick as mud, black as
-night, reeking with cognac, altogether very satisfactory. I wished
-every man could have had such a shot.
-
-Early in the morning we passed the walled heights of Chaumont, A. E. F.
-headquarters. On past the picturesque battlements of Langres, centre
-of the Army Schools; then east again. The country was more rugged and
-less highly cultivated. Here was a place where one might get off the
-road without stepping on Jacques’ garden. It looked more like home.
-The woods were sure enough ones, not little, severely confined, neatly
-trimmed groves such as they had in the north, with every tree numbered
-and recorded.
-
-Best of all, we were in the American sector. The M. P.’s at the
-stations were doughboys instead of Tommies or poilus. Here an American
-ambulance hustled along the road; there a good old 3-ton Q. M. truck
-lumbered along. Overseas caps were sprinkled about the stations. No
-more now of “What is the name of this bally station, old top?,” and
-“Kesky eessy, Mossure.” We could yell: “Say, buddy, what t’ell burg’s
-this?” like civilized persons.
-
-Off on a branch line, around hills, over a long, white stone bridge,
-and the train slid up to the long platform at Passavant station.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-“THE AMERICAN SECTOR”
-
-
-The battalion tumbled off, very greasy as to face and stiff as to legs.
-The rolling kitchens were unloaded; the Colonel and Lt. Gibbs appeared
-and disappeared. We saw our own supply company hard at work in the
-adjacent field. In a few minutes it was “Fall in,” and we hiked across
-the railroad and down into the centre of the little town.
-
-At the town square we halted, and lay around for an hour in the shade
-waiting for our French guides to take the companies to their billets.
-There was a cool fountain splashing in the center of the square, but
-it was marked “Non potable,” so we had to wait until we could get some
-chlorinated water from our lister bags. Oh, that chlorinated water!
-Will we ever get the taste of the stuff out of our mouths?
-
-At last a guide came along, but only to take off “C” Co., which was
-billeted at the little village of Rochere, about 4 kilos outside
-Passavant. Finally our guide appeared, and “A” and “B” companies hiked
-off down a narrow street, skirting the great chateau, then up a long
-hill, under the railroad bridge, and into our billeting area, a little
-“suburb” of the town across the railroad tracks.
-
-At once we noticed a difference in the people. This town was far behind
-the lines. No air raids had visited it; lights could be shown at night.
-And the people seemed actually glad to see us. Instead of lowering
-brows, grudging admission, furious protests, we met pleasant smiles,
-bon jour’s, readiness and willingness to accommodate us. Even when we
-swept out the stables and outhouses where we were billeted there was no
-objection. Oh, boy, this was something like it!
-
-The rolling kitchen was put to work in a field on the outskirts, and
-Wilson, deBruin, Lusier & Co. got busy. Everyone was pretty tired, but
-after chow things looked much brighter.
-
-That night occurred an incident which shows how thoughtless soldiers
-are. A couple of men, who shall be nameless, patronized the estaminets
-far too freely. When they had acquired a skinful of vin rouge apiece,
-they went forth and nobly robbed a hen roost, and had a chicken dinner.
-
-Now had this happened a week before, there would have been immediate
-and voluble protests to the authorities, and a bill for damages as long
-as your arm. And on our side, I fear the matter would have been looked
-on as righteous retribution, and the officers would have received very
-little assistance in investigating the affair.
-
-But this was different. Wilson and some others found the little girl
-at their billet and her mother in tears over their loss. The offenders
-were promptly trailed and spotted, and reported to Lt. Schuyler. And
-nobody felt more ashamed than they when they woke up in the guardhouse
-the next morning. Meanwhile, that same evening a hasty collection had
-been taken up in the company, and the French lady reimbursed a good
-many times the value of her loss. I understand she wouldn’t take all
-they collected; but next day I met a couple of the boys, Wilson and
-Weber, I think, coming back from town with the little girl between
-them, proudly bearing the finest bonnet that Passavant “epiceries”
-could produce, and enough chocolate to satisfy a dozen youngsters.
-
-The days at Passavant were about the brightest spot in our stay in
-France. The training schedules were on hand again, of course. Chauchats
-were issued to replace the Lewis guns of the English sector; much to
-the disgust of the auto riflemen, who had worked so hard learning the
-Lewis, and found the Chauchat but a crude affair comparatively. But the
-weather was beautiful; there was a stream to wash in, and a lovely lake
-about a mile away where you could have a swim--the only time we enjoyed
-this luxury that summer. The people were pleasant; we were getting
-American rations; all went well.
-
-It was too good to last long. On August 27th we got a march order, and
-at 1:00 P. M. the next day we pulled out, down the hill to Passavant,
-up hill through the town, and fell in behind the second battalion for
-a long, long hike through the summer afternoon and evening.
-
-Six o’clock came, and seven. Still no sign of camp. It was growing
-dark. The men were good and tired; but “B” company held to its record
-as the best marching company in the outfit, and plodded along doggedly.
-I felt uncomfortable every time I looked back at my four platoons; I
-felt that I ought to be hiking with them instead of on the Major’s
-horse; knowing, however, that I had a couple of hours hard work ahead
-of me after we camped, I turned back to the road ahead, and wished the
-Major were back.
-
-At last, at 8:00 P. M., when it was quite dark, we turned off to the
-left, crossed several fields, and came to a number of frame barracks.
-These had bunks within them--about half enough to accommodate the men,
-but we were glad to lie down anywhere. After the usual turmoil we got
-supper under way, and as fast as chow could be obtained and swallowed,
-we hit the hay--some in barracks, others in pup tents in the fields
-outside. We had done about 20 kilos that day.
-
-The next morning we pulled out at 9 o’clock, hiked into Fresnes, the
-village near by, and then out on a good wide road, heading generally
-west. The Colonel, who was making the hike in an automobile, had a
-theory that no man needed more than a pint of water on any march,
-and the march discipline was to be very strict. The everlasting rain
-started again; it was hike, hike, hike. Who that hasn’t done it can
-ever understand the awful, soul tearing grind of a long hike with
-full pack? After the first hour, the pack gets heavy on the back and
-shoulders. You see the feet of the fellow ahead--up and down, up and
-down, remorselessly, steadily--doesn’t he ever get tired? If he can
-make it, you can. Some buckle or piece of equipment gets loose, and
-goes jingle, jingle, jingle, and slap, slap, slap against your leg. It
-gets irritating. You are sweating and hot and dirty and uncomfortable.
-“Close up!” You mentally damn the officers, who haven’t any rifles;
-the ones who ride horses, doubly damned; and as for those birds in
-the autos--ahem! How long to the 10 minutes rest? Then it starts to
-rain. It beats into your face. You damn the boob who wished upon the
-Americans that prize inanity of equipment, the overseas cap. It is
-ingeniously designed to give the eyes and face no protection from sun,
-wind or rain, and at the same time efficiently to direct water down the
-back of your neck. On, on, on, plod, plash, squnchy, sqush. The Major
-looks at his watch. You eye the side of the road for a likely looking
-place. At last: “Fall out t’ right th’ road.” You stumble over and
-plump down on the ground. Oh, blessed moment! you ease the load on your
-shoulders; your feet are tingling with happiness at being off duty;
-after a few breaths you fish out a cigarette or the old pipe, and light
-up for a few puffs. You lean back--
-
- “Fall in!”
-
-Oh, murder! You know it hasn’t been four minutes, let alone ten.
-
-Toward noon we passed through Bourbonne-les-Bains, quite a sizable
-town; and as we went plugging along by the railroad station there was
-Major Odom. He was carried off by the Colonel in his car, but took
-command of the battalion that night, and I was glad to get back to “B”
-Co.
-
-Up that long, long, steep street we plugged along, rested, then pushed
-on well clear of the town, and halted beside a pretty green meadow in
-the woods for lunch. After we finished our hard bread, corned willy
-and jam, and were lying about in heavenly idleness for a few minutes,
-Roy Schuyler’s eye fell upon the bn. adjutant’s horse; a dignified and
-rotund, rather elderly mare, indulging in a roll while her saddle and
-bridle were off. In a minute Roy was on the astonished beast’s back.
-Encouraged by a couple of hearty thwacks from a club, Mary started on
-a very creditable imitation of youthful gamboling. It was a gallant
-sight for a summer afternoon. Often since, the picture has come back to
-me--the prancing horse, the laughing young rider with one hand in her
-mane, the other brandished aloft. But our time is up; Mary must resume
-her saddle, and we our packs, and off we go.
-
-The shadows lengthened; the sun dropped down behind the hills, and the
-long French twilight set in. Still no sign of our guides to indicate
-our billet was near. Village after village came into view, raised our
-hopes, and dashed them again as we plodded on. At last, at about 6:00
-P. M., we slogged into Merrey. There the Colonel was waiting, in his
-car. He remarked cheerfully that he had had quite a hunt for billets,
-but had found a splendid spot. We hiked through the village, and turned
-off the road into the splendid spot--a pine grove, very wet and rooty
-as to floor, and no water around. We were satisfied to get off our
-feet, however. After the usual procedure of getting kicked out of X
-company’s area, and kicking Y company out of ours, we rigged up shelter
-tents or sleeping bags. Of course the water carts weren’t on hand, and
-dinner was held up. There are two recurrent occasions in a soldier’s
-life when the seconds drag most fearsomely; the interval between a
-shell’s landing and bursting; and the interval between the end of a
-hike and chow.
-
-Some of the boys went off to wash their feet in a pretty little pond a
-couple of fields away. That pond concealed some dark secret beneath its
-placid bosom. Whew! Didn’t it stink when disturbed?
-
-At reveille we rolled out of our blankets, pretty stiff and cold, but
-rested. Packs were rolled again, and we fell in at 9:00 A. M., Major
-Odom again commanding the battalion, and were off on the last lap. This
-was to be a short one, only about five miles. We passed a large field
-with a number of Boche prisoners at work, and at about 11:00 A. M.
-crossed a railroad, turned off the road to the right, and came upon a
-cantonment just outside of Breuvannes, where the battalion was billeted.
-
-While these frame barracks were not so picturesque as other billets we
-had had, they were infinitely better adapted to our uses. There were
-bunks for all, mess halls, a parade ground large enough to form the
-battalion, and a fine level drill field near by, along the railroad
-track. A good-sized creek ran close by, and Breuvannes was only 5
-minutes walk away. A pretty enough little village, with five or six
-stores and estaminets. Also there was a Y hut, where you could see
-movies at night if you got there soon enough.
-
-The 42d Division had been here until the day before, resting and
-replacing their losses from the fighting in July. A bn. of the 5th
-Marines had preceded them, and that evening I ran across a Marine
-lieutenant who was following up his outfit. My own alma mater, the
-Virginia Military Institute, furnished a number of officers to the
-Marines, and I was particularly interested in news from them. This
-officer told me of the death of several of my old school fellows at
-Belleau Woods. When he said that only one in ten had come through out
-of his own company, however, I thought he was pulling a long bow.
-
-The next morning, August 31, we resumed the familiar drill schedules.
-Every effort was made to teach the use and mechanism of the new
-Chauchats. Special training went on as usual, and we practiced the
-formations of the O. C. S. U. (Offensive Combat of Small Units) on all
-the bushes and trees in the vicinity.
-
-Barney O’Rourke and I spent one day on a pilgrimage to Bourmont, where
-the courtmartial heretofore referred to took place; Barney quite
-prepared to be shot at sunrise, and I suspect a little disappointed at
-the affair ending so undramatically.
-
-The drill field furnished a very fair baseball diamond, and several
-inter-company contests were staged. We played one ten-inning thriller
-with “A” Co., in which Joe Fahey finally pitched us to victory,
-supported by an able cast. We had the makings of a good football team
-under way, too, and I remember I had most of the skin off my right arm.
-But more serious business was on hand, and our athletic activities had
-to be temporarily laid aside.
-
-On Sept. 4, we prepared to move. The battalion was formed at dusk, and
-at 9:00 P. M. we filed off for our first night march in France. It
-started raining promptly, of course. Wasn’t it dark! In an hour you
-literally could not see your hand an inch before your nose. No lights
-or smoking were allowed; and even a chew was risky, as you never knew
-who you’d hit when you let fly. Now and then a glimmer of light from
-some cottage fire would show the shadowy forms of the last squad of “C”
-Co. in front, hastening on into the darkness. I walked into an ungainly
-quadruped and requested the rider to get his damned mule out of the
-road; and was immediately and discourteously informed that I had better
-keep my mouth shut and drive on. I recognized Major Odom’s voice and
-drove on.
-
-Rain, hike, rain, slog, mud, mud, sweat, damn. Halt and fall out and
-sit in the mud for ten minutes and feel the rain percolate. Fall in,
-and hike again, your cold, wet clothes clinging to you.
-
-Eight weary hours of this. At last, just before daybreak, we turned
-off the road through the gateway of a once palatial estate, and hiked
-across a park to a grove where we were billeted. The fifteen miles we
-had covered seemed like 30. We were done in enough to fall asleep,
-many without unrolling their packs. The rain, however, found us out,
-trickled in at every corner, and morning found us miserable enough.
-
-No word was vouchsafed to us as to when we should move again; and this
-playing at secrecy cost “D” and “C” Cos. their meal. It was more luck
-than good management that gave me the hunch to rout out our weary cooks
-and have chow at 11:00 o’clock. At 12:00 o’clock orders came in a great
-hurry that we were to clear the crossroads at 2:30. We did it at 3:00.
-
-Our new lieutenant-colonel, Arthur Budd, had joined us the night
-before. During the first halt Lt. Foulkes came galloping up on old
-Mary, and his former platoon--the first--chortled with glee every
-time daylight showed between Louis and the saddle. Col. Budd promptly
-treated me to a cold and fishy stare, and inquired if it was the custom
-for “B” Co. to yell at officers when they passed. I hastily delivered
-a brief resume of Louis’ career with the company and the estimation in
-which we held him, intimating that he was regarded as one helofa good
-fellow, and that no mutiny was breaking out. Meanwhile I had hastily
-sized up our new acquisition as a goof. I had reason to revise this
-estimate, and that shortly.
-
-The rain let up this evening, for a wonder, and the march wasn’t half
-bad, except for the mud under foot, which we were pretty well used to.
-We passed by a sizeable cantonment of Chinese labor troops, and Diskin
-wanted to fall out and leave his laundry. We had only the most vague
-idea of where we were; in fact, our notions of French geography were
-of the crudest anyhow. Bill Reid, from his six-foot eyrie, solemnly
-announced that he saw the Alps ahead, and had the 1st platoon craning
-its respective necks for an hour.
-
-Just as darkness fell, we ran into an ammunition train, the tail end of
-the 42d Division. We pushed on behind them up a hill into the village
-of Viocourt, where our old dependable of the advance party, Sgt. Hill,
-met us and pointed out our billets, in lofts and stables on both sides
-of the “street.”
-
-We all knew pretty well by now that we must be in for action soon.
-The St. Mihiel salient meant nothing more to us than it did to folks
-at home then. The general impression was that it was to be a drive on
-Metz; and this wasn’t so far out of the way, at that.
-
-By this time it didn’t take us long to make ourselves at home in a
-strange place. We had bagged a good place for the rolling kitchen, and
-the billets weren’t so bad. Between showers we got in some drilling,
-and a couple of hours on an extemporized 30-yard range that Lt.
-Schuyler put up one morning before breakfast. Everyone tried his hand
-at the Chauchat for a magazine full. This was the only chance we had to
-fire this gun before we had to meet the enemy with it. The men armed
-with pistols punctured a few tin cans after a vast expenditure of lead.
-
-There was a beautiful meadow below town, and on Sunday, the 8th, we
-staged a couple of good ball games. On Monday we had a company problem
-through the woods beyond the meadow, and Tuesday we got in the target
-practice.
-
-Wednesday morning the Major assembled the Co. cmdrs. and ordered us to
-be ready to march at 1:30. After the usual bustle all was ready for
-the road, two days’ rations being carried. Our kitchen and cooks were
-attached to the regt’l supply train.
-
-It had been raining all the morning, but old J. Pluvius had only been
-practising for the real show. We started off in a steady downpour,
-which speedily became a regular deluge. The wind rose to a gale, which
-drove the sheets of water directly at us, penetrating right through
-slickers and clothing. In 15 minutes we were all wet to the skin.
-
-It was only an hour’s march this time. At 3:00 P. M., we came to a
-crossroads just outside Chatenois. There stood a long line of motor
-trucks, stretching away in either direction as far as the eye could
-see. The embussing was well handled, and in 20 minutes we were packed
-in, 20 or more to a truck, jammed as tight as they could be, every man
-wet through and chilled. Even our incorrigibly optimistic regimental
-history says, “We shall never forget this day because of its miserable
-and nasty weather.”
-
-These busses were driven by Chinese in the French service. With their
-impassive Oriental faces looking out over their great sheepskin coats,
-they looked fitting agents of destiny; grave Charons, bearing us on
-the last lap of our progress toward our fate.
-
-At 4:00 o’clock we were off, with a jerk and a clank of gears and a
-steady rumble. On and on, over the long French road, rolling on through
-rain and wind, steadily, inevitably; each lorry nearly touching the one
-in front. Darkness fell; the long gray train rolled on, not a light,
-not a sound save the rumble of the trucks. We got colder and colder;
-more and more cramped. Capt. Fleischmann and I spent most of the night
-each cherishing the other’s icy feet in his bosom. On and on, through
-gray, silent towns, past the ghostly figure of a lonely M. P. at a
-crossroads; through fields, woods, villages, all wet and quiet in the
-falling rain.
-
-Just as the daylight began to thin the inky mist, the train halted, and
-the word was passed along the line to debus. Wet, shivering, miserable,
-“B” Co. struggled hastily into clammy shoes and slung their heavy,
-soggy packs. As we formed on the side of the road, the busses started
-again, and rolled swiftly off into the shadows ahead, leaving us on the
-road, with heavy woods on either side.
-
-We marched down the road to an open field on the left. Here a railroad
-track entered the corner of the wood. We turned off up the track, and
-about 300 yards along we came upon the 2nd battalion bivouacking. We
-went on just beyond them, and were allotted our own share of squishy
-ground and drenched underbrush.
-
-A limited number of fires were allowed, and we made ourselves as
-comfortable as we could under the circumstances. I was detailed on
-O. D. and spent a busy day dissuading the regiment from straggling
-all over the road and open fields. All knew that a big attack was in
-preparation, and that it was important that the concentration be kept
-under cover from the enemy’s aircraft. But some men apparently couldn’t
-compree that we weren’t roosting in that bally old dysentery generator
-of a wood for sheer sport.
-
-Showers fell intermittently during the day, but nothing like the
-previous day’s deluge. At about 4 P. M. there was an officers’ call,
-and we were warned to march at 7 P. M. Co. Commanders were issued maps,
-and we learned that our present bivouac was in the Bois de la Cote en
-Haye, east of Tremblecourt.
-
-About 5 P. M., six French tanks came clanking down the road, did a
-Squads Left, waddled across the fields and disappeared over the brow
-of the hill, toward the rumble of intermittent artillery fire in the
-distance that meant the front.
-
-The 312th Inf. was bivouacked on the other side of the railroad track,
-and the rest of the division was hidden in the woods near by. Across
-the main road was a great artillery ammunition dump, big enough to blow
-up ten divisions if a bomb ever hit it. But I kept this to myself, and
-what a soldier doesn’t know doesn’t worry him. He has enough to worry
-about anyhow.
-
-The kitchens came up late in the afternoon, and we got outside of a
-ration of hot slum before dark.
-
-By 6:45 P. M. we had rolled packs, and were ready to hit the road
-again. I went to sleep on the ground, with my pack on my back, and was
-awakened by Dunn to find it nearly dark, and the battalion ready to
-move off.
-
-It seemed hours before we got out of the wood into the open field.
-We would go forward a few steps along the track, and then stand and
-wait for ten or fifteen minutes. The road by which we had arrived
-was crowded with transport and artillery, and we turned off on a
-bypath through the woods. It was now quite dark, and blind work it
-was blundering along, touching the man ahead to keep from losing him,
-slipping and tripping in the wet underbrush. It is remarkable how
-exasperating a pack and rifle become under such circumstances. However,
-the excitement of anticipation buoyed us up, and “B” Co. wallowed
-through the wood, across a mushy field, and scrambled up a slippery
-embankment on to a strange road, much more cheerfully than now seems
-possible.
-
-Once re-formed on said road, we hiked along briskly in column of
-squads. Soon we overtook a long column of transport wagons, trucks and
-artillery. Road discipline was something apparently unknown; every
-vehicle seemed to be trying to pass every other one. The consequence
-was of course wondrous confusion, and here and there a total jam,
-through which we had to thread our way in single or double file as best
-we could.
-
-When we got clear of the last jam, the company ahead had gained about
-15 yards, and was consequently as completely out of sight as if they
-had been in Timbuctoo. We passed through a village in hot pursuit of
-them. At the crossroads, by sheer good luck I turned off up the right
-one. After a long hour’s stern chase we were relieved to see the
-bobbing forms of Headquarters Co. show through the gloom ahead.
-
-At about 10:30 we came upon Sgt. Hill waiting for us by the roadside,
-with the welcome news that our temporary destination was only a couple
-of kilos off. We toiled up a long hill, and turned off the macadam into
-a rough road that was a series of four inch ponds. We plashed along to
-the edge of a large wood, and Hill showed us a pile of empty bandoliers
-and boxes, where the Marines had been issued ammunition and grenades
-about an hour before. They had just pulled out, and were going over the
-top at dawn.
-
-A hundred yards or so, and we turned into the woods, on a road which
-was from ankle to knee deep in all varieties of mud, from sticky to
-liquid. We moved on, stumbled over a railroad track, and finally Hill
-said we were at our bivouac. The trees and underbrush grew so thick
-along the road that we blundered about a bit before we found a couple
-of places where we could force our way through. As each man reached a
-place where he could sit or lie down, down he flopped, and the rest of
-the company walked over him. The woods already had some occupants, and
-more and more poured in every minute.
-
-At last “B” Co. had distributed itself on the ground, and was preparing
-for a dismal wallow until morning. In spite of wet, mud and chill some
-were already asleep. We were just within the artillery zone, and the
-jar and grumble of the guns ahead was occasionally punctuated by the
-roar and scream of one of the heavies nearer by. This, however, was
-only normal artillery fire, such as we had been accustomed to at St.
-Pol and Lattre St. Quentin, and we settled down to wait for the big
-show. Some of the more energetic started to pitch their pup tents.
-
-Just as I dozed off, some idiot shouted “Gas!” Our long hours of gas
-drill, and many vivid and gruesome lectures on the subject, promptly
-bore fruit. In fact, the good seed shot up like Jack’s beanstalk.
-The cry was re-echoed by a dozen, then a score of startled voices.
-Everyone reached into the familiar canvas satchel that he cherished
-on his bosom, donned his mask more or less expeditiously, and sat
-expectantly awaiting developments.
-
-In the midst of the rumpus I heard Lt. Foulkes’ voice from the road
-bawling for the company commanders. I thought sadly that the lad had
-probably lost his mask, or the gas had caught him suddenly and he was
-raving. However, for sake of auld lang syne, I took a long breath,
-and shouted, “Whatsmatterwhydontyouputonyourmask?” I replaced my
-mouthpiece, and started blundering toward Louis’ voice, hoping I might
-be in time at least to view his remains.
-
-During the next two minutes I walked on every man in “B” Co. at least
-once, and probably on most of “A” and “C” Cos. Then Foulkes roared my
-name within five yards of me.
-
-“Where’s the gas?” I demanded.
-
-There wasn’t any gas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-ST. MIHIEL AND LIMEY SECTOR
-
-
-The Major was waiting for us up the “road.” He informed us that the
-156th Brigade was the alert brigade. We were not to pitch tents nor
-unroll packs, but lie on our arms ready to reinforce the front line
-division should occasion demand it. The barrage was due to start at 1
-A. M.; at 5 A. M. the infantry was to go over the top.
-
-I waded back with this gladsome news, and we lay in the mud and wet
-leaves and shivered and wished we could smoke, and waited for the show
-to start. Word had passed that there was a big French railroad gun
-about 30 yards away, and a pleasant time was anticipated by all.
-
-At 1 A. M. the sullen jar of the usual cannonade was shattered by a
-tremendous crash. And that crash lasted solid for four hours. I shall
-not try to describe a real A-1 barrage to men who have been there.
-
-The railroad gun came across according to plan too. Every five minutes
-her mighty roar and scream would announce the departure of a G. I.
-can towards Metz, and then would come the clanking of the cars as the
-recoil drove the train back along the track against the logs piled
-behind it. After an hour or so we got accustomed to the barrage and the
-glare that lit up the sky ahead; but as often as we drowsed off, the
-thunder of this mighty gun would shake the earth beneath us, and jar us
-into consciousness.
-
-The night wore on, and the gray morning light crept into the woods;
-and still the thunder rolled unceasing. I watched the glow of my wrist
-watch hand creep to five o’clock. There was a slight lull as the
-artillery shifted to their rolling barrage schedule. Then she started
-up again with renewed fury. We knew the doughboys were off. The A. E.
-F. was starting its first show on its own. The overture was over, the
-fiery curtain raised, the act begun; and we were awaiting our cue.
-
-Morning broke, cloudy, but little or no rain, and about 7 o’clock it
-quite cleared off. We made ourselves as comfortable as we could, and
-prayed for our kitchen.
-
-I went wading through the mud along the road to look for it. There
-were several Marines about, belonging to the skeleton organization,
-left behind to act as a nucleus in case a whole outfit was wiped out.
-I passed a Marine lieutenant whose face looked familiar, and after a
-moment recognized “Happy” Mason. He had been a cadet at V. M. I. with
-me, and had helped me wind a red silk sash around my middle for many a
-dress parade. It was a far cry from the Blue Ridge to the Bois de la
-Rappe, and from dress parade to the St. Mihiel drive.
-
-We had a glad reunion there in the mud, and he invited the “B” Co.
-officers to share his breakfast. Their rolling kitchen, or “galley”
-as they called it, was on hand, and they had hot coffee and peach
-turnovers!
-
-Those Marines were regular guys. When they heard our transport wasn’t
-up yet, they turned to and fed as many of our men as they could, until
-their supply ran out. They had been through the mill before, at Chateau
-Thierry and Belleau Wood. As one of them said “Better help the other
-fellow now. Tomorrow’s a hell of a way off here.”
-
-The Marines have had an awful lot of joshing, of course, about their
-press agent stuff--“Ace high with the Satevepost,” and so on. But
-these were certainly a fine bunch, and gave us a lift when we needed
-it. Naturally, those of them who did the fighting did the least of the
-blowing about it afterward.
-
-The sun came out to look at the battle after awhile, and we got warmed
-and partially dried. Also the kitchen arrived, and a hot dinner was in
-prospect.
-
-About 11 A. M. bulletins began arriving from the front, and were read
-out to us. All objectives were being taken according to schedule, and
-the number of prisoners and guns captured mounted by leaps and bounds.
-We were not allowed out of the woods, but even from the trees on the
-outskirts one couldn’t see much except a great cloud of smoke and dust
-slowly rolling up the slope of a range of distant hills.
-
-The wet exposure and irregular eating of half cooked food had already
-started to tell on us. Dysentery was appearing; nearly all the company
-suffered with constant diarrhoea from this time on.
-
-The afternoon dragged on; still no call for the alert brigade. We were
-allowed to pitch pup tents, but no fires were allowed; the wood was too
-wet and smoky.
-
-Night fell; we crawled into whatever shelter we had, and
-surreptitiously smoked, and talked, and listened to the rumble of the
-guns until we got to sleep.
-
-At about 1:30 A. M. a battalion runner fell over my feet and lit on
-Lt. Dunn. After a few hasty remarks we stopped for breath, and were
-informed that the battalion was to form on the road right away. Stiff
-and sleepy, I stumbled out into the dank night, routed out Chiaradio,
-my staunch little runner and striker, and broke the glad news to
-Robbins and the company runners. The woods were soon in a bustle as we
-rolled packs, donned equipment, and filed out by platoons into the mud
-of the road.
-
-By 2 A. M. the battalion was standing ankle deep in the slushy mud
-in column of squads, the Major at our head. Half an hour passed. Not
-a sound except an occasional “su-luck-slosh,” as someone shifted his
-heavy pack, or tried in vain to find a less liquid footing. The leaden
-minutes dragged by. Three o’clock; no move. Half past four--the company
-ahead moved off, and we sloshed along behind, but only to the edge of
-the wood. Dawn broke--another gray and misty dawn. Oh, that awful wait
-in that awful hole! It was quite light before, at 5 o’clock, we finally
-moved out, and, splashing and sliding over a muddy field, finally hit
-the road and were off toward the scene of action.
-
-As we were stretching the kinks out of our legs on a fairly good road,
-we passed a U. S. Coast Artillery outfit; a 12-inch gun. Some of the
-crew came out to the roadside from the emplacement, and Capt. O’Brien
-recognized his old outfit, in which he had served as an enlisted man
-years before.
-
-On we go toward the distant booming of the guns. We wind around hills,
-hike across a valley, over another long hill. Then the road runs along
-the bottom of a long, long valley. During the ten-minute rests we
-snatch a hasty breakfast from our reserve rations, with growls from
-those who don’t get in on the jam.
-
-Now we begin to see traces of the battle--an overturned wagon,
-abandoned in the ditch; a train of ammunition trucks crossing the road
-ahead of us; a motor truck repair shop, hastily set up in a little
-cabin along the road, from which came a smell of hot coffee that
-tantalized our cold stomachs. Further on we passed a field hospital;
-great white tents pitched in a sheltered dell, with red crosses glaring
-on the tent flies.
-
-At the next halt, a Ford ambulance came down the muddy road with a load
-of wounded. It stopped by us, and the driver went around behind to see
-to one of the occupants. The canvas curtain was pushed aside from the
-top, and a head lolled out--a face of ghastly yellow paste, surrounded
-by dirty light brown hair. The poor chap was evidently badly gassed. He
-retched violently time and again, spat out some blood, stared vacantly
-at us with glassy, miserable eyes. The driver put the head inside
-with a kindly “All right, buddy; nearly there now;” and the old Henry
-started off again with a jerk, and a groan from within.
-
-As we resumed the march, a youngster from the 5th Division overtook us.
-He wore an M. P.’s brassard, and no equipment but a .45 and a canteen.
-We with our heavy packs and ammunition envied him. He was sleepy
-eyed and jaded, but still enthusiastic. Ever since the drive started
-he had been on the job escorting prisoners from front line division
-headquarters to the pens in the rear.
-
-By 9 o’clock we had done twelve miles under our full pack, ammunition,
-and two days’ rations, with a breakfast of a little corned willy and
-hard bread and chlorinated water; the whole preceded by three hours’
-standing in eight inches of liquid mud. We felt pretty well done in,
-for a fact. The auto riflemen were the worst off, having their heavy
-Chauchats and several big magazines of ammunition besides. One of them
-lightened his load by the ingenious means of “forgetting” his bag of
-magazines at a halt. When Lt. Schuyler discovered it, the culprit was
-promptly accommodated with a double dose to carry.
-
-But this was the exception. As I shifted about, hiking first with one
-platoon and then another, I always found a set of determined grins, and
-a cheerful “Oh, we’re all right. How’s the rabble up ahead?”
-
-We had been passing through the rear area of the former Allied sector.
-Now and again a trench system--trenches, barbed wire, emplacements,
-all complete--stretched away on either hand. Here and there were great
-stretches of barbed wire filling gullies and ravines.
-
-At 10 o’clock we crossed a stone bridge and started up a long, long
-hill. At the top we found that we were on a ridge that had been the
-front line before the attack. Shell holes covered the whole place. To
-our left, the ground fell away in a long dip, and we saw the ground
-over which the first wave had attacked. The battle was now far away
-over the horizon.
-
-For a couple of kilos we hiked along the road on top of the ridge.
-It had already been repaired roughly, and all sorts of traffic
-was passing over it. Once it had been bordered with trees, set at
-regular intervals, like most self respecting French roads. Now only a
-shattered, blasted stump stood here and there.
-
-A few men began to straggle from the outfits ahead, but “B” Co. stuck
-to it gamely. On that day not a man fell out.
-
-Now we drew near a large barbed wire enclosure filled with men. It was
-a P. W. pen, where prisoners were collected on their way to the rear. A
-couple of detachments of them were going in as we came by.
-
-We turned off here to the left, toward the front. About a kilo down
-this road we hit a traffic jam--a regular one. This road was badly cut
-up, and poor road discipline soon did the rest. Some truck or ambulance
-had tried to pass another, and both had stalled. Others, arriving from
-both directions, instead of lining up behind on the right of the road,
-pressed up as far as they could go, until the road was so completely
-jammed that even we on foot could not get through. Belts of barbed wire
-that ran up to the road on either side prevented us from going around.
-So there we were.
-
-It was a most cosmopolitan collection. French 75’s, Ford ambulances,
-a general’s Cadillac, rubbed shoulders with lumbering lorries, sturdy
-steel ammunition Quads, and limbers. A French transport wagon driver
-cracked his long whip and argued volubly with the chauffeur of a tank,
-who spat and regarded him contemplatively. Field kitchens, huddled in
-the jam, held the food that was so desperately needed up front.
-
-At last a Colonel of Marines blew in from somewhere, and plunged into
-the mess. He got it thinned out enough for us to filter through on the
-outskirts. And then--Glory be--we turned off the road into an open
-space, with no barbed wire and comparatively few shell holes. Here we
-found part of the 312th Inf., and the battalion stacked arms and fell
-out.
-
-We slipped off our packs, and fell to on monkey meat and hard bread
-with a will. The sun had come out, and we lay around and soon got warm
-and dry, and felt nearly human again.
-
-All too soon we fell in, and set off again. We threaded our way across
-the jam--now nearly as bad as ever--and spent the afternoon drifting
-down a little valley at right angles to the road we had just left.
-Nobody seemed to know just where we were going, or why. We heard later
-that a jumbled order somewhere between Division and Brigade Hdqs. had
-caused us to spend this day in a wild goose chase.
-
-The Colonel and Regt’l Hdq. had not been seen since the morning. We
-hiked a few hundred yards, waited awhile, then moved on a bit again. We
-passed, and were in turn passed by artillery, supply trains, infantry.
-We sweated and chafed under our burdens, and wondered what t’ell, but
-supposed it was all part of the game.
-
-At last, about 6 P. M., we came to the head of the valley. There we
-spied the Colonel and his car, on a road up on the top of the hill. We
-climbed up to the road, pushing a stalled rolling kitchen ahead of us.
-We were urged to “Step out,” and showed our military discipline and
-Christian forbearance by not saying what we thought of this request.
-We got on a good road that led over the hill and up toward the front.
-Along this we hiked a little way, then turned off to the left, and up a
-lumber road that led straight up the hill into the woods. It was nearly
-dark; the road was so steep that I could never understand how six
-inches of liquid mud stayed on it. The climb up this road soon put our
-feet into their usual muddy and wet condition. We turned off into the
-woods, the Bois de Hoquemont, and were told that we would bivouac here
-for the night.
-
-Our kitchens pulled up along the main road shortly, and the cooks,
-tired as they were, got to work at once. The rations consisted mostly
-of dehydrated vegetables. They say they are good if you can soak them
-for twenty-four hours. A stew and coffee were soon under way.
-
-I toiled back up the hill and found a message to report at once to
-the regt’l commander. On a hunch, I had Schuyler get a detail out and
-bring up the chow right away. Sure enough, at the officers’ meeting we
-were ordered to make combat packs and be ready to move again in twenty
-minutes. We got our coffee and slum, though; and the half cooked stuff
-tasted pretty good at that.
-
-Then we again donned our equipment, and plashed down the sloppy road
-on weary feet. The night was very dark, and the road, as usual, jammed
-with transport, our kitchens among others. As we threaded our way
-through, we got mixed up somehow with a company of Marines going in
-the same direction. Finally the jam thinned out, and we turned off
-on another road, though we had to sort out B company and the Marines
-almost man by man. And so we plodded on.
-
-It is remarkable how much a man can do after he thinks he is all in. We
-picked ’em up and put ’em down for three hours. At last we drew near
-some woods. Our orders were to proceed to Bois d’Euvezin and bivouac,
-and show no lights. Well, we couldn’t see a map, and didn’t know where
-we were on one anyhow, so this wood looked pretty good. At any rate, we
-turned off the road and headed for it.
-
-Easy enough for a staff officer to look at a map and say, “Bivouac in
-these woods.” Unfortunately, there was a 30 foot belt of wire fringing
-this particular one. Orders are orders, though, so we scrambled through
-somehow, and pushed in far enough to hide from any further marching
-orders that night. Then we flopped down, any place at all, and dropped
-off.
-
-It seemed but a couple of minutes before the sun came prying through
-the leaves and under my eyelids. I rolled over, and saw Lt. Col. Budd,
-sitting up with his back against a tree, wrapped in his trench coat--no
-better off than we were. Right away my morale went up.
-
-An American outfit is never so weary that it doesn’t furnish a few
-inquisitive souls. Already curiosity was driving the doughboys out of
-the woods, by two’s and three’s, to see what was around. Just over a
-knoll they found a little fragment of history. A German machine gun,
-cunningly camouflaged; across it the body of a big “Feldwebel,” or
-German top sergeant, with a bayonet wound through his body; a couple
-of yards away a dead Marine, riddled with machine gun bullets, still
-grasping his rifle with the bloody bayonet fixed.
-
-At 9 A. M. the outfit was rounded up, and we were off again. As we
-plugged along the road in column of squads we thought with some disgust
-of the night marches we had made a hundred kilos behind the lines.
-Fortunately this hike was short. In an hour we entered another and
-larger wood, the Bois d’Euvezin sure enough, this time. Here we found
-the rest of the brigade, and bivouacked in the woods just off the road.
-
-The woods were full of German dugouts, evacuated by the enemy only a
-day or so before. Most of these were preempted by various headquarters.
-We settled down to make the most of our rest. For a wonder the sun
-was out; and despite the mud under foot, we were soon fairly warm and
-dry--and oh, how hungry! It was well along in the afternoon before the
-water carts pulled in, though, and we got our hot slum and coffee.
-
-The Y. M. C. A. kicked through with a canteen, and after some trouble
-in keeping the men from mobbing the place, crackers, chocolate and
-tobacco were sold.
-
-That night our gas training blossomed forth again. The Boche dropped a
-couple of shells around and our over-anxious sentries promptly bawled
-“Gas!” The alarm would be taken up and spread through the brigade, and
-by the time things quieted down they were off again. We finally got
-some sleep by the primitive but effective expedient of promising to
-blow the head off the next guy that raised the cry.
-
-Next day a great bunch of orders were dumped on me to read--all about
-the new censorship regulations. After wading through these, the
-officers were summoned to go up on a reconnoitering party to look over
-the sector which we were to take over that night.
-
-We set out, and after a couple of hours’ stiff hiking arrived at a
-very elaborate system of dugouts, in the edge of a wood, the Bois St.
-Claude. Here was the Regt’l Hdq. of the 61st Infantry, 5th Division,
-which we were to relieve. About five hundred meters north lay the
-little village of Vieville-en-Haye. Descriptions of this charming
-hamlet are superfluous, as we all had plenty of opportunity to
-contemplate it thereafter.
-
-It was early afternoon, and the Boche was behaving rather well; only
-occasionally slamming an .88 into the village in a perfunctory sort of
-way. From the northeast, however, came an intermittent crackle of rifle
-and machine gun firing, where the outposts were snarling and chattering
-away at each other.
-
-We sat around for an hour while the regt’l hdq’s made their
-arrangements. I found out that the C. O. of the 61st was an old friend
-of my father’s--his father had been in my father’s company at V. M. I.
-in the Civil War.
-
-At last the dope filtered down to the Co. Cmdrs., and we were given ten
-minutes to reconnoiter our positions. We then had to make haste back to
-the regiment, so that we could be ready to start again at dark. Packs
-were made, the platoons gathered together, and at 7:30 P. M. we filed
-out onto the road and were off on the last lap of our journey to the
-battle line.
-
-Hardly were we clear of the woods when we halted, for some unknown
-reason. We sat and lay on the grass by the roadside, among shell holes,
-and listened to the drone of airplanes above us. It was an eerie,
-ominous sound; and though we were pretty sure the motors were not the
-deep voiced monsters of the enemy, still we were relieved when they
-drew off without dropping any H. E. into our midst.
-
-In half an hour we started, this time in earnest. It was rough going,
-and blind work at best. We stumbled up a ravine, out onto a road,
-skirted a wood lined with artillery, and so drew near our position
-south of Vieville-en-Haye.
-
-The 1st battalion was in support, the 2nd holding the front line, and
-the 3rd brigade reserve. I never did know where the battalion was that
-we were relieving. A and B Cos., however, were to hold the crest of
-a slight swell of the ground about 300 meters south of the village.
-Trenches there were none; but there were plenty of shell holes, and the
-company was posted so as to command the terrain in front with Chauchat
-and rifle fire; two or three men to a shell hole. The 4th platoon found
-a little stretch of trench which they improved for themselves. A Co.
-was on our left; C and D Cos. were posted about 700 meters to our right
-rear, behind Regt’l Hdq.
-
-We had gotten pretty well settled, when just before dawn a battalion
-runner came up, with the cry that haunted me day and night, “Commanding
-Officer, B Co.” Hard on his heels came the Major. Two companies of the
-2nd battalion had lost their way and were temporarily missing, and B
-Co. was to go up and hold the line of resistance at once.
-
-So B Co. was routed out of its bivvies, and donned packs and
-ammunition, and set off in double file. I was to report to the C. O. of
-the 61st Inf. front line battalion at Vieville.
-
-We hiked down to the road, and up to where the houses began; then
-through a spacious barn, climbing over a dead horse, and arriving
-finally at the northern outskirts of the town. Not finding the Bn. Hdq.
-I had the company take what cover they could in the road and barn while
-the Major and I strolled up to the top of the hill beyond to have a
-look ’round.
-
-Near the top of this long hill were two German concrete pillboxes,
-nicely turfed over. We found one of these occupied as a first aid post;
-in the other we found a machine gun company hdq. Nobody knew any dope
-about where we were wanted, but they said that Bn. Hdq. was about a
-kilo away to the right.
-
-Just then Heinie started his morning strafe of Vieville-en-Haye. Three
-or four whiz bangs came hurtling over our heads, and landed in the east
-end of the village, right where B Co. was lying. I saw no necessity of
-our doing a Casabianca, and hastily obtained permission from the Major
-to take B Co. back to its former position until we knew where to go. As
-I shuffled down the hill, hitting the dirt now and then when one landed
-close by, I chanced to look back just in time to see a shell hit the
-first aid pillbox and pivot it neatly around, so that the door faced
-us instead of the enemy. It didn’t take long to start B Co. toward our
-bivvies, very much disgusted with the morning’s work, but glad to stop
-playing target for a while. Fortunately, no one was hit.
-
-The 2nd Battalion located its wandering sheep later in the day, so we
-were not called on for that errand again.
-
-The regiment’s task was now to organize and strengthen our sector of
-the line. The main line of resistance, as indicated on the map, was
-being held and dug in by three Cos. of the 2nd Battalion, H Co. holding
-the outpost line about two kilos in advance.
-
-Our kitchens were established in the woods behind Regt’l Hdq., and
-started work on the old standby, slum. The rough roads leading into
-these woods were all ankle deep in mud, and the ration detail wasn’t
-any bed of roses.
-
-The day we spent in deepening our bivvies as best we could, though our
-intrenching tools made little impression on the hard and stony ground.
-Whoever salvaged a man-sized pick or shovel was lucky. While it was
-light, we kept down under cover as much as possible, for the German
-observation balloons were peeping sinisterly over the horizon, and we
-didn’t care about drawing attention to our position.
-
-On Wednesday, September 18th, at about 1 P. M., A and B Cos. received
-orders to report to the Engineer Dump at 368.3-240.3, as a working
-party. Several enemy observation balloons were up, and it was a clear
-afternoon; but orders were orders, and off we filed.
-
-At the dump we met an Engineer Lieutenant--very stout, very bullheaded
-and very incompetent. I asked where we were to work, and he replied he
-didn’t know--over there somewhere--pointing in the general direction of
-Germany. Having had enough of that sort of business in the morning, I
-told him to toddle right off and find out where he was to take us. He
-got quite huffy at this, but finally set out, and returned with some
-definite information. We drew picks and shovels, and hiked away after
-him; I being forced to hurt his importance again by refusing to march
-the company along in single file on the sky line.
-
-Our task was to dig a communication trench, already taped out, from
-the point where the line of resistance entered the Bois Gerard back
-over the brow of the hill. The first platoon was in plain view of the
-enemy’s observation balloon, the other three were just behind the rise.
-
-We posted sentinels, and set to work, absolutely out in the open, no
-cover save a few shell holes. For ten minutes we dug. Then it came. A
-whistle, scream and slam, just over the hill; another; then a fierce,
-deadly whir, right in our ears. We hit the dirt, and a second later Lt.
-Dunn called to me “Captain, there’s a man killed here and I don’t know
-how many wounded.”
-
-For an instant of horror the company gazed at the spot. I sent Sgt.
-Hill to the first aid pillbox for stretchers, put the others to work
-again, and hastened up to see the situation. The shell had landed just
-between the 1st and 2nd platoons. Lt. Schuyler was already having the
-wounded carried into the edge of the woods near by, and had the rest
-of the 1st platoon take cover there. Poor O’Hara was lying dead right
-by the shell hole. It had burst nearly underneath him, and a fragment
-of shell had torn its way through his temple and right out through his
-steel helmet. His brains were oozing out through the hole.
-
-Seeing that nothing could be done for him, I went over to the woods.
-Lester Farry, our mechanic, as fine a man as ever walked, was sitting
-up between Lt. Schuyler and Sgt. Reid, with a big hole in the side of
-his head. He never uttered a word of complaint; just sat still while
-they bandaged it; and the stretchers came up and took him off. He died
-in hospital six days later.
-
-Curcio had a great hole in the upper part of his leg. Donohue had an
-ugly bit of shell in his back, and Bogucki, Fielding, and Hauber were
-wounded, but less seriously.
-
-This was a nasty introduction to shell fire, because the whole company
-saw the thing happen. Their behaviour, however, was excellent. Doggedly
-the men continued at the work, and soon we had enough cover to at least
-be in while the shells burst near by.
-
-Our gallant friend, the Engineer Lieutenant, had promptly vanished, and
-I never saw him again. I withdrew the first and second platoons behind
-the hill, and we kept on the job until 6 P. M., as ordered. At about
-5:30, A Co. came along over the hill, and the Heinies sped them on
-their way with a few gas shells, which made them scamper.
-
-As we turned in our shovels at the dump, every man mustered up a grin
-as he passed by; and though it had been one hell of a party, the old
-morale was still on deck.
-
-On the top of the knoll where our position was, the Germans had had an
-anti-aircraft gun, gaudily camouflaged. Some cooks from an artillery
-outfit had found a lot of ammunition belonging to it, and, dragging
-it into Vieville, had amused themselves during the day by shooting
-Fritz’s own H. E. in his general direction. This apparently annoyed
-Fritz; and just as I got back to our bivvies at the tail of B Co., two
-ash cans--whoppers--arrived at the gun’s former position, right in the
-midst of A Co. Our comrades promptly departed to the woods until the
-next morning.
-
-The cooks sent up a good chow--steaks and coffee--and we got to sleep
-in our holes as best we could.
-
-The next day--Thursday, September 19th--was rainy. We dug our shelters
-a little deeper, and wished this war thing were over. I found a German
-translation of one of De Maupassant’s novels, which I read through, but
-for the life of me I can’t remember a bit of the story.
-
-In the afternoon the chaplain, Lt. Cressman, came around, and O’Hara’s
-platoon was allowed to attend his burial service in the little cemetery
-in the edge of the Bois St. Claude, east of Vieville.
-
-In the meantime I had been called to Btn. Hdq., where Mr. Morse, our
-faithful old “Y” man, had brought up some chocolate and cigarettes. He
-was supposed by the regulations of the “Y” to sell them, but he refused
-to take any money from the Co. Cmdrs. at first, intending to account
-for them out of his own small pay. When we understood this, we insisted
-on paying for the stuff out of the company funds. The news got out
-that the “Y” was charging for chocolate and tobacco, and caused some
-bitterness, under the circumstances. But thereafter Mr. Morse made some
-arrangement whereby the stuff was issued free.
-
-As for Mr. Morse himself, I think we should here express something of
-our appreciation of his faithful and unselfish devotion to the men
-of the battalion. A man well past the prime of life, he shared our
-hardships, hiked with us--not sticking like grim death to a Ford as
-some of his confreres were prone to do--; slept in mud and rain with
-us. Right under shell fire he would come plugging on up with his little
-bag of smokes and chocolate. The Red Cross, the Salvation Army, were
-only names to us. But the “Y,” which we cussed out so frequently,
-surely did us proud when they gave us Mr. Morse.
-
-That night the 1st, 3rd and 4th platoons went out as separate working
-parties. Apparently the deaths of O’Hara and Farry had demonstrated
-even to our friends the Engineers that sporting about in sight of Hun
-balloons in the daytime was magnificent, but not war.
-
-The Boche had the range, though, and shelled the area all night. The
-1st platoon ran on an average schedule of dig two minutes and duck
-five. The 3rd was in no better case, and Barney O’Rourke got an ugly
-little piece of shell through his foot. He hobbled off between Hill
-and Weber, adjuring me as he left “Don’t let th’ byes get up too soon
-afther they bor-r-rst, sor-r-r.” And thereafter we didn’t.
-
-Rifle bullets were cracking by over our heads now and then, and the
-rumor got about that snipers were concealed in the nearby woods. The
-whole sector had of course been in German hands five days before, and
-all sorts of tales were current about death traps found in dugouts, and
-lurking snipers, lying close in the daytime in cunning shelters, well
-provisioned, who came out at night to pot a few of us and eventually
-escape by underground passages.
-
-Most of these tales I recognized as old friends originally met with
-in the Sat. Eve. Post. But digging was quite unpleasant enough as it
-was, and the source of the impression was not so important as the fact
-that it existed. So Osterweis, Woolley and I went forth to bag the
-franctireurs. We waded through a vast deal of mud, but couldn’t flush
-anything except a disgusted runner looking for Brigade Hdq.; so I sent
-the corporals back, and set out myself for the 4th platoon, which was
-stringing wire over on the left of the sector.
-
-On the way I stumbled over the body of a 5th Division soldier. He had
-a red runner’s brassard on his arm, and was all ticketed for burial.
-His face seemed to be in shadow. There was a plug of chewing tobacco
-sticking out of his pocket and this seemed to be in the shadow too.
-Then I realized that his face had turned black--it was just the color
-of that plug of tobacco. The vicious shriek of a shell approached,
-and I hit the dirt. A bit of the shell hit the dead man by me, and he
-jumped as if alive. I got up and was on my way.
-
-The majority of the 4th platoon had taken individual leases on shell
-holes; Sgt. Rogers and a few others were making valiant efforts to make
-some headway with the wire. The shelling quieted down after awhile,
-however, and we got down to business. Then I started back to see how
-the others were faring.
-
-On the way I heard Capt. Fleischmann’s voice from the darkness; his
-men also were worried about the stray bullets overhead. As I came up,
-a couple of his sentinels thought they had spotted the snipers, and
-cracked down on some figures moving past a clump of bushes to their
-left. A few remarks in choice American made it clear that they were
-potting away at my 3rd platoon, which had decided that it was time to
-quit for the night. Privately I was heartily in sympathy with this
-view; but officially I had to lead the way back to the trench and
-set the boys to work again. Meanwhile the C. O. of the 4th platoon,
-laboring under a similar delusion, had taken his wiring party back to
-their bivvies. Sgt. Rogers, Slim Price and one or two others were still
-on deck, very much disgusted. So we had a good long trudge back, routed
-the lads out, and all hands returned to the hill.
-
-At last 3 o’clock came, and we turned in tools and quit for the night.
-As Rogers, Hayden and I were crossing the belt of wire north of the
-Vieville road, four or five gas shells landed quite near by. We all got
-a pretty good snootful before we got our masks on; and Rogers, the Co.
-gas N. C. O., was so busy cussing the wire that he didn’t notice the
-gas soon enough, and got enough to put him in the hospital.
-
-My shell hole looked pretty luxurious to me; Chiaradio had swiped a
-piece of corrugated iron for a roof, and it wasn’t as wet as it might
-have been. I was glad to crawl in between him and Robbins and go to
-sleep.
-
-At about 9 A. M. Heinie set to work to blow us out. His range was fifty
-meters short, fortunately, and he shelled away on a line between us and
-Vieville with characteristic diligence and thoroughness. The flying
-fragments made promenading unhealthy. Lt. Schuyler came over to my
-bivvy with a rumor that the Austrians had quit. Two minutes after he
-left, a long jagged piece came whistling along and half buried itself
-just where he had been sitting, and six inches above my foot. Cheery-O
-used it to hang his mess kit on thereafter.
-
-That night we only furnished two small working parties, and the rest of
-us had a cushy sleep.
-
-On Friday, the 20th, the Co. Cmdrs. were assembled at Bn. Hdq., and
-were told that we were to relieve the 2nd Battalion on the night of the
-21st. That afternoon we went up to reconnoiter the position we were to
-take over. The guides took us up past the Engineer dump, through the
-woods to the 2nd Bn. Hdq. Here we found Major Adee and his staff taking
-advantage of a quiet hour to have lunch above ground. They were using a
-couple of German dugouts as headquarters--very good ones, about 20 feet
-under ground and well timbered.
-
-Major Adee seemed to have aged twenty years. His face was lined and
-haggard with care and responsibility. His runner had been killed at the
-entrance to the dugout that morning by a shell.
-
-Fleischmann and I with two runners apiece, our officers and top
-sergeants, were furnished with a guide to take us to the outpost line.
-B and D Cos. were to relieve H Co.; A and C were to hold the line of
-resistance.
-
-It was a long two kilos up to the outpost line, especially as we had
-to keep under cover of the woods all the way. We crossed and recrossed
-one of the little narrow gauge railways that the Germans had running
-everywhere. My right ankle, which I had broken the previous fall
-playing football at Camp Dix, had a touch of rheumatism, and the
-nagging pain from it made a background for all the rest of my time in
-the line. Even now when I think about the Limey sector, the old ankle
-comes through with a reminiscent twinge. I suppose each of you had
-some corresponding petty aggravation which worried you absurdly out of
-proportion to its intrinsic importance.
-
-We toiled up the little wooded hill at the edge of the Bois Hanido, and
-passed a gun pit, the ground around strewn with German arms, equipment,
-and clothing, and several dead Germans lying about. Just on the other
-side of the hill was a German rest camp, with several bunk houses, a
-movie theatre, and a little open air Catholic chapel, with a wooden
-cross.
-
-At the bottom of the hill we came to the narrow gauge railway again,
-followed it up a little way, and then turned down one of the straight
-paths that the Boche cut through the woods, barring all other
-approaches with barbed wire, and commanding these with machine guns. It
-was a good stunt, too, as we found out later. After you’ve struggled in
-barbed wire for a while you’ll take a chance on machine gun bullets to
-get on a path.
-
-It was not far to H Co.’s headquarters. There we found Capt. Ressiguie,
-commanding the company--a most cool-headed, courageous and efficient
-officer. Lt. Col. Budd was also there, inspecting the outpost. The
-company headquarters was a shelter half stretched over a two foot
-ditch. Earlier in the afternoon, the left flank platoon had had a
-skirmish with an enemy machine gun patrol, losing two men killed and
-a couple wounded, including Lt. Stern. We made our reconnaissance and
-started back, arriving at our own Bn. Hdq. by nightfall. There we were
-issued battle maps of the sector and the relief order, which makes the
-arrangements down to the last detail on paper.
-
-Two platoons went out as working parties that night, and got off with
-comparatively little shelling. The next morning Capt. Fleischmann and I
-were issued an assortment of pyrotechnic signals--rockets, Very lights,
-etc.,--with lengthy directions as to their use.
-
-In the afternoon a division order postponed the relief for twenty-four
-hours. Working parties had been called off on account of the relief,
-and we all got a night off.
-
-As soon as dusk fell on Sunday, September 22nd, the platoons were
-assembled under full equipment, and we started. The guides didn’t
-appear, and it was fortunate we had been up before. Several times I
-thought I had lost my way, and was leading the two companies into
-the German lines. Trying to keep in touch with the man ahead while
-blundering through those woods, laden down with rifle and equipment,
-tripping over logs, roots and barbed wire, slipping in the mud;
-occasional shells bursting to remind us that any noise would be
-disastrous, and, of course, a nice rain falling--I’ve been on lots of
-pleasanter walks.
-
-At last we came to the old German rest camp, and I knew where we were.
-Soon we met Capt. Ressiguie, and the sgt. commanding his left platoon
-took us in tow.
-
-The first and third platoons furnished the line of outguards, along
-the line 368.8-242.4: 368.3-242.8; the first platoon on the right. The
-second and fourth platoons were the support, and were to organize a
-strong point at the north of the little strip of woods at 368.1-242.5.
-Co. Hdq. was established at 368.6-242.4, just off the path through the
-woods.
-
-Only a small part of our sector had been held by H Co., and we had to
-dig our own bivvies. Our intrenching tools made little headway in the
-rocky ground, laced with tree roots; and even those who found German
-picks and shovels made little better progress. The support was somewhat
-better off, as they had one or two good dugouts and gun pits.
-
-By the time all the dispositions were made and inspected it was
-beginning to get light. There was plenty of German clothing and
-equipment lying around, and in ten minutes you could have collected
-enough souvenirs to satisfy even a Paris Q. M. sergeant. The heavy
-fleeceskin German coats came in especially handy, and the other stuff
-was good to line our bivvies, though it was soaking wet and smelt most
-damnably. Hun machine gun ammunition in long canvas belts was scattered
-around in abundance; and down in the corner of the field on our left
-was an abandoned field kitchen.
-
-Raymond Harris and a couple of battalion runners were running a field
-telephone up from B. H. Q. to the Co. Hdq. We had crawled into our
-holes for some sleep, when about 1 P. M. a nasty, shrill little whir
-like a giant mosquito heralded the arrival of a small one-pounder shell
-about a hundred meters down the line. It was repeated rapidly, dropping
-shells right along that path which ran parallel to the outpost line at
-about twenty-five yard intervals. And to our dismay, we realized that
-the shells were coming from behind us.
-
-Cheery-O had carefully cleaned and oiled his rifle and leaned it up
-against a sapling at the edge of our hole. The vicious whir came again
-directly at us, and, as our muscles grew taut against the shock of the
-explosion, the butt of the rifle suddenly vanished. A moment later
-Cheery-O scrambled out and returned with a rueful face, bearing his
-precious rifle, bent neatly at the breech into a right angle.
-
-Just then one of the battalion runners came up, with a bleeding hand,
-saying that his mate had just been killed down the path. I took the
-two first aid men attached to the company and we went down and found
-Harris, my own runner, lying by the coil of telephone wire he had been
-laying, with a great hole in the side of his head--a horrible thing to
-look at.
-
-I stopped only long enough to see a dressing applied and a stretcher
-brought, and then hastened down the path to D Cos. headquarters, where
-a phone had been installed. I found Fleischmann shooting off all the
-fireworks that would go off--about one in ten--and his first sergeant
-grinding the bell handle of the field phone like mad. To make things
-pleasanter, our artillery dropped a couple of shells neatly among our
-outguards. We sent back runners to B. H. Q., and the shells stopped.
-
-We never found out who was responsible for that one-pounder. Our own
-was far in the rear, and the outfits on either side--the 90th Division
-on the right, the 312th Inf. on the left--disclaimed any knowledge of
-it. So headquarters solved the problem, as usual, by telling us we were
-green at this game and didn’t know what we were talking about.
-
-It seemed so pitifully unnecessary about Harris. He was such a
-handsome, bright, intelligent and cheery little chap, a favorite with
-all the company; and we carried him off with half his face torn away,
-moaning and unconscious. I never dreamed he could live. But somehow
-they pulled him through and I have just had a card from him today, from
-Walter Reed Hospital, where he is yet.
-
-The nearest first aid post was at Bn. Hdq., and we had to carry all our
-wounded back those two long kilometers through the woods, with only
-the rough dressings that we could apply on the spot. For our rations
-we had to go back another two kilos, to Rgt’l Hdq., making four kilos
-each way, nearly all the way through woods and under shell fire. The
-continual wetness, exposure and loss of sleep made us easy prey to
-dysentery, and this weakened us a great deal. Under these conditions,
-to have to carry a stretcher or a can of stew several kilos in the dark
-was--well, it was just hell. I think the ration parties had the worst
-job, though their loads were not so heavy as the stretcher bearers’
-were. The latter were held up by sympathy for the poor devil on the
-stretcher. There isn’t much inspiration in a can of slum or a bag of
-bread.
-
-Joe Levy had charge of the ration parties, and a thankless job it was.
-The Major arranged to have the chow brought as far as the line of
-resistance in a limber; but when shells were banging about--which was
-pretty generally the case--either the limber didn’t get up that far,
-or the chow was dumped down and abandoned. Worst of all, we only had
-enough thermos cans to carry one ration for the company; so the ration
-detail had to go back, get the chow, bring it up and distribute it,
-collect the cans, lug them back to the kitchens, and then return to
-the outpost line. It did seem absolutely inexcusable that this had to
-be done, all for lack of a few cans. It cost us several unnecessary
-losses in killed and wounded, and after all had done their turn at this
-detail, weakened from diarrhoea and exposure as we were, it made us
-very low physically.
-
-The night of the 23rd passed comparatively quietly for the outpost
-line, though the line of resistance was well bucketed, and the ration
-party had a hard time. Shells landing near the kitchen transformed
-several thermos cans into sieves, and made the shortage worse than
-ever. Besides, Regt’l Hdq. decided that the kitchens were attracting
-enemy shell fire in their direction, and ordered them moved another
-kilo back, to the brigade reserve.
-
-Our orders were to do no patrolling in front of the line of outguards,
-as this was to be done by the battalion scouts under Lt. Drake. I
-believe this was a mistake, and if I had it to do over again I should
-send out patrols every night. It makes all the difference in one’s
-confidence and peace of mind, and no information can equal that gained
-at first hand.
-
-At about 3 P. M. on the 24th, as I was dozing in our bivvy, Lt.
-Col. Budd’s face peeped in. He and a Major from Division Hdq. were
-inspecting the outpost line. I was glad to see someone higher up than
-myself dodging shells. It might have been wrong in theory for him to be
-up there, but I surely appreciated it. I did the honors for our sector,
-asked for more thermos cans, and got a couple of cigars from the Lt.
-Colonel. He brought the news that the 90th Division on our right was
-pulling off a battalion raid that night, covered by a barrage, and to
-lie close.
-
-About three times a day I would go down to chew the rag and swap dope
-with Capt. Fleischmann. It was funny that I nearly always met him on
-the way, coming over to do the same with me. The idea always struck us
-at the same moment. Somehow it seemed to help share the responsibility,
-and cheered us up a lot.
-
-The barrage started about 11 P. M. The Boche replied with a counter
-barrage, and he had a very fair range on our outpost line. In five
-minutes the shells were ripping the tops off the trees all around, and
-the air grew acrid from the bursting lyddite. He was just about 50
-meters too high, and it was his shorts that did the damage to us.
-
-In about fifteen minutes, when the din was at its height, Cole, a
-runner from the 3rd platoon, came up, out of breath and shaken. A shell
-had hit directly on platoon hdq.; Lt. Merrill and Sgt. Hill were both
-wounded, and several men killed.
-
-I left Sgt. Robbins in charge at Co. Hdq., and with Cole, Winemiller,
-Chiaradio and our two medical detachment men went out to see the
-situation.
-
-We pushed through the thick underbrush to the shallow hole that Merrill
-was occupying. It was raining a little; the only light came from the
-flashes of the bursting shells and the guns on the horizon. Merrill
-and Hill had been lying in their bivvy, with the other platoon runner,
-Laurencell, sitting on their feet. A shell had hit Laurencell right at
-the shoulders, carrying all his head, neck and shoulders and arms away.
-His bleeding trunk and legs, an awful corpse, was lying across Hill and
-Merrill, who were both badly wounded in the feet and legs, and could
-not remove the body.
-
-We took up poor Laurencell’s remains and laid them to one side, and
-then got Merrill on a stretcher, and Cheery-O and Cole carried him off.
-Sgt. Hill’s feet, however, were so mangled and mixed up with the bottom
-of the hole that our attempts to raise him out of it caused him intense
-agony. He said, “Captain, there’s a German razor in my coat pocket.
-Please cut my foot off, and then I can stand it.”
-
-I couldn’t see, but I could feel with my hands that this was about the
-only way to extricate him. So I took the razor, and cut away his shoe
-and the mangled part of his foot, which was all mixed up with a German
-overcoat they had been lying on. Then we were able to lift him on to
-the stretcher; but he wouldn’t be carried away until we took all his
-cigarettes out of his pocket and gave them to him.
-
-Then I went down toward the line of outguards. When I got out on the
-road by the German kitchen, I was challenged by Cpl. McGarrity. It did
-my heart good to hear his stern, cool voice coming out of that night
-of blackness and horror. He reported that several men in the outguards
-were killed and wounded, and that he and Corp. Welsh were arranging
-for the wounded. Sgt. Schelter had gone to Co. Hdq. for stretchers,
-and hadn’t been heard of since. We never saw him again. His body was
-found in the woods several hundred meters away several days later; he
-evidently lost his way, and while wandering about in search of Co. Hdq.
-was killed by shell fire.
-
-Welsh and McGarrity took hold of the situation like veterans.
-I designated them first and second in command of the platoon,
-respectively, and told them they would be relieved before morning.
-
-On returning to Co. Hdq. I found the wounded beginning to stream in.
-Nearly all were from the 3rd platoon; the 1st platoon, strangely,
-suffered very little. All the Co. runners and buglers were soon
-carrying stretchers, and I again left Sgt. Robbins in charge while I
-went over to the support to see to bringing up more stretcher bearers
-and relief for the 3rd platoon.
-
-That walk across the fields to the support’s position was certainly a
-thriller. As I came out of the woods and started across the open, the
-shells were going just overhead and bursting in the field to my left,
-along a line about 50 meters away. After I doped this out it was easy
-enough to plan my route so as to avoid them.
-
-I found the platoon commanders and their sergeants in their
-dugout--quite luxurious it looked, lighted with a candle and
-comparatively dry. They thought I was wounded, as my hands, arms,
-trousers and gas mask were all spotted and spattered with blood. I
-ordered a detail from the 2nd platoon to report to me at once for
-ration and stretcher carrying parties, and the 4th platoon to report as
-soon as the barrage lifted to relieve the 3rd on the line of outguards.
-As soon as the carrying parties were ready, I started back with them.
-
-Sgt. Levy was placed in charge of the carrying parties, and they
-were soon on their way. The men knew nothing of the country; it
-was pitchy black, the shelling was still heavy, and they were wet,
-weak and miserable. It was very hard to make orders understood, and
-everything was wrong at once. Besides, there was the possibility of a
-counter-attack or raid by the Boche.
-
-In about half an hour the shelling died down and the 4th platoon came
-up. When they were posted, while inspecting the outguards, I stumbled
-over a body. As I could not see the face, I cut off the front of his
-gas mask pouch where the name of the owner was printed. Next morning I
-saw it was Kindt, of the 3rd platoon. He had been killed instantly by a
-small piece of shell through the heart.
-
-As I got back to Co. Hdq. it was getting light. I crawled into our
-hole, which had a shelter half over it, and lit my pipe--the old black
-briar I have in my face now as I write. Before I had taken three puffs
-I fell off to sleep. A few minutes later Sgt. Robbins woke me with the
-news that the ration detail had returned. I had been breathing through
-my pipe which made me very sick and dizzy for awhile.
-
-It was too light then to get the rations out to the outguards. The
-ration detail was lying about on the ground, dead beat, among the pots
-and cans. Sgt. Wilson and his cooks had worked all the day before to
-make up a good chow, and Wilson had come up with it himself, though
-that was no part of his duty. It almost broke his heart to be too late.
-I tried to eat some, but everything tasted like blood.
-
-Someone in the rear--not Sgt. Wilson--had the idea that we needed
-coffee worse than water and so while we had plenty of strong, thick,
-cold black coffee, we only had water that was left in our canteens. Our
-upset stomachs refused the coffee; I used mine to wash the blood off my
-hands and wrists. Robbins shaved in his.
-
-Just then Capt. Fleischmann came striding along the path. He greeted
-me with “Hello Daddy. Isn’t this awful?” D Co. had suffered even worse
-than we, and they had not enough men to carry in the wounded, though
-they had stripped the outguards as much as they dared. He asked me for
-men to carry in four wounded that were still at his Co. Hdq.
-
-I looked at the men lying on the ground asleep--the only ones
-available. They had been carrying all that awful night under the heavy
-shell fire, and I had not the heart to order them to make the trip
-again. But I woke them up and told them that D Co. had some men lying
-wounded, and asked for volunteers to take them in.
-
-They stared dully for a moment, too tired to understand. Then Joe Levy,
-who had been on the go all night, dragged himself to his feet, and said
-“Hell, I’ll go. Come on, fellows.” Nobody wanted to go, and nobody
-pretended to. But they went. It was one of the finest things I ever
-saw, and every man that went should have had a D. S. C. No excitement
-to it though; nothing to thrill the penny-a-liners, so they didn’t get
-it.
-
-When night fell, a detail went out to bring in the bodies of Weidman,
-Kindt and Laurencell. Cpl. Weidman had been hit right in the waist by
-a shell; his legs were lying several yards away from his body. It was
-a gruesome task bringing him and Laurencell in. We laid the bodies,
-covered with a blanket, near the graves of two H Co. men who had
-been killed, just off the path at the place when it crossed the good
-road--about point 368.8-242.3.
-
-The night passed comparatively quietly; we got the rations issued, and
-some water came up too late. Holly, one of the company runners, had
-twisted his knee badly, and could not walk; so Cole was made runner in
-his place; and a faithful, fearless lad he was, too.
-
-Wednesday, September 25th, dawned a bright fall day. About 10 A. M.
-Lt. Cressman, the regimental chaplain, came up. Winemiller, Cole,
-Cheery-O, and Slover went with us to bury our three comrades. We turned
-over their personal belongings to the chaplain, wrapped each poor
-mangled body in a blanket, and laid them side by side in the shallow
-graves--the best we had been able to dig. The chaplain read the burial
-service, while an occasional shell tore through the air far overhead.
-Then we filled in the graves. It was hard on our over-strained nerves,
-and when we got through most of us were crying more or less. We hadn’t
-as yet seen so much as one of the enemy to shoot at; it was all such a
-hopeless, dreadful, ghastly business. Winemiller and Cole made three
-little crosses and set them up at the head of the graves.
-
-At 2:30 P. M. a message came up for Capt. Fleischmann and myself to
-report at once to Btn. Hdq. We set out together wondering what was up;
-leaving Lts. Hultzen and Schuyler in command.
-
-We reported to Major Odom, who was studying his battle map by the
-light of a couple of candles. Louis Foulkes greeted us on the side and
-slipped me a couple of cigars.
-
-After a few minutes, the Major took out his Bull Durham and started
-rolling a cigarette, saying:
-
-“I have a little problem for your companies to do tomorrow morning,”
-quite as he had been saying any afternoon for the past year. Then he
-went on to explain.
-
-The great Argonne drive was to begin the next morning. It was to be
-a surprise attack, preceded by only a couple of hours’ artillery
-preparation. We were to make a demonstration, a sham attack, with the
-object of keeping the enemy guessing for a few hours as to where the
-real blow was to fall, and so to delay his concentration of troops to
-meet the main drive.
-
-The 312th Inf. on our left, and the 90th Div. on our right, were
-to advance several kilos. We were to advance about half a kilo, to
-approximately the line 368.3-243.4; 369.5-242.3. This line we were
-to hold, and the units on our flanks were gradually to fall back and
-re-establish the outpost line on us as a guide. We would have no
-barrage, but there would be an hour of concentration fire--that is,
-our artillery would shell points in the sector of the advance like
-crossroads, probable strong points, battery positions, etc.
-
-Zero hour was 5:30 A. M. At that moment we were to cut loose with all
-our small arms fire. The battalion scouts had reported that there were
-no Germans for 500 meters to the front, but this Fourth of July stuff
-was to get the enemy’s wind up.
-
-The arrangements for supplies and liaison were soon made. We had had no
-chance to use any ammunition, and about all we asked for was water and
-food.
-
-Foulkes said that orders had arrived at Regtl. Hdq. detailing me to
-report to the Army School of the Line at Langres on Oct. 1st. I thought
-of the men we had buried that morning, and reflected grimly that I
-should probably not matriculate.
-
-When the Major finished his instructions, we sat quiet for a moment.
-Then Fleischmann said “Well, come on, Daddy; we’ve got a lot to do
-before dark,” and we set out.
-
-As we climbed Dead Man’s Hill, the Boche balloon saw us, and they
-amused themselves by sniping at us with a couple of 88’s. We kept
-about 20 yards apart, so that if one was potted the other could see to
-the attack. It was rather like playing “Going to Jerusalem.” We would
-linger by a good shell hole and then hustle for the next one; and of
-course the shells would always catch us between two holes, and we would
-have to flop into some six inch puddle.
-
-On arriving at Co. Hdq. I sent for the platoon commanders and
-sergeants. Welch and McGarrity were left in command of the 3rd platoon;
-I had perfect confidence in their ability to handle it after their
-showing two nights before.
-
-I knew that the moment we opened fire the German barrage would drop.
-If he hadn’t shortened his range since Monday night we would have it
-behind us. If he had, we would have to go through it anyhow, and the
-sooner the better.
-
-B Co. was attacking over a full kilometer front, which in a regular
-supported attack would be the sector for at least a battalion. If we
-met any serious opposition, we could not hope to push through to our
-objective on this frontage. I therefore made my main objective the edge
-of the open field along the line 369.0-243.0 to 368.6-243.2. This line
-was along the top of a rather steep reverse slope, which would give us
-protection from frontal fire, and from this as a base we could throw
-out combat patrols to the flanks, and eventually get in touch with the
-units on either side.
-
-The company was to advance with the 1st, 4th and 2nd platoons in the
-first wave, in above order from right to left; all in line of combat
-groups. The 3rd platoon was to follow at 50 meters, and would act
-as support and mopping up party. All would jump off from the line
-of outguards, so that all would get clear of the enemy’s barrage as
-quickly as possible. The 1st Plt. already had a common post with D Co.,
-which was to move down the road on our right flank as a combat patrol.
-Our left flank post was to arrange with the visiting patrol of the
-312th Inf. to advance similarly along the left flank of our sector.
-
-By the time these orders were issued and the ground reconnoitered,
-it was nearly dark. Our rations were to be brought up that night by
-details from the rear; but they lost their way--or their ambition--and
-the chow never got beyond the foot of Dead Man’s Hill.
-
-About midnight Capt. Fleischmann came over for a last consultation, and
-we explained our plans to each other. Then we shook hands hard, wished
-each other “Cheery-O” after the manner of the Scotties; and the night
-closed behind his tall figure as he strode off down the path.
-
-Various details of the arrangements kept me busy until the 2nd and 3rd
-platoons came up at 5 A. M. to take their posts for the attack. Things
-were comparatively quiet; only the usual shells going overhead. There
-was just time to see the platoons properly disposed and to get my
-headquarters platoon into position between the 1st and 4th platoons.
-Then I watched my wrist watch tick off the last five minutes, as the
-first tinge of dawn crept into the sky on our right. I ran everything
-over in my mind hastily, to be sure nothing was forgotten. And then the
-minute hand pointed the half hour.
-
-Nothing happened.
-
-The seconds ticked away. I listened and listened for ages--twenty
-seconds by the watch--and nothing happened.
-
-Finally I heard Schuyler’s voice over to the right, calling cautiously
-“Hey, Cap, isn’t it time yet?”
-
-“Sure it is,” I replied irritably. “Turn ’em loose. It’s after the time
-now.”
-
-The words were not out of my mouth before his rifle cracked and his
-voice rang out “First platoon, Fire.”
-
-The shots began to ring out, singly, then a rattle as the other
-platoons took it up, each man firing a clip; then the rackety-split of
-the Chauchats. An instant’s lull as we reloaded, and then the command
-was “Forward!”
-
-Then Hell broke loose.
-
-The Germans had shortened their range. Their barrage dropped right on
-us. The company runners were behind me in single file, Slover at the
-rear. A shell burst behind us, killing him in his tracks before he
-took a step. We knew nothing of it at the time. We pushed across the
-field to our front, a field studded with stumps and full of underbrush.
-Shells were bursting all around; the air filled as if by magic with the
-stifling acrid smoke of high explosive. Several times the concussion of
-a close one nearly knocked me off my feet, and the fumes blew against
-my face like the blast from a furnace door. I wondered vaguely when
-I’d get it, and shouted “Come on, B Company,” until I was hoarse.
-Occasionally I heard Schuyler cheering on his men. You couldn’t see ten
-feet for the smoke.
-
-At the far edge of the field we ran into a broad belt of barbed wire.
-We spread out, looking for a passage. Joe Levy called “Here’s a place,
-Captain,” and we struggled through; I was dragging a long French VB
-rifle after me. The wire was about 20 feet across.
-
-We found ourselves at the bottom of a wooded slope, on a rough wagon
-track. Lt. Schuyler, with Sgt. Reid and a couple of men, had gotten
-through further along, and we started up the hill, sheltered somewhat
-from the shells, though they were bursting in the treetops overhead.
-
-I dumped my pack and V. B. rifle by a tree and christened the place
-company headquarters. Then we went on up the hill. I got out my map and
-pencil to be sure this was our objective.
-
-It was quite light now; a beautiful September morning. Schuyler and I
-gained the top of the ridge together. The woods ended there, giving
-way to a little open plateau, about 250 meters across, with woods on
-the other side again. I verified the position on my map, and ordered
-Schuyler to post his men along the ridge under cover of the trees and
-underbrush, while I did the same further to the left, where men from
-the 4th platoon were coming up the slope in groups of two and three as
-they got through the wire.
-
-I had not gone twenty paces when Sgt. Reid came running after me and
-said “Lieut. Schuyler’s been hit, Captain.” I answered mechanically
-“All right; bring him behind the ridge, take charge of the platoon and
-post the men as they come up.”
-
-Rifle bullets were beginning to snap overhead, coming apparently from
-the woods across the field, which was held in some force by the enemy,
-as we soon realized. Our only chance of meeting a counter-attack was to
-build up a firing line to sweep the plateau in front, and as fast as
-men from the 4th platoon came up I posted them to command our front and
-left flank.
-
-Slim Price, in a German’s black fur coat that came about to his hips,
-came stalking up the hill with his Chauchat, and disappeared over the
-crest, subsiding in a little clump of bushes out on the left of the
-plateau. He was telling the world that he was a “fighting ---- of a
-----.” A moment later I heard the rattle of his gun as he spotted a
-Heinie machine gun squad advancing down the gully on our left. I guess
-Slim was right, at that.
-
-The C. O., 4th Plt., came up by this time. He was badly shaken, but
-I put him in charge of the left flank until the 2nd platoon should
-arrive, and went back to the right.
-
-They had brought Lt. Schuyler a little way down the slope, and laid
-him down until a stretcher came up. A shell had burst right beside
-him, between him and Reid. He was still breathing, but very heavily,
-and was quite unconscious; his eyes were nearly closed. I bound up his
-head as best I could with his first aid packet, but my heart sank--the
-concussion had been near the base of the skull. Oddly enough, he was
-not at all disfigured; but it had been a terrible blow, and only his
-magnificent vitality was keeping him breathing. That was a bitter
-moment, with my best officer and best friend in the outfit dying, the
-company shattered; and not a German had I seen.
-
-Sgt. Levy came up with a couple of stretchers and the news that both
-the Medical Detachment men attached to the company were killed. Hoping
-against hope I had him put Roy on the first stretcher, and they bore
-him away to the rear, though the shells were still bursting behind us.
-It was no use; that gallant spirit breathed its last before they had
-gone a kilometer. The bearers wanted to take him on to the surgeon
-anyhow, but there were many others desperately wounded, and stretchers
-were pitifully few.
-
-In the meantime I had sent out patrols to the flanks to try and get in
-touch with D Co. and the 312th Inf. A patrol of 6 men from D Co. came
-in on our right, but they were separated from their outfit and didn’t
-know what had happened. Brisk machine gun firing to our right rear made
-us fear things were not going well there.
-
-On our left, a party of the Boche under an officer had advanced down
-the ravine toward the end of our ridge, and had driven in our advanced
-riflemen; but had been checked, largely by the doughty Price from his
-clump of bushes. Three runners sent to the left to find the 2nd platoon
-did not return, and I feared the latter had lost its direction and was
-in trouble.
-
-During a temporary lull, I strolled out to the left, map in hand, and
-crossing the ravine started up the next ridge to find them. About a
-hundred yards ahead I caught a glimpse of a man walking through the
-trees, and thought I recognized one of our runners. I shouted “Hey.”
-He turned around. I asked “What platoon are you in?” Then I noticed
-how nicely his helmet came down around his neck. He unlimbered a rifle
-that looked about eight feet long, and cracked a bullet past my ear. I
-reached for my .45, remembered my last target score with that weapon,
-and promptly betook myself off to our own ridge.
-
-There I took a dead man’s rifle and ammunition, and called for
-volunteers to go on a combat patrol to find the 2nd platoon. We needed
-them badly, for if the enemy got in on our left flank they could
-enfilade our ridge and shoot us down at pleasure.
-
-I took Martocci and four other men--their names I can’t recall, though
-their faces stand out sharply in my memory. We advanced up the ridge
-on our left in skirmishing order. My Boche friend was waiting for us,
-and before we had gone fifty yards he cracked down on us from the woods
-above. We answered, firing by ear at the sound of his rifle. It was
-blind work; we couldn’t see fifty yards through the woods.
-
-We worked up to the top of the ridge, and then along it toward the
-west. Two of the patrol were missing; lost or killed, I never knew
-which. We pushed on cautiously, a few yards at a time, stopping to look
-and listen. Now and again the enemy would spot us, and his bullets
-would snap past us viciously. The German rifle has a high, whip-like
-crack, easily distinguishable from that of our Enfield or Springfield;
-but the noise of the bullet passing by is much the same.
-
-Suddenly I felt a sharp blow on my shoulder; one of the gentlemen had
-pinked me neatly. Down the ridge the bushes rustled; all four of us let
-drive at the sound. There was a shrill scream, and then silence. One of
-us had found a mark.
-
-This was all very interesting, but my business was to find that 2nd
-platoon. My mind was working away industriously at that problem, with
-a peculiar detachment. I only remember feeling vaguely annoyed at our
-patrol’s unpleasant situation, and did my share of the shooting almost
-mechanically.
-
-Of course, as we found out later, the 312th Inf. outpost made no
-advance at all that morning, and our patrol had pushed in behind the
-German line of outguards; to our mutual bewilderment and disgust. The
-Boche began to fall back through the woods, not stealthily as we were
-moving, but clumping and crashing along, and shouting to one another to
-know what in donner und blitzen was up.
-
-We were now well beyond the left of our own regimental sector, and a
-long half kilo from the company. The withdrawing outguards of the enemy
-were passing all around us. For twenty minutes we played a desperate
-game of blind man’s buff with them. Occasionally we would catch a
-glimpse of a gray form or a green helmet through the trees, and our
-little messengers of death would speed him on his way. Then bullets
-would sing over our heads from all directions, and we would hug the
-ground until we could push on again, to repeat the performance from
-another position.
-
-Finally I gave up hope of finding the 2nd platoon, and got out my
-compass to steer our course back to B Co. Cautiously we stole through
-the woods to the southeast. We could still hear the Boche trampling the
-bushes all around us.
-
-Suddenly from the bushes ahead came a challenge, in the mechanical,
-drill-book German that means bullets are coming. We hit the dirt, just
-as a brisk rapid fire opened on us, cutting the twigs overhead. We
-let drive into the bushes in front, firing low. As I slipped a fresh
-clip into my magazine, I glanced at Martocci, his olive cheek white
-with excitement, but firing quite steadily and coolly from a kneeling
-position.
-
-I signalled “Cease firing.” All was still, except for a trampling
-receding off to the right. Warily we circled round the bushes, and came
-upon a road--one of those straight German roads, with a 2-inch pipe
-line running along the side.
-
-One of the men crossed, while the rest stood ready to cover him. I
-crossed next, with Martocci. As I glanced down the road, I saw two
-Germans lying at the side of it, about ten yards away. Nice looking,
-fair-haired lads they were. One of them just then stretched out his
-hand towards his rifle, which lay beside him. It may have been only a
-convulsive movement, but we weren’t taking chances. I put a bullet into
-him, squeezing the trigger carefully. He jumped and rolled out into the
-middle of the road, where he lay still enough. Then I did the same for
-the other, mechanically, with a cold disgust at the whole business. My
-mind seemed to stand aloof and watch the proceeding for a moment; then
-it went on thinking, planning, weighing carefully our next move.
-
-After this, the enemy seemed to steer rather clear of us, though we
-passed near several other groups. One fellow was shouting for “Emil;”
-and I reflected grimly that Emil’s military career was probably
-blighted, anyhow. So we came at last to the foot of the ridge again,
-and about 200 meters along the road at its foot we found our left
-flank post. And there at last we found the 2nd platoon--Lt. Dunn, Sgt.
-Sweeney and four men. The rest were lying back in the field where the
-barrage had struck them, or were on that long, long trip back to the
-first aid post.
-
-At this time--about 8 A. M.--a German plane appeared, coming at us with
-a rush, low over the treetops, almost head on. We could see the aviator
-looking over the side of the car. He spotted someone moving, and flew
-low along our line, firing his machine gun, but more as a signal than
-at us particularly, I think. We cracked away at him, but had no luck.
-With superb nerve he flew slowly the length of our line, returned,
-and then banked lazily and disappeared toward his own lines. Ten
-minutes later shells were bursting about us with devilish precision,
-and machine gun squads pushed up on either flank, until stopped by
-our Chauchats. They were still somewhat leery of us, though, possibly
-suspecting a trap, and the attack was not pressed home. The German
-snipers in the woods across the little plateau in front were reinforced
-by machine guns, and both sides greeted every shaking bush or exposed
-head with a vicious crackle of bullets.
-
-Corporal Apicelli’s squad, lying out in the advanced posts where they
-had been stationed by Schuyler and Reid, were especially exposed,
-Apicelli and two other men being killed during the morning. At least
-one of the enemy was using dumdum bullets, as I saw one of our men
-shot in the hip, and where the bullet came out you could have put your
-fist in the hole.
-
-Levy and Winemiller were set to cutting two lanes in the wire behind
-us, so that we would not be hopelessly in a cul-de-sac.
-
-At about 9 A. M. Lt. Wolcott of D Co. appeared with his platoon,
-reduced to some 20 men. He was out of touch with the rest of his
-company, and did not know how it had fared. He was posted on our right
-flank, and sent out a patrol to get in contact with D Co.
-
-The firing died down to incessant sniping, and I set about completing
-my situation report for the Major, having given up hope for the present
-of establishing contact on the flanks. As I was finishing, Lt. Drake
-came up with a squad of the battalion scouts, among them the honest
-face of our own Sgt. DeGrote. I explained the situation, and gave him
-the report to take back. I shall never forget “Ducky’s” eyes, sick with
-seeing horrors, as he turned to go.
-
-As he disappeared, a tall figure came striding along from the
-right--Capt. Fleischmann, with dark circles under his eyes, blackened
-and stained from head to foot with blood and powder. We greeted each
-other as risen from the dead, and compared notes. He had run into the
-enemy in force strongly established in concrete pillboxes and machine
-gun posts; and while scattered groups of his company had won through to
-the company objective, they were unable to hold it without machine guns
-against the enemy’s enfilading fire. The remnant had retired to their
-old line of outguards, after suffering heavy losses.
-
-Since I still thought the 312th Inf. might be far out to our left
-front, and depending on us to cover their ultimate withdrawal, we
-decided that B Co. should hold on where we were, while D Co. would
-string scattered Cossack posts along their old line until relief or
-further orders came up.
-
-The morning wore on; still no news from our left flank. I kept on the
-move up and down the line, assuming a confidence that I did not feel;
-for of course if the enemy advanced in any force we were done for.
-Still we had our orders, and there was nothing for it but to put up the
-best scrap we could.
-
-Some things were funny, even then. I remember the company barber, that
-sterling son of Italy, after a Boche sniper put a bullet past each
-ear. He wriggled back from his unpleasant position on the crest of the
-ridge, and retaliated by holding up his rifle at arm’s length over his
-head, pointed northeast, and executing rapid fire, pulling the trigger
-with his thumb, while he regarded my approach with the complacence
-of conscious ingenuity. I think the Boche must have laughed too; for
-the branches of a tree across the field began to shake, and a bullet
-brought a gray body tumbling down from branch to branch.
-
-We had some food--hard bread, corned willy and goldfish--but very
-little water. It was pitiful to see the wounded, who wouldn’t take
-any from the others, because they were going back when the stretcher
-bearers got around to them. Levy and his detail worked like Trojans,
-but it was a long trip, and every time they returned there was a fresh
-batch of wounded to be carried.
-
-There was one man--I wish I could remember his name, but though every
-event stands out clearly in my mind, I cannot remember the names
-connected with them. He was sitting with his back against a tree,
-wounded by a shell in the legs and stomach. When I asked him if I
-could do anything for him, he said “If I could have a little water.”
-I gave him my canteen, which had a couple of swallows left in it. He
-shook it, and grinned and shook his head. “Not your last, Cap’n.” I
-told him that Levy had just brought up a can, and hurried off to the
-left, where the firing was getting heavy. When I passed that way again,
-the man was dead. And the water was still in my canteen, and he had
-screwed the stopper back on; so he must have thought I was lying about
-Levy.
-
-Three o’clock came, and shortly after a platoon from A Co. under Lt.
-Bigler came up to reinforce us. They were posted on our left flank to
-hold the ravine up which the enemy had been trying to advance and flank
-our position. I couldn’t understand why the Germans in front of D Co.
-had not come in on our right flank yet.
-
-At 3:30 a patrol of two officers and six men came up the road on the
-left, and as they drew near I recognized Capt. Gray, of the 312th Inf.,
-who I knew commanded their outpost line. His news was not encouraging.
-His company had received no orders to advance; they were still on their
-old line to our left rear. We arranged that he should run a line of
-Cossack posts along the road up to join us, so that we would have at
-least a continuous line of outguards on the brigade front. On the way
-over the ridge from his right flank post, his patrol had had several
-skirmishes with German outposts or patrols; so the enemy was apparently
-venturing back to the positions where our patrol had flushed them
-earlier in the day.
-
-Just after he left--about 5.30--Lt. Col. Budd came up with several men.
-I was certainly glad to see him, and even more glad to see Levy with
-a can of water, which he doled out, a swallow to each man. Col. Budd
-looked over the situation, and decided that we should hold the ridge
-until nightfall, when we would be relieved. While he was there, three
-German snipers managed to get into a rifle pit on the plateau about a
-hundred yards in front of us, and made things very hot on the right
-flank. Sgt. Lehy took our last two rifle grenades, and dropped the
-second one plumb into the pit, which discouraged those three for the
-day.
-
-Col. Budd departed to arrange for sending up water, ammunition and the
-relief.
-
-At 5:30 the enemy’s artillery started in on us again, sweeping the top
-of the ridge with shell and shrapnel, and dropping time shells into
-the ravine behind it. For twenty minutes he poured in a heavy barrage,
-while we hugged the ground and gripped our rifles. If this meant a
-counter-attack in force we were up against it, because our ammunition
-was running low; but if we could beat them off once more we might hold
-out until night brought the relief.
-
-But this time the enemy was starting the real thing. He knew the ground
-like a book, of course; and I must say that his attack was ably planned
-and bravely executed. While his artillery shelled us, machine guns
-worked around behind both our flanks. At 5:50 men from D Co’s outguards
-came running in and reported that the enemy had advanced in force,
-broken their skeleton line, and was coming in on our right flank with
-machine guns. Even while they spoke, the “Tap-tap-tap” of the machine
-gun broke out on the right to confirm them, and our Chauchats spat back
-in answer.
-
-In those woods, it was merely a question of who could throw enough lead
-to keep the other fellow’s head down; and at this game our Chauchats
-had the chance of the proverbial snowball. With Sgts. Reid, Lehy, Fahey
-and Levy, the right flank, which had been disorganized and driven in
-with the D Co. outposts, was re-formed, and a firing line built up at
-right angles to our front to face our new foes. The enemy in front was
-pouring in a hot fire; we could not encircle the enemy machine guns to
-the right because of that belt of wire behind us. Meanwhile those same
-machine guns were enfilading our main line along the ridge.
-
-Our only chance was a frontal attack on them. First we tried a
-series of rushes. I realized then exactly what was meant by “fire
-superiority,” and the enemy certainly had it. One Chauchat ran out of
-ammunition. The other was in Cocker’s hands, and he used it well until
-it jammed. He worked at it desperately for several minutes, as he
-advanced with the line; then he threw it up against a tree in disgust,
-crying bitterly “That’s a hell of a thing to give a man to fight with.”
-From then on we had only our rifle fire against their leaden hailstorm.
-Neither side could aim their shots, but they were shooting twenty
-bullets to our one, and our hastily formed line was driven back.
-
-As they retired, Sgt. Fahey and I, with two other men, tried to sneak
-up along the top of the ridge and get close enough to bomb one of
-the machine guns. We were lucky at first, the enemy being busy with
-his bullets further down the slope. We saw four Germans, carrying
-ammunition ahead of us, but held our fire, hoping they would lead on
-to their gun. Fahey slipped me a bomb, and I pulled the pin, ready
-to throw. Just then a new devil’s tattoo broke out about fifty yards
-away to our left, and the bullets came showering about our ears. They
-must have caught sight of us through some opening in the trees, and
-were probably waiting for just such an attempt. One of our patrol was
-riddled through the stomach and back, and started crawling back on one
-hand and his knees, with strange, shrill moans like a wounded animal.
-The other was killed instantly. Fahey and I looked in each other’s eyes
-for a startled moment; each, I think, wondering why the other was not
-killed. A bullet went through the tube of my gas mask, as I noticed
-later. Fahey lifted his eyebrows and pointed at the new gun. I nodded,
-and we started for it. But the first gun’s crew heard the cries of
-the wounded man, and traversed back and forth by us. Fahey staggered,
-shot through the chest. We could not see to throw a bomb, and it would
-probably hit a branch and light on us anyhow. Our slender chance
-vanished, and we slipped back through the trees.
-
-As we returned, I saw our left flank retiring in some disorder, further
-confusing our hard pressed right. The enemy had driven back the
-post holding the head of the ravine on our left, and we were in the
-desperate position of being enfiladed from both flanks. Our losses were
-heavy, and ammunition was very low.
-
-I glanced at my watch--only 6:20. No chance for the Lt. Col. to have
-gotten a counter-attack under way. The position had become untenable,
-and at any moment might develop into a complete cul-de-sac. It was time
-to pull out.
-
-I gave the order to withdraw by squads and fall back to the old outpost
-line; 4th platoon to go first, covered by the 1st and 3rd; then the 4th
-platoon to cover our withdrawal from the other side of the wire.
-
-As the first squad from the 4th platoon started through the wire, a
-machine gun opened on the wire and the road before it, killing two
-and driving the rest back. The platoon leader reported that it was
-impossible to get across.
-
-To remain, however, meant almost certain death for all, with very
-little chance of inflicting compensating losses on the enemy. So as a
-last resort I took the 1st platoon, and during a momentary lull in the
-firing we made a rush for it in two or three groups at different places.
-
-The wire clawed and tore at us as though it were alive. My group
-scrambled through, somehow, anyhow, marvelling that the bullets did not
-come. When half way through I noticed that I was still mechanically
-holding Fahey’s bomb, with the pin out. I went a bit carefully after
-that, so was the last one through. As I ripped my puttee free from the
-last strand of wire, the machine guns started up again, and I hugged
-the dirt while bullets cracked viciously overhead. The grass and green
-leaves felt cool and smelled fresh and green, and a little green bug
-went scrambling along a creeper, two inches from my nose.
-
-Presently another lull came, and I proceeded to worm my way through the
-underbrush, looking for my half platoon. Not a sign of them. They had
-gotten clear of the last burst of fire, and then made a break for it.
-
-The machine guns were still firing intermittently, but I heard no reply
-from our rifles, and hoped that the others had followed us through the
-wire. Most of them had, as I found out later.
-
-Then came the hardest moment of the war for me. A group of about 20 men
-had remained on the hill, apparently despairing of crossing the wire
-alive. An officer was with them, and upon him lies the responsibility
-of what happened. The men themselves had done brave service before that
-time. But, as I understand by permission if not under orders, they
-raised the cry of “Kamerad.”
-
-When I realized that this had really happened, I tried desperately to
-cross the wire to them again. But I was in too big a hurry, and made
-too much noise. The machine guns spotted me promptly, and streams of
-bullets made the sparks fly from the wire six feet ahead of me. Before
-I could work around to another place, I heard the sound of their
-withdrawal toward the German lines, and knew I was too late.
-
-My next job was to get back to the old outpost line and take charge
-there. The enemy machine gunners had penetrated well to our rear, and
-I had to go very cautiously, hearing their voices all around. They
-were withdrawing, however, and in ten minutes I found out why. Their
-artillery completed the day’s work by shelling the ravine and vicinity
-in their usual methodical manner. Not to be outdone, our own artillery
-did the same. This was the last straw; I was too dead tired to dodge
-American shells as well as German. So I crawled under a bush and waited
-for whatever was on the cards. In two minutes I dozed off, with the
-shells banging all around.
-
-I must have slept for about twenty minutes. Waking with a start, I
-found dusk setting in. I took off my tattered slicker and wound it
-around my tin hat, to keep the twigs from playing an anvil chorus on
-it. The shelling had stopped. My short rest had revived some interest
-in life, and I slowly retraced our advance of that morning. I didn’t
-think the enemy had left any outposts behind, but in any case was too
-tired to care, and went clumping along like any Heine. I arrived at our
-old outpost line, which we had held long, long ago, it seemed. It was
-absolutely deserted. I went along the path, past D Co.’s headquarters,
-and noticed that a shell had landed there and set off those pyrotechnic
-signals which had been quite fireproof two days before.
-
-Apparently the war had been called off around here. I pottered about
-for quite a bit, but could find no one. Somehow my principal feeling
-was an immense relief that for the present I had no responsibility, no
-one to look out for but myself. Presently, however, it was evident that
-as I had not even a runner, I had to go back to Bn. Hdq. myself and
-report on the situation.
-
-Wearily I plodded off, back over Dead Man’s Hill. It was quite dark,
-about 11 P. M., and I was making very slow time. As I drew near the
-main line of resistance, I came upon two D Co. men, lying where they
-had been hit by a shell. One was dead; the other had a leg shot off.
-He said he had been lying there for about three hours. His comrade had
-helped him tie up his leg before he died. I left my blouse over him,
-as it was chilly, and went on to the firing trench, which had wire in
-front of it by this time. I had some trouble convincing the occupants
-of my identity. In truth, with no blouse, my ragged slicker draped
-about my helmet, the shoulder of my shirt all torn and bloody, and my
-breeches and puttees in tatters, I didn’t look much like an officer,
-and not at all like a gentleman.
-
-I stumbled down the ramp into Bn. Hdqrs., where I found Maj. Odom,
-Foulkes, Strawbridge and Lt. Col. Budd, to whom I reported. Capts.
-Markewick and Laing, of “I” and “L” Cos., were also there. Thinking the
-position in front was strongly held by the enemy, the idea was to send
-these companies up at dawn behind a rolling barrage to re-establish
-the outpost line. I was glad to tell them that this was unnecessary,
-and they later strolled on up in single file and occupied our old line
-without a single casualty.
-
-Major Odom in turn told me that Lt. Dunn with most of the 1st and 2nd
-platoons had already come in, and had been sent to the kitchen for
-chow. Louis Foulkes gave me some water and a couple of doughnuts, which
-I was nearly too sleepy to eat.
-
-I had to report to Regimental Hdq. then, and rehash the day’s
-operations; but all I remember is that Capt. Brennan gave me some grape
-jam and bread and water, and the regimental surgeon swabbed my shoulder
-with iodine. I have some hazy recollection of the Colonel himself
-pulling a blanket over me, though this may not be correct.
-
-Late next morning I woke up to be greeted by Strawbridge with the
-news that our travel orders had come, and we--he, Capt. Brennan, and
-myself--were directed to be at Langres--wherever that was--by October
-1st.
-
-As soon as possible I rejoined the company, which had been stationed at
-Brigade Reserve with the remnants of D Co. We had about 50 men left,
-not counting 20 who were on various special details. Sgt. Wilson and
-the cooks fed us like lords, and we made up for the past week. Big
-shells landed around occasionally, but it was a Philadelphia Sunday
-compared to what we had just left.
-
-The company was reorganized as a platoon, with Lt. Dunn in command and
-Reid as top sergeant. We slept in pillboxes or gun emplacements, or
-anywhere else where there was a bit of shelter.
-
-The next day I said goodby to the company for six weeks, as I thought.
-There were rumors that the Bulgarians were nearly done, and the
-Austrians weakening; but I don’t think that anyone dreamed that the
-armistice was only six weeks off. I stopped off one night with Sgt.
-Stiles to write up the company records, and finally boarded a motor
-truck for Toul.
-
-From this point the history is taken up by Lt. Gardenier, Sgt. Stiles,
-Sgt. Peter and Sgt. Tracy White.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-MEUSE-ARGONNE
-
-
-Sept. 28th: Today the company commander left the company, leaving
-same in charge of Lt. Dunn, the only officer left. He reorganized
-the company--two platoons of about 40 men each was our strength. We
-remained in reserve in the Bois des Grandes positions until the night
-of October 4th. It was during this period that rumors of the enemy
-countries, Bulgaria, Turkey and Austria having quit reached us, causing
-a great deal of discussion and doing much to keep the morale at its
-highest. Sergeant Reid left for Officers’ Training School.
-
-Oct. 4th: “We are going out for a rest”--These words were heard all
-through the company. Shortly before dark we left our position and
-marched to the road that led through Limey and remained there until
-midnight. We then started on what was one of the most tiresome hikes
-we ever experienced, and finally, at 5:30 A. M., reached the forest
-de la Reine. A fact that is worthy of mention and probably refreshes
-the reader’s mind of incidents of the night was what seemed to be a
-direct hit on an ammunition dump to the right. The sky was brilliantly
-illuminated and was the cause of numerous rumors and suggestions as
-to the reason of the glare. We remained here until about 4:00 P. M.
-October 6th, and then started off for what we fondly believed was a
-rest. Subsequent events proved that our hopes were not to be fulfilled.
-It was here that Lt. Luhn joined the company. After hiking until
-midnight, most of the time through rain, we reached Mecrin and were so
-tired that regardless of the weather we threw ourselves on the ground
-and without further aid went to sleep until the following morning. Sgt.
-Perry rejoined the company at this place. At 11:30 A. M., we started
-again on a hike to Pierrefitte, arriving at 10 P. M., having covered
-about 24 kilos. It was again our fate to have mother earth for a bed
-this night.
-
-From here we hiked a short distance to Nicey, where we took busses for
-a 40 kilo trip to Beauchamp Ferme in the Forest de Argonne, arriving
-about 10 P. M. in what seemed to be the darkest spot on earth. As usual
-it was raining, and this added greatly to our discomfort. There were
-only sufficient barracks for one company, the rest of the outfit had
-to sleep in their shelter tents, pitched in spots that were not very
-appealing when revealed at dawn. Lt. Dunn having been ill for some time
-left us here and Lt. Lahey took command of the company, having been
-transferred from Company “I.” Sgt. Perry having been made 1st Sergeant
-upon his return to the company aided materially in reorganizing the
-company. We had a few days of much needed rest here and also consumed
-quantities of wood in making bonfires that dried us out and made life a
-little more cheerful.
-
-At 2:00 A. M. October 10th we aroused from our slumbers with orders to
-roll packs and be ready to leave at once. This was another example of
-how things are done in the army. Having spent several hours in rolling
-packs and getting breakfast, it was 7:30 A. M. before we started out.
-Our hikes of several days previous to arrival at this camp had taken
-us through many ruined villages and parts of the country recently
-evacuated by the enemy. Today’s hike covered 22 kilos and brought us
-into the heart of the Argonne, the same ground having been bitterly
-contested by opposing armies only a week previous. It was here that
-we were able to form a definite idea of how the Germans lived behind
-the lines. Every hillside was covered with dugouts made of concrete
-and heavily timbered and furnished in a style that had been unknown
-to us during the past four months. In the Limey Sector we found some
-German camps that were fitted up in grand style, but these could not
-be compared with the ones mentioned above. The officers’ quarters were
-equipped with shower baths and in one place a large swimming pool.
-Everything seemed to denote that the Germans intended to stay there for
-all time. The signs on the trees and every crossroad led one to believe
-that the Germans were a nation of sign painters. Arriving at our
-destination after hiking about 23 kilos we appreciated an opportunity
-to rest and lost no time in pitching tents and getting a much needed
-sleep.
-
-The following day we marched about 4 kilos and took up a position in
-the Bois de Chatel. It was here, on the eve of October 12th, that our
-much battered company of approximately 80 men, all veterans of the
-St. Mihiel, received 104 replacements from the 86th Division. Some of
-these men had never fired a rifle and were not familiar with the use
-of the gas mask. The company was again reorganized. The four platoons
-were placed in charge of Sergeants Newell, Lehy, White and Weber,
-respectively; to these men and our two officers, Lts. Lahey and Luhn,
-is due the credit of training these new and inexperienced men so that
-when they were called upon they made a creditable showing. Too much
-cannot be said about the way these men took care of what seemed to be
-almost a hopeless task.
-
-October 15th again brought us under shell fire. About 8:00 P. M. we
-left our positions and marched through heavy rains to relieve a unit
-of the 308th Infantry, west of La Folie Ferme. We took up our position
-about 3:00 A. M. and despite the fact that we were wet through, made
-ourselves as comfortable as circumstances would permit, only to be
-awakened at 5:30 A. M. to prepare to advance at once. While preparing,
-Jerry saluted us with a barrage that, while it lasted, was very
-annoying and upset the new men exceedingly, this being the first time
-they had ever been under shell fire. This lasted only for a few minutes
-and after their baptism they all acted like seasoned veterans. This
-relief having been made during the darkness of the night, the units
-encountered great difficulty in keeping the men together. There was
-considerable mixup on the road that led to Chevieres; three columns of
-troops and a transport train trying to pass at one time. This caused
-a great deal of confusion and the result was that many of the new
-men became separated from the company and did not rejoin us until the
-following morning. On October 17th Sergeants Levy and Wilson left for
-Officers’ Training School. This morning we lost Sergeant Lehy; he was
-killed just one hour before he was ordered to leave for Officers’
-Training School.
-
-Oct. 18th: At 10:00 P. M. we took up a position in the front line to
-the west of Chevieres, relieving our 2nd Battalion. At 3:00 A. M. we
-stepped off in a line of combat groups in support of “C” company, and
-advanced through heavy artillery and machine gun fire. We reached our
-objective at daybreak and held same through the day under continual
-fire from the enemy snipers and machine guns. Enemy planes endeavored
-to locate our position and flew so low that the aviators were easily
-seen. Their object no doubt was to signal their artillery the location
-of our position, but judging from the heavy barrage that fell directly
-in back of us, their efforts were not crowned with success. We suffered
-quite a few casualties during this attack, among whom was Sgt. Welch,
-who had been recommended for a D. S. C. for bravery at St. Mihiel.
-He was wounded in seven different places by machine gun bullets, but
-refused to be evacuated until the other wounded men had been taken
-care of. Owing to our advanced position, and both the units on our
-flanks having failed to obtain their objectives, we were subject to
-such a heavy fire that it was impossible to evacuate our wounded until
-dark. Toward evening the enemy closed in on both flanks, and on our
-front, making our position untenable, and under cover of darkness
-drew close enough to drop hand grenades among our fox holes. This
-caused our officers to call for volunteers to carry a message to the
-Battalion Commander. After several runners had failed to get through,
-Sgt. White had volunteered to carry the message and reached Battalion
-Headquarters P. C. in safety and returned with instructions to have the
-company withdraw. He was awarded a D. S. C. for this brave act. His
-entire route was continually subject to heavy artillery and machine
-gun fire. By performing this deed he undoubtedly saved many lives and
-enabled the company to make an orderly retreat to the position they
-left that morning. He also assisted in directing the evacuation of the
-wounded; every man was removed without further casualties. During the
-activities the enemy continually sent up rockets and flares so that our
-movements could only be made during short minute periods of darkness.
-Too much credit cannot be given to both Lt. Lahey and Lt. Luhn. Their
-bravery and unselfish action in face of the enemy did much to keep up
-the morale of the men. We fell back to the position we had left that
-morning, and remained until 6:00 A. M. Then we fell back to railroad
-track running from Chevieres to Grand Pre, where we remained about
-four hours and then advanced again and took up our position along the
-River Aire. Here we remained for nine days and nights under continuous
-shell fire. While we suffered no casualties at this place from the
-enemy fire, several of our men were evacuated with influenza. One great
-difficulty that we experienced here was that of obtaining rations, as
-it was impossible to bring them up during the day, and at night Jerry
-threw over such a heavy shell fire that made the work of the ration
-parties extremely hazardous.
-
-On Saturday evening, October 26th, we were relieved by the 310th
-Infantry and took up a position in Brigade Reserve in the Bois de
-Negremont. This day Lt. Luhn was transferred to “D” Company, and we
-were again left with only one officer. Having lost a great many men,
-it was necessary to reorganize the company again. There were only
-sufficient men left to form two platoons. This position was subject to
-intermittent shell fire which caused occasional casualties.
-
-The night of October 29th-30th will be one that will be long remembered
-by those men who were present with us. The enemy had been shelling us
-the entire evening without causing any casualties. It was about 1:30 A.
-M. a shell, the last one he fired that night, struck a tree directly
-over our camp and exploded. It killed or wounded 14 men, and Lt. Lahey
-was also severely wounded. Lt. Lahey’s bravery at this critical period
-was such that his men never cease praising him. While wounded so
-seriously that he died two days later, he directed the evacuation of
-all the other wounded men and gave instructions to the non-commissioned
-officers left with the company, before he permitted himself to be
-evacuated. Sgt. Newell, then acting 1st Sergeant, was killed instantly
-by this same shell. Sgt. White was now in command of the company and
-did excellent work keeping the company organized until the arrival of
-Lt. Gardenier. The following day, October 30th, the enemy resumed their
-heavy shelling and we suffered several more casualties in killed and
-wounded. During our stay in the Bois de Negremont we were fortunate
-enough to get a bath by walking five miles for it, and a change of
-underwear, but seldom it was indeed that we received more than one meal
-a day, so continuous was the enemy shell fire.
-
-Oct. 29th: The position of the company was still in the Bois de
-Negremont, in Brigade Reserve. Pvt. Koehler was killed by shell fire
-during the day. Toward evening the shelling let up and was fitful and
-erratic from that time on. Lt. Gardenier arrived in the evening and
-took command of the company which was at the time in charge of Sgt.
-White.
-
-Oct. 30th: The morning was spent in reorganizing the company and
-issuing equipment preparatory to the drive which was to start the
-following day. The company was divided into two platoons, the first
-under Corporal Ahearn, and the second under Corporal Thomas White; with
-Sgt. White second in command of the company. Pvt. Koehler was buried
-at La Noua le Coq, near the chateau. There was considerable shelling
-during the afternoon, but there were no casualties, and the appearance
-of a big consignment of rations in the evening did much to hearten the
-men. Enemy shell fire had interfered with the rations considerably up
-to this time, as there was but one route the ration parties could take
-and it seemed to be quite familiar to the Boche artillerymen.
-
-Combat packs were made at night and the company was ready to move early
-in the morning as the 2nd and 3rd Battalions were to attack at dawn. In
-the afternoon a pirate 75 was moved up behind our position and engaged
-in an artillery duel with a Boche battery until late at night. The only
-result being a fairly continuous shelling of our area.
-
-Nov. 1st: At 2:30 A. M. the barrage preparatory to the launching of
-the second phase of the Meuse-Argonne opened. The sky behind us was
-a flickering, gleaming red. The roar was as of myriad drums rolling
-almost in unison, and the air overhead seemed almost alive with
-whistling visiting cards to the departing Jerry. The effect of this on
-the men who had heard little but shells coming in their direction was
-tremendous. The men walked about the hills whistling and singing and
-the erstwhile quiet forest was alive with conjectures as to what was
-happening when the winged death that was flying overhead arrived at its
-destination. After the firing had ceased there was extreme quietness
-and there was no activity during the night.
-
-Nov. 2nd: The company was held in readiness throughout the day, and
-after mess in the evening packs were slung and the Battalion moved
-out. It began to rain just at the start, and the path we followed in
-the pitch black forest was steep and slippery. We progressed slowly
-over the plain between la Noua le Coq and the Aire River and entered
-the shell-torn town of Grand Pre. Passing through the ruins along the
-Kron Printz Strasse, we went north to the road fork between Grand Pre
-and Ferme des Loges. Here the company was detached from the Battalion,
-Lt. Conroy was placed in command and we waited for trucks to enable us
-to overtake the now flying enemy. Trucks were boarded about 11:00 P.
-M. and we bumped over the shell-torn road in the general direction of
-Germany, until our way was blocked by a mine hole not yet repaired. We
-debussed and hiked to Briquenay, where we found the 312th Infantry had
-the situation in hand and with the exception of about twenty men who
-formed an ammunition detail for the 309th Machine Gun Battalion, we
-turned into some German billets about 2:30 A. M. The infantry advance
-up to this time had been so swift that the artillery had been unable to
-catch up to us, having set up their guns three times without firing a
-shot.
-
-Nov. 3rd: During the day the 2nd Battalion passed through Briquenay
-and we were held there. Most of the time was spent in improvising
-meals and exploring the debris left by the enemy in his hasty flight.
-Toward evening about 200 American airplanes in combat formation flew
-over going north. Lt. Conroy returned to Battalion Headquarters.
-About 5:00 P. M. the rest of the Battalion moved out and through a
-misunderstanding the company was left behind. When our plight was
-discovered we set out for Germond, and after passing a Battalion of
-the 308th Infantry on the road arrived just in time to get the last
-available billets. Germond at that time held the four Regimental P.
-C.’s of our division, one of the 77th and somewhere in the neighborhood
-of 2,000 troops.
-
-Nov. 4th: At 5:00 A. M. we started for Authe, after the heartrending
-procedure of passing a battalion of the 308th Infantry lined up for a
-hot meal. We went through Authe to Brieulles under fairly heavy shell
-fire where the road had been blown up, six mines having been placed
-at a bridge and we were forced to make a long detour through a swamp.
-From there we proceeded to Les Petites Armoises as the advanced guard
-of the Brigade. It was a gruelling hike and considering the condition
-of the men, the spirit shown was remarkable, and we halted south of the
-town only four men less than we had left Germond with in the morning.
-Artillery was quite active there and we witnessed some wonderful work
-by German batteries and an airplane in destroying a group of buildings
-to the west of us.
-
-On entering the town we were greeted by delighted civilians who had
-been under German rule for four years and who gave us some atrocious
-black bread covered with lard which almost tasted good. They also
-warned us that the enemy had a machine gun nest to the north of the
-village.
-
-After deploying we started up the hill, and soon as scouts appeared
-above the crest machine guns opened up on them. In the subsequent
-reconnaissance Privates Sullivan and Burchell were killed by machine
-gun fire. One gun was located about 300 meters in front of us and in
-an effort to flank its position the right of the company was deployed
-along the crest of the hill, and was in position to rush it, but it was
-cut off by fire from the flank. After three attempts Sgt. White brought
-the left flank to a similar position only to have the advance halted
-by another machine gun. As it seemed impossible to advance without
-auxiliary weapons the company was withdrawn and dug in half way down
-the hill. “D” company established contact on our left but there was
-nothing on our right but German machine guns. Corporal Miller led a
-patrol in an effort to put the guns out of action, but was unsuccessful
-because of the covering fire from other guns and the openness of the
-country. About 3:00 P. M. two airplanes arrived and one by his near
-presence causing a Boche plane to retire, dropped a message which
-said “There are Boche machine guns in a shell hole 200 meters to your
-front.” This information was somewhat superfluous, but the affair was
-interesting. The other plane, endeavoring to locate Company “D” flew
-too low and landed on a hill about 500 yards in front of our line.
-The aviator unhurt got out of the machine and in spite of the hails
-of our outpost he headed for Germany and was seen no more. The plane
-was dragged by the enemy to a point north of Tannay and demolished.
-About 5:00 P. M. Boche artillery opened up and played a steady stream
-of fire on the town, and by no means neglected our position. A strong
-point made up of men from Company “C” was scarcely located in their
-new position when a shell severely wounded two of their men. The loss
-of our First Aid Man who was killed by a shell early in the evening
-greatly handicapped the evacuation of the wounded.
-
-From 5:00 P. M. to 1:00 A. M. there was a perfect hail of shells and
-machine gun bullets while enemy airplanes dropped bombs on the town
-itself. Corporal Peter did excellent work during this time keeping the
-outposts organized. Casualties--killed 5, wounded 9.
-
-Nov. 5th: About 3:30 A. M. the enemy machine guns pulled out and at
-5:00 A. M. the company retired to les Petites Armoises for breakfast
-and then went on to Tannay. After reconnaissance by the Battalion a
-patrol of 30 men was called for to establish a strong point in a patch
-of woods northwest of the town. An effort was also to be made to obtain
-liaison with units on our right. The first platoon was called upon and
-though practically exhausted they responded promptly and went up to
-take their position. Lt. Gardenier with three runners went on until
-contact was established with the 165th Infantry just north of Sy.
-Sgt. Ahearn meanwhile, finding no opposition in the woods designated,
-pushed his jaded men to the edge of the Bois de Mont Diens, about two
-kilometers further on and began to exchange courtesies with a lonely
-machine gunner. To this detachment belongs the distinction of being the
-unit of the 78th Division nearest Germany when the relief came.
-
-When the 166th Infantry had leapfrogged us at 3:30 P. M., the company
-pulled back into Tannay at 4:15 P. M. just in time to begin hiking
-back. It was raining again, and it was a dismal hike to Les Petites
-Armoises where no billets were available, and the only alternative
-was Brieulles, 7 kilometers further on. Over a road pitted with shell
-holes, filled with troops, transport and artillery headed in the
-opposite direction, the company plodded on, arriving at Brieulles about
-midnight. A conservative estimate of the distance covered by the first
-platoon that day is thirty kilometers and all under the most trying
-conditions. On reaching Brieulles we shared a church with “C” company
-and while some sat up and others stood crowded into corners, everybody
-slept. We left Brieulles at 5:00 A. M. and hiked to Authe where, Nov.
-6th, a hot breakfast put new life in the company, which was fortunate,
-because though we did not know it at the start, there were twenty-two
-gruelling kilometers in front of us. After hiking continuously until
-5:30 P. M. we reached La Folie Ferme and stayed the night in these
-familiar haunts.
-
-Nov. 7th: Packs were slung and we were on the move early in the morning
-and after hiking until 4:00 P. M. we were presented with a soaked,
-battered section of the Argonne not far from Appremont, and told to
-make ourselves comfortable. We were doing the best we could when there
-was an unholy din and a fireworks display, owing to a signal corps
-outfit hearing “Officially” that the war was over. We mistook it for a
-German air raid, however, so we did not derive much comfort therefrom.
-But it is worthy of notice because it was the beginning of the greatest
-conglomeration of rumors in the history of civilized warfare.
-
-Nov. 8th: It took most of the day trying to follow out the order to
-make ourselves comfortable and we were just beginning to accomplish
-this when on the morning of November 9th we pulled out and hiked to
-Florent, remaining there the following day. Lt. Gartley, who had joined
-on November 8th, assisted the company commander in re-acquainting the
-jaded doughboys with the intricacies of the manual of arms and that
-evening the pearly notes of “Retreat” and The Star Spangled Banner made
-us feel nearly civilized again. The rumors were still running high.
-
-Nov. 11th: On this historic day the 1st Battalion celebrated by taking
-its longest hike of the Meuse-Argonne Campaign. We moved from Florent
-to Varimont, a distance of twenty-nine good long kilometers. While we
-were passing through Ste Menehould, the French papers with gigantic
-headlines “C’EST SIGNE” were shown us and we passed innumerable
-grinning French men and women repeating over and over again the words
-which were like music to our ears--“la Guerre Finie.”
-
-We arrived at Varimont about 5:00 P. M. nearly exhausted and resumed
-back area existence at once.
-
-Nov. 12th-14th: Our stay in Varimont was punctuated by determined
-efforts to get separated from Argonne Mud and getting policed up and
-generally put in shape for a Fifth Avenue parade, which was to come off
-very soon. Lt. Gartley left for the 1st Division.
-
-Nov. 15th: The company moved to Givry-en-Argonne to act as a loading
-detail for the Brigade which was to entrain, and the following day was
-spent in that occupation.
-
-Nov. 17th: The company entrained about 11:00 P. M. and started on a
-two-day journey to Les Laumes, where they arrived about 3:00 P. M. on
-the 19th. With much grunting and puffing the initial ascent of the now
-well known hill was made, and about 5:00 P. M. we arrived at Flavigny,
-which was to be our home until we began our journey homeward.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-FLAVIGNY-SUR-OZERAIN
-
-
-It might be interesting to insert here a brief description of Flavigny,
-taken from a letter written home by one of the men:
-
-“To say the least, Flavigny is a town that is somewhat interesting.
-There is a bit of history attached to the place in that we are told
-that Caesar fought a battle against the Germanic people in this
-neighborhood about 55 B. C., using the plateau across the valley as his
-base for operations against a town a few miles from here.
-
-“Flavigny was then standing on its present site, although, perhaps,
-much smaller than it is today, and there are no evidences that any of
-the buildings then existing are now standing. It would hardly seem
-possible that they could be. Today, the village stands on the top of a
-high plateau, which is reached by a road winding around the mountain.
-Although it was a cold dismal day when we came here, we were dripping
-with perspiration by the time we reached the top.
-
-“It is a walled village--part of the wall being formed by some of the
-buildings--having three entrances large enough for vehicles and a
-fourth one large enough for only persons or animals in single file.
-The main entrance, ‘La Porte du Bourg,’ opening to the road up which
-we came and which seems to have its ending in the centre of the town.
-About a quarter of a mile before reaching the town this road branches
-off to the left, winding around some farm buildings, and running along
-the outside of the wall overlooking the valley, and as it passes the
-rear of the village making a steep descent into the valley again.
-
-“Opening into this road at about the centre of the village is the
-second entrance, ‘La Porte du Val.’ While this entrance seems to be of
-less importance than the others, as it is reached from the inside by a
-narrow alley, yet it is well protected, or was considered so as regards
-weapons of mediaeval warfare. There are two towers built of heavy
-stone, one on either side of the gate, each with peep-holes at the
-height of a man’s head. Between the towers and over the gate the wall
-is about twelve feet high, so built that soldiers standing on a ledge
-running behind the wall and over the gate from tower to tower could
-fire down on anyone along the road, or who might be trying to approach
-the town up the side of the mountain.
-
-“Everything here is built of stone, of course, but with the exception
-of the more modern buildings there is decay everywhere. In many places
-the wall is crumbling and the houses are patched and crumbling and the
-thatched roofs are covered with moss, mould and dirt collected for
-ages. At ‘La Porte du Val,’ one of the gates which is still hanging
-being made of wood, worm-eaten and decayed, looks as if a slight puff
-of wind would blow it to dust.
-
-“There are a very few new buildings. Some of these are stucco and seem
-to be quite modern.
-
-“A large church stands near the centre of the town in whose tower is a
-clock which rings out the time every fifteen minutes.
-
-“There is only one or possibly two streets in the town large enough to
-be called streets, but there is a great maze of little narrow alleys
-running everywhere and crossing, turning sharply around corners,
-sometimes leading into a barnyard, and again plumb into the side of a
-building and others seem to lead nowhere. Sometimes you will start for
-a store just a block down the alley, when suddenly you find you have
-chased yourself right back to where you started from, having reached
-nowhere, not even the end of the alley. It is one of these that begins
-in the centre of the town where the street through ‘La Porte du Bourg’
-stops, and after winding and twisting around a bit leads you to the
-little entrance at the rear of the village from which a steep, narrow
-path leads to the Valley of the Ozerain.
-
-“The village is electrically lighted, gets its current from a little
-power-house down by the Ozerain River.
-
-“A convent building and grounds occupies a large portion of the village
-extending from near ‘La Porte du Val’ to the extreme lower corner of
-the town.
-
-“About half way between ‘La Porte du Bourg’ and ‘La Porte du Val’
-is another entrance, just inside of which is a large and very old
-abbaye. Both this and the convent are now used for the accommodation of
-tourists and travelers.
-
-“Just outside this entrance the Y. M. C. A. building stands. The road
-going from this entrance leads to the inevitable wash-house where on
-wash-days congregate a large number of women with large bundles of
-clothes and plenty of gossip.
-
-“There is a Post and Telegraph Office combined, as is usual in France,
-a butcher shop, several grocery stores, a bake shop, drug store,
-barber, tailor, milliner, wooden shoe maker, barrel maker, rope maker,
-numberless cafes and little shops.
-
-“Inside the majority of homes are neat and well-kept even where one
-room has to serve as kitchen, dining room, living room and bed room,
-often serving all purposes at one time. There are, of course, more
-prosperous homes that are as pleasant and comfortable as those we have
-in America.”
-
-This was our home for over five months. That time will be merely
-sketched, as it was a monotonous existence punctuated by flurries of
-excitement caused by rumors of westward bound ships with which we never
-connected. Imaginary Bolsheviki were driven from every hillside; the
-Campe de Cesare was the slaughter house for thousands of imaginary
-machine gunners; and drills and manuevres of every sort made up the
-schedule. Mr. McNab tried (and failed) to get us excited about the
-gentle art of rifle shooting. French weather was at its abominable
-worst. But through it all, if the writer may insert a personal tribute
-into an impersonal history, through it all there was in Company “B”
-a bunch of boys whom it was both a pleasure and an inspiration to be
-with. Joking at discomforts, chafing, but bearing with as much courage
-as it took to face the Hun, the seemingly interminable wait and showing
-a spirit, a snap, and a dash which overcame everything, you formed a
-body of men which was a privilege to command and a pleasure to serve.
-
-The month of March arrived, bringing with it the news that the 78th
-Division would return to the United States in May. The weather was
-still unchanged, but notwithstanding that they were slopping around in
-the mud and wet from the continual rains, and every “good rumor” that
-came floating around was eventually salvaged, the men were still in
-fine spirits.
-
-Towards the end of the month it was officially announced that the
-Division would begin to move towards a port April 16th, and on April
-6th it passed into the command of the S. O. S., but also came the
-rather disheartening news that our movement had been postponed for
-ten days, and by the time the 26th rolled around it had been further
-postponed until May 2nd, causing a downcast of spirits that had not
-obtained since our arrival in France. However it was quite evident that
-our time of departure was drawing near by the various preparations that
-were taking place, and when it finally became definitely known that
-we were to go direct to Bordeaux instead of having to pass through
-Le Mans, the spirit of the men took a remarkable jump and then, when
-it was announced that the movement from Flavigny would begin with
-Headquarters company’s departure on Sunday, May 4th, their joy was
-unbounded, and this was not noticeably marred by the last days of April
-being the bearer of the heaviest and longest snow storm that we had
-experienced. Saturday night, May 4th, Taps was blown by a quartette of
-cornets from the Regimental Band, and farewell parties were held in
-nearly every home in Flavigny.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-HOMEWARD BOUND
-
-
-At 7:00 A. M. Monday, May 5th, “B” Company “fell in” in front of the
-Abbaye with full equipment, and at eight o’clock, with the command:
-SQUADS RIGHT, MARCH, moved out with the remaining troops, from the town
-that had been our home for nearly half a year, and our long journey
-homeward had at last really begun. By easy marches we reached Les
-Laumes-Alesia Station at 10:00 A. M., where we were given a big dinner
-by the American Red Cross, consisting of a good beef stew, bread, jam,
-coffee (with both milk and sugar in it), apple sauce, cigarettes and
-candy, which was followed by hot chocolate and cakes given to us by
-pretty Y. M. C. A. girls. At 12:30 P. M. we entrained in American “60
-Hommes-20 Chevaux,” which we had lined with bed sacks filled with straw
-and about thirty-five men to a car, which proved the most comfortable
-ride we had had since our arrival in Europe nearly a year previous. We
-made several stops to get coffee or warmed corned beef. The trip lasted
-about 42 hours, arriving at St. Jean Station, Bordeaux, at 4:00 A. M.
-May 7th, from which we marched to the “Entrance Camp,” reaching there
-at 9:00 A. M. and immediately having breakfast served. The men were
-kept pretty busy during the day on various details, and the following
-morning, May 8th, we left this camp and marched about a mile to the
-“Permanent Camp.” The memory of this camp will probably remain with
-most of us by reason of the “MILL,” which was the first thing to which
-we were introduced and which consumed most of the conversation during
-our stay here.
-
-The MILL was well named in every respect. First we were marched into
-a “hangar” very similar to those used to house air planes. This had a
-dirt floor and after unslinging packs the men filed along one side of
-the hangar leaving their rifles in a heap, then filed back to their
-packs. Next they took their blankets which had been rolled together
-before leaving the Entrance Camp, and threw them in a pile. Next,
-everything the soldier carried was placed in his shelter half and
-carried thru a wicket gate, by which stood a long desk behind which
-were several men. The first asked your name and army serial number,
-which he wrote on two slips of paper which you had to sign. This seemed
-quite natural because no one knew what they were signing, and if anyone
-should stop to ask he would be informed that he would learn that in due
-time, a statement which no one doubted because no one thought any more
-about that phase of it, probably for the reason that about one-tenth of
-a doughboy’s time is spent in signing papers he does not know anything
-about, the same being part of his military training.
-
-The next man took the “dog tags” and asked your name and number and
-compared your answer with the tags; if they agreed all well and good,
-if they disagreed something was checked on the slip of paper you had
-signed and you began to wonder how many checks you would get and if
-each check meant an additional month in France, or an extra tour of K.
-P. The next man gave you a Red Cross bag which often brought a smile
-because of the name--“American Red Cross” was stamped in ink on a white
-patch on the bag, otherwise you would have looked for a deduction on
-the next pay roll. At this time someone in the farthest corner of the
-building called out a number which sounded like a cell number, but
-which proved to be nothing more than their manner of ushering you to
-a certain litter into which you dumped everything you had, from your
-steel helmet which had just been painted to your last handkerchief
-which you had failed to wash. The object of this being for the man to
-see if you had more than he did. If you did not have as much, he handed
-you a barrack bag and helped you to put all your things into it except
-such personal things as your pocket book, tooth brush, shaving brush,
-etc. These you put in the Red Cross bag, then handed your slip of paper
-to the man who then asked what you had in the barrack bag or on your
-back. If you guessed right, all right; if you guessed wrong he checked
-an item on the slip of paper.
-
-If you did not like your blouse he would give you a chance to draw
-again. If your underclothes were too large for you he would give you
-a chance to draw a larger pair, and so on. After you were all out of
-breath talking to this man, you hung your Red Cross Bag around your
-neck, threw your Barrack Bag on your shoulder and marched out of the
-door across a wood pile to another building in which was another long
-row of desks, and for a moment you thought you were going to get your
-discharge papers toote de suite, but these hopes were soon dashed to
-the ground. An officer handed you your Service Record, which seemed
-rather a strange thing because the company clerk said that he had it
-when you asked him the day before you left Flavigny. Struggling along
-with this in one hand and dragging your barrack bag with the other you
-passed down the line until you came to a blank file with a typewriter
-and a man behind it.
-
-Here you stopped and handed him your Service Record, after which he
-asked you your name, number, name and address of your wife or mother.
-He evidently wanted to know this in the event you did not come through
-the mill alive he could advise your nearest relative that you had been
-killed in action, or words to that effect. When you afterwards inquired
-what this slip was you were informed that it was a certificate to show
-that you had been through the mill. But why should they issue such a
-certificate before you had been through? Probably the government took a
-chance like the doughboy does when he signs the pay roll a month before
-he gets paid. If he did not sign re would not get paid and often when
-he does sign he don’t get paid, so “sanferriens.” Any way this man kept
-the Service Record, “mill slip,” and all, and you were ushered into the
-engine room.
-
-There was a great racket going on and your heart was beating like a
-trip hammer. You remembered you had not cut your toe nails for several
-weeks and you wondered if they would scratch your neck. You also
-wondered what part of your body went in first. Someone ordered you to
-move along, and along you moved until you came to a bin which reminded
-you of where your grandfather kept his potatoes. You looked around for
-the man who was administering the “Dope,” because you heard nobody
-scream or groan--or were some of those noises groans? Through the
-middle of this bin ran a railroad and in the middle of the track stood
-a man issuing orders, none of which you understood. Besides, the man in
-the bin behind you was talking louder than the man in your bin, so that
-you heard more of what he said than of what your man said; but after
-listening for a while you gleaned the fact that you were supposed to
-take off all your clothes, which you did.
-
-By that time two large doors in the side of the building opened and
-out came a car that looked like the ones they have in circuses to
-carry animals in, which was divided into compartments with numbers
-corresponding with the number of your bin, which were full of shelves
-and hooks. Into your compartment on this car you put everything you
-had except the articles in the Red Cross bag. This you still had hung
-around your neck. Everything had to be taken out of the Barrack bag;
-your puttees could not be wound; your underclothes and socks which
-you took off were not put in the car however. They said this was to
-kill the cooties, and suddenly you had a feeling of pity for the poor
-cootie. As suddenly as the car came out of these big doors it went back
-again and the doors were closed; then you were ordered to pick up your
-soiled underclothes and “move along.” A little further along you threw
-your soiled underclothes out of a window marked “Salvaged Clothes.” You
-were wearing your shoes but nothing else. As you passed out of this
-room you were handed a towel and as you entered the next room you were
-met by a couple of doctors who asked you if you had been to Paris and
-then refused to take your word that you had not. From here you entered
-the bath room where you had the grand and glorious feeling of a real
-shower bath, although the so-called soap was beyond description. From
-here you passed another long line of doctors that reminded you of your
-first day at camp, and then you passed into a room which reminded you
-of Gimbel Brothers at home. Your famous slip of paper which had been
-kept in your Red Cross Bag, now came into use and you began to learn
-the reason for it. Everything that your Supply Sergeant at Flavigny
-had refused to give you was handed to you here. First you were given a
-suit of underclothes and a pair of socks to take the place of the ones
-you had salvaged. Then down the line you went, getting new blankets for
-the ones you had left in the hangar, and new trousers for the ones you
-had said were no good, and even a new tape for your dog tags. From here
-you passed into another bin similar to the first one, and while you
-were putting on your underclothes out came the car with all your things
-on it, but everything so hot you could hardly touch them. Poor cooties,
-not a one remained alive to tell of what happened inside.
-
-After dressing, which you had to do in four seconds less than a minute,
-you stuffed everything into the barrack bag except your overcoat which
-you put on, and, with barrack bag over your shoulder and your slip of
-paper in your hand, you passed into another room. Here you handed said
-slip of paper to a man whom you could just see over the top of a heap
-of them, then passed by a man who examined the condition of your hair
-and then passed outside with the perspiration streaming down your face
-and marched about two blocks down the street to another building. There
-you completed your toilet and were guided to your company barracks
-which was either 212, 214 or 216, and there you set yourself down more
-exhausted than you were the day you marched from Florent to Varimont.
-But you were still in the army though not in the mill, and there was
-work to be done. The first detail was to carry all the rifles from the
-mill to the barracks. You were given dinner and then given more detail,
-and more detail the next day.
-
-Friday, May 9th, the commanding officer was notified that Company “B”
-would embark the next day, and accordingly, at 5:00 P. M. Saturday,
-May 11th, the company was lined up and marched to the American Docks,
-reaching them about 7:00 P. M. A peculiar coincidence it was, that
-during the greater part of this march it rained. It had been bright
-and clear all day but when we started on our last march in France the
-sky became darkened, with a heavy cloud, and shortly after we had
-started for the docks it began to rain and did not clear until after
-we had embarked. After reaching the dock, we were served sandwiches,
-chocolate, cigarettes, candy, and a handkerchief by the Red Cross.
-Miss Colby, the Y. M. C. A. worker who had been with us all winter at
-Flavigny, followed us to the dock and there bade us good-bye. She was
-not to return to America for several months. The rest of the Y. M. C.
-A. outfit had departed with Regimental Headquarters. Mr. Allen, the
-K. of C. worker who had been with us at Flavigny, returned to America
-with us. We embarked at 8:00 P. M. May 10th, on the good ship “OTSEGO,”
-formerly the Prince Eitel Fredrich III, one of the German liners that
-had been turned over to the American Government for the transportation
-of troops to America. It was her second trip in this service.
-
-The trip was long, somewhat tedious, and uneventful. The food was
-excellent, the best we had had since we had left home. The Azores
-lay along our route and we passed close enough to see some of the
-buildings. A couple of schools of small whales were sighted, and
-porpoises were continually playing about the ship. The third or fourth
-day out we began to have trouble with the boilers, which continued
-nearly all the way across, which accounted for the length of the
-voyage. On the morning of the 25th we passed the “Ambrose” Lightship
-and soon after sighted land. We expected to dock in the afternoon,
-but it was five o’clock when we entered the Upper Bay at New York and
-dropped anchor off St. Georges, S. I. Many small boats loaded with
-sight-seers came by. The Mayor’s Committee of New York City brought
-a band to play for us. The next morning, May 26th, 1919, about eight
-o’clock we weighed anchor and sailed up the river to Hoboken, where
-we docked a half hour later. We were given a light lunch by the Red
-Cross and were then put on a river boat and went to the West Shore
-docks, where we got on a train and went to Camp Merritt. It was a grand
-and glorious feeling to be riding in an American train once more.
-We arrived at Camp Merritt about 11:00 A. M. and had lunch shortly
-after. In the afternoon we again went through the mill or “Sanitary
-Process” and the next morning went to a different part of the camp,
-where the company was broken up into Casual Detachments. The men from
-most of the Southern and Western camps being assigned to Hoboken
-Casual Detachments, and the others into Camp Dix, Camp Upton, or Camp
-Grant Casual Detachments. We did not move out, however, until Sunday
-afternoon, June 1st. Passes were issued daily, however, and a majority
-of the men took advantage of this privilege and went home to visit
-their folks. At 2:00 P. M. June 1st, the Camp Dix C. D. entrained for
-Camp Dix, where we arrived at 7:00 P. M. and immediately turned in all
-our equipment and then marched to the barracks formerly occupied by the
-Third Battalion.
-
-June 2nd: All company records were turned in and Company “B” was only
-a memory. The days dragged slowly by until Thursday, June 5th, when we
-had our final examination. One incident happened at this time which to
-us seemed almost tragical. A Welcoming Committee from Elizabeth came
-down Wednesday, June 4th, three days after we entered Camp Dix, to see
-the Elizabeth boys, and upon inquiring at Camp Headquarters for our
-location, were told that we were not in the Camp, as they had no record
-of us. This probably was the reason why several outfits that arrived
-in camp as late as Wednesday were discharged ahead of us. Saturday
-morning, June 7th, is a day in the lives of the remaining men of
-Company “B” 311th Infantry never to be forgotten, as it was then that
-we received our final pay and discharge from the Army and once more
-became civilians.
-
-
-
-
- COMPLETE ALPHABETICAL ROSTER
- OF
- COMPANY “B,” 311TH INFANTRY
-
-
-Including all officers and men assigned to and present with the company
-upon arrival in France, and all replacements of men received overseas.
-
-The information shown in the following roster is compiled from data
-from the Company Records. The information regarding men who were
-wounded is taken from reports sent in to Personnel Headquarters of the
-Regiment by the Medical Detachment and Battalion Headquarters. All the
-information is shown regarding men killed in action that was obtainable
-from the records of the Regiment and from eye witnesses.
-
-All men shown as having joined prior to May 19th were with the company
-when it arrived in France; those who joined October 12, 1918, were
-replacements from the 86th Division.
-
-Men who were wounded or evacuated for other causes did not return to
-the company unless so stated. All other men returned to the United
-States with the company except a few who were kept at the port of
-embarkation on account of missing records, which was due to no fault of
-theirs.
-
-
- ROSTER OF OFFICERS ASSIGNED TO AND SERVING WITH THE COMPANY AT
- VARIOUS TIMES FROM DATE OF LEAVING THE UNITED STATES, MAY 19, 1918,
- UNTIL DATE OF RETURN TO THE UNITED STATES, MAY 26, 1919.
-
-Bell, John P., Capt. U. S. Inf.
-
-109 Dauphin Street, Mobile, Alabama. Joined company April 20, 1919, and
-was in command from that date until the company was mustered out.
-
-Colonna, B. Allison, Capt. U. S. Inf.
-
-c/o C. D. Jackson & Co., 140th St. and Locust Ave., New York, N. Y.
-Assigned to company late in the year 1917; was in command at time of
-departure for overseas and until September 28, 1918, when he left
-for detached service at Army School of the Line. Returned to company
-January 4, 1919, and was in command until March 1st. Left March 3rd
-for detached service with A. E. F. University at Beaune, France.
-Transferred to 5th Division April 11th and returned to the United
-States in May, 1919.
-
-Devereux, John C., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-413 Genesee Street, Utica, N. Y. Joined company April 6, 1919, and was
-in command from April 15th until April 20th. Returned to United States
-with company.
-
-Dunn, Raymond B., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-c/o R. B. Dunn & Co., Knoxville, Tenn. With company as a 2nd Lieutenant
-at time of departure overseas; appointed 1st Lieutenant in October,
-1918. In command from September 28th until October 9th, on which date
-he was taken sick and evacuated. Mentioned in 78th Division General
-Orders No. 6 for bravery on September 26th.
-
-Foulkes, Louis S., Jr., Capt. U. S. Inf.
-
-c/o Rochester Stamping Co., Rochester, N. Y. With company as a 1st
-Lieutenant at time of departure overseas and was 2nd in command.
-Transferred and made 1st Battalion Adjutant July 11th; made Regimental
-Adjutant September 28th.
-
-Gardenier, David, 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-Chatham, N. Y. Joined company October 29, 1918, and was in command from
-that date until January 4, 1919. Transferred and made 1st Battalion
-Adjutant April 6, 1919.
-
-Lahey, William S., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-520 Summit Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Joined company October 9, 1918,
-and was in command from that date until October 29th, when he was
-severely wounded in left side of face and neck by shrapnel while in
-support lines behind Grand Pre. Died of wounds October 31st, and on
-same date orders arrived appointing him captain.
-
-Merrill, Henry M., 2nd Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-72 Center Street, Brookline, Mass. Sailed for overseas with advanced
-party May 9, 1918. Rejoined company in Brunembert Area July 8th.
-Severely wounded in left foot by shrapnel September 24th while on
-outpost duty and returned to United States in October, 1918.
-
-Norton, Robert H., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-482 Clinton Avenue, Albany, N. Y. Joined company January 8, 1919. In
-command from March 1st to April 15th, on which date he was transferred
-to M. P. Corps Replacement Camp, Parigne, L’Evaque, Le Mans Area.
-
-Proctor, William S., 2nd Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-67 North Central Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. Joined company in April, 1919,
-and returned to United States with company.
-
-Schuyler, Roy A., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-(Andrew J. Schuyler, father), Pattersonville, Schenectady County, N. Y.
-Sailed for overseas with advanced party May 9, 1918. Rejoined company
-in Brunembert Area July 5th. Killed in action September 26, 1918, by
-shrapnel through head while leading his platoon in an attack upon enemy
-positions. Mentioned in 78th Division General Orders No. 6 for bravery
-on this date.
-
-Shanks, Thomas H., 2nd Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-654 Kempton Street, New Bedford, Mass. Joined company December 4, 1918,
-and returned to United States with company.
-
-Vanderbilt, Herbert R., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.
-
-17 Sherwood Avenue, Ossining, N. Y. With company at time of departure
-for overseas. Reported missing in action September 26th. Was prisoner
-in Camp Karlsruhe, Germany. Returned to Regiment in January, 1919, and
-assigned to Company “D.”
-
-
-
-
- COMPLETE ALPHABETICAL ROSTER OF MEN ASSIGNED TO COMPANY FROM DATE OF
- LEAVING THE UNITED STATES FOR OVERSEAS SERVICE, MAY 19, 1918, UNTIL
- DATE OF RETURN TO THE UNITED STATES, MAY 26, 1919.
-
-
- Accetturo, Anthony, No. 2040459, Private, (Address unknown). Enlisted
- March 29, 1918; joined company Sept. 9th. Taken sick Oct. 25, 1918,
- and evacuated.
-
- Ackerman, William, No. 1737299, Pvt. 1st Class, Miss Minnie Ackerman,
- sister, 941 Washington Street, c/o The Lutheran Home, Buffalo, N. Y.
- Reported Missing in Action September 26, 1918. Was last seen by Cpl.
- Sutton leaning against a tree with a large hole in his neck. Advice
- received from Central Records Office that he died from wounds Sept.
- 26th. He enlisted April 2, 1918, and joined company same date.
-
- Ackerman, William, No. 2451126, Corporal, 860 Fox Street, Bronx, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.
-
- Ahearn, Walter J., No. 2411094, Sergeant, Keansburg, N. J. Enlisted
- February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Albitz, Oscar, No. 3746398, Pvt. 1st Class, 928 South Third Street,
- LaCrosse, Wisconsin. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October
- 12th.
-
- Aldridge, Joseph S. Jr., No. 2414730, Pvt. 1st Class, 319 Union
- Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same
- date. Decorated for deed of bravery performed September 26th.
-
- Allen, Frank C., No. 2568100, Corporal, 309 Pleasant Street,
- Petaluma, California. Enlisted March 10, 1918; joined company
- December 9th. Taken sick December 22d and evacuated.
-
- Amann, Walter G., No. 1749246, Pvt. 1st Class, 292 Terrace Avenue,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Wounded by mustard gas burns October 22d; rejoined company December
- 16th.
-
- Anderson, George J., No. 1763315, Private, 24 Eddywood Avenue,
- Springfield, Mass. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Anderson, John A., No. 3752380, Corporal, Box 40, Route 2, Turtle
- Lake, Wis. Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Andrzejewski, Stanislaw, No. 1752094, Private, 176 Barnard Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Angevine, William A., No. 1748872, Private, 919 Park Avenue, Hoboken,
- N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Served with
- Railhead Detachment during campaign.
-
- Anness, Peyton R., No. 1746065, Sergeant, “The Belnord,” Broadway
- & 86th Street, New York City. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined
- company October 11th. Transferred to Depot Division, 1st Army Corps,
- A. E. F., July 27, 1918.
-
- Annibalini, Aldo, No. 652015, Private, 251 South Division Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
- Wounded in action (degree undetermined) September 26th. Rejoined
- company December 16th.
-
- Apicelli, Joseph, No. 2410760, Corporal, (Salvatore Apicelli,
- father), 1505 Somerfield Street, Asbury Park, N. J. Killed in action
- September 26th in Bois St. Claude, by sniper’s bullet through head
- while leading his squad to attack machine gun. Enlisted February 25,
- 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Arcuri, Carmine, No. 2450304, Private, (Reitano Arcuri, brother),
- 132 South Main Street, Port Chester, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action September 26th in Bois
- St. Claude, by sniper’s bullet through head while advancing with his
- automatic rifle in an attack on enemy positions.
-
- Ashlock, Newton C., No. 1757769, Corporal, Carrolton, Ill. Enlisted
- April 29, 1918; joined company April 26, 1919.
-
- Awe, John A., No. 3754195, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 4, Box 67,
- Greenwood, Wis. Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Baiano, Carmelo, No. 2451001, Private, Broadway, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y.
- Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Slightly wounded
- by shrapnel in right foot September 26th.
-
- Ball, Walter V., No. 2451462, Private, 356 Upland Avenue, Yonkers, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Transferred to
- Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, June 26th.
-
- Barnes, Earl, No. 1765247, Pvt. 1st Class, 444 South Park Avenue,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Accidentally wounded September 20th. Returned to
- United States in December, 1918. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined
- company same date.
-
- Barsamian, Hazar, No. 3329308, Private, 67 Minomona Avenue, South
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 28, 1918; joined company October 12th.
- Slightly wounded by shrapnel in head November 4th. Returned to
- America in December.
-
- Baumann, William, No. 1749247, Pvt. 1st Class, 147 Congress Street,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Bement, Mervin, No. 1752197, Private, Odessa, N. Y. Enlisted April
- 1, 1918; joined company same date. Went with 303rd Sanitary Train
- on Detached service in July, 1918; taken sick and admitted to Base
- Hospital No. 42 in September, and after recovering took up his duties
- with that unit.
-
- Benzing, John M., No. 1737291, Pvt. 1st Class, 1058 Smith Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Reported missing in action September 26, 1918. Was
- prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined
- company same date.
-
- Benzschawel, Joseph, No. 3754197, Mechanic, Route 3, Box 81, Thorp,
- Wis. Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Bernhard, John, No. 1749249, Private, 381 New York Avenue, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner in Camp
- Rastatt, Germany. Returned to company January 16, 1919.
-
- Bernstein, Barnett, No. 2409686, Private, Sixteenth Avenue, Belmar,
- N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Best, Harry C., No. 1737292, Pvt. 1st Class, 140 Zenner Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Birk, William, No. 1737293, Private, 610 Broadway, Buffalo, N. Y.
- Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in
- action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany.
-
- Bishop, Joseph, No. 2411096, Pvt. 1st Class, Everett, N. J. Enlisted
- February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in
- action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany.
- Rejoined company January 7, 1919.
-
- Blair, James, No. 1765248, Private, 51 Mineral Spring Road, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Bloome, Peter, No. 3336326, Pvt. 1st Class, Box 147, Annawan, Ill.
- Enlisted June 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Bloomquist, Gust W., No. 3332154, Pvt. 1st Class, 1712 Eighth Street,
- Rockford, Ill. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Blount, George L., No. 2451251, Private, 738 East 137th Street,
- New York City. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.
- Reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany.
-
- Boettcher, Walter, No. 2828102, Private, 868 22d Street, Milwaukee,
- Wis. Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Bogart, William D., No. 1747126, Pvt. 1st Class, 219 Catherine
- Street, Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same
- date. Transferred to 1st Replacement Depot, February 16, 1919, for
- return to United States.
-
- Bogucki, Stanley F., No. 1737294, Private, 95 Detroit Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded by shrapnel in left arm September 19th.
-
- Borg, Edward, No. 3750612, Private, Route 1, Brantwood, Wis. Enlisted
- July 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Boucher, Joseph A., No. 1748003, Private, 3644½ Boulevard, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in left face September 26th; rejoined company
- January 11, 1919.
-
- Boyle, Edward H., No. 1765249, Private, 1 Paul Place, Buffalo, N. Y.
- Transferred to 14th General Hospital, Boulogne, France, July 8th.
- Rejoined company April 27, 1919. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined
- company same date.
-
- Brand. Arthur F., No. 3329616, Pvt. 1st Class, 345 17th Street,
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Brenner, Carl M., No. 3746407, Private, (address unknown); joined
- company October 12, 1918. Severely wounded by bullets in left arm,
- right side, and compound fracture of right leg.
-
- Brooks, Bertrand G., No. 1749251, Private, 579 Central Avenue, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 2 6, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in right arm September 26th.
-
- Broomhall, Harry R., No. 2932965, Pvt. 1st Class, 849 East Avenue,
- Akron, Ohio. Enlisted June 27, 1918; joined company December 10th.
-
- Brown, Elijah E., No. 2083783, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 6, Aledo, Ohio.
- Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Buechler, Louis, No. 1749250, Private, 598 Tonnell Avenue, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Taken
- sick and evacuated October 18th.
-
- Burchell, Harold E., No. 1748085, Private, (Mrs. Kitty Burchell,
- mother), 621 Main Street, Paterson, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action November 4th by machine
- gun bullet below heart during an attack on enemy machine gun nests,
- near Les Petites Armoises (Meuse-Argonne).
-
- Burke, John F., No. 1752093, Pvt. 1st Class, (Peter Burke, brother),
- 2000 Seneca Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined
- company same date. Severely wounded September 26th by shrapnel in
- arm, back and hips during general attack on enemy positions. Died in
- Evacuation Hospital No. 12, September 28th.
-
- Butler, William G., No. 2414732, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Hannah Mills,
- foster mother), 821 Jackson Street, Morristown, Penna. Enlisted April
- 2, 1918; joined company same date. Killed in action November 4th,
- near Les Petites Armoises (Meuse-Argonne), by shrapnel, while runner
- for Battalion Headquarters and while on road carrying messages.
-
- Byreiter, John F., No. 1737296, Pvt. 1st Class, 59 Thomas Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
- Transferred to 311th Infantry Supply Company October 17th.
-
- Cahill, James E., No. 1749048, Private, (Miss Catherine Cahill,
- sister), 114 Monroe Street, Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action September 26th, at Bois
- St. Claude, by shrapnel, during general advance of the company.
-
- Calabrese, Dominick, No. 2451322, Sergeant, East Hampton, N. Y.
- Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.
-
- Campanini, Frederick S., No. 1748532, Pvt. 1st Class, Washington
- Street, Northvale, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same
- date. Accidentally shot in foot and evacuated September 16th.
-
- Campbell, William J., No. 1765250, Pvt. 1st Class, 42 Edson Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Cantu, Peter E., No. 3340909, Private, (Mrs. Adabell Cantu, wife),
- 910 West Front Street, Davenport, Ill. Joined company October 12th.
- Killed in action November 4th, at Les Petites Armoises, by machine
- gun bullets through body, while acting as company runner, during an
- attack on enemy machine gun nests.
-
- Cardell, Anthony, No. 1765251, Pvt. 1st Class, 14 Pembino Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Carr, Charlie, No. 3746410, Pvt. 1st Class, 608 North Ninth Street,
- LaCrosse, Wis. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Cassely, Joseph R., No. 1749067, Private, 710 Jersey Avenue, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date. Taken
- sick and evacuated November 5th; returned to company March 21, 1919,
- from Company “K,” 320th Infantry.
-
- Centofante, Natale A., No. 1748533, Pvt. 1st Class, P. O. Box 41,
- Northvale, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Wounded by gas and evacuated November 4th.
-
- Chiaradio, Samuel E., No. 1748534, Pvt. 1st Class, South Palisade
- Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same
- date. Slightly wounded by shrapnel in right shoulder September 26th;
- rejoined company November 2d; wounded by gas November 4th.
-
-[Illustration: 3d Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.]
-
- Clark, Earl B., No. 3527729, Private, 322 East Mulberry Street,
- Lancaster, Ohio. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company December
- 10th. Transferred to Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.
-
- Clark, Frank W., No. 1746104, Sergeant, 11 High Street, Elizabeth, N.
- J. Enlisted September 6, 1917; joined company April 21, 1919. Went
- overseas with company “C,” 311th Infantry.
-
- Closeman, Harry, No. 2076987, Private, 312 Seventh Street, Red Wing,
- Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly
- wounded in right arm October 20th. Rejoined company November 16th.
-
- Cobble, Clarence R., No. 3874973, Private, Route 2, Midway, Tenn.
- Enlisted August 5, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Cocker, Herbert M. P., No. 1750235, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Marjorie
- Cocker, mother), 17 McKinley Avenue, West Orange, N. J. Enlisted
- April 1, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in action
- September 26th. Fate not known.
-
- Colaguori, Pietro, No. 2411608, Pvt. 1st Class, 136 Westwood Avenue,
- Long Branch, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same
- date.
-
- Cole, Harry Lee, No. 1345828, Private, (address unknown). Joined
- company September 9, 1918. Killed in action October 20th, northwest
- of Grand Pre, during an attack on Ferme des Loges.
-
- Collura, Rosario, No. 2450663, Pvt. 1st Class, 34 Riverdale Avenue,
- Yonkers, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.
-
- Congelosi, Joseph, No. 2085786, Corporal, (address unknown). Enlisted
- February 27, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded in
- right leg by shrapnel November 4th.
-
- Connolly, Frank J., No. 2450135, Pvt. 1st Class, 87 West Carroll
- Street, City Island, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company
- same date. Taken sick and evacuated September 19th. Was later
- assigned to Co. G, 110th Infantry.
-
- Cook, Elmer J., No. 1748573, Private, Highwood Avenue, Tenafly, N. J.
- Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
- September 26th in both hands and head.
-
- Corbine, Charles, No. 3746635, Private, Odnah, Wis. Enlisted July 22,
- 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Cordes, Henry A., No. 1748874, Pvt. 1st Class, 119 Park Avenue,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Wounded by gas November 4, 1918.
-
- Cottrell, Alonzo, No. 2409690, Private, Institute Street, Freehold,
- N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Taken
- sick and evacuated December 24th.
-
- Cowser, Levi C., No. 1415491, Corporal, Goree, Texas. Enlisted May
- 27, 1918; joined company December 10th.
-
- Croft, Lawrence M., No. 1765253, Pvt. 1st Class, 20 Archer Avenue,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Culkowski, John E., No. 1737297, Pvt. 1st Class, 79 Townsend Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
- Transferred to 1st Replacement Depot, St. Aignan, France, for return
- to United States in March, 1919.
-
- Curcio, Joseph M., No. 1748875, Private, 719 Clinton Street, Hoboken,
- N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
- wounded by shell fire in right leg September 19th; returned to
- company December 19th; transferred to 1st Replacement Depot, St.
- Aignan, for return to United States March 10, 1919.
-
- Curtin, Matthew V., No. 1765254, Private, 2 Paul Place, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
- in left leg September 26th. Returned to United States in December,
- 1918.
-
- Czajka, Frank, No. 1765255, Private, 139 Weiss Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
- Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded
- in left hand and head September 26th. Returned to company January 6,
- 1919.
-
- Daeschler, Michael, No. 1765256, Private, 48 Lester Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Damato, Guisseppe, No. 1738115, Private, 35 Sidney Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Accidentally
- wounded September 26th, received 1st Aid and returned to duty. Again
- accidentally wounded October 30th. Returned to company December 18th.
-
- Danielson, John, No. 2084548, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted
- June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded in hip
- October 22.
-
- Dash, Harvey R., No. 1765257, Corporal, 93 Macamley Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- deBruin, Walter, No. 1746077, Cook, Elberon, N. J. Enlisted September
- 21, 1917; joined company same date. Burned by mustard gas October
- 30th, but was not evacuated.
-
- DeGrote, Walter, No. 2411100, Sergeant, Port Monmouth, N. J. Enlisted
- February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred to 1st
- Replacement Depot, St. Aignan, for return to United States, April 28,
- 1919.
-
- Deile, Albert, Jr., No. 1749050, Pvt. 1st Class, 83 Jackson Street,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Deleskie, Stanley, No. 2824994, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Mary Kuczeuski,
- mother), 2114 Front Street, East, Ashland, Wis. Joined company
- October 12, 1918. Killed in action October 20th, northwest of Grand
- Pre, by machine gun bullets while trying to cross road swept by
- machine gun fire, during an attack on Ferme des Loges.
-
- Denier, Louis F., No. 1738113, Pvt. 1st Class, 519 Glenwood Avenue,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
- Transferred to Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, February 20,
- 1919.
-
- Devine, Thomas E., No. 2450369, Pvt. 1st Class, 130 Old Pond Road,
- Beacon, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.
- Taken sick and evacuated September 2d.
-
- Diskin, James J., No. 2414736, Private, 418 South Broad Street,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in left leg September 26th.
-
- Dollard, Joseph P., No. 3204125, Private, (Edmund A. Dollard,
- brother), 124 Baker Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y. Joined company October
- 12, 1918. Killed in action October 28th, northwest of Grand Pre, by
- bullet wounds through chest, during an attack on Ferme des Loges.
-
- Donohue, John E., No. 1749068, Private, 179 Third Street, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Severely wounded in back September 19th. Returned to company March
- 29, 1919, from Company “E,” 53rd Engineers.
-
- Dreher, Walter A., No. 2821474, Corporal, 1135 Lincoln Street,
- Klamath Falls, Oregon. Enlisted May 24, 1918; joined company October
- 12th.
-
- Eastman, Wilbert A., No. 1976313, Sergeant, Route 2, Anna, Ill.
- Enlisted September 4, 1917; joined company December 10th, 1918.
-
- Edgerly, Robert E., No. 2816271, Private, Sauk Center, Minn. Enlisted
- June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Effingham, Harry, No. 2409695, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Howard Hartman,
- friend), Smithburg, R. F. D. 4, Freehold, N. J. Enlisted February 25,
- 1918; joined company same date. Killed in action September 26th, by
- bullets through body during general advance of company.
-
- Ellison, William J., No. 1750236, Private, (Mrs. Mary Wallenbeck,
- mother), 108 West Fourth Street, Watkins, N. J. Enlisted April 26,
- 1918; joined company same date. Died from wounds received in action
- November 4th.
-
- Ely, Eugene, No. 1749069, Pvt. 1st Class, North Drake Street,
- Titusville, Pa. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Was slightly wounded in left shoulder September 26th.
-
- Emerson, William G., No. 2413210, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 4, Canton,
- N. Y. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Taken
- sick September 9th and evacuated. Was afterwards a member of the 4th
- company, 4th Army Corps Replacement Battalion.
-
- Ennocenti, Alfredo, No. 3751617, Pvt. 1st Class, Box 59, Beloit, Wis.
- Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Erickson, Albert C., No. 3752633, Private (address unknown). Joined
- company October 12, 1918. Died from wounds November 1st received same
- date, caused by shrapnel in left hip and arm while in support lines
- behind Grand Pre.
-
- Erlandson, Gustave F., No. 3338575, Pvt. 1st Class (Oscar Erlandson,
- brother), Route 1, North Branch, Minn. Joined company October 12th.
- Killed in action November 4th, at Les Petites Armoises, by bullet
- wounds while in advance patrol of company during an attack upon enemy
- machine gun nests.
-
- Ertwine, Maxwell B., No. 1746060, 1st Sergeant, Ringtown, Penna.
- Enlisted June 26, 1917; joined company September 5th; appointed 1st
- Sergeant February 23, 1918; transferred to Depot Division, 1st Army
- Corps, A. E. F., July 27, 1918.
-
- Fahey, John F., No. 1765260, Corporal, 34 Weyand Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Fahey, Joseph H., No. 2414738, Sergeant, 42 Fulton Street, Medford,
- Mass. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
- wounded in action September 26th in right foot and chest. Returned
- to company November 22d. Decorated for deed of bravery performed
- September 26th with both Distinguished Service Cross and Croix de
- Guerre.
-
- Farry, Lester E., No. 1746072, Mechanic, (George E. Farry, father),
- Farmingdale, N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same
- date. Severely wounded September 19th by shrapnel in head and face
- while digging trenches, which caused his death in Evacuation Hospital
- No. 1 a few days later.
-
- Fay, Norman W., No. 2060023, Pvt. 1st Class, 52 North Long Avenue,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company October
- 12th. Taken sick November 22d and evacuated.
-
- Feeney, Patrick J., No. 1748877, Pvt. 1st Class, 821 Park Avenue,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in right arm September 26th; returned to company
- November 23.
-
- Fellows, Elmer, No. 2941531, Private, West Frankfort, Ill. Enlisted
- April 27, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Fergus, Morris F., No. 3533664, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 3,
- Brookville, Ohio. Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company December
- 10th.
-
- Ferrians, Frank, No. 2062094, Private, Sauk Center, Minn. Enlisted
- June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Fielding, William H., No. 1749252, Private, 138 Manhattan Avenue,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same
- date. Slightly wounded by shell fire in arm September 19th; rejoined
- company December 15th.
-
- Fischer, Jacob J., No. 1765262, Pvt. 1st Class, 369 South Park
- Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same
- date.
-
- Fleischmann, Gustave E., No. 2410771, Pvt. 1st Class, 1608 Park
- Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company
- same date. Accidentally received a broken leg during bayonet practice
- on drill ground in Brunembert Area June 28, 1918. Returned to America
- in August, 1918.
-
- Formes, Joseph H., No. 1749186, Private, 170 New York Avenue, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Was
- slightly wounded underneath left eye September 26th. Returned to
- United States in January, 1919.
-
- Freedman, Sam, No. 1752476, Pvt. 1st Class, 305 Adams Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Was
- slightly wounded by shell fire on September 24th.
-
- Frey, Albert P., No. 1737302, Corporal, 566 Goodyear Avenue, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Furlong, William E., No. 2420056, Private, 454 First Street, Troy,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 5, 1918; joined company same date. Was slightly
- wounded in scalp September 26th; rejoined company January 22, 1919.
-
- Gaier, Julius, No. 2410772, Private, 33 Montgomery Street, New York
- City. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
- wounded in both feet October 29th.
-
- Gantert, Othmar, S. B., No. 2084273, Corporal, 811 Fourteenth Avenue,
- North, Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company
- October 12th.
-
- Geoghegan, John A., No. 2414741, Sergeant, 177 Reid Street,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Glenn, Edward F., No. 1749253, Pvt. 1st Class, 165 North Street,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Transferred to Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, July 15, 1918.
-
- Goldberg, Israel, No. 2452893, Private, 269 South Second Street,
- Brooklyn, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company April 16th.
- Slightly wounded by shell fire in left forearm, September 24th.
-
- Golling, Paul E., No. 3341860, Private, Trochee, Alberta, Canada.
- Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Goodman, Max, No. 4245461, Private, 3751 North Irving Street,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.
- Taken sick December 21st and evacuated.
-
- Goodwin, Joseph F., No. 2450527, Cook, South Hampton, Long Island, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Transferred to
- 1st Depot Division January 20, 1919, for return to United States.
-
- Greenberg, Joseph G., No. 2414743, Private, 408 Jefferson Avenue,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Gress, Edward G., No. 1737305, Private, 184 Weaver Avenue, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick
- and evacuated October 14th.
-
- Griffin, Carl E., No. 2414744, Private, 720 Grand Street, Elizabeth,
- N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred
- to Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.
-
- Haegerl, John, No. 3750635, Private, Route 1, Box 77, Butternut, Wis.
- Enlisted July 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Hagedorn, Otto C., No. 3752811, Private, Route 3, Box 60, Fall Creek,
- Wis. Enlisted July 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Hallock, Charles F., No. 2451048, Private, Sag Harbor, N. Y. Enlisted
- April 2, 1918; joined company April 16th. Slightly wounded in left
- ankle October 20th.
-
- Halpern, Max, No. 1748878, Private, 924 Bloomfield Street, Hoboken,
- N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Hansen, Emil L., No. 3329369, Corporal, R. F. D. 4, West Allis, Wis.
- Enlisted May 28, 1918; joined company October 12th. Taken sick and
- evacuated December 21st.
-
- Hansenberger, John G., No. 1750237, Pvt. 1st Class, (George
- Hansenberger, father), R. F. D. Odessa, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action September 26th by shell
- which blew off both legs, during preparation for attack on enemy
- positions in Bois St. Claude.
-
- Hardies, William A., No. 2833530, Private, (Fred A. Hardies, father),
- 2231 Cortez Street, Chicago, Ill. Joined company October 12, 1918.
- Killed in action October 30th, in Bois d’Negremont, by shrapnel in
- head and body while in support lines behind Grand Pre.
-
- Harriss, Raymond L., No. 2450329, Pvt. 1st Class, Rhinebeck, N. Y.
- Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded in
- left side of face by one pound shell, September 23d.
-
- Hauber, George, No. 1737306, Corporal, 916 Clinton Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
- wounded in hand and leg by shell fire September 19th; rejoined
- company November 3d.
-
- Hayden, Alexander M., No. 1746070, Sergeant, 1129 First Avenue,
- Asbury Park, N. J. Enlisted September 4, 1917; joined company same
- date. Reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company January 27, 1919. Qualified for
- and attended the Inter-Allied Meet at Le Mans in April, 1919.
-
- Haynes, Wilfred E., No. 2411615, Sergeant, Eatontown, N. J. Enlisted
- February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Evacuated September 2d
- with injuries incurred on athletic field in July.
-
- Healey, James J., No. 2942194, Pvt. 1st Class, 116 Clinton Street,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Heck, George W., No. 2414746, Corporal, 306 Court Street, Elizabeth,
- N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
- wounded in left hand September 26th.
-
- Heichberger, George A., No. 1737306, Pvt. 1st Class, 109 Clare
- Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same
- date. Taken sick and evacuated January 3, 1919.
-
- Heiple, Loran L., No. 2941539, Private, DeSota, Ill. Enlisted April
- 27, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in left thigh
- September 26th; returned to United States in November.
-
- Heisler, Karl K., No. 1746305, Sergeant, 703 Broad Street, Beverly,
- N. J. Enlisted September 18, 1917; joined company January 5, 1919.
- Sailed for overseas service with Company “I,” 311th Infantry.
-
- Henne, Fred, No. 1747743, Pvt. 1st Class, 963 Lafayette Street,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in left shoulder September 26th; rejoined company
- December 9th.
-
- Hennessey, Edward F., No. 2405759, Sergeant, Highlands, N. J.
- Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Hess, John, No. 2060477, Corporal, 2860 West 22d Street, Chicago,
- Ill. Enlisted December 3, 1917; joined company October 12, 1918.
-
- Heymer, Louis R., No. 1749254, Private, 118 Palisade Avenue, West
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Received compound fracture left femur by shrapnel October 29th.
-
- Hill, Joseph L., No. 2420051, Sergeant, 218 West St. Louis Street,
- West Frankfort, Ill. Enlisted April 27, 1918; joined company same
- date. Severely wounded in both feet and right leg by shell fire
- September 24th. Returned to United States in December, 1918.
-
- Hillinski, Joseph, No. 2084238, Private, 300 Second Street, N. E.,
- Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October
- 12th.
-
- Hoeck, Roy L., No. 1346490, Corporal, 1635 North Crawford Avenue,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company December 10th.
-
- Hogan, George A., No. 1748879, Pvt. 1st Class, 1106 Grand Street,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Holly, Harold E., No. 1748541, Pvt. 1st Class, Demarest, N. J.
- Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Was taken sick and
- evacuated October 8th; afterwards a member of M. P. company 202, at
- Paris.
-
- Hughes, Eugene P., No. 1765263, Private, 1767 Seneca Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Wounded by
- gas November 4th.
-
- Hunterbrink, Charles A., No. 1749055, Corporal, 40 Thorne Street,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Huntley, Harry H., No. 2832015, Private, 1003 Wyman Street, New
- London, Wis. Enlisted May 25, 1918; joined company October 12th. Was
- slightly wounded in right arm October 20th; rejoined company December
- 9th.
-
- Huston, Henry L., No. 1750238, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 1, Hector, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
- September 26th.
-
- Jacobi, William, No. 1749056, Private, 260 First Street, Hoboken,
- N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
- wounded in left leg and right thigh September 26th.
-
- Janczjewski, Louis, No. 2833675, Private, 1115 Sixth Avenue,
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th.
- Slightly wounded in upper arm October 20th. Returned to United States
- in January, 1919.
-
- Janicki, Alexander, No. 1737309, Private, Box 90, Grotten Street,
- Forks, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in left hand September 26th; rejoined company
- November 21st.
-
- Jern, Erick P., No. 3332962, Private, 373 Marion Avenue, Aurora,
- Ill., C. B. & Q. R. R. office. Enlisted June 23, 1918; joined company
- October 12th.
-
- Johnson, Carl E., No. 3753096, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 2, Box 109,
- Grand Rapids, Wis. Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company October
- 12th. Slightly wounded by shrapnel in upper arm October 22d; returned
- to United States in December, 1918.
-
- Johnson, Charles W., No. 2941548, Private, Six Mile Run, Penna.
- Enlisted April 22, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
- in left arm September 26th.
-
- Johnson, Edward J., No. 1746078, Corporal, 258 West 128th Street, New
- York City. Enlisted September 22, 1917; joined company same date.
- Transferred to 14th General Hospital, Boulogne, France, July 8th.
-
- Johnson, Lloyd F., No. 3335191, Private, Route 2, Box 68, Balabon,
- Minn. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
- Transferred to Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, February 23,
- 1919.
-
- Johnson, Oscar E., No. 3754218, Private (address unknown). Enlisted
- July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded by
- shrapnel in shoulder November 4th.
-
- Jones, James E., No. 1746069, Corporal, 613 Fourth Avenue, Bradley
- Beach, N. J. Enlisted November 21, 1917; joined company same date.
- Company Clerk until July 21st. Fell from lorry July 21st, fracturing
- leg and ankle, and was transferred to Upper Southard Hospital,
- Dartford, England. Returned to United States in December, 1918.
-
- Josephson, Emil B., No. 3746707, Private, P. O. Box 115, Hayward,
- Wis. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Kahn, Leon L., No. 3337375, Private (address unknown). Enlisted June
- 26, 1918; joined company October 12th. Severely wounded in face
- October 29th and died from wounds November 4th. Buried at Villes
- Daucourt.
-
- Kane, Albert J., No. 1748880, Pvt. 1st Class, 1029 Park Avenue,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Kapacius, Ignatius S., No. 2821449, Private, 12120 Halsted Street,
- West Pullman, Ill. Enlisted May 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Kapala, John J., No. 2084048, Mechanic, 1321 Third Street, N. E.,
- Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October
- 12th.
-
- Karns, Jay B., No. 1765264, Corporal, 1899 Seneca Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Kaufman, Isidore, No. 2414750, Private, 356 Linden Avenue, Elizabeth,
- N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
- wounded by shrapnel in left leg September 26th. Returned to United
- States in November.
-
- Kazmierczak, John S., No. 2824702, Pvt. 1st Class, 400 Madison
- Street, Beaver Dam, Wis. Enlisted July 27, 1918; joined company
- October 12th.
-
- Kelley, Leandrew T., No. 3270643, Pvt. 1st Class, Bradleyton,
- Alabama. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
- Transferred to 78th Division, M. P. Company, April 8, 1919.
-
- Keyes, Paul, No. 17490 57, Private, 208 Harrison Street, Harrison, N.
- J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Kilbourn, Henry, No. 1745902, Private, Jamesburg, N. J. Enlisted
- November 19, 1917; joined company same date. Transferred to
- Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, September 10, 1918.
-
- Kilburn, Vallie J., No. 1752091, Pvt. 1st Class, Chestnut Street,
- Cardiff, Md. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Kindt, Edward W., No. 1737311, Private, (Mrs. Mary Kindt, mother),
- 257 Howard Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined
- company same date. Killed in action September 24, 1918, in Bois St.
- Claude, by direct hit of shell, while on outpost duty.
-
- Kitson, John G., No. 1749073, Private, 275 Thirteenth Street, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Transferred to Supply Company, 311th Infantry, November 13th.
-
- Klosiak, Stanley F., No. 1737312, Private, 1074 Smith Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in left knee and body by shrapnel September 24th.
- Was later assigned to Service Battalion Army Schools, A. E. F.
-
- Koegel, William, No. 1749256, Private, (Miss Caroline Koegel,
- sister), 102 Leonard Street, Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26,
- 1918; joined company same date. Killed in action in Bois St. Claude,
- September 26, 1918.
-
- Koehler, Herman G., No. 3337632, Private (Mrs. Mary C. Koehler,
- mother), 2418 Ninth Street, Rock Island, Ill. Joined company October
- 12, 1918. Killed in action October 30th by shrapnel in back, while in
- support lines behind Grand Pre.
-
- Kopec, Antoni, No. 1763333, Pvt. 1st Class, 96 Lenora Street, Depew,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Koster, Theodore A., No. 3744398, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 5, Sterling,
- Ill. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Kreiner, George J., No. 1749191, Private, 179 Hopkins Avenue, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company December 9, 1918.
-
- Kronhelm, Joseph E., No. 2829687, Corporal, 760 First Avenue,
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 28, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Kropidlowski, Peter W., No. 3752668, Private (John Kropidlowski,
- brother), Route 1, Box 14, Amherst Junction, Wis. Joined company
- October 12, 1918. Killed in action October 20th, northwest of Grand
- Pre during an attack upon Ferme des Loges.
-
- Krygier, Walter, No. 1737313, Private, 188 Coit Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
- over right eye by shrapnel September 19th. Afterwards assigned to
- Company “A,” 110th Infantry.
-
- Kuczkowski, Alexandre, No. 1737314, Private, (Mrs. Marion Kuczkowski,
- mother), 70 Woltz Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918;
- joined company same date. Severely wounded in right side and chest
- by shrapnel September 26th. Died in Evacuation Hospital No. 12,
- September 28th.
-
- Kuecker, Carl A., No. 2082342, Pvt. 1st Class, Brownsville, Minn.
- Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded
- by shrapnel in left arm October 30th; rejoined company December 9th.
-
- Kunferman, George, No. 3752853, Pvt. 1st Class, 611 Babcock Street,
- Eau Claire, Wis. Enlisted July 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Lambert, John C, No. 1748887, Pvt. 1st Class, 70 Gautier Avenue,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company December
- 9th; sailed for overseas service with Company “E,” 311th Infantry.
-
- Lammert, Will J., No. 3752450, Private, Verdi, Minn. Enlisted July
- 23, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Lander, Irving W., No. 2451020, Private, Stone Avenue, Elmsford, N.
- Y. Enlisted March 30, 1918; joined company April 16th. Taken sick and
- evacuated October 14th.
-
- Lang, Joseph J., No. 2409708, Private, 27 Ward Street, Maspeth, Long
- Island, N. Y. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
- Germany. Rejoined company December 16th.
-
- Lange, Fred C. H., No. 1748881, Private, 744 Park Avenue, Hoboken,
- N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
- wounded in right leg October 29th.
-
- Larkin, Philip J., No. 2825537, Corporal, (address unknown). Enlisted
- May 28, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded in right
- arm November 4th. Afterwards assigned to Company “I,” 320th Infantry.
-
- Larson, Olaf A., No. 2074383, Private, 1401 Washington Avenue,
- Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October
- 12th. Slightly wounded in right thigh by shrapnel, October 30th;
- rejoined company January 24, 1919.
-
- Larson, Oscar L., No. 3333579, Private, 2728 Longfellow Avenue,
- Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October
- 12th.
-
- Laurencell, Harry J., No. 1765267, Pvt. 1st Class, (Joseph
- Laurencell, father), 342 South Park Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
- April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Killed in action September
- 24th in Bois St. Claude, by direct hit of shell while on outpost duty.
-
- LaVigne, Harry, No. 2452392, Private, 300 West 17th Street, New York
- City. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company April 16th. Slightly
- wounded in left leg September 26th; returned to United States in
- December.
-
- Lawton, John G., No. 1328335, Corporal, Garnett, Hampton County,
- S. C. Enlisted April 5, 1917; joined company December 9, 1918.
- Transferred to 30th Division (with which he went to France) March 11,
- 1919.
-
- Ledwin, Joseph, No. 1752090, Private, 64 Zittle Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
- in right arm October 20th; rejoined company December 17th.
-
- Lehy, Howard C., No. 1746071, Sergeant, (Mrs. John Lehy, mother),
- Oakhurst, N. J. Enlisted September 4, 1917; joined company same date.
- Killed in action by shrapnel October 17, 1918, at La Folie Ferme.
-
- Leitzke, Edward A., No. 3750112, Private, (William F. Leitzke,
- father), Route 1, Box 37, Burnett Junction, Wis. Enlisted July 24,
- 1918; joined company October 12th; wounded in stomach and left arm by
- shrapnel October 31st, while in support lines behind Grand Pre; died
- in Mobile Hospital No. 2, same date.
-
- Lent, Arnold W., No. 3338546, Private, Stacy, Minn. Enlisted June 24,
- 1918; joined company October 12th; severely wounded by shrapnel in
- left wrist October 31st.
-
- Leonard, Cyril T., No. 2414752, Private, 34 Sayre Street, Elizabeth,
- N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick
- due to exposure in Limey Sector and evacuated October 13th; returned
- to United States in December.
-
- Letmolee, Kittel N., No. 2081589, Pvt. 1st Class, Perley, Minn.
- Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Levy, Joseph, No. 1746080, Supply Sergeant, Freehold, N. J. Enlisted
- November 12, 1917; joined company same date. Appointed Supply
- Sergeant April 12, 1918; transferred to Army Candidate School October
- 10th; rejoined company December 10th; transferred to 1st Replacement
- Depot, St. Aignan, for immediate discharge April 8, 1919. Mentioned
- in 78th Division General Orders No 6 for bravery on September 26th.
-
- Limbert, William D., No. 1755647, Private, (address unknown).
- Enlisted September 7, 1917; joined company August 16, 1918; wounded
- by gas burns October 22d.
-
- Lineski, John A., No. 2084164, Private, 1601 California Street, N.
- E., Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October
- 12th.
-
- Lipowsky, Julius, No. 4566070, Private, 43 Rutgels Street, New York
- City. Enlisted August 27, 1918; joined company December 10th.
-
- Long, William G., No. 1737317, Corporal, 668 North Division Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Lotesto, Rocco, No. 2822865, Private, 523 West 80th Street, Chicago,
- Ill. Enlisted May 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Lueders, Emil A., No. 2829483, Pvt. 1st Class, (address unknown).
- Joined company October 12th. Taken sick and evacuated October 20th.
-
- Lush, Adam J., No. 1749075, Private, 145 Eighth Street, Jersey
- City, N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919; transferred to
- Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, March 8th.
-
- Lusier, Albert J., No. 2409712, Cook, 228 West Hazard Street,
- Philadelphia, Penna. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same
- date.
-
- Lykes, James H., No. 2409711, Pvt. 1st Class (Mrs. Catherine Lykes,
- mother), 30 Bowne Avenue, Freehold, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action September 26th, by bullet
- through body during general advance of company.
-
- McAslan, Walter W., No. 2450787, Pvt. 1st Class, 407 Second Street,
- Greenport, Long Island, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company
- April 16th; severely wounded in right shoulder and left hip September
- 26th; rejoined company November 21st.
-
- McCarthy, Frederick H., No. 2411625, Pvt. 1st Class, 180 Brighton
- Avenue, Long Branch, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company
- same date; transferred to Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry June
- 28th.
-
- McCumber, Norman, No. 1751361, Private, 482 William Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
- wounded in right arm September 26th.
-
- McDonald, William, No. 2061019, Private, Curtis, Nebraska. Enlisted
- December 7, 1917; joined company October 12, 1918.
-
- McGarrity, Joseph R., No. 2411623, Corporal, 142 Bridge Avenue, Red
- Bank, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Severely wounded in left elbow September 26, 1918. Mentioned in 78th
- Division General Orders No. 6, for bravery in action on September
- 24th.
-
- McGuire, James P., No. 2407801, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted
- February 25, 1918; joined company August 16th. Slightly wounded by
- shrapnel November 4th.
-
- McMahon, James C., No. 1749077, Private, 178 Eighteenth Street,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in left foot September 25th.
-
- McMahon, William C., No. 1765269, Pvt. 1st Class, 48 Walter Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Mackley, James E., No. 2452441, Private, 117 West South Street,
- Frederick City, Md. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company same date.
- Severely wounded in right lower leg September 26th.
-
- Madsen, Christ, No. 3335322, Pvt. 1st Class, 718 West Hickory Street,
- Stillwater, Minn. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Magaski, William P., No. 3340770, Private, 2511 West Walton Street,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
- Accidentally wounded in shoulder October 22d; rejoined company
- November 17th.
-
- Makowiecki, Boleslaw, No. 1747860, Private, (Mrs. Jadwiga Makowiecki,
- wife), 205 Weimar Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action September 26th by shrapnel
- in body and head during general advance of company in Limey Sector.
-
- Malone, Edward M., No. 2414753, Pvt. 1st Class, 1019 Olive Street,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
- Severely wounded in back September 26th; rejoined company December
- 9th; again evacuated on account of old wound December 16th.
-
- Mandinach, Oscar, No. 4566060, Pvt. 1st Class, 556 East 105th Street,
- Brooklyn, N. Y. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December
- 9th.
-
- Marcinkiewicz, Frank J., No. 2833843, Corporal, 1326 Fourth Avenue,
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Martin, Charles H., No. 2085824, Corporal, 3258 North California
- Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Enlisted February 27, 1918; joined company
- October 12th.
-
- Martocci, Salvatore, No. 2670129, Corporal, 160 West 100th Street,
- New York City. Enlisted April 4, 1918; joined company April 16th.
-
- Maske, Louis A., No. 1760024, Private, (Louis Maske, father), 82
- Baumann Street, Rochester, N. Y. Joined company August 16, 1918;
- severely wounded by shrapnel in right thigh September 26th; died
- while on way to hospital.
-
- Meister, John C., No. 1748543, Pvt. 1st Class, Washington Street,
- Dumont, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Meltzer, Sam M., No. 4566099, Private, 241 Madison Street, New York
- City. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Mergan, Lewis W., No. 3746816, Private, 1610 Ohio Avenue, Superior,
- Wis. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Mero, John, No. 2414755, Private, 44 James Place, Staten Island, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date; slightly wounded
- in right leg September 26th.
-
- Miller, Michael J., No. 1737318, Corporal, 441 Emslie Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Morath, Paul, No. 1760050, Private, (address unknown). Joined company
- August 16th. Severely wounded in left leg September 26th; died of
- wounds (date unknown).
-
- Morelli, Angelo, No. 2411627, Pvt. 1st Class, 215 Jane Street, Long
- Branch, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Moroshick, Max, No. 4566061, Private, 488 Hinsdale Street, Brooklyn,
- N. Y. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Morris, L. P. Morton, No. 2410780, Corporal, 128 Heck Avenue, Ocean
- Grove, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in left foot September 26th. Returned to United
- States in February, 1919.
-
- Morrison, John W., No. 3747447, Private, Route 20, Winneconne, Wis.
- Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Mouser, Charles J., No. 2411111, Pvt. 1st Class, Lincroft, N. J.
- Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Reported
- missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
- Germany; rejoined company January 25, 1919.
-
- Murphy, Thomas J., No. 1764987, Private, 295 Bailey Avenue, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Evacuated to
- hospital in September, 1918.
-
- Murphy, Robert A., No. 2827853, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted
- May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th. Taken sick and evacuated
- November 1st.
-
- Nelson, Carl E., No. 2084434, Pvt. 1st Class, 1422 James Avenue,
- North, Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company
- October 12th; wounded (degree undetermined) in right elbow and
- forearm October 20th; rejoined company December 3d.
-
- Nelson, Otto, No. 3339872, Private, Route 1, Box 65, Stanchfield,
- Minn. Enlisted June 28, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Ness, Sander O., No. 3340000, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted
- June 27, 1918; joined company October 12th. Evacuated to hospital
- sick November 1st.
-
- Neuffer, Rinehart J., No. 1737319, Private, 50 Wagner Place, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
- wounded in left leg and thigh September 26th.
-
- Newell, Clendenon S., No. 1748544, Sergeant, (Mrs. Leona D. Newell,
- mother), 165 Leonia Street, Leonia, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action October 20th by shrapnel
- through head from shell which struck a nearby tree and exploded,
- killing him while lying in his tent, while in support lines behind
- Grand Pre.
-
- Newell, James McC., No. 1773758, Sergeant (Officer Candidate), (James
- W. McConnell, Uncle), 800 Russell Street, Nashville, Tenn. Enlisted
- May 5, 1917; joined company October 27th; appointed 2nd Lieutenant
- effective June 1, 1918, and attached to Company “G,” 311th Infantry,
- July 15th; killed in action October 16, 1918.
-
- North, Harry E., No. 3534857, Private, 1325 West 117th Street,
- Cleveland, Ohio. Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company December 9th.
- Evacuated to hospital December 21st.
-
- Norton, William H., No. 2414757, Sergeant, 1089 Magnolia Avenue,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
- Transferred to 1st Replacement Depot, St. Aignan, for immediate
- discharge February 13, 1919.
-
- O’Connell, James M., No. 2450203, Pvt. 1st Class, 2070 Eastern
- Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company April
- 16th; reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company December 15th.
-
- O’Gara, John J., No. 1749059, Pvt. 1st Class, 72 Garden Street,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Reported wounded September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
- Germany; rejoined company December 15th.
-
- O’Hara, William F., No. 2414066, Private, 267 Pearl Street,
- Burlington, N. J. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company July 15th.
- Killed in action September 19th by shrapnel through head, while
- digging trenches--the first death casualty in company.
-
- O’Neill, William E., No. 1749060, Private, 222 Willow Avenue,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- O’Reilly, John J., No. 2942195, Pvt. 1st Class, 1036 Willow Avenue,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Wounded by gas burns October 30th; returned to United States in
- January, 1919.
-
- O’Rourke, Bernard J., No. 1764989, Private, 78 Eleventh Avenue, New
- York City. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
- wounded in heel September 19th.
-
- Ohin, Carl L., No. 3341710, Private, Box 6, Osco, Ill. Enlisted July
- 10, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Osterweis, Dayton, No. 2411112, Sergeant, Hotel Endicott, New York
- City. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Ovrid, Imbert A., No. 3758119, Private, Caperon, Ill. Enlisted August
- 3, 1918; joined company October 12th; reported missing in action
- October 20th; was wounded by piece of rock being thrown against his
- knee by an exploding shell same date; rejoined company December 21st.
-
- Pankow, Arthur F. W., No. 3747293, Bugler, R. F. D. 6, Box 36,
- Merrill, Wis. Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company October 12th.
- Evacuated to hospital April 24th.
-
- Perry, George H., No. 1746063, 1st Sergeant, 75 Heck Avenue, Ocean
- Grove, N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date;
- transferred to Depot Division 1st Army Corps, A. E. F., July 27th;
- rejoined company October 9th; appointed 1st Sergeant October 10th;
- evacuated to hospital October 26th; rejoined company December 27th;
- transferred to 1st Depot Division January 20, 1919.
-
- Peter, Charles, No. 1749195, Supply Sergeant, 208 Sherman Avenue,
- Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date;
- appointed Supply Sergeant November, 1918.
-
- Peterson, Elmer J., No. 3334575, Private, Route 1, Box 9, LeRoy,
- Minn. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Peterson, Lawrence R., No. 1737320, Private, 54 Alma Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Admitted to
- 14th General Hospital July 11th; rejoined company November 1st.
-
- Peterson, Theodore A., No. 1746062, Sergeant, Manasquan, N. J.
- Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date; went on
- detached service with Division Headquarters June 26; dropped from
- rolls in January, 1919.
-
- Pettys, Levi M., No. 1752088, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 5, Cuba, N. Y.
- Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date; transferred to
- 153rd Field Artillery Brigade July 15th.
-
- Picciano, Michael, No. 1748545, Private, Maple Avenue, Dumont, N. J.
- Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date; reported missing
- in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany;
- returned to United States in January 1919.
-
- Pilarski, Walter E., No. 1737322, Pvt. 1st Class, 77 Townsend Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date;
- severely wounded in left apex lung September 26th.
-
- Pitarro, Frank, No. 2411636, Pvt. 1st Class, 216 West Front Street,
- Red Bank, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date;
- reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919.
-
- Pitzrick, William G., No. 3752487, Pvt. 1st Class, Barron, Wis.
- Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Price, Lory L., No. 2941581, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 6, Marion, Ill.
- Enlisted April 27, 1918; joined company same date; reported missing
- in action September 26; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany;
- rejoined company January 7, 1919; mentioned in 78th Division General
- Orders No. 6 for bravery in action September 26, 1918.
-
- Przyczkowski, Joseph J., No. 2833893, Private, 1041 First Avenue,
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th;
- wounded in left leg (degree undetermined) October 20th; rejoined
- company December 12th; taken sick and evacuated to hospital December
- 28th.
-
- Pushner, Jacob, No. 2954387, Private, 75 Bay Street, Brockton, Mass.
- Enlisted June 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Ranalletta, Achille, No. 3678854, Private, 531 State Street,
- Rochester, N. Y. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Rasmussen, Leslie L., No. 2832009, Corporal, R. F. D. 2, Belmont,
- Wis. Enlisted May 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Ratkiewcus, John, No. 2828386, Private, 2929 West 40th Street,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Reed, Thomas P., No. 2669133, Private, 80 Ravine Avenue, Yonkers, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.
-
- Reid, William M., No. 1746064, Sergeant, 114 West 39th Street, New
- York City. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date;
- transferred to Army Candidate School September 28th. Mentioned in
- 78th Division General Orders No. 6 for bravery in action September
- 26th.
-
- Renski, John J., No. 1737324, Private, 140 Coit Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded
- in right shoulder and neck September 26th.
-
- Richman, Fred, No. 4566016, Private, 8 Vernon Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
- Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Richter, Otto R., No. 2410784, Corporal, Lewis Street, Oakhurst, N.
- J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; served with
- Regimental Supply Company during campaign.
-
- Riedel, George I., No. 3747108, Pvt. 1st Class, Mosinee, Wis.
- Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Riess, Eugene, No. 2450873, Private, 141 West Sidney Avenue, Mt.
- Vernon, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.
-
- Riskey, John F., No. 3340152, Private, 924 Farrington Avenue, St.
- Paul, Minn. Enlisted June 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Robbins, Charles A., No. 1746061, 1st Sergeant, 150 Summit Street,
- South Manchester, Conn. Enlisted July 3, 1917; joined company
- September 7th; appointed 1st Sergeant August 1, 1918; slightly
- wounded by shrapnel in left leg September 26th; rejoined company
- December 17th; transferred to 1st Replacement Depot January 20, 1919;
- returned to United States in March 1919. Decorated with Distinguished
- Service Cross for bravery in action September 26, 1918.
-
- Rogers, George H., No. 1746067, Sergeant, Keyport, N. J. Enlisted
- September 22, 1917; joined company same date. Gassed September 19,
- 1918; rejoined company November 15th.
-
- Ryan, William H., No. 2413606, Pvt. 1st Class, 157 Chestnut Street,
- Red Bank, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same
- date; reported missing in action September 26; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919.
-
- Sanders, Will., No. 3662370, Private, Mott, Texas. Enlisted August 8,
- 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Sapienza, Sabastiano, No. 2830845, Private, 2910 Wentworth Avenue,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted May 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Sasso, Aniello, No. 2410785, Private, 110 Aitkens Avenue, Asbury
- Park, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Slightly wounded in thumb November 4th; rejoined company January 15,
- 1919.
-
- Sawyer, Elwood L., No. 1751858, Sergeant, 413 Morgan Avenue, Palmyra,
- N. J. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company November 13th. Sailed
- for overseas service with Supply Company 311th Infantry. Transferred
- to that company March 13, 1919.
-
- Schelter, John D., No. 1749263, Sergeant, (Mrs. Madeline Schelter,
- wife), 213 Terrace Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26,
- 1918; joined company same date. Killed in action by shrapnel
- September 26th while on outpost duty.
-
- Schiefer, Jacob, No. 1764991, Private, 93 Kilburn Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing
- in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany;
- returned to United States in January 1919.
-
- Schmid, Alfred, No. 4561896, Corporal, 756 Cauldwell Avenue, Bronx,
- New York. Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Schmidt, Jack, No. 2828065, Corporal, 787½ Fifteenth Street,
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Schmidt, Walter J., No. 1976622, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 1, Binkmille,
- Ill. Enlisted September 17, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Schreiner, George, No. 2832956, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Frances
- Schreiner, mother), 332 Seventeenth Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. Joined
- company October 12, 1918; killed in action October 20th northwest of
- Grand Pre, during an attack on Ferme des Loges.
-
- Schultz, Martin L., No. 2083969, Pvt. 1st Class, 1516 Grand Street,
- N. E., Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company
- December 9.
-
- Schultz, Walter, No. 1737326, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Mary Schultz,
- mother), 223 Metcalf Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action September 26th by machine
- gun bullets while resisting an enemy counter-attack.
-
- Schwenk, Michael A., No. 1737327, Private, 1012 Smith Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Sciancalepore, Louis, No. 1749063, Private, 229 Clinton Street,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Scory, John, No. 2481989, Mechanic, Box 94, Lansing, Ohio. Enlisted
- June 24, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Sculthorp, Warren D., No. 1746059, Mess Sergeant, 165 Riddle Avenue,
- Long Branch, N. J. Enlisted September 5, 1917; joined company same
- date; appointed Mess Sergeant October 1st; transferred to II Army
- Corps in August, 1918.
-
- Sculthorpe, Harold, No. 1746075, Cook, 25 Main Street, Asbury Park,
- N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date; burned
- by mustard gas October 30, 1918; rejoined company December 10th.
-
- Sheridan, Edward J., No. 1745938, Private, Ocean Avenue, Sea Bright,
- N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date but was
- afterwards transferred to Headquarters Company, same Regiment;
- rejoined company January 12, 1919.
-
- Sheridan, Leon J., No. 4563935, Private, 98 East Court Street,
- Cortland, N. Y. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company December 9th;
- transferred to Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.
-
- Shipman, Maurice, No. 3661183, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 6, Honey Grove,
- Texas. Enlisted August 5, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Siems, Walter, No. 2833423, Pvt. 1st Class, (address unknown). Joined
- company October 12, 1918; severely wounded by shrapnel in right side
- of head and back November 4th.
-
- Skillen, Edmund S., No. 1747131, Corporal, 155 Madison Avenue,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date;
- slightly wounded in left leg September 26th; returned to United
- States in December, 1918.
-
- Slover, Luke E., Jr., No. 2411118, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Eva Smith,
- friend), Main Street, Keansburg N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918;
- joined company same date. Killed in action in Limey Sector September
- 26th, by shrapnel, while carrying messages for company headquarters.
- Awarded Distinguished Service Cross for bravery in action September
- 26th.
-
- Smith, James E., No. 1738837, Private, 1146 Pierce Avenue, Niagara
- Falls, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company August 16th;
- evacuated to hospital September 2d; rejoined company December 17th;
- evacuated to hospital December 28th.
-
- Smogola, Anton F., No. 2833924, Private, 1039 Third Avenue,
- Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Sobol, Jacob I., No. 4561914, Private, 877 East 105th Street, Bronx,
- New York. Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Sokoloski, Martin J., No. 3330105, Corporal, 1016 West Denham Street,
- South Bend, Ind. Enlisted June 19, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Soldner, Raymond A., No. 1978502, Pvt. 1st Class, Kinmundy, Ill.
- Enlisted October 2, 1917; joined company December 9, 1918.
-
- Spensberger, John, No. 3306369, Pvt. 1st Class, 119 East 13th Street,
- Pittsburgh, Kansas. Enlisted June 23, 1918; joined company October
- 12th.
-
- Stankiewicz, John, No. 2086296, Pvt. 1st Class, 857 North May Street,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted February 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Stiles, Bert W., No. 2414760, Sergeant, 511 Fifth Avenue, New York,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Appointed
- Company Clerk July 21st.
-
- Storck, William H., No. 2932855, Private, Fiat, Ohio. Enlisted June
- 27, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Stringfield, Jasper, No. 3498489, Private, R. F. D. 1, Wheat, Tenn.
- Enlisted June 27, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Stuhser, Frank H., No. 3347505, Private, (Peter Stuhser, father), 728
- Second Street, Manasha, Wis. Joined company October 12, 1918. Killed
- in action October 30th by shrapnel while in support lines behind
- Grand Pre.
-
- Sullivan, John L., No. 1764992, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Martin Kelly,
- aunt), 141 Babcock Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918;
- joined company same date; killed in action November 4th, at Les
- Petites Armoises, by machine gun bullets, during an attack upon enemy
- machine gun nests.
-
- Sullivan, William, No. 3751681, Private, 314 von Minden Street, St.
- Paul, Minn. Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th;
- transferred to Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.
-
- Sutton, Lewis Z., No. 1745988, Corporal, 324 West Main Street,
- Moorestown, N. J. Enlisted September 18, 1917; joined company May 3,
- 1918; reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919.
-
- Suwalski, Jan, No. 1737331, Pvt. 1st Class, 102 Montgomery Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Sweeney, Hugh J., No. 1746066, Sergeant, (William Sweeney, father),
- 123 West Main Street, Moorestown, N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917;
- joined company same date. Slightly wounded in foot by ricochet bullet
- September 26, 1918, but nothing further was heard from him.
-
- Switalski, Ignatz W., No. 3329487, Private, Cudahy, Wis. Enlisted May
- 28, 1918; joined company October 12th; slightly wounded in left hip
- October 25th; rejoined company December 4th.
-
- Szymczak, John, No. 1737332, Private, 911 Smith Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Tannenbaum, David, No. 4566084, Private, 55 East Second Street, New
- York City. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Taras, Sebastiano, No. 1748548, Private (John Taras, brother), 128
- Central Avenue, Leonia, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company
- same date. Wounded in action September 26th (degree undetermined);
- reported died of wounds (date and place unknown).
-
- Tarlack, Bernard, No. 2060527, Private, 3128 Lincoln Avenue, Chicago,
- Ill. Enlisted September 19, 1917; joined company October 12, 1918.
-
- Tatoian, John C, No. 3329255, Corporal, 11700 Lowe Avenue, West
- Pullman, Ill. Enlisted May 3, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Tauber, Gustave, No. 2670074, Private, 25 McKibben Street, Brooklyn,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 4, 1918; joined company April 16th; reported
- missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
- Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919.
-
- Thompson, George M., No. 1746073, Mechanic, 210 Academy Street,
- Trenton, N. J. Enlisted September 8, 1918; joined company same date;
- reported missing in action September 26, 1918; was prisoner at Camp
- Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919.
-
- Tietje, John F., No. 4 561770, Private, 175 Park Avenue, Corning, N.
- Y. Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th; transferred
- to Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.
-
- Tuthill, George L., No. 2450789, Mechanic, (Mrs. E. W. Tuthill,
- mother), Jamesport, New York. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company
- April 16th; wounded in right arm October 20th; died of Hypostatic
- Pneumonia February 25, 1919, at Base Hospital No. 77, caused by
- wounds; buried in grave number 363, American Burial Plot, assigned,
- Beaune, Cote d’or, France.
-
- Ullrich, Lewis W., No. 2061989, Private, 3711 North Troy Street,
- Chicago, Ill. Enlisted March 12, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
-[Illustration: 4th Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.]
-
- Vafiadis, William K., No. 2412153, Private, 182 Broadway, Long
- Branch, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
- Severely wounded in right shoulder and face September 26th.
-
- Venche, Tony, No. 2411124, Pvt. 1st Class, Matawan, N. J. Enlisted
- February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Vermette, Gilbert W., No. 4563913, Private, R. F. D. 2, Malone, N. Y.
- Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Vieths, Friedrich G., No. 2082894, Corporal, Box “F,” Goodhue, Minn.
- Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th; transferred
- to 1st Replacement Depot, St. Aignan, April 6, 1919, for immediate
- discharge.
-
- Vorta, Nicholas, No. 2450906, Private, (Mrs. Agnes Vorta, mother),
- 1444 Edwards Avenue, Bronx, Westchester County, N. Y. Enlisted
- April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th; slightly wounded in scalp
- September 20th, received 1st Aid and returned to duty same date;
- killed in action September 26th by pistol bullet in head, shot by
- German officer, during general advance of company.
-
- Vrieze, Reuben, No. 2080897, Private, Route 1, Lime Spring, Iowa.
- Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-
- Viscuso, Frank, No. 1749080, Private, 641 Grove Street, Jersey City,
- N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Wallace, Walter R., No. 3659523, Private, Carlsbad, New Mexico.
- Enlisted August 5, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Wandry, Carl, No. 3347495, Mechanic (address unknown). Enlisted July
- 22, 1918; joined company October 12th; slightly wounded in right leg
- October 30th.
-
- Warner, Theodore H., No. 2450897, Private, c/o Mrs. T. W. Sadlier
- (sister), Quoque, New York. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company
- April 16th; reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner
- at Camp Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company January 16, 1919.
-
- Webb, William, No. 2409728, Pvt. 1st Class, 170 Jefferson Street,
- Trenton, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date;
- slightly wounded in right hand September 26th.
-
- Weber, Benjamin, No. 1746086, Mess Sergeant, 355 Joline Avenue, Long
- Branch, N. J. Enlisted November 19, 1917; joined company same date;
- with sergeant Welsh captured the first prisoner taken by the company;
- appointed Mess Sergeant November 10th.
-
- Weidman, John C., No. 1737335, Corporal, (Mrs. Justina Weidman,
- mother), 364 Watson Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918;
- joined company same date; killed in action September 24th by direct
- hit from shell while on outpost duty.
-
- Weinstein, Nathan, No. 4561941, Private, 603 Prospect Avenue, Bronx,
- N. Y. Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Wekony, Julius, No. 2059420, Cook, 4907 West Eddy Street, Chicago,
- Ill. Enlisted October 4, 1917; joined regiment October 12, 1918;
- joined company November 23d.
-
- Welsh, Edward J., No. 2409727, Sergeant, c/o Margaret Eisenberg
- (sister), 1719 Carlton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Enlisted February
- 25, 1918; joined company same date; with sergeant Weber captured
- the first prisoner taken by the company; severely wounded by seven
- machine gun bullets in right wrist and both arms October 20th; cited
- for bravery in Limey Sector; decorated with Distinguished Service
- Cross for bravery in Meuse-Argonne fight.
-
- Westlund, Gust V., No. 2074345, Pvt. 1st Class, 229 Twentieth Avenue,
- South, Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company
- October 12th.
-
- Wheeler, Raymerd, No. 2932858, Pvt. 1st Class, Peoli, Ohio. Enlisted
- June 27, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- White, Henry R., No. 1746087, Bugler, Center Street, Sea Bright, N.
- J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date; slightly
- wounded September 26th; returned to United States in December.
-
- White, Thomas A., No. 1764994, Corporal, 291 Babcock Street, Buffalo,
- N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- White, Tracy S., No. 2410793, 1st Sergeant, 1215 L Street, Belmar, N.
- J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Appointed
- 1st Sergeant November 10th; decorated with Distinguished Service
- Cross for bravery in Meuse-Argonne battles.
-
- Willett, Cornelius V. S., No. 2411126, Mechanic, Port Monmouth, N.
- J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; slightly
- wounded October 20th.
-
- Williams, Claude L., No. 1750243, Corporal, R. F. D. 1, Hector, N. Y.
- Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Williams, John, No. 1749065, Corporal, 116 Bloomfield Street,
- Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date;
- slightly wounded in left hip September 26th.
-
- Willmore, Herbert McK., No. 2941605, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 3, West
- Frankfort, Ill. Enlisted April 27, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Wilson, Carol, No. 2413196, Sergeant, New Street, Sea Bright, N. J.
- Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; Mess Sergeant
- from July 21st to October 20th, at which time he was transferred to
- Army Candidate School; rejoined company December 17th; transferred to
- Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, and appointed Regimental Color
- Sergeant, February 3, 1919.
-
- Winemiller, Robert B., No. 1746088, Bugler, 320 Tuttle Avenue, Spring
- Lake, N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date;
- slightly wounded in left hand September 26; rejoined company December
- 1st.
-
- Wise, Henry B., No. 2670038, Pvt. 1st Class, 215 West 101st Street,
- New York City. Enlisted April 4, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Wolcott, George T., No. 2411649, Corporal, (Mrs. Harriet Wolcott,
- wife), 214 Newark Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. Enlisted February 25,
- 1918; joined company same date; killed in action September 26th by
- machine gun bullet while rushing an enemy machine gun.
-
- Wolff, George C., No. 3454499, Pvt. 1st Class, 1808 Emma Street,
- Menominee, Mich. Enlisted July 14, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Wolfskeil, John E., No. 2414764, Corporal, 318 Linden Street,
- Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Wolley, Harry T., No. 2410794, Corporal, 132 Main Avenue, Ocean
- Grove, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date;
- slightly wounded in right hand September 26th; returned to United
- States in February 1919.
-
- Wolotkin, Benjamin, No. 4566100, Private, 24 Cannon Street, New York
- City. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Woolley, Francis P., No. 2411651, Corporal, 388 Columbus Place, Long
- Branch, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-
- Woolley, James B., No. 2409730, Corporal, Farmingdale, N. J. Enlisted
- February 25, 1918; joined company, same date; reported missing in
- action September 26th; was wounded and evacuated to hospital same
- date; rejoined company December 9th.
-
- Worsfold, Albert J., No. 3335949, Private (Mrs. Hannah Worsfold,
- mother), Stark, Ill. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October
- 12th; killed in action November 4th near Les Petites Armoises.
-
- Zalace, Dan C. Z., No. 3656966, Private, Eaton, Colorado. Enlisted
- June 24, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Zanni, Michael, No. 2450800, Private, (Raffaeli Santone, friend),
- Ardsley, N. Y. Enlisted March 30, 1918; joined company April 16th;
- killed in action by sniper’s bullet through head, September 26th.
-
- Zenzian, Kajetan, No. 2422045, Private, 437 Fourteenth Street, West
- New York, N. J. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-
- Ziefski, Frank, No. 1764997, Private, 224 Winona Street, Buffalo, N.
- Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date; reported missing
- in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany;
- rejoined company January 7, 1919.
-
- Zwolinkiewicz, Frank, No. 1737337, Corporal, 132 Detroit Street,
- Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.
-
-
-
-
-ROSTER OF THE COMPANY
-
- When Sailing Overseas
- Replacements from 86th Division
- Replacements from other Units of the 311th Infantry
- All other Replacements
-
-
-WHEN SAILING OVERSEAS
-
- 1st Sergeant
- Maxwell B. Ertwine
-
- Mess Sergeant
- Warren D. Sculthorp
-
- Supply Sergeant
- Joseph Levy
-
- Sergeants
- James McC. Newell
- Charles A. Robbins
- Theodore A. Peterson
- George H. Perry
- William M. Reid
- Peyton R. Anness
- Hugh J. Sweeney
- George H. Rogers
- Alexander M. Hayden
- Howard C. Lehy
- Wilfred E. Haynes
- Carol Wilson
-
- Corporals
- James E. Jones
- Edward J. Johnson
- Robert B. Winemiller
- Harry T. Wolley
- Edward F. Hennessey
- John A. Geoghegan
- Walter DeGrote
- Joseph H. Fahey
- George T. Wolcott
- Francis P. Woolley
- Bert W. Stiles
- Joseph Apicelli
- Frank Zwolinkiewicz
- Joseph R. McGarrity
- L. P. Morton Morris
- Tracy S. White
- Dayton Osterweis
- Walter J. Ahearn
- John C. Weidman
-
- Mechanics
- Lester E. Farry
- George M. Thompson
- George L. Tuthill
- Cornelius V. S. Willett
-
- Cooks
- Harold Sculthorpe
- Walter deBruin
- Albert J. Lusier
- Joseph J. Lang
-
- Buglers
- Henry R. White
- James H. Lykes
-
- Privates 1st Class
- William B. Ackerman
- Joseph S. Aldridge
- Earl Barnes
- John M. Benzing
- William G. Butler
- Dominick Calabrese
- William J. Campbell
- Samuel E. Chiaradio
- Herbert M. P. Cocker
- Lawrence M. Croft
- Albert Deile, Jr.
- Thomas E. Devine
- Eugene Ely
- William G. Emerson
- John F. Fahey
- Gustave E. Fleischmann
- Sam Freedman
- John G. Hansenberger
- Raymond L. Harriss
- George W. Heck
- George A. Heichberger
- George A. Hogan
- Henry L. Huston
- Isidore Kaufman
- Vallie J. Kilburn
- Harry J. Laurencell
- Frederick H. McCarthy
- Edward M. Malone
- Charles J. Mouser
- Clendenon S. Newell
- Bernard J. O’Rourke
- Charles Peter
- Levi M. Pettys
- Walter E. Pilarski
- William H. Ryan
- John D. Schelter
- Walter Schultz
- Edmund S. Skillen
- Luke E. Slover, Jr.
- Lewis Z. Sutton
- Tony Venche
- Theodore H. Warner
- William M. Webb
- Benjamin Weber
- Edward J. Welsh
- Thomas A. White
- John E. Wolfskeil
- James B. Woolley
-
- Privates
- William Y. Ackerman
- Walter G. Amann
- George J. Anderson
- Stanislaw Andrzejewski
- William A. Angevine
- Aldo Annibalini
- Carmine Arcuri
- Carmelo Baiano
- Walter V. Ball
- William Baumann
- Mervin Bement
- John Bernhard
- Barnett Bernstein
- Harry C. Best
- William Birk
- Joseph Bishop
- James Blair
- George L. Blount
- William D. Bogart
- John F. Byreiter
- Stanley F. Bogucki
- Joseph A. Boucher
- Edward H. Boyle
- Bertrand G. Brooks
- Louis Buechler
- Harold E. Burchell
- John F. Burke
- James E. Cahill
- Frederick S. Campanini
- Anthony Cardell
- Joseph R. Cassely
- Natale A. Centofante
- Pietro Colaguori
- Rosario Collura
- Frank J. Connolly
- Elmer W. Cook
- Henry A. Cordes
- Alonzo Cottrell
- John E. Culkowski
- Joseph M. Curcio
- Matthew V. Curtin
- Frank Czajka
- Michael Daeschler
- Guisseppe Damato
- Harvey R. Dash
- Louis F. Denler
- James J. Diskin
- John E. Donohue
- Harry Effingham
- William J. Ellison
- Patrick J. Feeney
- Elmer Fellows
- William H. Fielding
- Jacob J. Fischer
- Joseph Formes
- Albert P. Frey
- William E. Furlong
- Julius Gaier
- Edward F. Glenn
- Israel Goldberg
- Joseph F. Goodwin
- Joseph G. Greenberg
- Edward G. Gress
- Carl E. Griffin
- Charles F. Hallock
- Max Halpern
- George Hauber
- James J. Healey
- Loran L. Heiple
- Fred Henne
- Louis R. Heymer
- Joseph L. Hill
- Harold E. Holly
- Eugene P. Hughes
- Charles A. Hunterbrink
- William Jacobi
- Alexander Janicki
- Charles W. Johnson
- Albert B. Kane
- Jay B. Karnes
- Henry Kilbourn
- Edward W. Kindt
- John G. Kitson
- Stanley E. Klosiak
- William Koegel
- Paul Keyes
- Antoni Kopec
- Walter Krygier
- Alexandre Kuczkowski
- Irving W. Lander
- Fred C. H. Lange
- Harry LaVigne
- Joseph Ledwin
- Cyril T. Leonard
- William G. Long
- Adam J. Lush
- James E. Mackley
- Boleslaw Makowiecki
- Salvatore Martocci
- Walter W. McAslan
- Norman McCumber
- James C. McMahon
- William C. McMahon
- John C. Meister
- John Mero
- Michael J. Miller
- Angelo Morelli
- Thomas J. Murphy
- Rinehart J. Neuffer
- William H. Norton
- James M. O’Connell
- John J. O’Gara
- William E. O’Neill
- John J. O’Reilly
- Lawrence R. Peterson
- Michael Picciano
- Frank Pitarro
- Lory L. Price
- Thomas P. Reed
- John J. Renski
- Otto R. Richter
- Eugene Riess
- Aniello Sasso
- Jacob Schiefer
- Louis Sciancalepore
- Michael A. Schwenk
- John L. Sullivan
- Jan Suwalski
- John Szymczak
- Sebastiano Taras
- Gustave Tauber
- William K. Vafiadis
- Frank Viscuso
- Nicholas Vorta
- Claude L. Williams
- John Williams
- Herbert McK. Willmore
- Henry B. Wise
- Michael Zanni
- Frank Ziefski
-
-
-JOINED OVERSEAS
-
-
-From Other Units of the 311th Infantry
-
- Frank W. Clark
- Karl K. Heisler
- John C. Lambert
- William F. O’Hara
- Elwood L. Sawyer
- Edward J. Sheridan
-
-
-From 86th Division
-
- Oscar Albitz
- John A. Anderson
- John A. Awe
- Hazar Barsamian
- Joseph Benzschawel
- Peter Bloome
- Gust W. Bloomquist
- Walter Boettcher
- Edward Borg
- Arthur F. Brand
- Carl M. Brenner
- Elijah E. Brown
- Peter E. Cantu
- Charlie Carr
- Harry Closeman
- Joseph Congelosi
- Charles Corbine
- John Danielson
- Stanley Deleskie
- Joseph P. Dollard
- Walter A. Dreher
- Robert E. Edgerly
- Alfredo Ennocenti
- Albert C. Erickson
- Gustave F. Erlandson
- Norman W. Fay
- Frank Ferrians
- Othmar S. B. Gantert
- Paul E. Golling
- John Haegerl
- Otto C. Hagedorn
- Emil Hansen
- William A. Hardies
- John Hess
- Joseph Hillinski
- Harry H. Huntley
- Louis Janczjewski
- Erick P. Jern
- Carl E. Johnson
- Lloyd F. Johnson
- Oscar E. Johnson
- Emil B. Josephson
- Leon L. Kahn
- Ignatius S. Kapacius
- John J. Kapala
- John S. Kazmierczak
- Leandrew T. Kelley
- Herman G. Koehler
- Theodore A. Koster
- Joseph E. Kronhelm
- Peter W. Kropidlowski
- Carl A. Kuecker
- George Kunferman
- Will J. Lammert
- Phillip J. Larkin
- Olaf A. Larson
- Oscar L. Larson
- Edward A. Leitzke
- Arnold W. Lent
- Kittel N. Letmolee
- John A. Lineski
- Rocco Lotesto
- Emil A. Lueders
- William McDonald
- Christ Madsen
- William P. Magaski
- Frank J. Marcinkiewicz
- Charles H. Martin
- Lewis N. Mergan
- John W. Morrison
- Robert A. Murphy
- Carl E. Nelson
- Otto Nelson
- Sander O. Ness
- Carl L. Ohrn
- Imbert A. Ovrid
- Arthur F. W. Pankow
- Elmer J. Peterson
- William G. Pitzrick
- Joseph J. Przyczkowski
- Leslie L. Rasmussen
- John Ratkiewcus
- George I. Riedel
- John F. Riskey
- Sabastiano Sapienza
- George Schreiner
- Jack Schmidt
- Walter S. Siems
- Anton F. Smogola
- Martin J. Sokoloski
- John Spensberger
- John Stankiewicz
- Frank H. Stuhser
- William Sullivan
- Ignatz W. Switalski
- Bernard Tarlack
- John C. Tatoian
- Lewis W. Ullrich
- Friedrich G. Vieths
- Reuben Vrieze
- Carl L. Wandry
- Gust V. Westlund
- Julius Wekony
- Albert J. Worsfold
-
-
-Miscellaneous
-
- Anthony Accetturo
- Frank C. Allen
- Harry R. Broomhall
- Levi C. Cowser
- Earl B. Clark
- Harry Lee Cole
- Newton C. Ashlock
- Clarence R. Cobble
- Wilbert A. Eastman
- Morris F. Fergus
- Max Goodman
- Roy L. Hoeck
- George J. Kreiner
- Julius Lipowsky
- John G. Lawton
- William D. Limbert
- Oscar Mandinach
- Max Moroshick
- Sam Meltzer
- Louis A. Maske
- Paul Morath
- James P. McGuire
- Harry E. North
- Jacob Pushner
- Fred Richman
- Achille Ranalletta
- Alfred Schmid
- Jacob I. Sobol
- Jasper Stringfield
- Maurice Shipman
- Will Sanders
- Leon J. Sheridan
- John Scory
- Walter G. Schmidt
- Raymond A. Soldner
- William G. Storck
- James E. Smith
- Martin L. Schultz
- David Tannenbaum
- John F. Tietje
- Gilbert W. Vermette
- Walter R. Wallace
- Nathan Weinstein
- Benjamin Wolotkin
- George C. Wolff
- Raymerd Wheeler
- Kajetan Zenzian
- Dan C. Z. Zalace
-
-
-
-
-NUMBER OF OFFICERS AND MEN IN THE COMPANY BY STATES
-
-
- Original Company Replacements
- State Officers Men Officers Men
-
- Alabama 1 1
- California 1
- Colorado 1
- Connecticut 1
- Illinois 5 30
- Indiana 1
- Iowa 1
- Kansas 1
- Maryland 2
- Massachusetts 1 2 1 1
- Michigan 1
- Minnesota 23
- Nebraska 1
- New Jersey 115 1 8
- New Mexico 1
- New York 4 100 3 17
- Ohio 1 8
- Oregon 1
- Pennsylvania 6
- South Carolina 1
- Tennessee 1 1 2
- Texas 3
- Wisconsin 37
- -- ---- -- ----
- 6 232 7 140
- Canada 1
- Unknown 17
- -- ---- -- ----
- Total 6 232 7 158
-
-
-NUMBER OF CASUALTIES IN THE COMPANY
-
- Officers Men
- Killed in Action 1 35
- Died of Wounds 1 12
- Died of Disease 0 0
- -- ----
- 2 47
- Wounded in Action 1 83
- Accidentally Wounded 0 6
- Gassed 0 10
- Missing in Action 1 22
- -- ----
- Total--all classes 4 168
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF CASUALTIES
-
-
-KILLED IN ACTION
-
- 1st Lieut.
- Roy A. Schuyler
-
- Sergeants
- Lehy, Howard C.
- Newell, Clendedon S.
- Newell, James McC.
- Schelter, John D.
-
- Corporals
- Apicelli, Joseph
- Weidman, John C.
- Wolcott, George T.
-
- Pvts. 1st Class
- Butler, William G.
- Deleskie, Stanley
- Effingham, Harry
- Erlandson, Gustave F.
- Hansenberger, John G.
- Laurencell, Harry J.
- Lykes, James H.
- Schreiner, George
- Schultz, Walter
- Slover, Luke E.
- Sullivan, John L.
-
- Privates
- Arcuri, Carmine
- Burchell, Harold E.
- Cahill, James E.
- Cantu, Peter E.
- Cole, Harry L.
- Dollard, Joseph P.
- Hardies, William A.
- Kindt, Edward W.
- Koegel, William
- Koehler, Herman G.
- Kropidlowski, Peter W.
- Makowiecki, Boleslau
- O’Hara, William F.
- Stuhser, Frank H.
- Vorta, Nicholas
- Worsfold, Albert J.
- Zanni, Michael
-
-
-DIED OF WOUNDS
-
- 1st Lieut.
- William S. Lahey
-
- Mechanics
- Farry, Lester E.
- Tuthill, George L.
-
- Pvts. 1st Class[A]
- Ackerman, William B.
- Burke, John F.
-
- Privates
- Ellison, William J.
- Erickson, Albert C.
- Kahn, Leon L.
- Kuczkowski, Alexandre
- Lietzke, Edward A.
- Maske, Louis A.
- Morath, Paul
- Taras, Sebastiano
-
-
-GASSED
-
- Sergeant
- Rogers, George H.
-
- Cooks
- deBruin, Walter
- Sculthorpe, Harold
-
- Pvts. 1st Class
- Amann, Walter G.
- Centofante, Natale A.
- Chiaradio, Samuel E.
- Cordes, Henry A.
- O’Reilly, John J.
-
- Privates
- Hughes, Eugene P.
- Limbert, William D.
-
-
-ACCIDENTALLY WOUNDED
-
- Corporal
- Jones, James E.
-
- Pvts. 1st Class
- Barnes, Earl
- Campanini, Frederick S.
- Fleischmann, Gustave E.
-
- Privates
- Damato, Guisseppe
- Magaski, William P.
-
-
-WOUNDED IN ACTION
-
- 2nd Lieut.
- Henry M. Merrill
-
- 1st Sergeant
- Charles A. Robbins
-
- Sergeants
- Fahey, Joseph H.
- Hill, Joseph L.
- Sweeney, Hugh J.
- Welsh, Edward J.
-
- Corporals
- Congelosi, Joseph
- Hauber, George
- Heck, George W.
- Larkin, Phillip J.
- McGarrity, Joseph R.
- Morris, L. P. Morton
- Skillen, Edmund S.
- Williams, John
- Wolley, Harry T.
- Woolley, James B.
-
- Mechanics
- Wandry, Carl L.
- Willett, Cornelius
-
- Buglers
- Winemiller, Robert B.
- White, Henry R.
-
- Pvts. 1st Class
- Chiaradio, Samuel E.
- Ely, Eugene
- Feeney, Patrick J.
- Freedman, Sam
- Harriss, Raymond L.
- Henne, Fred
- Huston, Henry L.
- Johnson, Carl E.
- Kaufman, Isidore
- Kuecker, Carl A.
- McAslan, Walter W.
- Malone, Edward M.
- Nelson, Carl E.
- O’Rourke, Bernard J.
- Pilarski, Walter E.
- Siems, Walter S.
- Webb, William M.
-
- Privates
- Annibalini, Aldo
- Baiano, Carmelo
- Barsamian, Hazar
- Bogucki, Stanley F.
- Boucher, Joseph A.
- Brenner, Carl M.
- Brooks, Bertrand G.
- Cook, Elmer W.
- Curcio, Joseph M.
- Curtin, Matthew V.
- Czajka, Frank
- Danielson, John
- Diskin, James J.
- Donohue, John E.
- Fielding, William H.
- Formes, Joseph
- Furlong, William E.
- Gaier, Julius
- Goldberg, Israel
- Hallock, Charles F.
- Heiple, Loran L.
- Heymer, Louis R.
- Huntley, Harry H.
- Jacobi, William
- Janczjewski, Louis
- Janicki, Alexander
- Johnson, Charles W.
- Johnson, Oscar E.
- Klosiak, Stanley E.
- Krygier, Walter
- Lange, Fred. C. H.
- Larson, Olaf A.
- LaVigne, Harry
- Ledwin, Joseph
- Lent, Arnold W.
- McCumber, Norman
- McGuire, James P.
- McMahon, James C.
- Mackley, James E.
- Mero, John
- Neuffer, Rinehart J.
- Ovrid, Imbert A.
- Przyczkowski, Joseph J.
- Renski, John J.
- Sasso, Aniello
- Switalski, Ignatz W.
- Vafiadis, William K.
-
-[B]MISSING IN ACTION
-
- 1st Lieut.
- Herbert R. Vanderbilt
-
- Sergeant
- Hayden, Alexander M.
-
- Corporal
- Sutton, Lewis Z.
-
- Mechanic
- Thompson, George M.
-
- Pvts. 1st Class
- Benzing, John M.[C]
- Cocker, Herbert M. P.
- Mouser, Charles J.
- O’Connell, James M.[D]
- O’Gara, John J.
- Pitarro, Frank
- Price, Lory L.
- Ryan, William H.
-
- Privates
- Bernhard, John
- Birk, William
- Bishop, Joseph
- Blount, George L.
- Lang, Joseph J.
- Lush, Adam J.
- Picciano, Michael
- Schiefer, Jacob
- Tauber, Gustave
- Warner, Theodore H.
- Ziefski, Frank
-
-
-
-
-MEMBERS OF COMPANY “B,” 311TH INFANTRY WHO WERE DECORATED WITH THE
-DISTINGUISHED SERVICE CROSS.
-
-
-FIRST SERGEANT, CHARLES A. ROBBINS.
-
-On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two kilometers
-northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, Sergeant Bobbins, although painfully
-wounded in the knee, during advance, he continued to the objective,
-rendered valuable assistance in reorganizing his company and refused to
-retire until ordered to do so by Company Commander. He thereupon helped
-to carry several other wounded to the First Aid Station before his own
-condition was observed and he was evacuated.
-
-FIRST SERGEANT, TRACY S. WHITE.
-
-For extraordinary heroism in action near Ferme des Loges, France, 19th
-October, 1918. When the position his company held was enfiladed and
-communication to the rear cut off, he volunteered to carry a message to
-the battalion commander after several runners had been killed in the
-attempt. Crossing ground swept by intense machine gun and artillery
-fire, he delivered the message and returned with orders as to the
-disposition of the company.
-
-SERGEANT, JOSEPH H. FAHEY.
-
-On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two kilometers
-northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, when his platoon was enfiladed by
-several enemy machine guns, made three attempts to rush same, retiring
-only when he and his companions had been badly wounded or killed.
-
-Sergeant Fahey was also decorated with the French Croix de Guerre.
-
-SERGEANT, EDWARD J. WELSH.
-
-On September 24, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two kilometers
-northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, while his platoon was holding the
-outpost line, under heavy shell fire and in the open, Sergeant (then
-Corporal) Welsh’s platoon commander and all platoon sergeants were
-killed or wounded. He promptly took charge, reorganizing his platoon,
-and held his sector until relieved.
-
-PRIVATE 1st CLASS, JOSEPH S. ALDRIDGE, JR.
-
-On the night of September 24-25, 1918, at Bois de Grande, Fontaine,
-two kilometers northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, Pvt. 1st Class Aldridge
-carried messages repeatedly between Company and Battalion Headquarters
-through a heavy enemy barrage; also took place of a wounded litter
-bearer and brought in wounded under shell fire.
-
-PRIVATE 1st CLASS, LUKE E. SLOVER, JR. (Deceased).
-
-On the night of September 24-25, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two
-kilometers northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, Private 1st Class Slover
-carried messages repeatedly between Company and Battalion Headquarters
-through a heavy enemy barrage; also took place of a wounded litter
-bearer and brought in wounded under heavy shell fire.
-
-
-
-
-MEMBERS OF COMPANY “B,” 311TH INFANTRY MENTIONED IN 78TH DIVISION
-GENERAL ORDERS NO. 6
-
-
-EXTRACT: “The Division Commander desires to record in the General
-Orders of the 78th Division some of the deeds of men of this command
-which were marked by the display of the highest of soldierly
-qualities--initiative, dauntless courage, self-sacrifice and steadfast
-devotion to duty which offered a constant inspiration to all who
-came to have knowledge thereof and which contributed largely, in the
-aggregate, to the success of the division’s operations against the
-enemy.”
-
-1st LIEUT. ROY A. SCHUYLER, (Deceased)
-
-On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, after holding
-outpost line with his platoon for three days under continuous shell
-fire, without shelter and under most trying weather conditions on being
-ordered to advance, led his men with most conspicuous gallantry through
-a heavy barrage, took his objective, reorganized his command, where,
-while posting men in observation in front of his position, with utmost
-disregard of his personal safety, he was killed.
-
-2nd LIEUT. RAYMOND B. DUNN.
-
-On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, advanced with his
-platoon through heavy enemy barrage; after heavy losses joined company
-at objective with remaining five men, showing great coolness and
-courage in organizing and defending new position under fire.
-
-SERGEANT WILLIAM M. REID.
-
-On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, after his platoon
-leader was killed, took command of platoon and handled same most
-gallantly and efficiently, repulsing two enemy counter-attacks.
-
-SUPPLY SERGEANT JOSEPH LEVY.
-
-On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, exhibited continuous
-gallantry in action. Several times he brought up ration parties through
-heavy shell fire to the outpost line. During enemy counter-attacks he
-assisted company commander to reorganize right flank of company.
-
-CORPORAL JOSEPH R. McGARRITY.
-
-On September 24, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, when his platoon
-leader and sergeants were killed or wounded, assisted Corporal Welsh
-to reorganize his platoon under heavy shell fire, and to hold position
-until relieved.
-
-PRIVATE LORY L. PRICE.
-
-On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, being posted to
-cover his company’s left flank with his automatic rifle, held his post
-under heavy shelling and machine gun and rifle fire and was mainly
-responsible for repulsing repeated enemy counter-attacks from 6:00 A.
-M. to 6 P. M. He thus set for his comrades a remarkable example of
-devotion to duty and cool and unhesitating self-sacrifice.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] Reported missing in action.
-
-[B] Taken prisoners and were released after the signing of the
-armistice.
-
-[C] The writer was unable to learn what became of Cocker.
-
-[D] Reported wounded.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF COMPANY B, 311TH
-INFANTRY IN THE WORLD WAR ***
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The history of Company B, 311th Infantry in the World War, by B. Allison Colonna</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The history of Company B, 311th Infantry in the World War</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: B. Allison Colonna</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Contributors: Bert W. Stiles</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>David Gardenier</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>Charles Peter</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>Tracy S. White</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 16, 2022 [eBook #68333]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: David E. Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF COMPANY B, 311TH INFANTRY IN THE WORLD WAR ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i002.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Capt. Colonna and Lt. Foulkes at Camp Dix, 1918.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>THE HISTORY<br />
-<span class="small">OF</span><br />
-COMPANY B, 311th INFANTRY<br />
-<span class="small">IN THE</span><br />
-WORLD WAR.</h1>
-
-<p>Edited by<br />
-B. A. Colonna<br />
-with contributions by David Gardenier, Charles Peter,<br />
-and Tracy S. White.</p>
-
-<p>Statistics compiled by Bert W. Stiles.</p>
-
-<p>FREEHOLD, N. J.<br />
-TRANSCRIPT PRINTING HOUSE,<br />
-1922</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1922,<br />
-BY B. A. COLONNA AND B. W. STILES.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2">Page</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Introduction</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter I—Madison Barracks</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_6">6</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter II—Camp Dix</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter III—The Cruise of the “NESTOR”</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter IV—The English Sector</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter V—The American Sector</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter VI—St. Mihiel and Limey Sector</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter VII—Meuse-Argonne</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter VIII—Flavigny-sur-Ozerain</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Chapter IX—Homeward Bound</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Alphabetical Roster of Officers</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Alphabetical Roster of Enlisted Men</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Classified Rosters</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Number of Officers and Men by States</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Lists of Casualties</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Decorations</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Extracts from General Orders No. 6</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>You, my comrades of the past two years, for whom this history is written,
-know that I have but small gift of expression at any time, and least of all for
-the things closest to my heart. At your request, however, made when we parted
-for the last time, I am writing the story of our company. I shall do my best to
-put down everything as it occurred, so far as my knowledge and memory will
-serve; and I trust that if the matter is true, you will overlook crudeness in
-the form.</p>
-
-<p>“Company B, 311th Infantry”—Only a letter and a number? Only one
-company out of the hundreds in the National Army? Yes, to outsiders; but to
-me, and I trust and believe to you, Company B was a living and vital being,
-composed of part of what was best in each of us. Its official life was twenty
-months; in that time it was born, grew to full strength, was trained, travelled
-some 7500 miles, fulfilled its destiny—fought, suffered, lost; and finally returned
-to its birthplace and was mustered out. But the spirit of B Company is
-still with each of us, and not a man but has carried away more than he gave.</p>
-
-<p>Relatively, B Company was a very small part of the army. But to us, it
-was the army; just as we shall always think of the war in terms of St. Mihiel
-and the Argonne. We have heard of the Marne, Ypres, Verdun, Chateau
-Thierry; but every man sees the war through his own eyes.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason, I am writing in the first person. The best I can do is to
-relate things as I saw them so I shall not take refuge behind an artificial
-impersonality. Probably a good many things were pulled off that I did not
-know anything about. And then you may discover that I knew more about
-some little matters than you thought I did.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-MADISON BARRACKS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>On May 5, 1917, I reported for duty at the Officers’ Training Camp at
-Madison Barracks, New York, with a commission as Second Lieutenant of
-Infantry in the Reserve Corps. My call to active duty had cut short my law
-course at Columbia University two months before I was to take my degree.</p>
-
-<p>Having graduated three years before from the Virginia Military Institute,
-and served there a year as sub-professor of German and tactics, I had some
-idea of the fundamental principles of military training; but, like almost all the
-other reserve officers, army paper work and administration was a closed book
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>A few days later I was told off to report to Capt. Haynes Odom, U. S. R.,
-commanding Co. 5 of the 2d Provisional Training Regt. Capt. Odom was
-already conspicuous among the batch of reserve officers for his efficiency and
-tireless energy and industry. The tall, upstanding figure, with the mark of the
-regular army man indelibly stamped upon him; the head carried well back;
-the weather-worn, sun-wrinkled face, the hooked nose, cool hazel eyes; the
-smile that accompanied alike a friendly greeting or a merciless balling out;
-the soft Southern accent indescribably harshened by thousands of commands
-given—do you recognize the Major, boys?</p>
-
-<p>The three long, hot, arduous months of training at Madison Barracks can
-be passed over briefly. My cot in the long frame barrack was next to that of a
-tall, lithe, black haired lad from Rochester, N. Y., with the merriest, keenest,
-black eyes I ever saw. Before a week went by he stood out above the average
-candidate. He was young, just twenty-one—I was at the venerable
-age of twenty-two. But he had the keenest, quickest, practical mind I have
-ever met, and the gift of natural leadership, which is compounded of courage,
-intelligence, unselfish sympathy, and a sense of humor. He had graduated
-from Cornell in 1916. Later you knew him as 1st Lieut. Louis Sinclair
-Foulkes, the best officer in “B” Company; the best officer it was my fortune to
-come in contact with during the war.</p>
-
-<p>One of the training companies was organized as a cavalry troop. We saw
-them now and then being led in physical drill by a handsome, muscular young
-chap, so alive and vibrant with nervous energy that it was good to watch him
-work. He was Roy A. Schuyler, of Schenectady, a graduate of Union College,
-and a descendant of that General Schuyler whose record in the Revolutionary
-War makes so bright a page in American history. Brilliant, impulsive, generous,
-full of the joy of life, passionately eager to serve; he was a worthy descendant
-of a long line of fighting patriots.</p>
-
-<p>In Co. 9 was an earnest, dignified, hard working reserve first lieutenant,
-one of the most capable of the reserve officers on the post. He was a prominent
-lawyer of Utica, N. Y., and one of the leaders in the Plattsburg movement.
-Though well over the draft age, he had given up his large practice and had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-gone into the service at the first call. This was Russell H. Brennan, the first
-commander of “B” Company.</p>
-
-<p>At last our course drew to a close; the commissions were announced and
-we departed for ten days’ leave before reporting to Camp Dix for duty. Will
-we ever forget those ten golden August days? The world was ours, and life
-was sweet. No one knew what lay ahead, but we all made the most of our
-last taste of the old life for some time.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-CAMP DIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Most of you saw it for the first time when you rolled into the long train
-shed, and hiked up to your barracks through a mile or more of company streets,
-in a city of forty thousand men, the hundreds of large barracks already
-weatherbeaten with the snows and rains of winter.</p>
-
-<p>We, however, after changing trains several times, finally rolled up to what
-was apparently a piano box in a lumber yard, and were there assured by the
-conductor that this was Camp Dix. We tumbled off, and trudged away through
-six inches of New Jersey dust toward the only building in sight with a roof on
-it—camp headquarters. Our bags became heavier and heavier; our new
-uniforms were fearfully hot; our new shoes and puttees, with which we had
-been dazzling admiring womenfolks and causing menfolk to grunt with assumed
-indifference, were abominably tight and pinchy.</p>
-
-<p>Finally we straggled in to headquarters, to indulge for a couple of hours
-in that amusement so familiar to every man in the army—standing in line for
-an hour to do two minutes of red tape. When our turn was over, we went over
-to a partially completed barracks, where we were each allowed to appropriate
-1 cot, iron. This was the limit of our accommodation—those who couldn’t get
-away to some nearby town slept on the soft side of a piece of bristol board.
-We walked to the ether side of camp for all our meals—about two miles, if
-you didn’t lose your way.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning we attended a rollcall at 9 A. M. There we met Col.
-Marcus B. Stokes, the commanding officer; and Lt. Col. Edgar Myer,
-second in command. We found that the officers from Madison
-Barracks, Cos. 5 and 6, with half of the Troop formed the nucleus of the new
-regiment.</p>
-
-<p>Capt. Odom was Regimental Adjutant and to my horror I was at once
-made Regimental Supply Officer. The following officers were assigned to “B”
-company:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Capt. Russell H. Brennan, commanding company,<br />
-2d Lt. Roy A. Schuyler,<br />
-2d Lt. Fred S. Fish,<br />
-2d Lt. Wm. D. Ashmore.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>For a month the regiment went through the agonies of organization.
-Supplies came in by driblets; transportation there was none, save for two hopelessly
-over-worked motor truck companies, which put in half their time trying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-to separate their trucks from the sacred soil of Jersey. A great swarm of
-civilian workmen were toiling feverishly to get up the barracks. The regiment
-was moved four times in as many weeks. The roads were six inches deep in
-mud or dust.</p>
-
-<p>The first enlisted men in the regiment were three former candidates at
-Madison Barracks, who, through no fault of their own, had not received commissions,
-but who wouldn’t leave the bunch, and enlisted in the regiment,—Dave
-Gardenier, Art McCann, and Jimmie Hooker. McCann and Gardenier
-were made regimental sergeants major, and Hooker was my regimental supply
-sergeant.</p>
-
-<p>In about a week a number of men came in from various Regular Army
-regiments, to form a nucleus of N. C. O.’s. “B” company received Ertwine,
-Robbins, and J. M. Newell. These men were shortly afterward made corporals
-on recommendation of Capt. Brennan.</p>
-
-<p>From Sept. 19th to Sept. 22d, the men of the first draft came in. As
-Supply Officer, my own troubles kept me pretty busy during those strenuous
-days. I knew “B” company, however, as a good outfit. Capt. Brennan’s steady,
-methodical, tireless work, and the energy and devotion of his three lieutenants
-showed results from the first. Lt. Fish, a former National Guard officer, was
-an old hand and steadied the younger officers.</p>
-
-<p>After two months of hard work, the companies began to round out into
-some sort of shape. The non-commissioned officers were selected, with as much
-care as was possible in the limited time allowed for observation of the new
-men. The first top sergeant of “B” Co. was Eilert, a sturdy and sterling
-product of the first draft, who had been a foreman in a large factory. The
-“top” is, absolutely, the most essential man in a company. His position is such
-that he has to see to the carrying out of all the disagreeable orders, and making
-the details for all the dirty jobs, while at the same time he is not protected by
-any barrier of rank. He is usually cordially detested and thoroughly respected
-by the men, and is about as useful to the officers as a right hand. We never
-had a top in “B” Co. who was not absolutely loyal to the service and to the
-company commander; never one who shrank from the most disagreeable duty,
-nor who gave a thought to his personal popularity. They were human, of
-course, and made mistakes like the rest of us; and sometimes they couldn’t
-help being placed in a bad light to the men. But you men—some of you, even,
-who beefed most against the tops—if you only knew how many times that same
-top came to the company commander or other officers to help out this fellow
-or that, to suggest some way of making things easier for the whole company;
-if you knew how hard and thankless a job they held; possibly you would have
-been a little more lenient in your judgments.</p>
-
-<p>James McC. Newell was the first supply sergeant, and got away with
-everything not nailed down. Samuel Tritapoe was Mess Sgt. until Lt. Wagner
-recognized his ability and took him for a regimental supply sergeant, and
-Warren Sculthorp succeeded to this thankless but highly important job. The
-other sergeants, as well as I remember, were Ertwine, Perry, Anness and Robbins.
-Joe Levy was soon drafted by Newell to make the accounts balance;
-Harold Sculthorpe started on his culinary career; Sweeney, Rogers, Tom Viracola,
-Howard Lehy, Hayden and Long Bill Reid were corporals. Sutton<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-and Weber were detailed at the regimental exchange where they
-were a great factor in making it the best in the division. And last, but not
-least, deBruin was man of all work and plumber-in-chief. Red Sheridan also
-started his lurid career with “B” Co., and helped deBruin and “Bugs” Wardell
-to dispose of the vanilla extract rations.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the middle of October, Lt. Foulkes arrived from Cambridge, Mass.,
-where he had been sent for a special course in trench warfare. He was assigned
-to B Co., and remained as second in command until he was made battalion
-adjutant in July 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Now started in the era of transfers. New drafts were constantly coming
-in; and as soon as we would get them uniformed and able to negotiate a
-“Squads Right” without losing each other, they would be drawn away to fill
-up some other division destined for overseas duty before the 78th. Not once,
-but a dozen times between September and May did this happen, leaving the
-company with its officers and a skeleton of N. C. O.’s, cooks and orderlies.</p>
-
-<p>On December 6th, Capt. Brennan and I were interchanged, he taking over
-the Supply Company and I, “B” Co.</p>
-
-<p>The winter wore on, and spring was upon us, and we seemed no nearer
-France than before. Changes took place in officers as well as enlisted men.
-Lt. Ashmore went to “A” Co.; Lt. Fish to the Supply Co.; 2d Lts. Dunn and
-Merrill and 1st Lt. Vanderbilt took their places with “B” Co. The time was
-filled with training and equipping the ever changing quotas of recruits and
-drilling them in fundamentals; for the training cadre of officers and N. C. O.’s
-there were special courses in bayonet fighting, bombing, trench digging—how
-many cold and weary hours were swallowed up in that trench system east of
-the regimental area!—and ever and always wind, mud and snow, or wind,
-sun and dust.</p>
-
-<p>When the March drafts came in, rumors took a new lease on life. The
-77th division was being equipped to leave Camp Upton; our turn would probably
-come next. The transfers went out now to fill up, not other divisions, but
-our own artillery regiments across the parade ground. Work on the target
-range was increased. Ah, the joys of being routed out of the hay long before
-daybreak, snatching a hasty breakfast, and hiking off through the cold dawn,
-five miles through the barrens to that wind-swept waste with the long rows of
-targets.</p>
-
-<p>1st Sgt. Eilert and Supply Sgt. Newell had been selected to attend the
-officers’ training school. Sgt. Ertwine, who had shown exceptional ability
-while in charge of the recruits’ barracks, was made 1st Sgt., and Joe Levy, of
-course, became Supply Sgt.</p>
-
-<p>It was not all work and no play, though. At night there were movies at
-the “Y” huts; the Post Exchange for those who had something left from insurance,
-allotments and other ornaments of the pay roll,—or who were gifted
-enough to fill a full house or roll a “natural” consistently. And on Saturday
-afternoon and Sunday the lucky 25% would be off for a few precious hours at
-home or in the city, while the camp would be filled with visitors to the less
-fortunate.</p>
-
-<p>April passed, and May arrived with green trees and warm days. We
-bought baseball equipment, and each company had a team (I wonder who got<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-hold of all that stuff finally?). The April drafts had brought the companies
-above normal strength. Tents were put up in the company streets to accommodate
-the overflow.</p>
-
-<p>These were busy days for Supply Sgt. Levy and Cpl. Jimmie Jones, Company
-Clerk. There was a continuous procession in and out the door of the
-squad room where Levy had established his headquarters; recruits going in
-with blissful visions of emerging in the likeness of a magazine ad. soldier;
-departing with murder in their hearts because their trousers bagged at the
-knees. And Joe, who remembered last September when recruits would bum
-around for a month before getting a sign of a uniform, had scant sympathy
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>This was also an era of reports. Reports on how many men we had; how
-many shirts each man had; how many extra shoe-laces were in our possession;
-how many men had W. R. insurance; how many were yet to be inoculated and
-how many times. Twice a day did I have to report for officers’ meeting; twice
-a day would the Colonel hold forth on the reports the general wanted, which
-company commanders would prepare at once, personally, in writing; then the
-adjutant would begin on the reports the colonel wanted; then the supply officer
-would chime in with a few more that he had to have by six o’clock at the
-latest. Life was a veritable nightmare of typewritten figures. The supply sergeant
-of “L” company actually lost his mind under the strain. Drill was
-carried on in the intervals of lining up for another check or inspection. And
-the men, quite naturally, looked upon the officers as a set of lunatics who didn’t
-know their own minds for ten minutes at a time.</p>
-
-<p>About May 1st, an advance party of some 25 officers and men left the
-regiment, so we knew we were soon to follow. Lts. Schuyler and Merrill were
-in this party. They attended the A. E. F. Schools at Chatillon-sur-Seine, and
-rejoined us about July 1st.</p>
-
-<p>At last the company was filled up to war strength, and equipped down to
-the last shoe lace. On Friday, May 17th, all visitors were excluded from camp.
-That evening I assembled the company and put the proposition up to every
-man in it whether he wanted to go to France or not, offering to leave anyone
-behind who wished to remain. I am proud to say that not a man applied to be
-left.</p>
-
-<p>Saturday was a hectic day of last preparations. The barracks were stripped
-down to their last mattress and swept out. The typewriters clicked busily until
-the last minute. Tom Viracola, one of our best sergeants, who had been tripped
-on a slight disability by the medicos at the last minute and was nearly
-heartbroken, was to be left in charge of barracks.</p>
-
-<p>About nine o’clock the company was formed for the last time at its old
-home. Packs were heavy with the regulation equipment, tobacco, and gifts
-from home. As I was signing some last papers under the arc light, “C” company
-moved out silently. I gave “Squads left, march,” the company wheeled
-out and we were off for the station.</p>
-
-<p>The road was lined with soldiers from the Depot Brigade as we passed.
-Here and there we saw a familiar face, and though the movement was to be
-kept as quiet as possible, there was many a husky “so long, fellows” and “good-bye,
-311, good luck,” to cheer us on our way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>Packs were heavier every step, and what with the extra rations, typewriter,
-etc., we were glad to have a half hour’s rest at the station. Then the word
-came to fall in again—how many times were we to hear those weary words,
-“Fall in”—and the company filed along to the day coaches awaiting them.
-Equipment was removed, and all made themselves as comfortable as they could
-for the night.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning the train pulled out. As dawn broke, we made out
-the names of some of the New Jersey towns we passed through. Many a lad
-saw his home town for the last time as we rolled through it in the chill of that
-May morning.</p>
-
-<p>At Jersey City we detrained and passed through the station to the ferry.
-Several civilians asked us where we were going; but the men realized the importance
-of secrecy, and all the curious ones got was a gruff invitation to “put
-on a uniform and find out.”</p>
-
-<p>Then we were jammed on a ferry boat. It was some jam, too, leaving
-those who hadn’t been trained on the subway gasping.</p>
-
-<p>Down to the street, on between the great warehouses, and into a spacious
-covered pier. Here was the point of embarkation, where we had been told
-every service record was examined, every man inspected; the focus of all the
-red tape that had been driving us insane for the past two months. To our
-very agreeable surprise, however, the loading was handled by two or three
-business-like men in civvies, who merely checked each company on the boat by
-the passenger lists as fast as the men could hike up the gangplank.</p>
-
-<p>We were met by Lt. Gibbs, battalion adjutant, who led us below, pointed
-out three decks each about the size of our Camp Dix orderly room, and announced
-that these were B Co.’s palatial quarters. I gasped, and remarked
-that we were much obliged, but suppose someone should want to turn around,
-where would he be, and howinell was Geoghegan going to get in one of those
-little canvas napkins they called hammocks, anyhow? He replied that I ought
-to see “C” company’s place, and melted away in a fashion peculiar to Bn. Adjts.
-when leaving Co. Cmdrs. S. O. L. A few moments later we heard him consoling
-Capt. O’Brien on the deck above by telling him that he ought to see “B”
-Co.’s place.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-THE CRUISE OF THE “NESTOR”</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>By the time the space and hammocks were assigned to platoons and squads,
-the ship was under way. Orders were to keep below decks until out of the
-harbor; and for many, their last look at America was a glimpse of the harbor
-front through a port hole.</p>
-
-<p>At this point Lt. Gibbs reappeared, with the cheerful order that life
-preservers would be donned at once, and kept on for the rest of the voyage.
-For the next ten days all waddled about feeling like motherly hens. The
-apparatus I drew seemed particularly dirty, and most unbecoming to my figure,
-which is built close to the ground anyway.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast had been nothing more than a cracker and bully beef, snatched
-at odd moments. The good ship hadn’t started to roll much yet, so all looked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-forward to dinner with a robust interest. Then it evolved that this was an
-Australian transport, the “Nestor;” and as such, sailed under the British flag;
-and hence and therefore, the next meal would be tea at 5 o’clock. Eternity
-passed, and about half an hour thereafter the steward came around, and in
-queer, clipped cockney English introduced us to “dixies” and “flats.” Another
-half hour, and the first messes to be served saw their hash-grabbing detail
-returning, bearing through aisles of famished Yanks—bread and cheese and
-tea! A planked steak would have been more to the point, we felt, and a towering,
-raw-boned countryman in a corner,—Lory Price, I imagine—opined
-dismally that we were being mistaken for an orphan asylum. However, what
-there was aroused the boys sufficiently to take a less morbid view of life, and
-as the officers departed to the cabin, cards and books appeared, and the mystic
-words were softly chanted: “Natural, bones”—“Read ’em and weep.”</p>
-
-<p>But there was not what you might call a festive air to that first evening;
-nor to many thereafter. Of course, for some fellows who had no one dependent
-on them, who were setting out foot loose for a great adventure, there was
-nothing to interfere with the thrill of the unknown before them. But the
-majority of these men had been taken out of their civilian life but two or three
-weeks before; they were among strangers, and in an absolutely foreign environment;
-their new uniforms still uncomfortable and scratchy, and army regulations
-and discipline an incomprehensible set of shibboleths. Far down in each
-heart the love of their country burned, steadily enough for the most part;
-white hot in some; in others, but recently kindled. All hid it diligently, of
-course, from the general view. They had been so fed up with windy orators, with
-politicians waving the flag with one hand and keeping the other on exemption
-certificates, that the real thing was jealously concealed.</p>
-
-<p>As I made my final inspection that night, looking out from the companion-way
-over the rows of close slung hammocks, I wondered what their occupants
-were thinking; what forms of dear ones were present to their minds; to what
-homes their thoughts went back—a Harlem flat, a Jersey farmhouse, a great
-hotel, a tiny pair of rooms in Jersey City; comfortable, well-off American homes;
-tenements in the foreign districts—each one dear for its memories, each one
-the home to fight for. Would we have time to train these men into a fighting
-machine, or would we be thrown in at once to stop the great Hun drive in
-Flanders, then at its height? How many of us would see these homes, these
-dear ones again?—But a company commander has little time to indulge in
-reflections; and thoughts of the morning report, and how to distribute the chow
-more evenly, and a large budget of orders I had to read, soon chased away
-everything else.</p>
-
-<p>The NESTOR carried the 1st and 2d Bns. and Headquarters Co. of the
-311th Inf., a Machine Gun battalion, and Brig. Gen. Dean, our brigade commander,
-and his staff. Our colonel was in command of the troops on board,
-such things being below the dignity of general officers. He was in his element;
-he had an officers’ meeting the first thing, and dished out about 4 square acres
-of orders to be read and put into effect at once.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i015.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">1st Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Now no one knows better than I how many orders you men received, and
-how it was often beyond human power to obey all of them. But I call any
-company commander to witness that we got them coming and going. The Co.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-Cmdr. is the one man who can’t pass the buck on responsibility. We had to
-take the bushels of orders we received, eliminate those utterly impossible,
-select from those remaining what seemed essential and what we thought the
-Major and Colonel would deem essential, and then get those things done by
-the company—that is, issue orders to the 1st Sgt. for details, Supply Sgt. for
-supplies, Mess Sgt. for mess, officers for drill and instruction, company clerk for
-paper work, and then see to it that the whole is carried out. And then one
-usually amasses a balling out for something or other that he has left out.</p>
-
-<p>One of these orders was the censorship order, of which we had heard so
-much. Instead of having all letters censored at post offices by clerks, some
-genius had decided to follow the British plan of having officers censor their
-own men’s mail. Thus at one brilliant stroke a situation was created which
-embarrassed men and officers alike, imposed an irksome and continual task on
-over-burdened officers, delayed the mail, and was in every way sweet incense
-in the nostrils of the little tin gods of the red tape; the exponents of the theory
-of How Not to Do It.</p>
-
-<p>The principal morning sport on the trip was the ship’s inspection. The
-holds of that old tub received such a scrubbing and cleaning as they had never
-had before. In spite of the close quarters, everything was kept quite fresh and
-clean. It gave me a vast respect for the women who do such work all day for
-paltry wages. At 10:00 A. M. the call would be sounded, and all except the
-day’s orderlies would be massed on decks in their boat drill stations, and a
-merry little crush it was. Then the lords of the earth would solemnly parade
-along in single file, preceded by a bugler, who blew a seasick “Attention” at
-each deck. Everybody would then step on everyone else’s feet, and make a
-little lane for the procession. The adjutant, the ship’s captain, the colonel,
-the ship supply officer—poor old Gibbs was the goat for that job—would play
-“follow my leader,” and look into corners, and sniff importantly, and everything
-would be very formal and terrible, and grand.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the day would be taken up with physical drills—one company
-using the deck at a time—and fire and boat drills. It was given out at first
-that four long blasts of the boat’s whistle would be the signal for “Abandon
-ship.” This was changed later by the ship’s captain, but somewhere along the
-line there was a hitch, and the information never got down to the company
-commanders. About five nights out, at about 10:30 P. M., the whistle began to
-toot, once—twice—heads began to appear over the hammocks; thrice—the
-hammocks began to be agitated; four times—two hundred and thirty odd
-hearts gave a leap, four hundred and sixty feet hit the floor, and B Company
-started up the gangway, with three sergeants, who shall be nameless, leading
-the way to victory. Lt. Foulkes, who was on fire watch, judged hastily that it
-must be all a mistake somehow, and calmed the riot with his .45 and a few
-choice remarks in the vernacular.</p>
-
-<p>Then the chow—oh, the chow; oh, the Gawd-forsaken chow. It was
-doled out as breakfast, dinner, and tea. It was none too much in
-quantity. There were here and there newly made n. c. o.’s who were not above
-holding out more than their share. And our American stomachs were several
-times abruptly introduced to strange dishes. First it was a weird looking
-mess that tasted like an explosion of mustard gas. How did we know it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-currie? Few had sufficient faith in human nature to down their portion. Then
-one day a ghastly odor tainted the noonday air, and we were introduced to
-tripe. The latter was finally buried with military honors, and I arrived on the
-scene just in time to save the ship’s cooks from being the star actors in a
-similar ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>“Tea” was bread and cheese and tea. We thought of the days of plenty
-at Camp Dix and reflected that the culinary end of this war business was hardly
-a success so far.</p>
-
-<p>The officers were fed well and in civilized fashion in the cabin, which
-didn’t help matters much for the men. Also some members of the boat’s crew
-took advantage of the situation by running a sub-rosa restaurant in the forecastle,
-gouging such as had the price. Of course the Americans thought right
-away that they were holding out part of our rations for this purpose, and
-international relations began to get very strained. The officers were finally
-informed, and the practice stopped.</p>
-
-<p>There were ten or twelve other ships in the convoy, which was headed by
-the battleship Montana. At last one morning the latter was missing, and we
-knew that we must be nearly across. Precautions were redoubled and life
-preservers were not removed even at night.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of May 31st we sighted land—a welcome sight indeed.
-Capt. Breen at once identified it as dear auld Ireland, and was much disgusted
-when we learned later that it was Scotland. We had sailed around the north
-of Ireland, and were dropping down the Irish sea to Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p>This was the submarine zone indeed. Destroyers appeared from the
-horizon and hovered on the outskirts of the convoy. A great silver dirigible
-swung lazily from the clouds and floated along above us. The Irish coast came
-into view on our right.</p>
-
-<p>At about 2:00 P. M. there was a scurry among the destroyers. The
-dirigible descended above a spot some half mile off our port bow. Guns began
-to speak from the transports and destroyers. It only lasted for about five
-minutes, however, and we couldn’t see any visible results. But we were told
-that a sub had been spotted and destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>Late that night we took the pilot aboard and proceeded up the Mersey.
-Few of us slept a wink. After the long strain it was good to see ourselves surrounded
-by the lights of shipping, and to see the shore on either side, though
-as few lights as possible were shown even then. However, we could open the
-portholes, and the long, long line of docks slipped by until we wondered if this
-great harbor had any end. At last, about 2:00 A. M., we docked and settled
-down to wait until morning for a glimpse of Merry England.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we waited around until 1:30, when we disembarked. We
-were marched about half a mile through the streets to a railroad terminal.
-The people hardly glanced at us. They were well used to soldiers by that
-time. Not a cheer, not a sign of curiosity. Another herd for the slaughter
-house. A few wounded soldiers, in their flaring “blues,” looked us over with
-some professional curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>At the railroad station we were halted on a cobbled street for a weary
-three hours’ wait. There was an English-American Red Cross canteen there,
-and we bought them out of buns in short order and distributed them to the companies.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-An aviator appeared on the scene and amused us for a while by doing
-all sorts of acrobatics—loops, whirls, twists through the air—such as we had
-never seen before.</p>
-
-<p>Finally we were formed and marched into the station, and boarded the
-funny little English coaches, and were locked up in different compartments.
-Canteen girls gave each of us a printed letter of welcome from King George,
-and finally we jolted out of the station, rolled along between factories and
-munition plants—manned mostly by girls and women—and so out into the
-countryside.</p>
-
-<p>That was a wonderful ride through England on the last day of May. It
-was a perfect evening, the air soft and balmy; light until ten o’clock. It was
-like a toy country to us, beautifully ordered and groomed, with little villages
-here and there, and green hedgerows, and usually one or two Tommies on
-leave walking down the lane with their sweethearts—that made us homesick
-already. And the train sped along, stopping only once for us to get out and
-have some coffee and a drink of water; and we were all thrilled and excited and
-felt a little tickly in the stomach, as you do before a big football game. We
-were fast drawing near the greatest game, now being played to a finish.</p>
-
-<p>As the night wore on, and it became dark, and we couldn’t look out the
-windows any more, our cramped quarters were anything but comfortable. Also,
-sanitary arrangements on European trains are conspicuous by their absence.
-When at last, at 2:00 A. M., we were told to detrain, we were pretty thoroughly
-uncomfortable.</p>
-
-<p>After the usual hubbub of detraining—“which way’s comp’ny form?”—“I
-dunno”—“First squad”—“Ninth squad”—“Where’s me bayonet?”—“Oh,
-thanks”—“D’ja get the can open all right?”—We departed into the night,
-filing past a little station out into a dark road, and then at a good round pace
-on through silent, dark streets, for about a mile. There we were introduced to
-our first billet.</p>
-
-<p>It was a large empty stone house in a row of similar ones. Bare floors,
-bare walls, but clean, and not so bad. After a vast amount of unnecessary
-fussing about the company got itself settled. Sixty men were to leave at six
-o’clock under Lt. Foulkes.</p>
-
-<p>That night and early the next morning we heard for the first time the
-distant rumble of the guns in France.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning we discovered that we were in an embarkation camp at
-Folkestone, near Dover. A beautiful place it was, something like Atlantic
-City, only everything seemed more permanent, and the boardwalk was lacking.
-The camp was a section of the town set apart for the purpose. Everything was
-well ordered. These Englishmen had been at the game a long time, and after
-some chafing and fussing around we discovered that though no one displayed
-any particular “pep,” nevertheless things really got done quite well; in the
-British way, of course. But woe be unto the ambitious Yank who sought to
-alter anything.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the company had not even been in the service long enough to
-master the manual of arms, and part of the day was used in instilling the rudiments
-of this essential into them. Time was still left for a short ramble about
-Folkestone, however; and the promenade, town, pubs, Tommies and Waacs were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-all investigated enthusiastically and as thoroughly as time and opportunity
-permitted.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning the battalion was formed at 6 A. M. and marched along
-cobbled streets to the pier, where we were sardined into a fast channel steamer,
-and donned those confounded lifebelts again for a short farewell wearing.
-Then, with an American destroyer racing along on either side, we slipped
-swiftly down under the Dover Cliffs, then swerving out and across the channel
-to Calais. A dock, a Red Cross train on the other side of it, a fisherman in a
-little boat alongside us—France at last.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-THE ENGLISH SECTOR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The company filed off the boat, and crossing the dock stumbled into formation
-down the railroad track by the hospital train, and was introduced to a bit
-of backwash from the drive. Some English wounded were being carried from
-the train to the boat by German prisoners. We looked curiously at the latter.
-These were the Huns we were taught to hate, whom we were to kill. They were
-husky, blonde chaps, in faded greenish gray uniforms, with their little flat caps.
-They paid scant attention to us, but carried the English very carefully and
-gently. Maybe the Tommy who walked near by with fixed bayonet had something
-to do with it. At any rate, I didn’t feel any very lusty rage or horror at
-them, and though one or two of our men cursed at them under their breath, it
-didn’t seem at all convincing, but rather forced. Most of the wounded men
-whose faces I saw glared at us with the usual British “What the devil do you
-mean by looking at me, sir?” so I suppose they were officers. I don’t blame
-them for not liking to be stared at. One or two fellows couldn’t help groaning
-when their stretchers were lifted.</p>
-
-<p>But “C” Co. is moving off, and we swing into column of squads and hike
-off behind them, our great heavy packs, religiously packed with all the items
-prescribed for us and much besides, getting heavier and heavier. It was a
-beautiful, sunny day. Calais was quiet; the cobbled streets apparently peopled
-only by a few little gamins of both sexes who greeted us with the cries that
-accompanied us through France—“Souvenir,” “Bis-keet,” “Chocolat.”</p>
-
-<p>We passed through the outskirts of the town and into a dusty, sandy road
-between green dikes or ramparts dotted with anti-aircraft guns. Then we
-passed by a group of weather-worn barracks, dusty and dreary, labeled—doubtless
-by some wag, we thought—“Rest Camp,” surrounded by wire fences.</p>
-
-<p>We cross a canal, turn to the left, and pass along to another—“Rest Camp
-No. 6.” The leading company turns in at a gate in the wire fence; we see
-American uniforms and campaign hats; one or two officers in overseas caps,
-strange looking to us then; then we pass in through the gate and realize that
-this is our temporary destination.</p>
-
-<p>We were billeted in tents, about 12 feet in diameter—and about 20 men
-to a tent. Sand everywhere. A hideous open latrine next to the mess hall.
-After the usual hurly-burly and confusion, we finally kick other companies out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-of our tents, are in turn kicked out of theirs, and, after a long wait, get—“tea.”
-Oh, how Americans did love that word!</p>
-
-<p>The officers were lodged in luxury—the five of us had a whole tent, with
-some boards to sleep on. We ate at the British officers’ mess, where meals and
-very good beer and wine were served by Waacs. The next thing was an
-officers’ meeting, and that night a talk by an English major. He cheered us
-up by telling us that very few ever came back, and narrated several choice
-tales of sudden death in unusual and gruesome forms. He was apparently
-bent on removing from our minds any impression that we were in for a pleasure
-trip. We afterwards heard that he was severely criticised by other British
-officers for trying to get our wind up first thing.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning our equipment was cut down. We could only keep
-what we could carry on our backs. The contents of our barrack bags, the
-extra equipment, the complete outfit that had been subjected to so many inspections,
-upon which we had turned in reams upon reams of reports at Camp Dix,
-were ruthlessly collected, dumped into trucks and carted off to Heaven
-knows where by a Q. M. 2nd Lieutenant. No count was taken, no papers
-signed. The omniscient powers, who had deviled our lives out to
-collect this stuff, hadn’t told us anything about this little ceremony. So underwear,
-socks, extra pairs of shoes were a drug on the market; and we simply
-couldn’t give the cigarettes away. A great quantity were turned over to the
-Y. M. C. A. canteen. Of course, we never saw our barrack bags again.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we formed with rifles, belts and bayonets, and marched about
-four miles out into the flat, flat country; past windmills and hedges and a little
-estaminet here and there, until we came to a British gas house. Here some
-English and Scotch sergeants issued English gas masks, and after a couple of
-hours gas mask drill we went through the gas house, and started back to camp.
-On our way we stopped by at an ordnance hut where our American Enfields
-were exchanged for English Enfields, with their stubby looking barrels and
-heavy sight guards. In our army issuing or exchanging any piece of ordnance
-property is like getting married, and when a rifle is involved it is like five
-actions at law and a couple of breach of promise suits. Here we filed in one
-door, shoved our rifle at a Tommy, beat it for the other door, grabbed an
-English weapon and bayonet, and the deed was done. I happened to be in
-command of the battalion that day, and somewhere I suppose the British government
-has a couple of grubby slips of paper on which I’ve signed for 1,000
-gas masks, rifles and bayonets. The transaction would probably have been a
-fatal blow to a U. S. ordnance officer. Being only a reserve officer of infantry,
-it seemed to me pretty sensible.</p>
-
-<p>Back in camp we were pretty much left alone, and some there were who
-lost no time making an acquaintance with the estaminets of Calais. In thirty-six
-hours we had learned enough English to discourse glibly of “tuppence ha’
-penny,” and I even overheard Price offer to “Shoot you a bob,” and somebody
-promptly took “six penn ’orth of it.” But this was nothing compared to our
-excursions into the unexplored fields of the long suffering French language. By
-that evening most of the men seemed quite proficient in a few such indispensable
-phrases as “Vin rouge tout de suite” or rather “Van rooge toot sweet,”
-“Encore,” “Combien,” and “Oo la la, ma cherie.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>The next morning—Wednesday, June 5th—we left Rest Camp No. 6, and
-glad we were to leave it, for a dirty, hot hole it was. We hadn’t been bombed,
-though the town got its usual raid, and the camp was complimented the next
-night by the Boche.</p>
-
-<p>The hike to the station was long and hot and made without a rest. Of
-course, not knowing as much as they would later, the men’s packs were tremendous.
-The overcoat, blanket, 100 rounds of ammunition and extra shoes
-and rations alone are a good load, and when one adds several suits of underwear,
-extra toilet articles, Jenny’s sweaters, Aunt Sarah’s wristlets, a couple of
-cartons of cigarettes and pipe tobacco, and some chocolate, it gets tremendous.
-Little Effingham’s pack as usual, was down to his heels, but he stoutly refused
-assistance, also as usual. The company arrived at the station feeling like a
-dyspeptic bear with scarlet fever.</p>
-
-<p>We were forthwith introduced to the famous “Hommes 40, Chevaux 8.”
-It was seldom that bad, but even 25 or 30 men are a tight fit in those little
-cattle cars, as you all can testify.</p>
-
-<p>We rolled out of Havre, pursued to the last by the children and orange
-sellers, who seemed to spring up from the ground everywhere in Northern
-France.</p>
-
-<p>This first trip was short. We passed from the low country into a gently
-rolling terrain, and at about 1 o’clock arrived at Marquise, where we detrained.</p>
-
-<p>We were met by a couple of Scotch officers from the 14th Highland Light
-Infantry. They guided us up the road to the village where we were billeted,
-about two miles away. On the way one of them, Captain “Jimmie” Johnston,
-told us that their battalion was detailed to act as instructors for the 311th
-Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>The first little crossroads village was our billet—Rinxent. The command
-“Fall out t’ right of th’ road” sounded quite welcome to the overloaded
-marchers and we watched the rest of the battalion march by enroute to their
-billets at Rety, two kilos further.</p>
-
-<p>The company was scattered along the road in small billets of from ten to
-forty men. Company headquarters was established in the corner estaminet.
-This was our first introduction to French billets. The usual procedure consisted
-of:</p>
-
-<p>1. Protest to billeting officer or N. C. O. at putting human beings into
-such a place. Unsuccessful.</p>
-
-<p>2. Long argument with house holder, he speaking French very fast and
-we speaking American very loud. Usually ended by the argument of a five
-franc note to the frugal French peasant.</p>
-
-<p>3. Cleaning out the stable, chicken house, or barn, with voluble protests
-from f. F. p.</p>
-
-<p>4. Making sundry discoveries during the first night.</p>
-
-<p>5. Pitching pup tents in nearest field.</p>
-
-<p>We got permission to use a field about 100 yards square for a drill ground
-and two platoons pitched pup tents there.</p>
-
-<p>The first night a few of the boys became slightly excited over the privilege
-of visiting the estaminets, and tried to drink up all the vin rouge and cognac<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-at once. The consequence was that the dispensers of good cheer were put
-under the ban for several days.</p>
-
-<p>Now the training of the company began in earnest. The majority of the
-men had had only the most hasty smattering of the elements of squad drill;
-many could not shoulder arms properly. Two platoons would use the drill field
-while two drilled on the roads outside. The training schedules called for a
-good nine-hour day of drill and ceremonies, varied occasionally by short
-practice hikes by company or battalion.</p>
-
-<p>Lewis guns were issued to us here. A few officers and n. c. o.’s had taken
-courses in the use of this weapon at Camp Dix; company and battalion schools
-were at once started, the latter conducted by Scottish n. c. o.’s from the 14th
-H. L. I.</p>
-
-<p>In addition, there were battalion, regimental and corps schools for bayonet,
-gas defense, liaison (for the runners), bombing, rifle grenade, musketry and
-several more. From this time until we left France there were always a number
-of men away at schools. Of course this was necessary, but it broke up the
-training of the company as a whole. Also, we were brigaded with the British,
-and some men would go to a British school and qualify as instructors, only to
-come back and find that the American system was being used, and vice versa.
-Both systems might have their good points, and did have, but the rate at which
-orders and instructions and ways of doing things changed from day to day was
-enough to bewilder old hands at this game; and we were greenhorns.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmy” Johnston helped a lot. He was in command of what was left of
-the 14th battalion, Highland Light Infantry—about four squads. Of medium
-height, rather stocky build, with a bonny, handsome face and bright blue eyes
-under his Scotch cap, Jimmy was one of the finest fellows and best officers that
-ever stepped. He had been through the Gallipoli expedition, and two years on
-the Western front; had been reported killed in action, and gone home on leave
-to be greeted as one risen from the dead.</p>
-
-<p>Jimmy had been through the mill. He knew. Always with a word of
-encouragement, to avoid dampening our American energy, he would help along
-with quiet hints and canny suggestions that were worth their weight in gold.
-When we came staggering along under heavy packs, he said nothing, but
-strolled along with his little cane and admired the landscape. When orders
-would come in thick and fast, each one contradicting the last, and all to be
-executed at once, Jimmy would intimate verra, verra cautiously, that if we used
-our own judgment we should get along somehow, and that C. O’s and chiefs of
-staff had to keep themselves busy, and what they didn’t know wouldn’t hurt
-’em. Like most Scotch officers he seemed to live mostly on whiskey, and
-throve on the diet.</p>
-
-<p>On June 11, Major Odom went to a Corps school, and I was left in charge
-of the battalion. Of course, that evening orders came in to move next morning.
-We had just begun to get in our English transport—the little limbers and the
-cranky rolling kitchen with which we were to become so familiar later. Up to
-then we had cooked on our American field ranges.</p>
-
-<p>At 7 o’clock next morning we pulled out and marched down to Rety.
-There we fell in behind the 2d battalion, and started on our first full day’s
-hike. The packs were still heavy, and those full cartridge belts—Lord, how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-much 100 rounds of ammunition can weigh after a while! As usual with green
-troops, the leading element set too fast a pace. Rests seemed but a minute.
-Finally, on a long, long up grade, we halted for lunch. After chow and an
-hour’s rest, we pulled on, picking ’em up and putting ’em down. On, over
-broad white roads; turning off into narrower roads shaded by rows of tall
-trees, turning into the highroad again. We passed stragglers from the 309th
-and 310th Infantry, so knew that the whole 78th Division must be in France
-and on the move near us. The hills were higher, the women were older. We
-came to a village; three estaminets, two stores, a school house, a blacksmith’s
-shop, a sign. “Brunembert.” Regimental Hdqrs. and Supply Co. are halted
-there. We keep on; on the other side of town “C” and “D” companies meet
-their advance party guides and turn off; we hike on half a kilometer, half way
-up a hill, turn off to the right, hike around the hill, and finally, at about 3 P. M.,
-plumb tuckered, the company is split, two platoons going to one farmhouse, the
-other two to another, at Haute Creuse.</p>
-
-<p>Haute Creuse itself was only a crossroads, with one poor cottage. Battalion
-headquarters was there. The company billets were a good quarter of a mile
-apart. In addition, when I inspected the billet assigned the 3rd and 4th
-platoons, I found a remarkably dirty old barn, with a cesspool and manure
-heap outside that was awful, even for France. The only spring was near the
-pool. So the next morning we moved these platoons over to the other billet,
-pitching pup tents in a beautiful field just on the other side of the barnyard.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon an old duffer in an English major’s uniform came ambling
-along. He expressed great anguish at our not using the billets assigned to us.
-It meant nothing to him that our comfort, health, convenience were served by
-our using our own tents. The plan was that that lousy old typhoid trap should
-be occupied, and so it must be done. And he, it appeared, was the “area commandant.”</p>
-
-<p>So I said “Yessir,” and tipped Sgt. Ertwine off to have some men make a
-great show of striking tents, and resolved privately to take a chance yet. Jimmy
-Johnston came along later and told me that area commandants were a tribe of
-dud officers who were given that job to keep ’em out of mischief.</p>
-
-<p>I was hauled over the coals three or four times about it. The old Major
-wrote to his General Hdq., and they wrote to our hdq., and it came down the
-line to our Colonel, whose soul shivered before the wintry blast. But finally
-Lt. Col. Myers took it up and obtained permission for us to stay where we were.</p>
-
-<p>At Rinxent a number of second lieutenants, just commissioned at the
-Officers’ Training Camp at Langres, had joined us. We had a captain and five
-or six second lieuts. attached to “B” Co. The captain, who was commanding
-the company in my absence at bn. hdq., was a peculiar individual, with very
-fierce and imposing mustachios, and a manner to match; but an absurdly incongruous
-weak and husky voice, due to throat trouble. The lieuts. were rather a
-good bunch; men who had been n. c. o.’s in outfits that had come over during
-the preceding year, and some of whom had been in the trenches already. We
-were fortunate in keeping one of them, Lieut. Bivens Moore, in the company;
-the others we lost by transfers from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>Training was resumed again; schools ran in full force. Officers and men
-were continually going off to sundry corps or army schools in the vicinity; at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-St. Omer or points near by. Harold Sculthorpe went off to a cooks’ school,
-and we didn’t see him again for many a month. Sgt. Peterson was made
-Brigade Postal N. C. O. We received our first mail from home, and nobody can
-ever tell how welcome it was. Letters were the one slender thread that connected
-our new life with the old. A bit of mail cheered up a soldier for days;
-a disappointment when mail came in without one for him made him blue for a
-week. It was pleasant to see the earnest faces of fellows like Sgt. Schelter, and
-Corporal DeGrote beaming when they heard from their wives and little ones.
-With the impatience and eagerness of the newlyweds, I was of course sympathetic.
-And as for the majority, who were waiting for letters from the best little
-girl in the world, they were either insufferable in their glamourous egotism, or
-serio-comic in their suffering, according to whether the lady had seen fit to be
-kind or cool when she took her pen in hand. Certain ones, too, who shall be
-nameless, would receive letters in sundry handwritings, with a variety of post-marks.
-Don Juans, these; gay and giddy Lotharios in the old home town.</p>
-
-<p>We were billeted at a typical French farm of the larger type. As you
-turned in off the road through the gateway, a black dog chained in a little stone
-dungeon just inside barked fiercely. This poor beast had been chained in that
-one place for so long that he knew nothing else. He was half blind; and one
-day when I unchained him and took him for a walk down the road, he was
-desperately frightened; and as soon as he got back he made a dash for his
-kennel, and refused to come out.</p>
-
-<p>The long, two story house took up most of the left hand side of the courtyard.
-The officers had two rooms here, one of which we used for a mess. The
-family lived mostly in the big kitchen, where a little fire burned on the great
-hearth. On the other two sides were stables, some of which were used as
-billets, storeroom and orderly room. The manure heap adorned the center of
-the courtyard. Behind lay a small but important yard, which in turn opened
-on the big field where two platoons were in pup tents around the border, and
-where the company formed.</p>
-
-<p>The people here were dull, homely, grasping and churlish. I do not
-recollect ever having been given a pleasant word by one of them; but of complaints
-and claims for damages there was no lack. They seemed to resent our
-presence from the very first; we were apparently as much intruders to them as
-German troops could have been.</p>
-
-<p>The men soon began to resent this attitude, and to reciprocate in kind.
-Soldiers are apt to be heedless, and are of course a nuisance to the people they
-are quartered on; but at Rety they had greeted us in the main as friends, and
-we in turn tried to give as little trouble as possible. Here our notions of being
-the welcome young warriors got a good severe jolt.</p>
-
-<p>We on our side took some time to learn how to conduct ourselves. How
-were we to know that a French peasant would far rather have you walk over
-him than over one of his fields? Why was it a crime to cut down a stunted
-dead tree for the company kitchen? And where, oh, where were the pretty
-mademoiselles?</p>
-
-<p>But even in Northern France all the people were not like this. Remember
-the old woman just down the road, who lived with her daughters in the cottage
-which was battalion headquarters? They were very poor, and worked very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-hard; all the long summer day—and it was light from 4:30 A. M. to 9:00 P. M.—they
-were busy, indoors and out. Her three sons were in the army, one a
-prisonier de guerre, two at the front. When one of them, only a young lad,
-came home for a few days’ permission, he went out every morning at 6:00
-o’clock and worked until dusk. How many of us would have done as much?
-And the old lady and girl always had a smile and cheery word, and would give
-soldiers a drink of milk and insisted on having officers going to bn. hdq. stop
-for a cup of coffee. Even the pretty little goat in the yard grew friendly with
-olive drab, and would romp with us like a dog.</p>
-
-<p>For several days we used whatever little fields we could for drill; every
-square foot of land that was suitable seemed to be under cultivation. This
-was unsatisfactory, to say the least. Finally Col. Meyers arranged for us to
-have the use of the top of the great hill. It was a splendid place to drill—after
-you got there. But oh, that hike up that young mountain and down again,
-twice a day! Will we ever forget it?</p>
-
-<p>When we had been here about a week, Major Odom returned, and a day
-or so later Lieuts. Schuyler and Merrill rejoined the company. They were all
-primed with the new wrinkles they had picked up at school at Chatillon, and
-took over the first and third platoons respectively. Schuyler’s conscientiousness,
-high spirits and inexhaustible energy made him a great asset to the company.
-Merrill was an equally hard and willing worker, and though young, was
-one of the brightest men in the regiment. He had graduated from the school
-at the head of his class, which included majors, captains and lieuts. from all
-over the A. E. F.</p>
-
-<p>We were stationed about 50 kilometers behind the lines; and had the
-Germans made one more drive on Calais that summer we should have undoubtedly
-gone into action. No lights were shown at night, and it was seldom that
-we did not hear the droning buzz of the great Boche bombing planes winging
-their way to bomb Calais or Boulogne, or maybe some nearer town, Desvres or
-St. Omer.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of July details of officers and n. c. o.’s were sent up to
-the front lines for four day tours of observation. Sgts. Ertwine, Perry and I
-went on the first one, and were in the line with a battalion of the King’s Own
-Scottish Borderers. Our experiences, while interesting, hardly belong here.
-Lieut. Foulkes went up the next week and landed in the midst of an attack, so
-he saw plenty of action. Then Lieut. Schuyler went up with an Australian
-outfit, who didn’t let him pine for excitement during his stay. It was an excellent
-system, and we saw at first hand how things were really run in the
-trenches.</p>
-
-<p>When I returned from my tour, an orderly brought around late that night
-some red covered books and leaflets, and we were told that these would be put
-into effect the next day. These were the new system of combat formations,
-involving an absolutely new extended order drill, and formation of the company.
-Lieut. Moore had drilled a few times in these formations; the rest of
-us knew no more about them than the company cooks did. So next morning
-we sallied forth, books in hand, and worked the formations out step by step.
-Everyone was quick to see that this was something like business, as of course
-our old army regulations were absurd when it came to using the new special<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-weapons, such as automatic rifles, hand and rifle grenades, and so on. So the
-new formations were mastered remarkably quickly.</p>
-
-<p>A bayonet course with trenches, “shell holes” and dummies was installed,
-and a sergeant of the Northumberland Fusileers was instructor. He was a
-good one, too; but as usual, we were up against it, as he taught some things
-slightly differently from the American methods.</p>
-
-<p>It was while going over this course that Gustave Fleischmann stepped in a
-hole and broke his leg. It was a bad break, for I saw his foot and lower leg
-go out sideways at a right angle, in spite of his leggings. He was game
-enough, though, and smoked a cigarette while waiting for an ambulance and
-surgeon. We heard from him several times from English hospitals, but he was
-never able to rejoin the company.</p>
-
-<p>We also lost another very valuable man in Corporal Edward Johnson.
-This man could have claimed exemption for either dependents or a weak heart.
-He refused to do either, and we managed to get him passed by the medicos for
-foreign service. The daily hike up that hill, however, and the strenuous life
-generally, were too much for him, though he kept at it until he was worn down
-to a very dangerous point. I made him go before the surgeon, who at once
-ordered him transferred to a depot brigade. I know that Johnson was not
-liked by some of you men on account of his conscientiousness. I believe, however,
-that when you look back upon it you will appreciate his honest, unselfish
-and unceasing labor for his squad, platoon, and company.</p>
-
-<p>That countryside was beautiful at this time. It rained often, but in
-showers; not the continuous drizzle that came later. Maybe it was because we
-took more notice of such things than usual, not knowing if we would see
-another summer, but the green fields, fresh in the early morning and cool and
-sweet at night, and the hedges, and the pretty little bits of woodland along the
-creeks and ravines, all seemed lovely as never before.</p>
-
-<p>In the next town, just over the hill, was an Australian rest camp. We
-got along with the Aussies much better than with Tommies, and every night
-numerous visitors went down to cultivate the entente cordial with the assistance
-of the town estaminets.</p>
-
-<p>Our first payday in France came about this time, and what with back pay
-coming in, and the high rate of exchange, and being paid in francs, some of
-the boys waxed rather too exuberant over the flowing bowl. What with Janicki
-and Effingham trying to clean up Brunembert, starting in with a couple of
-Tommies and ending with an abrupt thud when they got around to “D” Co.
-headquarters; and sundry members of the Irish brigade making a Donnybrook
-Fair out of the highways and byways, I had a busy night.</p>
-
-<p>Another night we shall remember is that of July 4th. Sgts. Ertwine,
-Perry and Anness were going up for commissions at the Officer Candidates’
-School at Langres, and the officers gave them a farewell supper that evening.
-The company was, I understand, also celebrating the national holiday conscientiously.
-When the festivities were at their height, we heard the squealing of
-bagpipes, and the curious bump-bump-bumpetty-bum of the Scottish drummer,
-that nobody on earth but a Jock can keep step with. The band of the H. L. I.
-had been serenading the Col. and were going back to their billets.</p>
-
-<p>All turned out to see them pass, and as they swung up the road, Lt.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-Foulkes, in an inspired moment, detailed Supply Sgt. Levy to bring ’em back
-for “B” Co.</p>
-
-<p>In five minutes the pipes returned, with Joe marching at their head twirling
-the drum major’s baton. They turned into the courtyard, and were taken
-into our midst with a mighty burst of cheers, skirling of pipes, and thunder of
-the drums. That was a scene I shall never forget—a wonderful setting for a
-musical comedy. The dark courtyard, fitfully illumined by the glare of a few
-lanterns and torches—the crowd of olive drab figures around the Scotties in
-their kilts, with one in the center doing a Highland fling. The visitors were
-already fortified, but additional liquid refreshments were hastily procured for
-them, and a testimonial taken up in the way of a collection. In the meantime
-the drummer, well on the shady side of sober, rendered several ballads. We
-reciprocated with Irish songs by Peter and others, and a breakdown by Kitson.
-It was well on towards midnight when they left; and next morning the Major
-wanted to know “what the hell was B Company up to last night?”</p>
-
-<p>Another pleasant time was had by all one day while I was at the front.
-Someone at staff hdq. felt an idle curiosity to see how fast the division could
-turn out, if it had to. Accordingly the order went forth—march at 2:00 P. M.
-Thinking the Boches had broken through and we were “for it,” there was a
-mad scurry and scramble; the kitchen pulled to pieces; rations hastily issued;
-and the company, under Lt. Dunn, reported to the Brunembert road about half
-an hour after the time set, and about two hours sooner than had seemed possible
-that morning. After fussing about a bit, the companies were marched back
-to their hastily abandoned billets.</p>
-
-<p>All the time we were in the English area, rations were short. The
-British ration must have been much smaller than ours, or else there was a hitch
-somewhere. Our men were used to three square meals a day. The British
-only had porridge, tea and bread and jam for breakfast; a regular meal—stew
-or meat and vegetables—in the middle of the day, and tea and bread and
-cheese at night. This didn’t go far to relieve the aching void that every American
-soldier cherishes under his belt. We spent thousands of francs from the
-company fund buying potatoes and whatever else we could to eke out the
-ration. But even so, there was never any difficulty in following the advice of
-those doctors who say to stop eating while you still feel hungry.</p>
-
-<p>July 14th was Bastile Day. We were turned out for a ceremony to celebrate
-it. The ceremony consisted of marching to Brunembert in the rain,
-squads left, right dress, present arms, order arms, squads left, and hike back
-in the rain. I can’t say my bosom dilated with enthusiasm, nor did the spectators—a
-dozen children, two estaminet keepers and the usual “orangee” girls—emit
-any rousing cheers.</p>
-
-<p>I see by the Regimental History that the Duke of Connaught and General
-Pershing “honored us with a visit” at this time, but said visits were practically
-painless for “B” Company, as we didn’t even see the dust from their automobiles.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the regimental transport was complete—or as nearly so as it
-ever was; all furnished by the British. Each battalion was now functioning as
-a separate unit, and Lt. Gibbs had his hands full with the supply and transport.
-He was accordingly made bn. transport and supply officer, and the Major<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-selected Lt. Foulkes as battalion adjutant. So we lost the best officer in “B”
-Company, and I believe the best line subaltern in the regiment. I know he
-hated to leave the company, and there wasn’t a man but missed him from that
-time on. He always had a soft spot in his heart for us, as Bn. Adjt. and later
-as Regimental Adjt. Foulkes was one man I was never disappointed in.
-McMahon, his striker, went with him. Mac was a good scout too.</p>
-
-<p>By July 18th we had skirmished over every inch of the big hill; hiked
-over all the roads within a six mile radius; bayoneted about 500 “Boche”
-gunnysacks apiece, and made ’steen triangles at musketry drill. We got
-another march order, and after the usual bustle of cleaning up we pulled out
-with full equipment on July 19th at 9:00 A. M.</p>
-
-<p>It was only a four mile hike this time, to Lottingham, the nearest railway
-depot. There we were parked in a little yard off the road, and saw the 309th
-and 310th Inf. go by to entrain. We waited about an hour, and I broke up a
-very promising crap game, to my secret regret. I afterward chucked the bones
-out of the car window, much to Dunn’s disgust.</p>
-
-<p>At 11:30 we were packed into a train, which rolled off in the usual nonchalant
-manner, at an average speed of six miles per hour. We passed through
-some pretty enough country during the afternoon, and speculated wildly on
-our destination, as usual missing it completely.</p>
-
-<p>At 8:30 P. M. we pulled up at Ligny alongside an American Red Cross
-train, with a couple of real American nurses in it. How good they looked to
-us! The car windows were nearly all shattered, and the cars scarred with
-bullets and shrapnel. This was a bit of the real thing.</p>
-
-<p>The battalion detrained, formed on the road, and we hiked off through the
-long summer twilight, guided by Vafiadis, our advance party detail. We were
-being introduced to the Arras-St. Pol road, with which we were to become well
-acquainted shortly. We went on, over the railroad tracks at Roellecourt, stopped
-for a ten-minute rest at dusk and watched the cows come home down the
-hill—another homesick sight for the country lads—and hiked on and on. At
-last, well after dark, we turned off up another road; past a bit of woods, then
-off to the right past a large farmhouse, and Vafiadis pointed out a little plot
-about as big as a Harlem flat and said we were to billet there. I remarked
-“likell” and pushed ahead into a nice grassy field where we pitched pup tents
-for the night. I knew there would be an awful yowl from the owners in the
-morning, but let it slide.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning we found that this was St. Michel, and that St. Pol, quite a
-sizeable town, was only a quarter of a mile away. Pup tents were pitched up
-the hill from the field, in the woods, along a rough lumber road. The kitchen
-was installed under some trees near the farmhouse, which was deserted. We
-found a lot of kitchen utensils—the place had been an estaminet—and put some
-of ’em to use. The day was spent in resting and getting cleaned up and settled.
-In the evening some went into St. Pol.</p>
-
-<p>That night we found out why the place was deserted. St. Pol was a railroad
-center, and quite convenient for the Boche bombers. No bombs landed
-in camp that night, but they were hitting all around, with a roar and a jar
-that gave a fellow a queer sensation in the stomach. Being bombed is such a
-helpless, hopeless sort of process.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>Earlier in the war St. Pol had been under long range artillery fire; and
-between that and the air raids there were plenty of shell holes all around.
-There were some among our pup tents, and a couple of huge ones just across
-the road in the woods.</p>
-
-<p>Company headquarters was established in the attic of the farmhouse,
-battalion headquarters being on the first floor. Regimental Hdq. was at
-Foufflin-Ricametz, about 4 kilos away.</p>
-
-<p>In a couple of days a vitriolic and voluble French woman descended upon
-us. It appeared that we had broken into the house, used her things without
-permission, taken eggs the hens had laid, used several priceless old boards
-from the barn to make a mess table, walked on the grass, and disturbed the
-manure pile. I never did believe she and her husband ever lived there; but
-we put everything back, and ate in the mud until Thompson and Farry found
-some boards elsewhere. These two French people made life as miserable as
-they could for us while we were there, continually claiming damages and protesting
-at everything we did, it seemed.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the inhabitants of St. Michel and St. Pol slept at night in long
-dugouts tunnelled underneath the hills. They were very damp, foul close
-holes, with little cubicles scratched out of the walls to sleep in. They weren’t
-taking any more chances with H. E.</p>
-
-<p>Our “intensive training” was continued here. We were rejoiced that we
-hadn’t that awful hill to climb, and somehow we got away with using the field
-to drill on. The mornings were taken up with problems, and before long we
-were well acquainted with those woods; then there was bayonet drill, bombing,
-the everlasting gas mask drill, musketry, physical drill, and so on. The
-afternoon was devoted to special drill for Lewis gun, V. B. and hand bombers,
-runners, etc., while the rest of the company did problems or musketry. We
-stood retreat and reveille along the lumber road—oh, yes, and that 15 minutes
-of manual of arms before retreat every night.</p>
-
-<p>Usually it rained here. Drill went on just the same, though. We could
-hear the thunder of the big guns at night, and the crash and roar from the
-droning bombing planes let us know that this was in grim earnest, and it
-behooved us to make the most of our time.</p>
-
-<p>Regimental, brigade, and divisional problems began to be all the rage.
-Since nobody below majors ever get any information as to what these are all
-about, the troops were usually represented by flags. In good weather these
-things are just a bore; when it rains, they’re considerably worse.</p>
-
-<p>On August 3d, the H. L. I. detachment left us, and we completed our
-training on our own.</p>
-
-<p>About two weeks after our arrival at St. Michel, the word was passed that
-Elsie Janis was coming to visit the division. Of course that afternoon was
-marked by a good old Northern France soaker. How it rained! We hiked
-about three miles through it, and were packed into a courtyard with five or six
-thousand other shoving, soaking doughboys. Miss Janis had our band to help
-her out, and a little platform with a bit of canvas overhead, which kept off a
-little of the rain. Half of us couldn’t see her except for occasional glimpses;
-officers and men were drenched right through and through. Besides, Miss
-Janis was physically about all in from overwork, and had a peach of a cold—a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-real A. E. F. cold, not the kind that amateur singers always use for an alibi.
-The bunch was sore at being hauled out in this weather for anything short of
-going into action.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, from the first moment that girl stepped on the platform, she had
-the crowd with her. We were fed up, lonesome in a strange land, sick of
-hearing a foreign tongue, longing to see a regular girl again. And here was
-a bit of real America before our eyes; pep incarnate—a snappy, clean cut,
-clean girl from home, laughing with us, making us laugh at ourselves and in
-spite of ourselves, jazzing it up in the rain. And we sloshed and squnched
-back to St. Michel, singing:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Beautiful Elsie, beautiful Elsie,</div>
-<div class="verse">“You’re the only, only girl that I ado-o-re.”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>On August 5th the battalion left St. Michel at 9:00 A. M. in full marching
-order. We were going to occupy a trench sector for a practice tour.</p>
-
-<p>As you all know now, the trench systems of each side during the war were
-in triplicate, or maybe quadruplicate. There was the system actually being
-occupied against the enemy. A couple of miles back was another complete
-system, to be defended in case the first was taken; and, if time permitted, yet
-another behind this.</p>
-
-<p>We were to take over a sector of the G. H. Q., or second system, just
-behind Arras. While this was partly a regular item on our training schedule—the
-last one before actually going into the line—it was also contemplated that
-in case the Boche uncorked another drive on Arras, we should occupy this line
-and bar the road of the enemy should he break through, as he had done in
-the spring further north.</p>
-
-<p>After a long 12 mile hike up the Arras road, we turned off to the right,
-past a long train of British motor lorries, of which there seemed an inexhaustible
-supply. On through roads ever rougher and narrower we went, and
-halted at last in a clearing in a patch of woods. The officers went out to
-reconnoitre the sector and have their company sectors assigned, and the company
-stacked arms in the wet woods—it was raining, of course—and wondered
-if we’d get any chow.</p>
-
-<p>It was dark when we had had supper from our one lunged rolling kitchen
-and filed off to take up our position. “B” Co. was battalion support. The
-trenches were only dug about waist high; there were no dugouts or cubby holes
-to sleep in; not even a firing step to keep you out of the mud. We splashed
-and squatted through the pitchy blackness; no lights were allowed, of course.
-We reached our post finally, and settled down in the bottom of the trench in
-abject misery. The only lights were from the star shells that the Germans
-were sending up from their real lines, only a few kilos away; and the rumble of
-artillery fire there ahead reminded us that we were pretty close to the real
-thing.</p>
-
-<p>While I was making my final inspection, I saw a light come flashing down
-the communication trench towards us. This was against all orders, so I snarled
-out a peremptory command to put it out. The light didn’t pay any attention.
-This was the last straw; I thought that so long as we had to go through this
-performance it was going to be done right, with nobody privileged to cross
-their fingers and say they weren’t playing. I wallowed off in the direction of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-that flash light, wet through and getting pretty sore. I hailed it; I adopted
-a false, feigned politeness; I remarked that this was not puss in the corner, nor
-was I talking for my health, and if they couldn’t douse that glim I had a .45
-that could. The light went out abruptly. I asked if he was simulating a
-steamboat on the Mississippi. I finally got quite near and demanded whoin’ell
-that was anyhow. And it was the Colonel. Yes, of course.</p>
-
-<p>The best of it was that he had issued the order against lights himself about
-two hours before, and couldn’t very well blame me.</p>
-
-<p>An order came round to send a detail after some corrugated iron at point
-“G24a7.3.” I stumbled around until I walked on a sergeant, Bill Reid, and so I
-made him the goat, and told him to take a detail and go to it. The place was
-about 300 yards away over a couple of fields. Bill and his detail floundered
-off, and roamed about until 3:00 A. M., when they hailed a figure in the darkness
-as “Hey, buddy.” It was Lt. Col. Myer, at regimental hdq. at Hermaville,
-a couple of kilos away. He steered Bill back to the company, where he arrived
-at dawn—without the iron.</p>
-
-<p>During the day the sun shone at intervals, and we scraped out cubbies in
-the side of the trench, and tried to get a little dry. Barney O’Rourke, who
-had been missing since the night before, showed up under guard, somewhat the
-worse for wear. He had wandered off to Hermaville, met an Irish Tommy,
-found a hospitable estaminet, and subsequently had severely rebuked an officer
-from Rgt’l. Hdqrs. who undertook to reprove him. Regt’l Hdq. was all for
-having Barney shot at sunrise or something, and of course I got a call. At
-the courtmartial, though, we got him off with a month’s hard labor and a
-$10.00 blind, which was really quite all that happy-go-lucky, golden-hearted
-son of Erin deserved. He never did the month at that, or rather we all did.
-But he dug me a company headquarters when he came back, and it would have
-been fine only someone walked through the roof.</p>
-
-<p>We were relieved that night by “E” Co., 24 hours before we expected.
-We marched back to the clearing in the woods, had supper at the rolling
-kitchen, pitched pup tents and had a comparatively dry night’s sleep. Jerry
-came over and tried to drop an ash can on the kitchen, but didn’t succeed.</p>
-
-<p>They let us sleep late next morning, and we started for our billet at 10:00
-A. M., leaving the 2d bn. to the joys of make-believe trench life.</p>
-
-<p>Right here I want to say a word about our experience with court-martials.
-There has been much criticism of military justice as administered in the
-A. E. F., but the 78th Division was fortunate in having as Judge Advocate a
-most capable, honest, experienced, broad minded man, Major George G. Bogert,
-formerly Professor of Law at Cornell, I believe. His assistant, Lt. John J.
-Kuhn, was an equally fine type of lawyer and gentleman. I know of no
-accused man who did not get an absolutely square deal from them, and from
-the courts-martial before which they appeared.</p>
-
-<p>Well, here we are back in St. Michel, rocked to sleep every night by the
-free fireworks from our aerial visitors. We had hardly rested from our trench
-experience before I was ordered to take details from each company to the rifle
-range. Part of “B” company had gone a week before, and their tales of woe
-had in some measure prepared us.</p>
-
-<p>We had no guide. As we hiked through Foufflin-Ricametz, I stopped off<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-and Capt. Wagner showed me our destination on a map. We plodded on and
-on, through about 20 villages, all alike, and all with a maze of crooked little
-streets that weren’t on any map. We passed by a lot of Canadian artillery back
-for a rest. The Canadians had been badly shot up before we got to France,
-and were being reorganized and recuperating that summer. They, the Anzacs,
-the Australians, the Scotties, and the Guard regiments were the shock troops
-of the British Army.</p>
-
-<p>Finally we came upon a welcome sign, “Target Range,” and we bivouacked
-in woods behind the slope whereon the targets were. The next day we plugged
-away at 200, 300 and 500 yards at four rickety swivel targets. It rained, of
-course; but we finished in the afternoon, and hiked back to St. Michel. It
-seemed even longer than before, though we took a short cut by a back road;
-and we were for once glad to see the lonely tower of St. Michel rising above the
-woods outside St. Pol.</p>
-
-<p>I returned to find Major Odom on the eve of departure for another school.
-From this time, then, until he returned on August 20th, the company was commanded
-by Lt. Schuyler, who carried out his additional duties with characteristic
-energy and conscientiousness.</p>
-
-<p>On August 12th, the whole regiment was on the move; and this time we
-were leaving St. Michel for good, though a small detail was left to guard the
-baggage. Sgt. Haynes, who had hurt his leg in bayonet practice, was left
-behind with water on the knee, and never succeeded in rejoining the company.
-Our faithful company clerk, too, Cpl. Jimmy Jones, broke his ankle, and was
-sent to a hospital in England. Fortunately for me, we had Cpl. Stiles ready
-to step into his shoes. From this time on Stiles handled the company paper
-work in a most efficient and conscientious fashion. Most fellows never have
-any idea of the long hours, day and night, that a company clerk puts in, struggling
-with the labyrinth of forms, records, reports and correspondence that are
-vital to the running of the company. The greater part of the paper work that
-was done at Camp Dix by the officers and Co. Cmdrs. was turned over to the
-Co. clerks in France, and many a night Stiles and Jones have pored over that
-field desk, by the light of a candle, keeping us straight with the authorities.
-If records ever went astray, or passes went awry, it was not their fault. “B”
-Company was certainly most fortunate in its company clerks.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long, hot march that sunny August day up toward the front, and
-the company pulled into Lattre St. Quentin pretty well tuckered. I had been
-taken up in a British staff car as we passed through Regt’l Hdq., and, with the
-other two battalion commanders, was taken to reconnoiter the sectors of the
-front line which we were to take over. Each battalion was to be brigaded with
-an English regiment, and to hold the front lines for a regular tour of duty as
-the last step in the training schedule.</p>
-
-<p>The 1st Bn. was to go in with the 1st London regiment. The officers of
-this brigade and regiment received me very cordially. Our proposed battalion
-sector was just outside Arras. The town itself was within the English lines,
-which ran along the eastern outskirts. The position was well organized, and
-the trenches were in good shape, as this part of the line had been practically
-stationary for a year. The outfit we were to relieve were in high glee, as they
-had been in the trenches for 8 months straight. It was a “quiet” sector, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-Jerry buzzed a few shells quite unpleasantly close while I was roaming about.</p>
-
-<p>I rode back in luxury in the staff car to find the battalion billeted and
-asleep. We had arranged for officers and platoon sergeants to go up in a
-couple of days to reconnoiter their respective positions.</p>
-
-<p>Lattre St. Quentin was a village of some sixty houses, about 20 kilos from
-Arras. “B” Co. was billeted in the barn behind the house where Bn. Hdq. was
-located, and in the house next to it down the road.</p>
-
-<p>During the next few days we had a platoon competition in the battalion.
-“B” Co. was represented by the 4th platoon. The event was won by the “C”
-Co. 3d platoon, but all the contestants did well.</p>
-
-<p>There was a nice “vacant lot” by the billet, and we had some good fun
-kicking a football and staging several baseball matches there. The weather
-was fine, and we were in great fettle.</p>
-
-<p>On August 14th orders arrived promoting Lt. Col. Myer to Colonel and
-putting him in command of the 129th Infantry. This was a great loss to the
-regiment. Myer was the best officer we had, thoroughly efficient, devoted to
-his profession, always on the job, an excellent judge of men, and an adept at
-picking out the essential things that counted. He placed the good of the service
-first, and himself last, and he had the trust and respect of every officer and
-man in the outfit.</p>
-
-<p>The officers and platoon sgts. left on the evening of the 15th for the front
-line via a little narrow gauge railway, returning the next morning. All was
-now in readiness.</p>
-
-<p>But at noon on the 16th, orders arrived postponing the relief. On the
-17th, rumors began to fly that we were to go to another part of the front. Then
-we were ordered to turn in the Lewis guns, with which we had become quite
-familiar. Somehow it leaked out that we were to go South to the American
-sector. This rumor became a certainty when we turned in all our British
-rifles and ammunition, receiving instead American Enfields. Our overcoats and
-other supplies that we had left at St. Michel were brought over in motor trucks.
-The details guarding them said that Jerry had bombed the old billet to a
-fare-you-well the night after we left it.</p>
-
-<p>Our joy at moving was heartfelt and unbounded. Those who had been
-south to schools or on other duties told us what a “bon secteur” it was. And
-the prospect of drawing American rations and being with American troops and
-transport again was welcomed with acclaim. To tell the truth, we were rather
-fed up with being under the wing of our British Allies. Their ways were not
-our ways; we would feel better when with our own kind. Theoretically, we
-were brothers in the great cause. Practically, in the mud and sweat and
-thousand petty aggravations and misunderstandings, we had undoubtedly
-gotten upon each other’s nerves. The average Tommy looked upon us as a
-bunch of greenhorn Yankees, who had all made fortunes during the first three
-years of the war and were now over in France three years late spending them
-and raising the price of vin rouge and “oofs.” We looked upon the average
-Tommy as a degenerate, tea drinking, saluting bellyacher. The Australians
-and Canadians were our sworn buddies, however, and we liked the Scotties.
-Maybe this was because the only British combat troops we had been in touch<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-with were these organizations. To me, the few English combat troops that I
-encountered seemed a fairly decent bunch.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i035.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">2d Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>It was with light hearts, then, that we pulled out of Lattre St. Quentin on
-a beautiful summer morning, at 10 o’clock, August 20th. It was only an 8
-mile hike to Tinques, a rail head on the Arras road. We turned into a big
-held and I halted the battalion while I went to find the R. T. O. in charge
-of entraining.</p>
-
-<p>All was bustle and hurry. Things were being rushed through in the
-American fashion. Nobody knew where the R. T. O. was; everybody was too
-busy to know anything. At last I saw Lt. Gibbs on top of a flat car loading
-wagons. He shouted that our train was across the platform and was due to
-leave in 20 minutes. I dashed back to the battalion, hurried it across the
-tracks, entrained them and sure enough the train pulled out just as I got the
-outfit aboard. As I was finishing, a dapper U. S. Major of the Division
-Inspector’s Dept. toddled up and said it was the worst entraining he had ever
-seen, and why weren’t the men marched up to the cars in column of squads?
-I saluted the boob wearily and swung aboard just as the train pulled out.</p>
-
-<p>Now came our longest rail journey in France. For two days we bowled
-along pretty steadily. We swung around by St. Pol, with a farewell glimpse of
-our old billet, and then south, through Amiens, up to the outskirts of Paris.
-Hearts beat high, and had the train stopped for five minutes at a likely looking
-place, I was prepared to see the battalion make a break for la vie Parisienne.
-The only stop, however, was for a few minutes to get routing orders from a
-business-like French R. T. O. From these orders I learned that our destination
-was Passavant. It might as well have been Timbuctoo for all that meant to
-me; but I had learned by this time that these French trains, with all their
-misery and sin, did get you to the proper place at last, so I didn’t worry.</p>
-
-<p>The houses of Paris fell behind, and we rolled east along the famous
-Marne river. At Haute Creuse and St. Pol we had read in the Paris editions
-of the “New York Herald” and “Daily Mail” of the desperate fighting along
-here in July, in which the mettle of our American regulars and marines had
-been put to so stern a test; and the next morning, a beautiful, bright day it
-was, too, we began to pass through towns whose names were yet ringing all
-over the world. The familiar signs of nearing the front began to appear—the
-roofless houses, shell holes, and so on. Then we began to see debris lying
-about—discarded bits of equipment and uniform, empty bandoliers, then here
-and there a new grave, marked by a helmet, and sometimes a little cross.
-Presently we went right through Chateau Thierry—one of the first trains since
-the battle. From our cars we saw the little firing posts that the Americans had
-scratched out in the side of the railroad embankment. Here and there a grave
-showed where one had died where he fought. Some German helmets over
-graves on the south side of the river showed where perhaps some of the enemy
-had gotten across before they fell under the fire of the Springfields.</p>
-
-<p>But the most impressive and inspiring sight of all to Americans were the
-hills that stretched up to the North of the river. A long steep, smooth, stretch
-broken only enough to allow of cover for reserves and machine guns—a
-position that looked absolutely impregnable if defended by modern weapons.
-And up these heights, defended by the flower of the German army, flushed with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-recent success, our countrymen had swept forward, carried the position, and
-hurled the foe back. It must have been some scrap.</p>
-
-<p>The Marne here is about as large as a good-sized American creek. There
-were quite a few dead horses and men still bobbing around in it. The countryside
-had not been under fire for very long, compared to the Arras section; some
-crops were still standing, and a few people at work reaping them already. I
-am sorry to say that one of our men was thoughtless enough to grab a pile of
-new cut hay from a field during a stop. I happened to see him and of course
-he put it back, and got a summary out of it. I mention this to remind you
-that in most of our trouble with the French peasants we were at fault to some
-extent. Of course, it isn’t pleasant to sleep for several nights on the floor of a
-jolting cattle car. But neither is it enjoyable for poor Jacques to see his hay
-miraculously preserved from the H. E.’s, laboriously gathered, and then have a
-doughboy coolly annex it and roll away in a train.</p>
-
-<p>We rolled on through the sunny August day, east to Chalons-sur-Marne,
-then southeast, away from the battle front. Night came on, and dragged along
-toward dawn. At about 2:00 A. M. we stopped at a little way station for hot
-coffee, ready for us in great G. I. boilers. The French corporal in charge of the
-station gave me a cup out of his own private pot, cooking over a smelly little
-oil stove, thick as mud, black as night, reeking with cognac, altogether very
-satisfactory. I wished every man could have had such a shot.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning we passed the walled heights of Chaumont, A. E. F.
-headquarters. On past the picturesque battlements of Langres, centre of the
-Army Schools; then east again. The country was more rugged and less highly
-cultivated. Here was a place where one might get off the road without stepping
-on Jacques’ garden. It looked more like home. The woods were sure
-enough ones, not little, severely confined, neatly trimmed groves such as they
-had in the north, with every tree numbered and recorded.</p>
-
-<p>Best of all, we were in the American sector. The M. P.’s at the stations
-were doughboys instead of Tommies or poilus. Here an American ambulance
-hustled along the road; there a good old 3-ton Q. M. truck lumbered along.
-Overseas caps were sprinkled about the stations. No more now of “What is
-the name of this bally station, old top?,” and “Kesky eessy, Mossure.” We
-could yell: “Say, buddy, what t’ell burg’s this?” like civilized persons.</p>
-
-<p>Off on a branch line, around hills, over a long, white stone bridge, and the
-train slid up to the long platform at Passavant station.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-“THE AMERICAN SECTOR”</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The battalion tumbled off, very greasy as to face and stiff as to legs. The
-rolling kitchens were unloaded; the Colonel and Lt. Gibbs appeared and disappeared.
-We saw our own supply company hard at work in the adjacent field.
-In a few minutes it was “Fall in,” and we hiked across the railroad and down
-into the centre of the little town.</p>
-
-<p>At the town square we halted, and lay around for an hour in the shade
-waiting for our French guides to take the companies to their billets. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-was a cool fountain splashing in the center of the square, but it was marked
-“Non potable,” so we had to wait until we could get some chlorinated water
-from our lister bags. Oh, that chlorinated water! Will we ever get the taste
-of the stuff out of our mouths?</p>
-
-<p>At last a guide came along, but only to take off “C” Co., which was billeted
-at the little village of Rochere, about 4 kilos outside Passavant. Finally our
-guide appeared, and “A” and “B” companies hiked off down a narrow street,
-skirting the great chateau, then up a long hill, under the railroad bridge, and
-into our billeting area, a little “suburb” of the town across the railroad tracks.</p>
-
-<p>At once we noticed a difference in the people. This town was far behind
-the lines. No air raids had visited it; lights could be shown at night. And
-the people seemed actually glad to see us. Instead of lowering brows, grudging
-admission, furious protests, we met pleasant smiles, bon jour’s, readiness
-and willingness to accommodate us. Even when we swept out the stables and
-outhouses where we were billeted there was no objection. Oh, boy, this was
-something like it!</p>
-
-<p>The rolling kitchen was put to work in a field on the outskirts, and Wilson,
-deBruin, Lusier &amp; Co. got busy. Everyone was pretty tired, but after chow
-things looked much brighter.</p>
-
-<p>That night occurred an incident which shows how thoughtless soldiers are.
-A couple of men, who shall be nameless, patronized the estaminets far too
-freely. When they had acquired a skinful of vin rouge apiece, they went forth
-and nobly robbed a hen roost, and had a chicken dinner.</p>
-
-<p>Now had this happened a week before, there would have been immediate
-and voluble protests to the authorities, and a bill for damages as long as your
-arm. And on our side, I fear the matter would have been looked on as
-righteous retribution, and the officers would have received very little assistance
-in investigating the affair.</p>
-
-<p>But this was different. Wilson and some others found the little girl at
-their billet and her mother in tears over their loss. The offenders were
-promptly trailed and spotted, and reported to Lt. Schuyler. And nobody felt
-more ashamed than they when they woke up in the guardhouse the next morning.
-Meanwhile, that same evening a hasty collection had been taken up in the
-company, and the French lady reimbursed a good many times the value of her
-loss. I understand she wouldn’t take all they collected; but next day I met a
-couple of the boys, Wilson and Weber, I think, coming back from town with
-the little girl between them, proudly bearing the finest bonnet that Passavant
-“epiceries” could produce, and enough chocolate to satisfy a dozen youngsters.</p>
-
-<p>The days at Passavant were about the brightest spot in our stay in France.
-The training schedules were on hand again, of course. Chauchats were issued
-to replace the Lewis guns of the English sector; much to the disgust of the
-auto riflemen, who had worked so hard learning the Lewis, and found the
-Chauchat but a crude affair comparatively. But the weather was beautiful;
-there was a stream to wash in, and a lovely lake about a mile away where you
-could have a swim—the only time we enjoyed this luxury that summer. The
-people were pleasant; we were getting American rations; all went well.</p>
-
-<p>It was too good to last long. On August 27th we got a march order, and
-at 1:00 P. M. the next day we pulled out, down the hill to Passavant, up hill<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-through the town, and fell in behind the second battalion for a long, long hike
-through the summer afternoon and evening.</p>
-
-<p>Six o’clock came, and seven. Still no sign of camp. It was growing dark.
-The men were good and tired; but “B” company held to its record as the best
-marching company in the outfit, and plodded along doggedly. I felt uncomfortable
-every time I looked back at my four platoons; I felt that I ought to be
-hiking with them instead of on the Major’s horse; knowing, however, that I
-had a couple of hours hard work ahead of me after we camped, I turned back
-to the road ahead, and wished the Major were back.</p>
-
-<p>At last, at 8:00 P. M., when it was quite dark, we turned off to the left,
-crossed several fields, and came to a number of frame barracks. These had
-bunks within them—about half enough to accommodate the men, but we were
-glad to lie down anywhere. After the usual turmoil we got supper under way,
-and as fast as chow could be obtained and swallowed, we hit the hay—some in
-barracks, others in pup tents in the fields outside. We had done about 20
-kilos that day.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning we pulled out at 9 o’clock, hiked into Fresnes, the
-village near by, and then out on a good wide road, heading generally west. The
-Colonel, who was making the hike in an automobile, had a theory that no man
-needed more than a pint of water on any march, and the march discipline was
-to be very strict. The everlasting rain started again; it was hike, hike, hike.
-Who that hasn’t done it can ever understand the awful, soul tearing grind of a
-long hike with full pack? After the first hour, the pack gets heavy on the
-back and shoulders. You see the feet of the fellow ahead—up and down, up
-and down, remorselessly, steadily—doesn’t he ever get tired? If he can make
-it, you can. Some buckle or piece of equipment gets loose, and goes jingle,
-jingle, jingle, and slap, slap, slap against your leg. It gets irritating. You
-are sweating and hot and dirty and uncomfortable. “Close up!” You mentally
-damn the officers, who haven’t any rifles; the ones who ride horses, doubly
-damned; and as for those birds in the autos—ahem! How long to the 10
-minutes rest? Then it starts to rain. It beats into your face. You damn the
-boob who wished upon the Americans that prize inanity of equipment, the overseas
-cap. It is ingeniously designed to give the eyes and face no protection
-from sun, wind or rain, and at the same time efficiently to direct water down
-the back of your neck. On, on, on, plod, plash, squnchy, sqush. The Major
-looks at his watch. You eye the side of the road for a likely looking place. At
-last: “Fall out t’ right th’ road.” You stumble over and plump down on the
-ground. Oh, blessed moment! you ease the load on your shoulders; your feet
-are tingling with happiness at being off duty; after a few breaths you fish out
-a cigarette or the old pipe, and light up for a few puffs. You lean back—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Fall in!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Oh, murder! You know it hasn’t been four minutes, let alone ten.</p>
-
-<p>Toward noon we passed through Bourbonne-les-Bains, quite a sizable town;
-and as we went plugging along by the railroad station there was Major Odom.
-He was carried off by the Colonel in his car, but took command of the battalion
-that night, and I was glad to get back to “B” Co.</p>
-
-<p>Up that long, long, steep street we plugged along, rested, then pushed on
-well clear of the town, and halted beside a pretty green meadow in the woods<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-for lunch. After we finished our hard bread, corned willy and jam, and were
-lying about in heavenly idleness for a few minutes, Roy Schuyler’s eye fell
-upon the bn. adjutant’s horse; a dignified and rotund, rather elderly mare,
-indulging in a roll while her saddle and bridle were off. In a minute Roy was
-on the astonished beast’s back. Encouraged by a couple of hearty thwacks
-from a club, Mary started on a very creditable imitation of youthful gamboling.
-It was a gallant sight for a summer afternoon. Often since, the picture has
-come back to me—the prancing horse, the laughing young rider with one hand
-in her mane, the other brandished aloft. But our time is up; Mary must resume
-her saddle, and we our packs, and off we go.</p>
-
-<p>The shadows lengthened; the sun dropped down behind the hills, and the
-long French twilight set in. Still no sign of our guides to indicate our billet
-was near. Village after village came into view, raised our hopes, and dashed
-them again as we plodded on. At last, at about 6:00 P. M., we slogged into
-Merrey. There the Colonel was waiting, in his car. He remarked cheerfully
-that he had had quite a hunt for billets, but had found a splendid spot. We
-hiked through the village, and turned off the road into the splendid spot—a
-pine grove, very wet and rooty as to floor, and no water around. We were
-satisfied to get off our feet, however. After the usual procedure of getting
-kicked out of X company’s area, and kicking Y company out of ours, we rigged
-up shelter tents or sleeping bags. Of course the water carts weren’t on hand,
-and dinner was held up. There are two recurrent occasions in a soldier’s life
-when the seconds drag most fearsomely; the interval between a shell’s landing
-and bursting; and the interval between the end of a hike and chow.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the boys went off to wash their feet in a pretty little pond a couple
-of fields away. That pond concealed some dark secret beneath its placid bosom.
-Whew! Didn’t it stink when disturbed?</p>
-
-<p>At reveille we rolled out of our blankets, pretty stiff and cold, but rested.
-Packs were rolled again, and we fell in at 9:00 A. M., Major Odom again commanding
-the battalion, and were off on the last lap. This was to be a short
-one, only about five miles. We passed a large field with a number of Boche
-prisoners at work, and at about 11:00 A. M. crossed a railroad, turned off the
-road to the right, and came upon a cantonment just outside of Breuvannes,
-where the battalion was billeted.</p>
-
-<p>While these frame barracks were not so picturesque as other billets we
-had had, they were infinitely better adapted to our uses. There were bunks for
-all, mess halls, a parade ground large enough to form the battalion, and a fine
-level drill field near by, along the railroad track. A good-sized creek ran close
-by, and Breuvannes was only 5 minutes walk away. A pretty enough little
-village, with five or six stores and estaminets. Also there was a Y hut, where
-you could see movies at night if you got there soon enough.</p>
-
-<p>The 42d Division had been here until the day before, resting and replacing
-their losses from the fighting in July. A bn. of the 5th Marines had preceded
-them, and that evening I ran across a Marine lieutenant who was following up
-his outfit. My own alma mater, the Virginia Military Institute, furnished a
-number of officers to the Marines, and I was particularly interested in news
-from them. This officer told me of the death of several of my old school fellows
-at Belleau Woods. When he said that only one in ten had come through out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-of his own company, however, I thought he was pulling a long bow.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning, August 31, we resumed the familiar drill schedules.
-Every effort was made to teach the use and mechanism of the new Chauchats.
-Special training went on as usual, and we practiced the formations of the
-O. C. S. U. (Offensive Combat of Small Units) on all the bushes and trees
-in the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>Barney O’Rourke and I spent one day on a pilgrimage to Bourmont, where
-the courtmartial heretofore referred to took place; Barney quite prepared to be
-shot at sunrise, and I suspect a little disappointed at the affair ending so
-undramatically.</p>
-
-<p>The drill field furnished a very fair baseball diamond, and several inter-company
-contests were staged. We played one ten-inning thriller with “A”
-Co., in which Joe Fahey finally pitched us to victory, supported by an able
-cast. We had the makings of a good football team under way, too, and I
-remember I had most of the skin off my right arm. But more serious business
-was on hand, and our athletic activities had to be temporarily laid aside.</p>
-
-<p>On Sept. 4, we prepared to move. The battalion was formed at dusk, and
-at 9:00 P. M. we filed off for our first night march in France. It started raining
-promptly, of course. Wasn’t it dark! In an hour you literally could not
-see your hand an inch before your nose. No lights or smoking were allowed;
-and even a chew was risky, as you never knew who you’d hit when you let fly.
-Now and then a glimmer of light from some cottage fire would show the
-shadowy forms of the last squad of “C” Co. in front, hastening on into the
-darkness. I walked into an ungainly quadruped and requested the rider to get
-his damned mule out of the road; and was immediately and discourteously
-informed that I had better keep my mouth shut and drive on. I recognized
-Major Odom’s voice and drove on.</p>
-
-<p>Rain, hike, rain, slog, mud, mud, sweat, damn. Halt and fall out and sit
-in the mud for ten minutes and feel the rain percolate. Fall in, and hike
-again, your cold, wet clothes clinging to you.</p>
-
-<p>Eight weary hours of this. At last, just before daybreak, we turned off
-the road through the gateway of a once palatial estate, and hiked across a park
-to a grove where we were billeted. The fifteen miles we had
-covered seemed like 30. We were done in enough to fall asleep, many without
-unrolling their packs. The rain, however, found us out, trickled in at every
-corner, and morning found us miserable enough.</p>
-
-<p>No word was vouchsafed to us as to when we should move again; and this
-playing at secrecy cost “D” and “C” Cos. their meal. It was more luck than
-good management that gave me the hunch to rout out our weary cooks and
-have chow at 11:00 o’clock. At 12:00 o’clock orders came in a great hurry
-that we were to clear the crossroads at 2:30. We did it at 3:00.</p>
-
-<p>Our new lieutenant-colonel, Arthur Budd, had joined us the night before.
-During the first halt Lt. Foulkes came galloping up on old Mary, and his former
-platoon—the first—chortled with glee every time daylight showed between
-Louis and the saddle. Col. Budd promptly treated me to a cold and fishy
-stare, and inquired if it was the custom for “B” Co. to yell at officers when they
-passed. I hastily delivered a brief resume of Louis’ career with the company
-and the estimation in which we held him, intimating that he was regarded as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-one helofa good fellow, and that no mutiny was breaking out. Meanwhile I had
-hastily sized up our new acquisition as a goof. I had reason to revise this
-estimate, and that shortly.</p>
-
-<p>The rain let up this evening, for a wonder, and the march wasn’t half bad,
-except for the mud under foot, which we were pretty well used to. We passed
-by a sizeable cantonment of Chinese labor troops, and Diskin wanted to fall out
-and leave his laundry. We had only the most vague idea of where we were; in
-fact, our notions of French geography were of the crudest anyhow. Bill Reid,
-from his six-foot eyrie, solemnly announced that he saw the Alps ahead, and
-had the 1st platoon craning its respective necks for an hour.</p>
-
-<p>Just as darkness fell, we ran into an ammunition train, the tail end of the
-42d Division. We pushed on behind them up a hill into the village of Viocourt,
-where our old dependable of the advance party, Sgt. Hill, met us and pointed
-out our billets, in lofts and stables on both sides of the “street.”</p>
-
-<p>We all knew pretty well by now that we must be in for action soon.
-The St. Mihiel salient meant nothing more to us than it did to folks at home
-then. The general impression was that it was to be a drive on Metz; and this
-wasn’t so far out of the way, at that.</p>
-
-<p>By this time it didn’t take us long to make ourselves at home in a strange
-place. We had bagged a good place for the rolling kitchen, and the billets
-weren’t so bad. Between showers we got in some drilling, and a couple of
-hours on an extemporized 30-yard range that Lt. Schuyler put up one morning
-before breakfast. Everyone tried his hand at the Chauchat for a magazine full.
-This was the only chance we had to fire this gun before we had to meet the
-enemy with it. The men armed with pistols punctured a few tin cans after a
-vast expenditure of lead.</p>
-
-<p>There was a beautiful meadow below town, and on Sunday, the 8th, we
-staged a couple of good ball games. On Monday we had a company problem
-through the woods beyond the meadow, and Tuesday we got in the target
-practice.</p>
-
-<p>Wednesday morning the Major assembled the Co. cmdrs. and ordered us
-to be ready to march at 1:30. After the usual bustle all was ready for the
-road, two days’ rations being carried. Our kitchen and cooks were attached to
-the regt’l supply train.</p>
-
-<p>It had been raining all the morning, but old J. Pluvius had only been practising
-for the real show. We started off in a steady downpour, which speedily
-became a regular deluge. The wind rose to a gale, which drove the sheets of
-water directly at us, penetrating right through slickers and clothing. In 15
-minutes we were all wet to the skin.</p>
-
-<p>It was only an hour’s march this time. At 3:00 P. M., we came to a crossroads
-just outside Chatenois. There stood a long line of motor trucks, stretching
-away in either direction as far as the eye could see. The embussing was
-well handled, and in 20 minutes we were packed in, 20 or more to a truck,
-jammed as tight as they could be, every man wet through and chilled. Even
-our incorrigibly optimistic regimental history says, “We shall never forget
-this day because of its miserable and nasty weather.”</p>
-
-<p>These busses were driven by Chinese in the French service. With their
-impassive Oriental faces looking out over their great sheepskin coats, they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-looked fitting agents of destiny; grave Charons, bearing us on the last lap of
-our progress toward our fate.</p>
-
-<p>At 4:00 o’clock we were off, with a jerk and a clank of gears and a steady
-rumble. On and on, over the long French road, rolling on through rain and
-wind, steadily, inevitably; each lorry nearly touching the one in front. Darkness
-fell; the long gray train rolled on, not a light, not a sound save the rumble
-of the trucks. We got colder and colder; more and more cramped. Capt.
-Fleischmann and I spent most of the night each cherishing the other’s icy feet
-in his bosom. On and on, through gray, silent towns, past the ghostly figure
-of a lonely M. P. at a crossroads; through fields, woods, villages, all wet and
-quiet in the falling rain.</p>
-
-<p>Just as the daylight began to thin the inky mist, the train halted, and the
-word was passed along the line to debus. Wet, shivering, miserable, “B” Co.
-struggled hastily into clammy shoes and slung their heavy, soggy packs. As
-we formed on the side of the road, the busses started again, and rolled swiftly
-off into the shadows ahead, leaving us on the road, with heavy woods on
-either side.</p>
-
-<p>We marched down the road to an open field on the left. Here a railroad
-track entered the corner of the wood. We turned off up the track, and about
-300 yards along we came upon the 2nd battalion bivouacking. We went on
-just beyond them, and were allotted our own share of squishy ground and
-drenched underbrush.</p>
-
-<p>A limited number of fires were allowed, and we made ourselves as comfortable
-as we could under the circumstances. I was detailed on O. D. and
-spent a busy day dissuading the regiment from straggling all over the road and
-open fields. All knew that a big attack was in preparation, and that it was
-important that the concentration be kept under cover from the enemy’s aircraft.
-But some men apparently couldn’t compree that we weren’t roosting in
-that bally old dysentery generator of a wood for sheer sport.</p>
-
-<p>Showers fell intermittently during the day, but nothing like the previous
-day’s deluge. At about 4 P. M. there was an officers’ call, and we were warned
-to march at 7 P. M. Co. Commanders were issued maps, and we learned that
-our present bivouac was in the Bois de la Cote en Haye, east of Tremblecourt.</p>
-
-<p>About 5 P. M., six French tanks came clanking down the road, did a
-Squads Left, waddled across the fields and disappeared over the brow of the
-hill, toward the rumble of intermittent artillery fire in the distance that meant
-the front.</p>
-
-<p>The 312th Inf. was bivouacked on the other side of the railroad track, and
-the rest of the division was hidden in the woods near by. Across the main road
-was a great artillery ammunition dump, big enough to blow up ten divisions if
-a bomb ever hit it. But I kept this to myself, and what a soldier doesn’t know
-doesn’t worry him. He has enough to worry about anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>The kitchens came up late in the afternoon, and we got outside of a ration
-of hot slum before dark.</p>
-
-<p>By 6:45 P. M. we had rolled packs, and were ready to hit the road again.
-I went to sleep on the ground, with my pack on my back, and was awakened by
-Dunn to find it nearly dark, and the battalion ready to move off.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed hours before we got out of the wood into the open field. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-would go forward a few steps along the track, and then stand and wait for ten
-or fifteen minutes. The road by which we had arrived was crowded with
-transport and artillery, and we turned off on a bypath through the woods. It
-was now quite dark, and blind work it was blundering along, touching the man
-ahead to keep from losing him, slipping and tripping in the wet underbrush. It
-is remarkable how exasperating a pack and rifle become under such circumstances.
-However, the excitement of anticipation buoyed us up, and “B” Co.
-wallowed through the wood, across a mushy field, and scrambled up a slippery
-embankment on to a strange road, much more cheerfully than now seems
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>Once re-formed on said road, we hiked along briskly in column of squads.
-Soon we overtook a long column of transport wagons, trucks and artillery.
-Road discipline was something apparently unknown; every vehicle seemed to
-be trying to pass every other one. The consequence was of course wondrous
-confusion, and here and there a total jam, through which we had to thread
-our way in single or double file as best we could.</p>
-
-<p>When we got clear of the last jam, the company ahead had gained about
-15 yards, and was consequently as completely out of sight as if they had been
-in Timbuctoo. We passed through a village in hot pursuit of them. At the
-crossroads, by sheer good luck I turned off up the right one. After a long
-hour’s stern chase we were relieved to see the bobbing forms of Headquarters
-Co. show through the gloom ahead.</p>
-
-<p>At about 10:30 we came upon Sgt. Hill waiting for us by the roadside,
-with the welcome news that our temporary destination was only a couple of
-kilos off. We toiled up a long hill, and turned off the macadam into a rough
-road that was a series of four inch ponds. We plashed along to the edge of a
-large wood, and Hill showed us a pile of empty bandoliers and boxes, where
-the Marines had been issued ammunition and grenades about an hour before.
-They had just pulled out, and were going over the top at dawn.</p>
-
-<p>A hundred yards or so, and we turned into the woods, on a road which was
-from ankle to knee deep in all varieties of mud, from sticky to liquid. We
-moved on, stumbled over a railroad track, and finally Hill said we were at our
-bivouac. The trees and underbrush grew so thick along the road that we
-blundered about a bit before we found a couple of places where we could force
-our way through. As each man reached a place where he could sit or lie down,
-down he flopped, and the rest of the company walked over him. The woods
-already had some occupants, and more and more poured in every minute.</p>
-
-<p>At last “B” Co. had distributed itself on the ground, and was preparing
-for a dismal wallow until morning. In spite of wet, mud and chill some were
-already asleep. We were just within the artillery zone, and the jar and
-grumble of the guns ahead was occasionally punctuated by the roar and scream
-of one of the heavies nearer by. This, however, was only normal artillery fire,
-such as we had been accustomed to at St. Pol and Lattre St. Quentin, and we
-settled down to wait for the big show. Some of the more energetic started to
-pitch their pup tents.</p>
-
-<p>Just as I dozed off, some idiot shouted “Gas!” Our long hours of gas
-drill, and many vivid and gruesome lectures on the subject, promptly bore
-fruit. In fact, the good seed shot up like Jack’s beanstalk. The cry was re-echoed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-by a dozen, then a score of startled voices. Everyone reached into the
-familiar canvas satchel that he cherished on his bosom, donned his mask more
-or less expeditiously, and sat expectantly awaiting developments.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the rumpus I heard Lt. Foulkes’ voice from the road
-bawling for the company commanders. I thought sadly that the lad had probably
-lost his mask, or the gas had caught him suddenly and he was raving.
-However, for sake of auld lang syne, I took a long breath, and shouted,
-“Whatsmatterwhydontyouputonyourmask?” I replaced my mouthpiece, and
-started blundering toward Louis’ voice, hoping I might be in time at least to
-view his remains.</p>
-
-<p>During the next two minutes I walked on every man in “B” Co. at least
-once, and probably on most of “A” and “C” Cos. Then Foulkes roared my
-name within five yards of me.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s the gas?” I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>There wasn’t any gas.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-ST. MIHIEL AND LIMEY SECTOR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Major was waiting for us up the “road.” He informed us that the
-156th Brigade was the alert brigade. We were not to pitch tents nor unroll
-packs, but lie on our arms ready to reinforce the front line division should
-occasion demand it. The barrage was due to start at 1 A. M.; at 5 A. M. the
-infantry was to go over the top.</p>
-
-<p>I waded back with this gladsome news, and we lay in the mud and wet
-leaves and shivered and wished we could smoke, and waited for the show to
-start. Word had passed that there was a big French railroad gun about 30
-yards away, and a pleasant time was anticipated by all.</p>
-
-<p>At 1 A. M. the sullen jar of the usual cannonade was shattered by a
-tremendous crash. And that crash lasted solid for four hours. I shall not try
-to describe a real A-1 barrage to men who have been there.</p>
-
-<p>The railroad gun came across according to plan too. Every five minutes
-her mighty roar and scream would announce the departure of a G. I. can
-towards Metz, and then would come the clanking of the cars as the recoil drove
-the train back along the track against the logs piled behind it. After an hour
-or so we got accustomed to the barrage and the glare that lit up the sky ahead;
-but as often as we drowsed off, the thunder of this mighty gun would shake the
-earth beneath us, and jar us into consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>The night wore on, and the gray morning light crept into the woods; and
-still the thunder rolled unceasing. I watched the glow of my wrist watch
-hand creep to five o’clock. There was a slight lull as the artillery shifted to
-their rolling barrage schedule. Then she started up again with renewed fury.
-We knew the doughboys were off. The A. E. F. was starting its first show on
-its own. The overture was over, the fiery curtain raised, the act begun; and
-we were awaiting our cue.</p>
-
-<p>Morning broke, cloudy, but little or no rain, and about 7 o’clock it quite
-cleared off. We made ourselves as comfortable as we could, and prayed for our
-kitchen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>I went wading through the mud along the road to look for it. There were
-several Marines about, belonging to the skeleton organization, left behind to act
-as a nucleus in case a whole outfit was wiped out. I passed a Marine lieutenant
-whose face looked familiar, and after a moment recognized “Happy” Mason.
-He had been a cadet at V. M. I. with me, and had helped me wind a red silk
-sash around my middle for many a dress parade. It was a far cry from the
-Blue Ridge to the Bois de la Rappe, and from dress parade to the St. Mihiel
-drive.</p>
-
-<p>We had a glad reunion there in the mud, and he invited the “B” Co.
-officers to share his breakfast. Their rolling kitchen, or “galley” as they called
-it, was on hand, and they had hot coffee and peach turnovers!</p>
-
-<p>Those Marines were regular guys. When they heard our transport wasn’t
-up yet, they turned to and fed as many of our men as they could, until their
-supply ran out. They had been through the mill before, at Chateau Thierry
-and Belleau Wood. As one of them said “Better help the other fellow now.
-Tomorrow’s a hell of a way off here.”</p>
-
-<p>The Marines have had an awful lot of joshing, of course, about their press
-agent stuff—“Ace high with the Satevepost,” and so on. But these were certainly
-a fine bunch, and gave us a lift when we needed it. Naturally, those of
-them who did the fighting did the least of the blowing about it afterward.</p>
-
-<p>The sun came out to look at the battle after awhile, and we got warmed
-and partially dried. Also the kitchen arrived, and a hot dinner was in
-prospect.</p>
-
-<p>About 11 A. M. bulletins began arriving from the front, and were read out
-to us. All objectives were being taken according to schedule, and the number
-of prisoners and guns captured mounted by leaps and bounds. We were not
-allowed out of the woods, but even from the trees on the outskirts one couldn’t
-see much except a great cloud of smoke and dust slowly rolling up the slope
-of a range of distant hills.</p>
-
-<p>The wet exposure and irregular eating of half cooked food had already
-started to tell on us. Dysentery was appearing; nearly all the company
-suffered with constant diarrhoea from this time on.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon dragged on; still no call for the alert brigade. We were
-allowed to pitch pup tents, but no fires were allowed; the wood was too wet
-and smoky.</p>
-
-<p>Night fell; we crawled into whatever shelter we had, and surreptitiously
-smoked, and talked, and listened to the rumble of the guns until we got to
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>At about 1:30 A. M. a battalion runner fell over my feet and lit on Lt.
-Dunn. After a few hasty remarks we stopped for breath, and were informed
-that the battalion was to form on the road right away. Stiff and sleepy, I
-stumbled out into the dank night, routed out Chiaradio, my staunch little runner
-and striker, and broke the glad news to Robbins and the company runners.
-The woods were soon in a bustle as we rolled packs, donned equipment, and
-filed out by platoons into the mud of the road.</p>
-
-<p>By 2 A. M. the battalion was standing ankle deep in the slushy mud in
-column of squads, the Major at our head. Half an hour passed. Not a sound
-except an occasional “su-luck-slosh,” as someone shifted his heavy pack, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-tried in vain to find a less liquid footing. The leaden minutes dragged by.
-Three o’clock; no move. Half past four—the company ahead moved off, and
-we sloshed along behind, but only to the edge of the wood. Dawn broke—another
-gray and misty dawn. Oh, that awful wait in that awful hole! It was
-quite light before, at 5 o’clock, we finally moved out, and, splashing and
-sliding over a muddy field, finally hit the road and were off toward the scene
-of action.</p>
-
-<p>As we were stretching the kinks out of our legs on a fairly good road, we
-passed a U. S. Coast Artillery outfit; a 12-inch gun. Some of the crew came
-out to the roadside from the emplacement, and Capt. O’Brien recognized his
-old outfit, in which he had served as an enlisted man years before.</p>
-
-<p>On we go toward the distant booming of the guns. We wind around
-hills, hike across a valley, over another long hill. Then the road runs along the
-bottom of a long, long valley. During the ten-minute rests we snatch a hasty
-breakfast from our reserve rations, with growls from those who don’t get in
-on the jam.</p>
-
-<p>Now we begin to see traces of the battle—an overturned wagon, abandoned
-in the ditch; a train of ammunition trucks crossing the road ahead of us; a
-motor truck repair shop, hastily set up in a little cabin along the road, from
-which came a smell of hot coffee that tantalized our cold stomachs. Further
-on we passed a field hospital; great white tents pitched in a sheltered dell,
-with red crosses glaring on the tent flies.</p>
-
-<p>At the next halt, a Ford ambulance came down the muddy road with a
-load of wounded. It stopped by us, and the driver went around behind to see
-to one of the occupants. The canvas curtain was pushed aside from the top,
-and a head lolled out—a face of ghastly yellow paste, surrounded by dirty
-light brown hair. The poor chap was evidently badly gassed. He retched
-violently time and again, spat out some blood, stared vacantly at us with
-glassy, miserable eyes. The driver put the head inside with a kindly “All right,
-buddy; nearly there now;” and the old Henry started off again with a jerk,
-and a groan from within.</p>
-
-<p>As we resumed the march, a youngster from the 5th Division overtook us.
-He wore an M. P.’s brassard, and no equipment but a .45 and a canteen. We
-with our heavy packs and ammunition envied him. He was sleepy eyed and
-jaded, but still enthusiastic. Ever since the drive started he had been on the
-job escorting prisoners from front line division headquarters to the pens in the
-rear.</p>
-
-<p>By 9 o’clock we had done twelve miles under our full pack, ammunition,
-and two days’ rations, with a breakfast of a little corned willy and hard bread
-and chlorinated water; the whole preceded by three hours’ standing in eight
-inches of liquid mud. We felt pretty well done in, for a fact. The auto
-riflemen were the worst off, having their heavy Chauchats and several big
-magazines of ammunition besides. One of them lightened his load by the
-ingenious means of “forgetting” his bag of magazines at a halt. When Lt.
-Schuyler discovered it, the culprit was promptly accommodated with a double
-dose to carry.</p>
-
-<p>But this was the exception. As I shifted about, hiking first with one
-platoon and then another, I always found a set of determined grins, and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-cheerful “Oh, we’re all right. How’s the rabble up ahead?”</p>
-
-<p>We had been passing through the rear area of the former Allied sector.
-Now and again a trench system—trenches, barbed wire, emplacements, all
-complete—stretched away on either hand. Here and there were great stretches
-of barbed wire filling gullies and ravines.</p>
-
-<p>At 10 o’clock we crossed a stone bridge and started up a long, long hill.
-At the top we found that we were on a ridge that had been the front line
-before the attack. Shell holes covered the whole place. To our left, the ground
-fell away in a long dip, and we saw the ground over which the first wave had
-attacked. The battle was now far away over the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>For a couple of kilos we hiked along the road on top of the ridge. It had
-already been repaired roughly, and all sorts of traffic was passing over it. Once
-it had been bordered with trees, set at regular intervals, like most self respecting
-French roads. Now only a shattered, blasted stump stood here and there.</p>
-
-<p>A few men began to straggle from the outfits ahead, but “B” Co. stuck to
-it gamely. On that day not a man fell out.</p>
-
-<p>Now we drew near a large barbed wire enclosure filled with men. It was
-a P. W. pen, where prisoners were collected on their way to the rear. A couple
-of detachments of them were going in as we came by.</p>
-
-<p>We turned off here to the left, toward the front. About a kilo down this
-road we hit a traffic jam—a regular one. This road was badly cut up, and poor
-road discipline soon did the rest. Some truck or ambulance had tried to pass
-another, and both had stalled. Others, arriving from both directions, instead
-of lining up behind on the right of the road, pressed up as far as they could
-go, until the road was so completely jammed that even we on foot could not
-get through. Belts of barbed wire that ran up to the road on either side
-prevented us from going around. So there we were.</p>
-
-<p>It was a most cosmopolitan collection. French 75’s, Ford ambulances, a
-general’s Cadillac, rubbed shoulders with lumbering lorries, sturdy steel
-ammunition Quads, and limbers. A French transport wagon driver cracked his
-long whip and argued volubly with the chauffeur of a tank, who spat and regarded
-him contemplatively. Field kitchens, huddled in the jam, held the
-food that was so desperately needed up front.</p>
-
-<p>At last a Colonel of Marines blew in from somewhere, and plunged into
-the mess. He got it thinned out enough for us to filter through on the outskirts.
-And then—Glory be—we turned off the road into an open space, with
-no barbed wire and comparatively few shell holes. Here we found part of the
-312th Inf., and the battalion stacked arms and fell out.</p>
-
-<p>We slipped off our packs, and fell to on monkey meat and hard bread with
-a will. The sun had come out, and we lay around and soon got warm and dry,
-and felt nearly human again.</p>
-
-<p>All too soon we fell in, and set off again. We threaded our way across
-the jam—now nearly as bad as ever—and spent the afternoon drifting down a
-little valley at right angles to the road we had just left. Nobody seemed to
-know just where we were going, or why. We heard later that a jumbled order
-somewhere between Division and Brigade Hdqs. had caused us to spend this
-day in a wild goose chase.</p>
-
-<p>The Colonel and Regt’l Hdq. had not been seen since the morning. We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-hiked a few hundred yards, waited awhile, then moved on a bit again. We
-passed, and were in turn passed by artillery, supply trains, infantry. We
-sweated and chafed under our burdens, and wondered what t’ell, but supposed
-it was all part of the game.</p>
-
-<p>At last, about 6 P. M., we came to the head of the valley. There we
-spied the Colonel and his car, on a road up on the top of the hill. We climbed
-up to the road, pushing a stalled rolling kitchen ahead of us. We were urged
-to “Step out,” and showed our military discipline and Christian forbearance by
-not saying what we thought of this request. We got on a good road that led
-over the hill and up toward the front. Along this we hiked a little way, then
-turned off to the left, and up a lumber road that led straight up the hill into
-the woods. It was nearly dark; the road was so steep that I could never
-understand how six inches of liquid mud stayed on it. The climb up this road
-soon put our feet into their usual muddy and wet condition. We turned off
-into the woods, the Bois de Hoquemont, and were told that we would bivouac
-here for the night.</p>
-
-<p>Our kitchens pulled up along the main road shortly, and the cooks, tired
-as they were, got to work at once. The rations consisted mostly of dehydrated
-vegetables. They say they are good if you can soak them for twenty-four
-hours. A stew and coffee were soon under way.</p>
-
-<p>I toiled back up the hill and found a message to report at once to the
-regt’l commander. On a hunch, I had Schuyler get a detail out and bring up
-the chow right away. Sure enough, at the officers’ meeting we were ordered
-to make combat packs and be ready to move again in twenty minutes. We
-got our coffee and slum, though; and the half cooked stuff tasted pretty good
-at that.</p>
-
-<p>Then we again donned our equipment, and plashed down the sloppy road
-on weary feet. The night was very dark, and the road, as usual, jammed with
-transport, our kitchens among others. As we threaded our way through, we
-got mixed up somehow with a company of Marines going in the same direction.
-Finally the jam thinned out, and we turned off on another road, though we
-had to sort out B company and the Marines almost man by man. And so we
-plodded on.</p>
-
-<p>It is remarkable how much a man can do after he thinks he is all in. We
-picked ’em up and put ’em down for three hours. At last we drew near some
-woods. Our orders were to proceed to Bois d’Euvezin and bivouac, and show
-no lights. Well, we couldn’t see a map, and didn’t know where we were on
-one anyhow, so this wood looked pretty good. At any rate, we turned off the
-road and headed for it.</p>
-
-<p>Easy enough for a staff officer to look at a map and say, “Bivouac in these
-woods.” Unfortunately, there was a 30 foot belt of wire fringing this particular
-one. Orders are orders, though, so we scrambled through somehow, and
-pushed in far enough to hide from any further marching orders that night.
-Then we flopped down, any place at all, and dropped off.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed but a couple of minutes before the sun came prying through the
-leaves and under my eyelids. I rolled over, and saw Lt. Col. Budd, sitting up
-with his back against a tree, wrapped in his trench coat—no better off than
-we were. Right away my morale went up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>An American outfit is never so weary that it doesn’t furnish a few inquisitive
-souls. Already curiosity was driving the doughboys out of the woods, by
-two’s and three’s, to see what was around. Just over a knoll they found a
-little fragment of history. A German machine gun, cunningly camouflaged;
-across it the body of a big “Feldwebel,” or German top sergeant, with a
-bayonet wound through his body; a couple of yards away a dead Marine,
-riddled with machine gun bullets, still grasping his rifle with the bloody
-bayonet fixed.</p>
-
-<p>At 9 A. M. the outfit was rounded up, and we were off again. As we
-plugged along the road in column of squads we thought with some disgust of
-the night marches we had made a hundred kilos behind the lines. Fortunately
-this hike was short. In an hour we entered another and larger wood, the
-Bois d’Euvezin sure enough, this time. Here we found the rest of the brigade,
-and bivouacked in the woods just off the road.</p>
-
-<p>The woods were full of German dugouts, evacuated by the enemy only a
-day or so before. Most of these were preempted by various headquarters. We
-settled down to make the most of our rest. For a wonder the sun was out; and
-despite the mud under foot, we were soon fairly warm and dry—and oh, how
-hungry! It was well along in the afternoon before the water carts pulled in,
-though, and we got our hot slum and coffee.</p>
-
-<p>The Y. M. C. A. kicked through with a canteen, and after some trouble in
-keeping the men from mobbing the place, crackers, chocolate and tobacco were
-sold.</p>
-
-<p>That night our gas training blossomed forth again. The Boche dropped a
-couple of shells around and our over-anxious sentries promptly bawled “Gas!”
-The alarm would be taken up and spread through the brigade, and by the time
-things quieted down they were off again. We finally got some sleep by the
-primitive but effective expedient of promising to blow the head off the next
-guy that raised the cry.</p>
-
-<p>Next day a great bunch of orders were dumped on me to read—all about
-the new censorship regulations. After wading through these, the officers were
-summoned to go up on a reconnoitering party to look over the sector which
-we were to take over that night.</p>
-
-<p>We set out, and after a couple of hours’ stiff hiking arrived at a very
-elaborate system of dugouts, in the edge of a wood, the Bois St. Claude. Here
-was the Regt’l Hdq. of the 61st Infantry, 5th Division, which we were to
-relieve. About five hundred meters north lay the little village of Vieville-en-Haye.
-Descriptions of this charming hamlet are superfluous, as we all had
-plenty of opportunity to contemplate it thereafter.</p>
-
-<p>It was early afternoon, and the Boche was behaving rather well; only
-occasionally slamming an .88 into the village in a perfunctory sort of way.
-From the northeast, however, came an intermittent crackle of rifle and machine
-gun firing, where the outposts were snarling and chattering away at each other.</p>
-
-<p>We sat around for an hour while the regt’l hdq’s made their arrangements.
-I found out that the C. O. of the 61st was an old friend of my father’s—his
-father had been in my father’s company at V. M. I. in the Civil War.</p>
-
-<p>At last the dope filtered down to the Co. Cmdrs., and we were given ten
-minutes to reconnoiter our positions. We then had to make haste back to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-regiment, so that we could be ready to start again at dark. Packs were made,
-the platoons gathered together, and at 7:30 P. M. we filed out onto the road
-and were off on the last lap of our journey to the battle line.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly were we clear of the woods when we halted, for some unknown
-reason. We sat and lay on the grass by the roadside, among shell holes, and
-listened to the drone of airplanes above us. It was an eerie, ominous sound;
-and though we were pretty sure the motors were not the deep voiced monsters
-of the enemy, still we were relieved when they drew off without dropping any
-H. E. into our midst.</p>
-
-<p>In half an hour we started, this time in earnest. It was rough going, and
-blind work at best. We stumbled up a ravine, out onto a road, skirted a wood
-lined with artillery, and so drew near our position south of Vieville-en-Haye.</p>
-
-<p>The 1st battalion was in support, the 2nd holding the front line, and the
-3rd brigade reserve. I never did know where the battalion was that we
-were relieving. A and B Cos., however, were to hold the crest of a slight swell
-of the ground about 300 meters south of the village. Trenches there were
-none; but there were plenty of shell holes, and the company was posted so as to
-command the terrain in front with Chauchat and rifle fire; two or three men to
-a shell hole. The 4th platoon found a little stretch of trench which they
-improved for themselves. A Co. was on our left; C and D Cos. were posted
-about 700 meters to our right rear, behind Regt’l Hdq.</p>
-
-<p>We had gotten pretty well settled, when just before dawn a battalion
-runner came up, with the cry that haunted me day and night, “Commanding
-Officer, B Co.” Hard on his heels came the Major. Two companies of the 2nd
-battalion had lost their way and were temporarily missing, and B Co. was to
-go up and hold the line of resistance at once.</p>
-
-<p>So B Co. was routed out of its bivvies, and donned packs and ammunition,
-and set off in double file. I was to report to the C. O. of the 61st Inf. front
-line battalion at Vieville.</p>
-
-<p>We hiked down to the road, and up to where the houses began; then
-through a spacious barn, climbing over a dead horse, and arriving finally at
-the northern outskirts of the town. Not finding the Bn. Hdq. I had the company
-take what cover they could in the road and barn while the Major and I
-strolled up to the top of the hill beyond to have a look ’round.</p>
-
-<p>Near the top of this long hill were two German concrete pillboxes, nicely
-turfed over. We found one of these occupied as a first aid post; in the other
-we found a machine gun company hdq. Nobody knew any dope about where
-we were wanted, but they said that Bn. Hdq. was about a kilo away to the right.</p>
-
-<p>Just then Heinie started his morning strafe of Vieville-en-Haye. Three or
-four whiz bangs came hurtling over our heads, and landed in the east end of
-the village, right where B Co. was lying. I saw no necessity of our doing a
-Casabianca, and hastily obtained permission from the Major to take B Co. back
-to its former position until we knew where to go. As I shuffled down the hill,
-hitting the dirt now and then when one landed close by, I chanced to look
-back just in time to see a shell hit the first aid pillbox and pivot it neatly
-around, so that the door faced us instead of the enemy. It didn’t take long to
-start B Co. toward our bivvies, very much disgusted with the morning’s work,
-but glad to stop playing target for a while. Fortunately, no one was hit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>The 2nd Battalion located its wandering sheep later in the day, so we
-were not called on for that errand again.</p>
-
-<p>The regiment’s task was now to organize and strengthen our sector of the
-line. The main line of resistance, as indicated on the map, was being held and
-dug in by three Cos. of the 2nd Battalion, H Co. holding the outpost line about
-two kilos in advance.</p>
-
-<p>Our kitchens were established in the woods behind Regt’l Hdq., and
-started work on the old standby, slum. The rough roads leading into these
-woods were all ankle deep in mud, and the ration detail wasn’t any bed of
-roses.</p>
-
-<p>The day we spent in deepening our bivvies as best we could, though our
-intrenching tools made little impression on the hard and stony ground. Whoever
-salvaged a man-sized pick or shovel was lucky. While it was light, we
-kept down under cover as much as possible, for the German observation
-balloons were peeping sinisterly over the horizon, and we didn’t care about
-drawing attention to our position.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday, September 18th, at about 1 P. M., A and B Cos. received
-orders to report to the Engineer Dump at 368.3-240.3, as a working party.
-Several enemy observation balloons were up, and it was a clear afternoon; but
-orders were orders, and off we filed.</p>
-
-<p>At the dump we met an Engineer Lieutenant—very stout, very bullheaded
-and very incompetent. I asked where we were to work, and he replied he
-didn’t know—over there somewhere—pointing in the general direction of
-Germany. Having had enough of that sort of business in the morning, I told
-him to toddle right off and find out where he was to take us. He got quite
-huffy at this, but finally set out, and returned with some definite information.
-We drew picks and shovels, and hiked away after him; I being forced to hurt
-his importance again by refusing to march the company along in single file on
-the sky line.</p>
-
-<p>Our task was to dig a communication trench, already taped out, from the
-point where the line of resistance entered the Bois Gerard back over the brow
-of the hill. The first platoon was in plain view of the enemy’s observation
-balloon, the other three were just behind the rise.</p>
-
-<p>We posted sentinels, and set to work, absolutely out in the open, no cover
-save a few shell holes. For ten minutes we dug. Then it came. A whistle,
-scream and slam, just over the hill; another; then a fierce, deadly whir, right
-in our ears. We hit the dirt, and a second later Lt. Dunn called to me “Captain,
-there’s a man killed here and I don’t know how many wounded.”</p>
-
-<p>For an instant of horror the company gazed at the spot. I sent Sgt. Hill
-to the first aid pillbox for stretchers, put the others to work again, and hastened
-up to see the situation. The shell had landed just between the 1st and 2nd
-platoons. Lt. Schuyler was already having the wounded carried into the edge
-of the woods near by, and had the rest of the 1st platoon take cover there.
-Poor O’Hara was lying dead right by the shell hole. It had burst nearly underneath
-him, and a fragment of shell had torn its way through his temple and
-right out through his steel helmet. His brains were oozing out through
-the hole.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that nothing could be done for him, I went over to the woods.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-Lester Farry, our mechanic, as fine a man as ever walked, was sitting up
-between Lt. Schuyler and Sgt. Reid, with a big hole in the side of his head.
-He never uttered a word of complaint; just sat still while they bandaged it; and
-the stretchers came up and took him off. He died in hospital six days later.</p>
-
-<p>Curcio had a great hole in the upper part of his leg. Donohue had an ugly
-bit of shell in his back, and Bogucki, Fielding, and Hauber were wounded, but
-less seriously.</p>
-
-<p>This was a nasty introduction to shell fire, because the whole company
-saw the thing happen. Their behaviour, however, was excellent. Doggedly
-the men continued at the work, and soon we had enough cover to at least be in
-while the shells burst near by.</p>
-
-<p>Our gallant friend, the Engineer Lieutenant, had promptly vanished, and
-I never saw him again. I withdrew the first and second platoons behind the
-hill, and we kept on the job until 6 P. M., as ordered. At about 5:30, A Co.
-came along over the hill, and the Heinies sped them on their way with a few
-gas shells, which made them scamper.</p>
-
-<p>As we turned in our shovels at the dump, every man mustered up a grin
-as he passed by; and though it had been one hell of a party, the old morale
-was still on deck.</p>
-
-<p>On the top of the knoll where our position was, the Germans had had an
-anti-aircraft gun, gaudily camouflaged. Some cooks from an artillery outfit
-had found a lot of ammunition belonging to it, and, dragging it into Vieville,
-had amused themselves during the day by shooting Fritz’s own H. E. in his
-general direction. This apparently annoyed Fritz; and just as I got back to
-our bivvies at the tail of B Co., two ash cans—whoppers—arrived at the gun’s
-former position, right in the midst of A Co. Our comrades promptly departed
-to the woods until the next morning.</p>
-
-<p>The cooks sent up a good chow—steaks and coffee—and we got to sleep
-in our holes as best we could.</p>
-
-<p>The next day—Thursday, September 19th—was rainy. We dug our
-shelters a little deeper, and wished this war thing were over. I found a German
-translation of one of De Maupassant’s novels, which I read through, but for the
-life of me I can’t remember a bit of the story.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon the chaplain, Lt. Cressman, came around, and O’Hara’s
-platoon was allowed to attend his burial service in the little cemetery in the
-edge of the Bois St. Claude, east of Vieville.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime I had been called to Btn. Hdq., where Mr. Morse, our
-faithful old “Y” man, had brought up some chocolate and cigarettes. He was
-supposed by the regulations of the “Y” to sell them, but he refused to take any
-money from the Co. Cmdrs. at first, intending to account for them out of his
-own small pay. When we understood this, we insisted on paying for the stuff
-out of the company funds. The news got out that the “Y” was charging for
-chocolate and tobacco, and caused some bitterness, under the circumstances.
-But thereafter Mr. Morse made some arrangement whereby the stuff was
-issued free.</p>
-
-<p>As for Mr. Morse himself, I think we should here express something of our
-appreciation of his faithful and unselfish devotion to the men of the battalion.
-A man well past the prime of life, he shared our hardships, hiked with us—not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-sticking like grim death to a Ford as some of his confreres were prone to do—;
-slept in mud and rain with us. Right under shell fire he would come plugging
-on up with his little bag of smokes and chocolate. The Red Cross, the Salvation
-Army, were only names to us. But the “Y,” which we cussed out so frequently,
-surely did us proud when they gave us Mr. Morse.</p>
-
-<p>That night the 1st, 3rd and 4th platoons went out as separate working
-parties. Apparently the deaths of O’Hara and Farry had demonstrated even to
-our friends the Engineers that sporting about in sight of Hun balloons in the
-daytime was magnificent, but not war.</p>
-
-<p>The Boche had the range, though, and shelled the area all night. The
-1st platoon ran on an average schedule of dig two minutes and duck five. The
-3rd was in no better case, and Barney O’Rourke got an ugly little piece of shell
-through his foot. He hobbled off between Hill and Weber, adjuring me as he
-left “Don’t let th’ byes get up too soon afther they bor-r-rst, sor-r-r.” And
-thereafter we didn’t.</p>
-
-<p>Rifle bullets were cracking by over our heads now and then, and the rumor
-got about that snipers were concealed in the nearby woods. The whole sector
-had of course been in German hands five days before, and all sorts of tales
-were current about death traps found in dugouts, and lurking snipers, lying
-close in the daytime in cunning shelters, well provisioned, who came out at
-night to pot a few of us and eventually escape by underground passages.</p>
-
-<p>Most of these tales I recognized as old friends originally met with in the
-Sat. Eve. Post. But digging was quite unpleasant enough as it was, and the
-source of the impression was not so important as the fact that it existed. So
-Osterweis, Woolley and I went forth to bag the franctireurs. We waded
-through a vast deal of mud, but couldn’t flush anything except a disgusted
-runner looking for Brigade Hdq.; so I sent the corporals back, and set out
-myself for the 4th platoon, which was stringing wire over on the left of the
-sector.</p>
-
-<p>On the way I stumbled over the body of a 5th Division soldier. He had a
-red runner’s brassard on his arm, and was all ticketed for burial. His face
-seemed to be in shadow. There was a plug of chewing tobacco sticking out of
-his pocket and this seemed to be in the shadow too. Then I realized that his
-face had turned black—it was just the color of that plug of tobacco. The
-vicious shriek of a shell approached, and I hit the dirt. A bit of the shell hit
-the dead man by me, and he jumped as if alive. I got up and was on my way.</p>
-
-<p>The majority of the 4th platoon had taken individual leases on shell holes;
-Sgt. Rogers and a few others were making valiant efforts to make some headway
-with the wire. The shelling quieted down after awhile, however, and
-we got down to business. Then I started back to see how the others were faring.</p>
-
-<p>On the way I heard Capt. Fleischmann’s voice from the darkness; his men
-also were worried about the stray bullets overhead. As I came up, a couple of
-his sentinels thought they had spotted the snipers, and cracked down on some
-figures moving past a clump of bushes to their left. A few remarks in choice
-American made it clear that they were potting away at my 3rd platoon, which
-had decided that it was time to quit for the night. Privately I was heartily in
-sympathy with this view; but officially I had to lead the way back to the trench
-and set the boys to work again. Meanwhile the C. O. of the 4th platoon, laboring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-under a similar delusion, had taken his wiring party back to their bivvies.
-Sgt. Rogers, Slim Price and one or two others were still on deck, very much
-disgusted. So we had a good long trudge back, routed the lads out, and all
-hands returned to the hill.</p>
-
-<p>At last 3 o’clock came, and we turned in tools and quit for the night. As
-Rogers, Hayden and I were crossing the belt of wire north of the Vieville road,
-four or five gas shells landed quite near by. We all got a pretty good snootful
-before we got our masks on; and Rogers, the Co. gas N. C. O., was so busy
-cussing the wire that he didn’t notice the gas soon enough, and got enough to
-put him in the hospital.</p>
-
-<p>My shell hole looked pretty luxurious to me; Chiaradio had swiped a piece
-of corrugated iron for a roof, and it wasn’t as wet as it might have been. I
-was glad to crawl in between him and Robbins and go to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>At about 9 A. M. Heinie set to work to blow us out. His range was fifty
-meters short, fortunately, and he shelled away on a line between us and
-Vieville with characteristic diligence and thoroughness. The flying fragments
-made promenading unhealthy. Lt. Schuyler came over to my bivvy with a
-rumor that the Austrians had quit. Two minutes after he left, a long jagged
-piece came whistling along and half buried itself just where he had been
-sitting, and six inches above my foot. Cheery-O used it to hang his mess kit
-on thereafter.</p>
-
-<p>That night we only furnished two small working parties, and the rest of
-us had a cushy sleep.</p>
-
-<p>On Friday, the 20th, the Co. Cmdrs. were assembled at Bn. Hdq., and
-were told that we were to relieve the 2nd Battalion on the night of the 21st.
-That afternoon we went up to reconnoiter the position we were to take over.
-The guides took us up past the Engineer dump, through the woods to the 2nd
-Bn. Hdq. Here we found Major Adee and his staff taking advantage of a quiet
-hour to have lunch above ground. They were using a couple of German
-dugouts as headquarters—very good ones, about 20 feet under ground and well
-timbered.</p>
-
-<p>Major Adee seemed to have aged twenty years. His face was lined and
-haggard with care and responsibility. His runner had been killed at the
-entrance to the dugout that morning by a shell.</p>
-
-<p>Fleischmann and I with two runners apiece, our officers and top sergeants,
-were furnished with a guide to take us to the outpost line. B and D Cos. were
-to relieve H Co.; A and C were to hold the line of resistance.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long two kilos up to the outpost line, especially as we had to keep
-under cover of the woods all the way. We crossed and recrossed one of the
-little narrow gauge railways that the Germans had running everywhere. My
-right ankle, which I had broken the previous fall playing football at Camp
-Dix, had a touch of rheumatism, and the nagging pain from it made a background
-for all the rest of my time in the line. Even now when I think about
-the Limey sector, the old ankle comes through with a reminiscent twinge. I
-suppose each of you had some corresponding petty aggravation which worried
-you absurdly out of proportion to its intrinsic importance.</p>
-
-<p>We toiled up the little wooded hill at the edge of the Bois Hanido, and
-passed a gun pit, the ground around strewn with German arms, equipment, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-clothing, and several dead Germans lying about. Just on the other side of the
-hill was a German rest camp, with several bunk houses, a movie theatre, and
-a little open air Catholic chapel, with a wooden cross.</p>
-
-<p>At the bottom of the hill we came to the narrow gauge railway again,
-followed it up a little way, and then turned down one of the straight paths
-that the Boche cut through the woods, barring all other approaches with barbed
-wire, and commanding these with machine guns. It was a good stunt, too, as
-we found out later. After you’ve struggled in barbed wire for a while you’ll
-take a chance on machine gun bullets to get on a path.</p>
-
-<p>It was not far to H Co.’s headquarters. There we found Capt. Ressiguie,
-commanding the company—a most cool-headed, courageous and efficient officer.
-Lt. Col. Budd was also there, inspecting the outpost. The company headquarters
-was a shelter half stretched over a two foot ditch. Earlier in the afternoon,
-the left flank platoon had had a skirmish with an enemy machine gun patrol,
-losing two men killed and a couple wounded, including Lt. Stern. We made
-our reconnaissance and started back, arriving at our own Bn. Hdq. by nightfall.
-There we were issued battle maps of the sector and the relief order, which
-makes the arrangements down to the last detail on paper.</p>
-
-<p>Two platoons went out as working parties that night, and got off with
-comparatively little shelling. The next morning Capt. Fleischmann and I
-were issued an assortment of pyrotechnic signals—rockets, Very lights, etc.,—with
-lengthy directions as to their use.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon a division order postponed the relief for twenty-four
-hours. Working parties had been called off on account of the relief, and we
-all got a night off.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as dusk fell on Sunday, September 22nd, the platoons were
-assembled under full equipment, and we started. The guides didn’t appear,
-and it was fortunate we had been up before. Several times I thought I had lost
-my way, and was leading the two companies into the German lines. Trying to
-keep in touch with the man ahead while blundering through those woods,
-laden down with rifle and equipment, tripping over logs, roots and barbed wire,
-slipping in the mud; occasional shells bursting to remind us that any noise
-would be disastrous, and, of course, a nice rain falling—I’ve been on lots of
-pleasanter walks.</p>
-
-<p>At last we came to the old German rest camp, and I knew where we were.
-Soon we met Capt. Ressiguie, and the sgt. commanding his left platoon took us
-in tow.</p>
-
-<p>The first and third platoons furnished the line of outguards, along the line
-368.8-242.4: 368.3-242.8; the first platoon on the right. The second and fourth
-platoons were the support, and were to organize a strong point at the north of
-the little strip of woods at 368.1-242.5. Co. Hdq. was established at 368.6-242.4,
-just off the path through the woods.</p>
-
-<p>Only a small part of our sector had been held by H Co., and we had to
-dig our own bivvies. Our intrenching tools made little headway in the rocky
-ground, laced with tree roots; and even those who found German picks and
-shovels made little better progress. The support was somewhat better off, as
-they had one or two good dugouts and gun pits.</p>
-
-<p>By the time all the dispositions were made and inspected it was beginning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-to get light. There was plenty of German clothing and equipment lying around,
-and in ten minutes you could have collected enough souvenirs to satisfy even a
-Paris Q. M. sergeant. The heavy fleeceskin German coats came in especially
-handy, and the other stuff was good to line our bivvies, though it was soaking
-wet and smelt most damnably. Hun machine gun ammunition in long canvas
-belts was scattered around in abundance; and down in the corner of the field
-on our left was an abandoned field kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>Raymond Harris and a couple of battalion runners were running a field
-telephone up from B. H. Q. to the Co. Hdq. We had crawled into our holes for
-some sleep, when about 1 P. M. a nasty, shrill little whir like a giant mosquito
-heralded the arrival of a small one-pounder shell about a hundred meters down
-the line. It was repeated rapidly, dropping shells right along that path which
-ran parallel to the outpost line at about twenty-five yard intervals. And to our
-dismay, we realized that the shells were coming from behind us.</p>
-
-<p>Cheery-O had carefully cleaned and oiled his rifle and leaned it up against
-a sapling at the edge of our hole. The vicious whir came again directly at us,
-and, as our muscles grew taut against the shock of the explosion, the butt of
-the rifle suddenly vanished. A moment later Cheery-O scrambled out and
-returned with a rueful face, bearing his precious rifle, bent neatly at the breech
-into a right angle.</p>
-
-<p>Just then one of the battalion runners came up, with a bleeding hand,
-saying that his mate had just been killed down the path. I took the two first
-aid men attached to the company and we went down and found Harris, my
-own runner, lying by the coil of telephone wire he had been laying, with a
-great hole in the side of his head—a horrible thing to look at.</p>
-
-<p>I stopped only long enough to see a dressing applied and a stretcher
-brought, and then hastened down the path to D Cos. headquarters, where a
-phone had been installed. I found Fleischmann shooting off all the fireworks
-that would go off—about one in ten—and his first sergeant grinding the bell
-handle of the field phone like mad. To make things pleasanter, our artillery
-dropped a couple of shells neatly among our outguards. We sent back runners
-to B. H. Q., and the shells stopped.</p>
-
-<p>We never found out who was responsible for that one-pounder. Our own
-was far in the rear, and the outfits on either side—the 90th Division on the
-right, the 312th Inf. on the left—disclaimed any knowledge of it. So headquarters
-solved the problem, as usual, by telling us we were green at this game
-and didn’t know what we were talking about.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed so pitifully unnecessary about Harris. He was such a handsome,
-bright, intelligent and cheery little chap, a favorite with all the company; and
-we carried him off with half his face torn away, moaning and unconscious. I
-never dreamed he could live. But somehow they pulled him through and I
-have just had a card from him today, from Walter Reed Hospital, where he is
-yet.</p>
-
-<p>The nearest first aid post was at Bn. Hdq., and we had to carry all our
-wounded back those two long kilometers through the woods, with only the
-rough dressings that we could apply on the spot. For our rations we had to
-go back another two kilos, to Rgt’l Hdq., making four kilos each way, nearly
-all the way through woods and under shell fire. The continual wetness, exposure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-and loss of sleep made us easy prey to dysentery, and this weakened us a
-great deal. Under these conditions, to have to carry a stretcher or a can of
-stew several kilos in the dark was—well, it was just hell. I think the ration
-parties had the worst job, though their loads were not so heavy as the stretcher
-bearers’ were. The latter were held up by sympathy for the poor devil on the
-stretcher. There isn’t much inspiration in a can of slum or a bag of bread.</p>
-
-<p>Joe Levy had charge of the ration parties, and a thankless job it was. The
-Major arranged to have the chow brought as far as the line of resistance in a
-limber; but when shells were banging about—which was pretty generally the
-case—either the limber didn’t get up that far, or the chow was dumped down
-and abandoned. Worst of all, we only had enough thermos cans to carry one
-ration for the company; so the ration detail had to go back, get the chow, bring
-it up and distribute it, collect the cans, lug them back to the kitchens, and then
-return to the outpost line. It did seem absolutely inexcusable that this had to
-be done, all for lack of a few cans. It cost us several unnecessary losses in
-killed and wounded, and after all had done their turn at this detail, weakened
-from diarrhoea and exposure as we were, it made us very low physically.</p>
-
-<p>The night of the 23rd passed comparatively quietly for the outpost line,
-though the line of resistance was well bucketed, and the ration party had a
-hard time. Shells landing near the kitchen transformed several thermos cans
-into sieves, and made the shortage worse than ever. Besides, Regt’l Hdq.
-decided that the kitchens were attracting enemy shell fire in their direction,
-and ordered them moved another kilo back, to the brigade reserve.</p>
-
-<p>Our orders were to do no patrolling in front of the line of outguards, as
-this was to be done by the battalion scouts under Lt. Drake. I believe this was
-a mistake, and if I had it to do over again I should send out patrols every night.
-It makes all the difference in one’s confidence and peace of mind, and no
-information can equal that gained at first hand.</p>
-
-<p>At about 3 P. M. on the 24th, as I was dozing in our bivvy, Lt. Col. Budd’s
-face peeped in. He and a Major from Division Hdq. were inspecting the outpost
-line. I was glad to see someone higher up than myself dodging shells. It
-might have been wrong in theory for him to be up there, but I surely appreciated
-it. I did the honors for our sector, asked for more thermos cans, and got
-a couple of cigars from the Lt. Colonel. He brought the news that the 90th
-Division on our right was pulling off a battalion raid that night, covered by a
-barrage, and to lie close.</p>
-
-<p>About three times a day I would go down to chew the rag and swap dope
-with Capt. Fleischmann. It was funny that I nearly always met him on the
-way, coming over to do the same with me. The idea always struck us at the
-same moment. Somehow it seemed to help share the responsibility, and
-cheered us up a lot.</p>
-
-<p>The barrage started about 11 P. M. The Boche replied with a counter
-barrage, and he had a very fair range on our outpost line. In five minutes the
-shells were ripping the tops off the trees all around, and the air grew acrid
-from the bursting lyddite. He was just about 50 meters too high, and it was
-his shorts that did the damage to us.</p>
-
-<p>In about fifteen minutes, when the din was at its height, Cole, a runner
-from the 3rd platoon, came up, out of breath and shaken. A shell had hit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-directly on platoon hdq.; Lt. Merrill and Sgt. Hill were both wounded, and
-several men killed.</p>
-
-<p>I left Sgt. Robbins in charge at Co. Hdq., and with Cole, Winemiller,
-Chiaradio and our two medical detachment men went out to see the situation.</p>
-
-<p>We pushed through the thick underbrush to the shallow hole that Merrill
-was occupying. It was raining a little; the only light came from the flashes
-of the bursting shells and the guns on the horizon. Merrill and Hill had been
-lying in their bivvy, with the other platoon runner, Laurencell, sitting on their
-feet. A shell had hit Laurencell right at the shoulders, carrying all his head,
-neck and shoulders and arms away. His bleeding trunk and legs, an awful
-corpse, was lying across Hill and Merrill, who were both badly wounded in the
-feet and legs, and could not remove the body.</p>
-
-<p>We took up poor Laurencell’s remains and laid them to one side, and then
-got Merrill on a stretcher, and Cheery-O and Cole carried him off. Sgt. Hill’s
-feet, however, were so mangled and mixed up with the bottom of the hole
-that our attempts to raise him out of it caused him intense agony. He said,
-“Captain, there’s a German razor in my coat pocket. Please cut my foot off,
-and then I can stand it.”</p>
-
-<p>I couldn’t see, but I could feel with my hands that this was about the only
-way to extricate him. So I took the razor, and cut away his shoe and the
-mangled part of his foot, which was all mixed up with a German overcoat they
-had been lying on. Then we were able to lift him on to the stretcher; but he
-wouldn’t be carried away until we took all his cigarettes out of his pocket and
-gave them to him.</p>
-
-<p>Then I went down toward the line of outguards. When I got out on the
-road by the German kitchen, I was challenged by Cpl. McGarrity. It did my
-heart good to hear his stern, cool voice coming out of that night of blackness
-and horror. He reported that several men in the outguards were killed and
-wounded, and that he and Corp. Welsh were arranging for the wounded. Sgt.
-Schelter had gone to Co. Hdq. for stretchers, and hadn’t been heard of since.
-We never saw him again. His body was found in the woods several hundred
-meters away several days later; he evidently lost his way, and while wandering
-about in search of Co. Hdq. was killed by shell fire.</p>
-
-<p>Welsh and McGarrity took hold of the situation like veterans. I designated
-them first and second in command of the platoon, respectively, and told
-them they would be relieved before morning.</p>
-
-<p>On returning to Co. Hdq. I found the wounded beginning to stream in.
-Nearly all were from the 3rd platoon; the 1st platoon, strangely, suffered very
-little. All the Co. runners and buglers were soon carrying stretchers, and I
-again left Sgt. Robbins in charge while I went over to the support to see to
-bringing up more stretcher bearers and relief for the 3rd platoon.</p>
-
-<p>That walk across the fields to the support’s position was certainly a
-thriller. As I came out of the woods and started across the open, the shells
-were going just overhead and bursting in the field to my left, along a line about
-50 meters away. After I doped this out it was easy enough to plan my route
-so as to avoid them.</p>
-
-<p>I found the platoon commanders and their sergeants in their dugout—quite
-luxurious it looked, lighted with a candle and comparatively dry. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-thought I was wounded, as my hands, arms, trousers and gas mask were all
-spotted and spattered with blood. I ordered a detail from the 2nd platoon to
-report to me at once for ration and stretcher carrying parties, and the 4th
-platoon to report as soon as the barrage lifted to relieve the 3rd on the line of
-outguards. As soon as the carrying parties were ready, I started back with them.</p>
-
-<p>Sgt. Levy was placed in charge of the carrying parties, and they were
-soon on their way. The men knew nothing of the country; it was pitchy black,
-the shelling was still heavy, and they were wet, weak and miserable. It was
-very hard to make orders understood, and everything was wrong at once.
-Besides, there was the possibility of a counter-attack or raid by the Boche.</p>
-
-<p>In about half an hour the shelling died down and the 4th platoon came
-up. When they were posted, while inspecting the outguards, I stumbled over
-a body. As I could not see the face, I cut off the front of his gas mask pouch
-where the name of the owner was printed. Next morning I saw it was Kindt,
-of the 3rd platoon. He had been killed instantly by a small piece of shell
-through the heart.</p>
-
-<p>As I got back to Co. Hdq. it was getting light. I crawled into our hole,
-which had a shelter half over it, and lit my pipe—the old black briar I have in
-my face now as I write. Before I had taken three puffs I fell off to sleep. A
-few minutes later Sgt. Robbins woke me with the news that the ration detail
-had returned. I had been breathing through my pipe which made me very
-sick and dizzy for awhile.</p>
-
-<p>It was too light then to get the rations out to the outguards. The ration
-detail was lying about on the ground, dead beat, among the pots and cans.
-Sgt. Wilson and his cooks had worked all the day before to make up a good
-chow, and Wilson had come up with it himself, though that was no part of
-his duty. It almost broke his heart to be too late. I tried to eat some, but
-everything tasted like blood.</p>
-
-<p>Someone in the rear—not Sgt. Wilson—had the idea that we needed
-coffee worse than water and so while we had plenty of strong, thick, cold black
-coffee, we only had water that was left in our canteens. Our upset stomachs
-refused the coffee; I used mine to wash the blood off my hands and wrists.
-Robbins shaved in his.</p>
-
-<p>Just then Capt. Fleischmann came striding along the path. He greeted
-me with “Hello Daddy. Isn’t this awful?” D Co. had suffered even worse
-than we, and they had not enough men to carry in the wounded, though they
-had stripped the outguards as much as they dared. He asked me for men to
-carry in four wounded that were still at his Co. Hdq.</p>
-
-<p>I looked at the men lying on the ground asleep—the only ones available.
-They had been carrying all that awful night under the heavy shell fire, and I
-had not the heart to order them to make the trip again. But I woke them up
-and told them that D Co. had some men lying wounded, and asked for volunteers
-to take them in.</p>
-
-<p>They stared dully for a moment, too tired to understand. Then Joe Levy,
-who had been on the go all night, dragged himself to his feet, and said “Hell,
-I’ll go. Come on, fellows.” Nobody wanted to go, and nobody pretended to.
-But they went. It was one of the finest things I ever saw, and every man that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-went should have had a D. S. C. No excitement to it though; nothing to thrill
-the penny-a-liners, so they didn’t get it.</p>
-
-<p>When night fell, a detail went out to bring in the bodies of Weidman,
-Kindt and Laurencell. Cpl. Weidman had been hit right in the waist by a
-shell; his legs were lying several yards away from his body. It was a gruesome
-task bringing him and Laurencell in. We laid the bodies, covered with a
-blanket, near the graves of two H Co. men who had been killed, just off the
-path at the place when it crossed the good road—about point 368.8-242.3.</p>
-
-<p>The night passed comparatively quietly; we got the rations issued, and
-some water came up too late. Holly, one of the company runners, had twisted
-his knee badly, and could not walk; so Cole was made runner in his place;
-and a faithful, fearless lad he was, too.</p>
-
-<p>Wednesday, September 25th, dawned a bright fall day. About 10 A. M.
-Lt. Cressman, the regimental chaplain, came up. Winemiller, Cole, Cheery-O,
-and Slover went with us to bury our three comrades. We turned over their
-personal belongings to the chaplain, wrapped each poor mangled body in a
-blanket, and laid them side by side in the shallow graves—the best we had
-been able to dig. The chaplain read the burial service, while an occasional
-shell tore through the air far overhead. Then we filled in the graves. It was
-hard on our over-strained nerves, and when we got through most of us were
-crying more or less. We hadn’t as yet seen so much as one of the enemy to
-shoot at; it was all such a hopeless, dreadful, ghastly business. Winemiller
-and Cole made three little crosses and set them up at the head of the graves.</p>
-
-<p>At 2:30 P. M. a message came up for Capt. Fleischmann and myself to
-report at once to Btn. Hdq. We set out together wondering what was up;
-leaving Lts. Hultzen and Schuyler in command.</p>
-
-<p>We reported to Major Odom, who was studying his battle map by the
-light of a couple of candles. Louis Foulkes greeted us on the side and slipped
-me a couple of cigars.</p>
-
-<p>After a few minutes, the Major took out his Bull Durham and started
-rolling a cigarette, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“I have a little problem for your companies to do tomorrow morning,”
-quite as he had been saying any afternoon for the past year. Then he went on
-to explain.</p>
-
-<p>The great Argonne drive was to begin the next morning. It was to be a
-surprise attack, preceded by only a couple of hours’ artillery preparation. We
-were to make a demonstration, a sham attack, with the object of keeping the
-enemy guessing for a few hours as to where the real blow was to fall, and so to
-delay his concentration of troops to meet the main drive.</p>
-
-<p>The 312th Inf. on our left, and the 90th Div. on our right, were to advance
-several kilos. We were to advance about half a kilo, to approximately the line
-368.3-243.4; 369.5-242.3. This line we were to hold, and the units on our
-flanks were gradually to fall back and re-establish the outpost line on us as a
-guide. We would have no barrage, but there would be an hour of concentration
-fire—that is, our artillery would shell points in the sector of the advance
-like crossroads, probable strong points, battery positions, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Zero hour was 5:30 A. M. At that moment we were to cut loose with all
-our small arms fire. The battalion scouts had reported that there were no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-Germans for 500 meters to the front, but this Fourth of July stuff was to get
-the enemy’s wind up.</p>
-
-<p>The arrangements for supplies and liaison were soon made. We had had
-no chance to use any ammunition, and about all we asked for was water
-and food.</p>
-
-<p>Foulkes said that orders had arrived at Regtl. Hdq. detailing me to
-report to the Army School of the Line at Langres on Oct. 1st. I thought of the
-men we had buried that morning, and reflected grimly that I should probably
-not matriculate.</p>
-
-<p>When the Major finished his instructions, we sat quiet for a moment. Then
-Fleischmann said “Well, come on, Daddy; we’ve got a lot to do before dark,”
-and we set out.</p>
-
-<p>As we climbed Dead Man’s Hill, the Boche balloon saw us, and they
-amused themselves by sniping at us with a couple of 88’s. We kept about 20
-yards apart, so that if one was potted the other could see to the attack. It
-was rather like playing “Going to Jerusalem.” We would linger by a good
-shell hole and then hustle for the next one; and of course the shells would
-always catch us between two holes, and we would have to flop into some six
-inch puddle.</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at Co. Hdq. I sent for the platoon commanders and sergeants.
-Welch and McGarrity were left in command of the 3rd platoon; I had perfect
-confidence in their ability to handle it after their showing two nights before.</p>
-
-<p>I knew that the moment we opened fire the German barrage would drop.
-If he hadn’t shortened his range since Monday night we would have it behind
-us. If he had, we would have to go through it anyhow, and the sooner the
-better.</p>
-
-<p>B Co. was attacking over a full kilometer front, which in a regular
-supported attack would be the sector for at least a battalion. If we met any
-serious opposition, we could not hope to push through to our objective on this
-frontage. I therefore made my main objective the edge of the open field along
-the line 369.0-243.0 to 368.6-243.2. This line was along the top of a rather
-steep reverse slope, which would give us protection from frontal fire, and from
-this as a base we could throw out combat patrols to the flanks, and eventually
-get in touch with the units on either side.</p>
-
-<p>The company was to advance with the 1st, 4th and 2nd platoons in the
-first wave, in above order from right to left; all in line of combat groups. The
-3rd platoon was to follow at 50 meters, and would act as support and mopping
-up party. All would jump off from the line of outguards, so that all would get
-clear of the enemy’s barrage as quickly as possible. The 1st Plt. already had a
-common post with D Co., which was to move down the road on our right flank
-as a combat patrol. Our left flank post was to arrange with the visiting patrol
-of the 312th Inf. to advance similarly along the left flank of our sector.</p>
-
-<p>By the time these orders were issued and the ground reconnoitered, it
-was nearly dark. Our rations were to be brought up that night by details
-from the rear; but they lost their way—or their ambition—and the chow
-never got beyond the foot of Dead Man’s Hill.</p>
-
-<p>About midnight Capt. Fleischmann came over for a last consultation, and
-we explained our plans to each other. Then we shook hands hard, wished each<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-other “Cheery-O” after the manner of the Scotties; and the night closed behind
-his tall figure as he strode off down the path.</p>
-
-<p>Various details of the arrangements kept me busy until the 2nd and 3rd
-platoons came up at 5 A. M. to take their posts for the attack. Things were
-comparatively quiet; only the usual shells going overhead. There was just
-time to see the platoons properly disposed and to get my headquarters platoon
-into position between the 1st and 4th platoons. Then I watched my wrist
-watch tick off the last five minutes, as the first tinge of dawn crept into the sky
-on our right. I ran everything over in my mind hastily, to be sure nothing was
-forgotten. And then the minute hand pointed the half hour.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing happened.</p>
-
-<p>The seconds ticked away. I listened and listened for ages—twenty
-seconds by the watch—and nothing happened.</p>
-
-<p>Finally I heard Schuyler’s voice over to the right, calling cautiously “Hey,
-Cap, isn’t it time yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure it is,” I replied irritably. “Turn ’em loose. It’s after the time now.”</p>
-
-<p>The words were not out of my mouth before his rifle cracked and his voice
-rang out “First platoon, Fire.”</p>
-
-<p>The shots began to ring out, singly, then a rattle as the other platoons
-took it up, each man firing a clip; then the rackety-split of the Chauchats. An
-instant’s lull as we reloaded, and then the command was “Forward!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Hell broke loose.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans had shortened their range. Their barrage dropped right
-on us. The company runners were behind me in single file, Slover at the rear.
-A shell burst behind us, killing him in his tracks before he took a step. We
-knew nothing of it at the time. We pushed across the field to our front, a
-field studded with stumps and full of underbrush. Shells were bursting all
-around; the air filled as if by magic with the stifling acrid smoke of high
-explosive. Several times the concussion of a close one nearly knocked me off
-my feet, and the fumes blew against my face like the blast from a furnace door.
-I wondered vaguely when I’d get it, and shouted “Come on, B Company,” until
-I was hoarse. Occasionally I heard Schuyler cheering on his men. You couldn’t
-see ten feet for the smoke.</p>
-
-<p>At the far edge of the field we ran into a broad belt of barbed wire. We
-spread out, looking for a passage. Joe Levy called “Here’s a place, Captain,”
-and we struggled through; I was dragging a long French VB rifle after me.
-The wire was about 20 feet across.</p>
-
-<p>We found ourselves at the bottom of a wooded slope, on a rough wagon
-track. Lt. Schuyler, with Sgt. Reid and a couple of men, had gotten through
-further along, and we started up the hill, sheltered somewhat from the shells,
-though they were bursting in the treetops overhead.</p>
-
-<p>I dumped my pack and V. B. rifle by a tree and christened the place company
-headquarters. Then we went on up the hill. I got out my map and
-pencil to be sure this was our objective.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite light now; a beautiful September morning. Schuyler and I
-gained the top of the ridge together. The woods ended there, giving way to a
-little open plateau, about 250 meters across, with woods on the other side
-again. I verified the position on my map, and ordered Schuyler to post his men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-along the ridge under cover of the trees and underbrush, while I did the same
-further to the left, where men from the 4th platoon were coming up the slope
-in groups of two and three as they got through the wire.</p>
-
-<p>I had not gone twenty paces when Sgt. Reid came running after me and
-said “Lieut. Schuyler’s been hit, Captain.” I answered mechanically “All
-right; bring him behind the ridge, take charge of the platoon and post the
-men as they come up.”</p>
-
-<p>Rifle bullets were beginning to snap overhead, coming apparently from
-the woods across the field, which was held in some force by the enemy, as we
-soon realized. Our only chance of meeting a counter-attack was to build up a
-firing line to sweep the plateau in front, and as fast as men from the 4th
-platoon came up I posted them to command our front and left flank.</p>
-
-<p>Slim Price, in a German’s black fur coat that came about to his hips, came
-stalking up the hill with his Chauchat, and disappeared over the crest, subsiding
-in a little clump of bushes out on the left of the plateau. He was telling
-the world that he was a “fighting —— of a ——.” A moment later I
-heard the rattle of his gun as he spotted a Heinie machine gun squad advancing
-down the gully on our left. I guess Slim was right, at that.</p>
-
-<p>The C. O., 4th Plt., came up by this time. He was badly shaken, but I put
-him in charge of the left flank until the 2nd platoon should arrive, and went
-back to the right.</p>
-
-<p>They had brought Lt. Schuyler a little way down the slope, and laid him
-down until a stretcher came up. A shell had burst right beside him, between
-him and Reid. He was still breathing, but very heavily, and was quite unconscious;
-his eyes were nearly closed. I bound up his head as best I could with
-his first aid packet, but my heart sank—the concussion had been near the base
-of the skull. Oddly enough, he was not at all disfigured; but it had been a
-terrible blow, and only his magnificent vitality was keeping him breathing.
-That was a bitter moment, with my best officer and best friend in the outfit
-dying, the company shattered; and not a German had I seen.</p>
-
-<p>Sgt. Levy came up with a couple of stretchers and the news that both the
-Medical Detachment men attached to the company were killed. Hoping against
-hope I had him put Roy on the first stretcher, and they bore him away to the
-rear, though the shells were still bursting behind us. It was no use; that gallant
-spirit breathed its last before they had gone a kilometer. The bearers wanted
-to take him on to the surgeon anyhow, but there were many others desperately
-wounded, and stretchers were pitifully few.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime I had sent out patrols to the flanks to try and get in touch
-with D Co. and the 312th Inf. A patrol of 6 men from D Co. came in on our
-right, but they were separated from their outfit and didn’t know what had
-happened. Brisk machine gun firing to our right rear made us fear things
-were not going well there.</p>
-
-<p>On our left, a party of the Boche under an officer had advanced down the
-ravine toward the end of our ridge, and had driven in our advanced riflemen;
-but had been checked, largely by the doughty Price from his clump of bushes.
-Three runners sent to the left to find the 2nd platoon did not return, and I
-feared the latter had lost its direction and was in trouble.</p>
-
-<p>During a temporary lull, I strolled out to the left, map in hand, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-crossing the ravine started up the next ridge to find them. About a hundred
-yards ahead I caught a glimpse of a man walking through the trees, and
-thought I recognized one of our runners. I shouted “Hey.” He turned around.
-I asked “What platoon are you in?” Then I noticed how nicely his helmet
-came down around his neck. He unlimbered a rifle that looked about eight
-feet long, and cracked a bullet past my ear. I reached for my .45, remembered
-my last target score with that weapon, and promptly betook myself off to our
-own ridge.</p>
-
-<p>There I took a dead man’s rifle and ammunition, and called for volunteers
-to go on a combat patrol to find the 2nd platoon. We needed them badly, for
-if the enemy got in on our left flank they could enfilade our ridge and shoot us
-down at pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>I took Martocci and four other men—their names I can’t recall, though
-their faces stand out sharply in my memory. We advanced up the ridge on
-our left in skirmishing order. My Boche friend was waiting for us, and before
-we had gone fifty yards he cracked down on us from the woods above. We
-answered, firing by ear at the sound of his rifle. It was blind work; we couldn’t
-see fifty yards through the woods.</p>
-
-<p>We worked up to the top of the ridge, and then along it toward the west.
-Two of the patrol were missing; lost or killed, I never knew which. We
-pushed on cautiously, a few yards at a time, stopping to look and listen. Now
-and again the enemy would spot us, and his bullets would snap past us viciously.
-The German rifle has a high, whip-like crack, easily distinguishable from
-that of our Enfield or Springfield; but the noise of the bullet passing by is
-much the same.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly I felt a sharp blow on my shoulder; one of the gentlemen had
-pinked me neatly. Down the ridge the bushes rustled; all four of us let drive
-at the sound. There was a shrill scream, and then silence. One of us had
-found a mark.</p>
-
-<p>This was all very interesting, but my business was to find that 2nd
-platoon. My mind was working away industriously at that problem, with a
-peculiar detachment. I only remember feeling vaguely annoyed at our patrol’s
-unpleasant situation, and did my share of the shooting almost mechanically.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, as we found out later, the 312th Inf. outpost made no advance
-at all that morning, and our patrol had pushed in behind the German line of
-outguards; to our mutual bewilderment and disgust. The Boche began to fall
-back through the woods, not stealthily as we were moving, but clumping and
-crashing along, and shouting to one another to know what in donner und
-blitzen was up.</p>
-
-<p>We were now well beyond the left of our own regimental sector, and a
-long half kilo from the company. The withdrawing outguards of the enemy
-were passing all around us. For twenty minutes we played a desperate game
-of blind man’s buff with them. Occasionally we would catch a glimpse of a
-gray form or a green helmet through the trees, and our little messengers of
-death would speed him on his way. Then bullets would sing over our heads
-from all directions, and we would hug the ground until we could push on
-again, to repeat the performance from another position.</p>
-
-<p>Finally I gave up hope of finding the 2nd platoon, and got out my compass<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-to steer our course back to B Co. Cautiously we stole through the woods to
-the southeast. We could still hear the Boche trampling the bushes all
-around us.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly from the bushes ahead came a challenge, in the mechanical,
-drill-book German that means bullets are coming. We hit the dirt, just as a
-brisk rapid fire opened on us, cutting the twigs overhead. We let drive into
-the bushes in front, firing low. As I slipped a fresh clip into my magazine, I
-glanced at Martocci, his olive cheek white with excitement, but firing quite
-steadily and coolly from a kneeling position.</p>
-
-<p>I signalled “Cease firing.” All was still, except for a trampling receding
-off to the right. Warily we circled round the bushes, and came upon a road—one
-of those straight German roads, with a 2-inch pipe line running along
-the side.</p>
-
-<p>One of the men crossed, while the rest stood ready to cover him. I
-crossed next, with Martocci. As I glanced down the road, I saw two Germans
-lying at the side of it, about ten yards away. Nice looking, fair-haired lads
-they were. One of them just then stretched out his hand towards his rifle,
-which lay beside him. It may have been only a convulsive movement, but we
-weren’t taking chances. I put a bullet into him, squeezing the trigger carefully.
-He jumped and rolled out into the middle of the road, where he lay
-still enough. Then I did the same for the other, mechanically, with a cold
-disgust at the whole business. My mind seemed to stand aloof and watch the
-proceeding for a moment; then it went on thinking, planning, weighing carefully
-our next move.</p>
-
-<p>After this, the enemy seemed to steer rather clear of us, though we passed
-near several other groups. One fellow was shouting for “Emil;” and I reflected
-grimly that Emil’s military career was probably blighted, anyhow. So we
-came at last to the foot of the ridge again, and about 200 meters along the
-road at its foot we found our left flank post. And there at last we found the
-2nd platoon—Lt. Dunn, Sgt. Sweeney and four men. The rest were lying back
-in the field where the barrage had struck them, or were on that long, long trip
-back to the first aid post.</p>
-
-<p>At this time—about 8 A. M.—a German plane appeared, coming at us
-with a rush, low over the treetops, almost head on. We could see the aviator
-looking over the side of the car. He spotted someone moving, and flew low
-along our line, firing his machine gun, but more as a signal than at us particularly,
-I think. We cracked away at him, but had no luck. With superb
-nerve he flew slowly the length of our line, returned, and then banked lazily
-and disappeared toward his own lines. Ten minutes later shells were bursting
-about us with devilish precision, and machine gun squads pushed up on either
-flank, until stopped by our Chauchats. They were still somewhat leery of us,
-though, possibly suspecting a trap, and the attack was not pressed home. The
-German snipers in the woods across the little plateau in front were reinforced
-by machine guns, and both sides greeted every shaking bush or exposed head
-with a vicious crackle of bullets.</p>
-
-<p>Corporal Apicelli’s squad, lying out in the advanced posts where they had
-been stationed by Schuyler and Reid, were especially exposed, Apicelli and
-two other men being killed during the morning. At least one of the enemy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-was using dumdum bullets, as I saw one of our men shot in the hip, and where
-the bullet came out you could have put your fist in the hole.</p>
-
-<p>Levy and Winemiller were set to cutting two lanes in the wire behind us,
-so that we would not be hopelessly in a cul-de-sac.</p>
-
-<p>At about 9 A. M. Lt. Wolcott of D Co. appeared with his platoon, reduced
-to some 20 men. He was out of touch with the rest of his company, and did
-not know how it had fared. He was posted on our right flank, and sent out a
-patrol to get in contact with D Co.</p>
-
-<p>The firing died down to incessant sniping, and I set about completing my
-situation report for the Major, having given up hope for the present of establishing
-contact on the flanks. As I was finishing, Lt. Drake came up with a
-squad of the battalion scouts, among them the honest face of our own Sgt.
-DeGrote. I explained the situation, and gave him the report to take back. I
-shall never forget “Ducky’s” eyes, sick with seeing horrors, as he turned to go.</p>
-
-<p>As he disappeared, a tall figure came striding along from the right—Capt.
-Fleischmann, with dark circles under his eyes, blackened and stained
-from head to foot with blood and powder. We greeted each other as risen
-from the dead, and compared notes. He had run into the enemy in force
-strongly established in concrete pillboxes and machine gun posts; and while
-scattered groups of his company had won through to the company objective,
-they were unable to hold it without machine guns against the enemy’s enfilading
-fire. The remnant had retired to their old line of outguards, after suffering
-heavy losses.</p>
-
-<p>Since I still thought the 312th Inf. might be far out to our left front, and
-depending on us to cover their ultimate withdrawal, we decided that B Co.
-should hold on where we were, while D Co. would string scattered Cossack
-posts along their old line until relief or further orders came up.</p>
-
-<p>The morning wore on; still no news from our left flank. I kept on the
-move up and down the line, assuming a confidence that I did not feel; for of
-course if the enemy advanced in any force we were done for. Still we had our
-orders, and there was nothing for it but to put up the best scrap we could.</p>
-
-<p>Some things were funny, even then. I remember the company barber,
-that sterling son of Italy, after a Boche sniper put a bullet past each ear. He
-wriggled back from his unpleasant position on the crest of the ridge, and
-retaliated by holding up his rifle at arm’s length over his head, pointed northeast,
-and executing rapid fire, pulling the trigger with his thumb, while he
-regarded my approach with the complacence of conscious ingenuity. I think
-the Boche must have laughed too; for the branches of a tree across the field
-began to shake, and a bullet brought a gray body tumbling down from branch
-to branch.</p>
-
-<p>We had some food—hard bread, corned willy and goldfish—but very little
-water. It was pitiful to see the wounded, who wouldn’t take any from the
-others, because they were going back when the stretcher bearers got around to
-them. Levy and his detail worked like Trojans, but it was a long trip, and
-every time they returned there was a fresh batch of wounded to be carried.</p>
-
-<p>There was one man—I wish I could remember his name, but though
-every event stands out clearly in my mind, I cannot remember the names
-connected with them. He was sitting with his back against a tree, wounded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-by a shell in the legs and stomach. When I asked him if I could do anything
-for him, he said “If I could have a little water.” I gave him my canteen, which
-had a couple of swallows left in it. He shook it, and grinned and shook his
-head. “Not your last, Cap’n.” I told him that Levy had just brought up a
-can, and hurried off to the left, where the firing was getting heavy. When I
-passed that way again, the man was dead. And the water was still in my
-canteen, and he had screwed the stopper back on; so he must have thought I
-was lying about Levy.</p>
-
-<p>Three o’clock came, and shortly after a platoon from A Co. under Lt.
-Bigler came up to reinforce us. They were posted on our left flank to hold
-the ravine up which the enemy had been trying to advance and flank our
-position. I couldn’t understand why the Germans in front of D Co. had not
-come in on our right flank yet.</p>
-
-<p>At 3:30 a patrol of two officers and six men came up the road on the left,
-and as they drew near I recognized Capt. Gray, of the 312th Inf., who I knew
-commanded their outpost line. His news was not encouraging. His company
-had received no orders to advance; they were still on their old line to our left
-rear. We arranged that he should run a line of Cossack posts along the road
-up to join us, so that we would have at least a continuous line of outguards on
-the brigade front. On the way over the ridge from his right flank post, his
-patrol had had several skirmishes with German outposts or patrols; so the
-enemy was apparently venturing back to the positions where our patrol had
-flushed them earlier in the day.</p>
-
-<p>Just after he left—about 5.30—Lt. Col. Budd came up with several men.
-I was certainly glad to see him, and even more glad to see Levy with a can of
-water, which he doled out, a swallow to each man. Col. Budd looked over the
-situation, and decided that we should hold the ridge until nightfall, when we
-would be relieved. While he was there, three German snipers managed to get
-into a rifle pit on the plateau about a hundred yards in front of us, and made
-things very hot on the right flank. Sgt. Lehy took our last two rifle grenades,
-and dropped the second one plumb into the pit, which discouraged those three
-for the day.</p>
-
-<p>Col. Budd departed to arrange for sending up water, ammunition and
-the relief.</p>
-
-<p>At 5:30 the enemy’s artillery started in on us again, sweeping the top of
-the ridge with shell and shrapnel, and dropping time shells into the ravine
-behind it. For twenty minutes he poured in a heavy barrage, while we hugged
-the ground and gripped our rifles. If this meant a counter-attack in force we
-were up against it, because our ammunition was running low; but if we could
-beat them off once more we might hold out until night brought the relief.</p>
-
-<p>But this time the enemy was starting the real thing. He knew the ground
-like a book, of course; and I must say that his attack was ably planned and
-bravely executed. While his artillery shelled us, machine guns worked around
-behind both our flanks. At 5:50 men from D Co’s outguards came running in
-and reported that the enemy had advanced in force, broken their skeleton line,
-and was coming in on our right flank with machine guns. Even while they
-spoke, the “Tap-tap-tap” of the machine gun broke out on the right to confirm
-them, and our Chauchats spat back in answer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>In those woods, it was merely a question of who could throw enough lead
-to keep the other fellow’s head down; and at this game our Chauchats had the
-chance of the proverbial snowball. With Sgts. Reid, Lehy, Fahey and Levy,
-the right flank, which had been disorganized and driven in with the D Co.
-outposts, was re-formed, and a firing line built up at right angles to our front
-to face our new foes. The enemy in front was pouring in a hot fire; we could
-not encircle the enemy machine guns to the right because of that belt of wire
-behind us. Meanwhile those same machine guns were enfilading our main line
-along the ridge.</p>
-
-<p>Our only chance was a frontal attack on them. First we tried a series of
-rushes. I realized then exactly what was meant by “fire superiority,” and the
-enemy certainly had it. One Chauchat ran out of ammunition. The other was
-in Cocker’s hands, and he used it well until it jammed. He worked at it
-desperately for several minutes, as he advanced with the line; then he threw
-it up against a tree in disgust, crying bitterly “That’s a hell of a thing to give
-a man to fight with.” From then on we had only our rifle fire against their
-leaden hailstorm. Neither side could aim their shots, but they were shooting
-twenty bullets to our one, and our hastily formed line was driven back.</p>
-
-<p>As they retired, Sgt. Fahey and I, with two other men, tried to sneak up
-along the top of the ridge and get close enough to bomb one of the machine
-guns. We were lucky at first, the enemy being busy with his bullets further
-down the slope. We saw four Germans, carrying ammunition ahead of us, but
-held our fire, hoping they would lead on to their gun. Fahey slipped me a
-bomb, and I pulled the pin, ready to throw. Just then a new devil’s tattoo
-broke out about fifty yards away to our left, and the bullets came showering
-about our ears. They must have caught sight of us through some opening in
-the trees, and were probably waiting for just such an attempt. One of our
-patrol was riddled through the stomach and back, and started crawling back
-on one hand and his knees, with strange, shrill moans like a wounded animal.
-The other was killed instantly. Fahey and I looked in each other’s eyes for a
-startled moment; each, I think, wondering why the other was not killed. A
-bullet went through the tube of my gas mask, as I noticed later. Fahey lifted
-his eyebrows and pointed at the new gun. I nodded, and we started for it.
-But the first gun’s crew heard the cries of the wounded man, and traversed
-back and forth by us. Fahey staggered, shot through the chest. We could
-not see to throw a bomb, and it would probably hit a branch and light on us
-anyhow. Our slender chance vanished, and we slipped back through the trees.</p>
-
-<p>As we returned, I saw our left flank retiring in some disorder, further
-confusing our hard pressed right. The enemy had driven back the post
-holding the head of the ravine on our left, and we were in the desperate
-position of being enfiladed from both flanks. Our losses were heavy, and
-ammunition was very low.</p>
-
-<p>I glanced at my watch—only 6:20. No chance for the Lt. Col. to have
-gotten a counter-attack under way. The position had become untenable, and
-at any moment might develop into a complete cul-de-sac. It was time to
-pull out.</p>
-
-<p>I gave the order to withdraw by squads and fall back to the old outpost
-line; 4th platoon to go first, covered by the 1st and 3rd; then the 4th platoon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-to cover our withdrawal from the other side of the wire.</p>
-
-<p>As the first squad from the 4th platoon started through the wire, a
-machine gun opened on the wire and the road before it, killing two and driving
-the rest back. The platoon leader reported that it was impossible to get across.</p>
-
-<p>To remain, however, meant almost certain death for all, with very little
-chance of inflicting compensating losses on the enemy. So as a last resort I
-took the 1st platoon, and during a momentary lull in the firing we made a
-rush for it in two or three groups at different places.</p>
-
-<p>The wire clawed and tore at us as though it were alive. My group
-scrambled through, somehow, anyhow, marvelling that the bullets did not
-come. When half way through I noticed that I was still mechanically holding
-Fahey’s bomb, with the pin out. I went a bit carefully after that, so was the
-last one through. As I ripped my puttee free from the last strand of wire, the
-machine guns started up again, and I hugged the dirt while bullets cracked
-viciously overhead. The grass and green leaves felt cool and smelled fresh and
-green, and a little green bug went scrambling along a creeper, two inches
-from my nose.</p>
-
-<p>Presently another lull came, and I proceeded to worm my way through
-the underbrush, looking for my half platoon. Not a sign of them. They had
-gotten clear of the last burst of fire, and then made a break for it.</p>
-
-<p>The machine guns were still firing intermittently, but I heard no reply
-from our rifles, and hoped that the others had followed us through the wire.
-Most of them had, as I found out later.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the hardest moment of the war for me. A group of about 20
-men had remained on the hill, apparently despairing of crossing the wire alive.
-An officer was with them, and upon him lies the responsibility of what happened.
-The men themselves had done brave service before that time. But, as
-I understand by permission if not under orders, they raised the cry of
-“Kamerad.”</p>
-
-<p>When I realized that this had really happened, I tried desperately to cross
-the wire to them again. But I was in too big a hurry, and made too much
-noise. The machine guns spotted me promptly, and streams of bullets made
-the sparks fly from the wire six feet ahead of me. Before I could work
-around to another place, I heard the sound of their withdrawal toward the
-German lines, and knew I was too late.</p>
-
-<p>My next job was to get back to the old outpost line and take charge there.
-The enemy machine gunners had penetrated well to our rear, and I had to go
-very cautiously, hearing their voices all around. They were withdrawing,
-however, and in ten minutes I found out why. Their artillery completed the
-day’s work by shelling the ravine and vicinity in their usual methodical manner.
-Not to be outdone, our own artillery did the same. This was the last
-straw; I was too dead tired to dodge American shells as well as German. So I
-crawled under a bush and waited for whatever was on the cards. In two
-minutes I dozed off, with the shells banging all around.</p>
-
-<p>I must have slept for about twenty minutes. Waking with a start, I
-found dusk setting in. I took off my tattered slicker and wound it around my
-tin hat, to keep the twigs from playing an anvil chorus on it. The shelling had
-stopped. My short rest had revived some interest in life, and I slowly retraced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-our advance of that morning. I didn’t think the enemy had left any outposts
-behind, but in any case was too tired to care, and went clumping along like any
-Heine. I arrived at our old outpost line, which we had held long, long ago, it
-seemed. It was absolutely deserted. I went along the path, past D Co.’s
-headquarters, and noticed that a shell had landed there and set off those pyrotechnic
-signals which had been quite fireproof two days before.</p>
-
-<p>Apparently the war had been called off around here. I pottered about for
-quite a bit, but could find no one. Somehow my principal feeling was an
-immense relief that for the present I had no responsibility, no one to look out
-for but myself. Presently, however, it was evident that as I had not even a
-runner, I had to go back to Bn. Hdq. myself and report on the situation.</p>
-
-<p>Wearily I plodded off, back over Dead Man’s Hill. It was quite dark,
-about 11 P. M., and I was making very slow time. As I drew near the main
-line of resistance, I came upon two D Co. men, lying where they had been hit
-by a shell. One was dead; the other had a leg shot off. He said he had been
-lying there for about three hours. His comrade had helped him tie up his leg
-before he died. I left my blouse over him, as it was chilly, and went on to the
-firing trench, which had wire in front of it by this time. I had some trouble
-convincing the occupants of my identity. In truth, with no blouse, my ragged
-slicker draped about my helmet, the shoulder of my shirt all torn and bloody,
-and my breeches and puttees in tatters, I didn’t look much like an officer, and
-not at all like a gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>I stumbled down the ramp into Bn. Hdqrs., where I found Maj. Odom,
-Foulkes, Strawbridge and Lt. Col. Budd, to whom I reported. Capts. Markewick
-and Laing, of “I” and “L” Cos., were also there. Thinking the position
-in front was strongly held by the enemy, the idea was to send these companies
-up at dawn behind a rolling barrage to re-establish the outpost line. I was glad
-to tell them that this was unnecessary, and they later strolled on up in single
-file and occupied our old line without a single casualty.</p>
-
-<p>Major Odom in turn told me that Lt. Dunn with most of the 1st and 2nd
-platoons had already come in, and had been sent to the kitchen for chow.
-Louis Foulkes gave me some water and a couple of doughnuts, which I was
-nearly too sleepy to eat.</p>
-
-<p>I had to report to Regimental Hdq. then, and rehash the day’s operations;
-but all I remember is that Capt. Brennan gave me some grape jam and bread
-and water, and the regimental surgeon swabbed my shoulder with iodine. I
-have some hazy recollection of the Colonel himself pulling a blanket over me,
-though this may not be correct.</p>
-
-<p>Late next morning I woke up to be greeted by Strawbridge with the news
-that our travel orders had come, and we—he, Capt. Brennan, and myself—were
-directed to be at Langres—wherever that was—by October 1st.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as possible I rejoined the company, which had been stationed at
-Brigade Reserve with the remnants of D Co. We had about 50 men left, not
-counting 20 who were on various special details. Sgt. Wilson and the cooks
-fed us like lords, and we made up for the past week. Big shells landed around
-occasionally, but it was a Philadelphia Sunday compared to what we had just
-left.</p>
-
-<p>The company was reorganized as a platoon, with Lt. Dunn in command<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-and Reid as top sergeant. We slept in pillboxes or gun emplacements, or
-anywhere else where there was a bit of shelter.</p>
-
-<p>The next day I said goodby to the company for six weeks, as I thought.
-There were rumors that the Bulgarians were nearly done, and the Austrians
-weakening; but I don’t think that anyone dreamed that the armistice was only
-six weeks off. I stopped off one night with Sgt. Stiles to write up the company
-records, and finally boarded a motor truck for Toul.</p>
-
-<p>From this point the history is taken up by Lt. Gardenier, Sgt. Stiles, Sgt.
-Peter and Sgt. Tracy White.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-MEUSE-ARGONNE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sept. 28th: Today the company commander left the company, leaving
-same in charge of Lt. Dunn, the only officer left. He reorganized the company—two
-platoons of about 40 men each was our strength. We remained in
-reserve in the Bois des Grandes positions until the night of October 4th. It
-was during this period that rumors of the enemy countries, Bulgaria, Turkey
-and Austria having quit reached us, causing a great deal of discussion and
-doing much to keep the morale at its highest. Sergeant Reid left for Officers’
-Training School.</p>
-
-<p>Oct. 4th: “We are going out for a rest”—These words were heard all
-through the company. Shortly before dark we left our position and marched
-to the road that led through Limey and remained there until midnight. We
-then started on what was one of the most tiresome hikes we ever experienced,
-and finally, at 5:30 A. M., reached the forest de la Reine. A fact that is
-worthy of mention and probably refreshes the reader’s mind of incidents of
-the night was what seemed to be a direct hit on an ammunition dump to the
-right. The sky was brilliantly illuminated and was the cause of numerous
-rumors and suggestions as to the reason of the glare. We remained here until
-about 4:00 P. M. October 6th, and then started off for what we fondly believed
-was a rest. Subsequent events proved that our hopes were not to be fulfilled.
-It was here that Lt. Luhn joined the company. After hiking until midnight,
-most of the time through rain, we reached Mecrin and were so tired that
-regardless of the weather we threw ourselves on the ground and without
-further aid went to sleep until the following morning. Sgt. Perry rejoined the
-company at this place. At 11:30 A. M., we started again on a hike to Pierrefitte,
-arriving at 10 P. M., having covered about 24 kilos. It was again our
-fate to have mother earth for a bed this night.</p>
-
-<p>From here we hiked a short distance to Nicey, where we took busses for a
-40 kilo trip to Beauchamp Ferme in the Forest de Argonne, arriving about
-10 P. M. in what seemed to be the darkest spot on earth. As usual it was
-raining, and this added greatly to our discomfort. There were only sufficient
-barracks for one company, the rest of the outfit had to sleep in their shelter
-tents, pitched in spots that were not very appealing when revealed at dawn.
-Lt. Dunn having been ill for some time left us here and Lt. Lahey took command
-of the company, having been transferred from Company “I.” Sgt. Perry
-having been made 1st Sergeant upon his return to the company aided materially<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-in reorganizing the company. We had a few days of much needed rest
-here and also consumed quantities of wood in making bonfires that dried us
-out and made life a little more cheerful.</p>
-
-<p>At 2:00 A. M. October 10th we aroused from our slumbers with orders
-to roll packs and be ready to leave at once. This was another example of how
-things are done in the army. Having spent several hours in rolling packs and
-getting breakfast, it was 7:30 A. M. before we started out. Our hikes of
-several days previous to arrival at this camp had taken us through many
-ruined villages and parts of the country recently evacuated by the enemy.
-Today’s hike covered 22 kilos and brought us into the heart of the Argonne,
-the same ground having been bitterly contested by opposing armies only a
-week previous. It was here that we were able to form a definite idea of how
-the Germans lived behind the lines. Every hillside was covered with dugouts
-made of concrete and heavily timbered and furnished in a style that had been
-unknown to us during the past four months. In the Limey Sector we found
-some German camps that were fitted up in grand style, but these could not be
-compared with the ones mentioned above. The officers’ quarters were equipped
-with shower baths and in one place a large swimming pool. Everything seemed
-to denote that the Germans intended to stay there for all time. The signs on
-the trees and every crossroad led one to believe that the Germans were a
-nation of sign painters. Arriving at our destination after hiking about 23
-kilos we appreciated an opportunity to rest and lost no time in pitching tents
-and getting a much needed sleep.</p>
-
-<p>The following day we marched about 4 kilos and took up a position in the
-Bois de Chatel. It was here, on the eve of October 12th, that our much
-battered company of approximately 80 men, all veterans of the St. Mihiel,
-received 104 replacements from the 86th Division. Some of these men had
-never fired a rifle and were not familiar with the use of the gas mask. The
-company was again reorganized. The four platoons were placed in charge of
-Sergeants Newell, Lehy, White and Weber, respectively; to these men and our
-two officers, Lts. Lahey and Luhn, is due the credit of training these new and
-inexperienced men so that when they were called upon they made a creditable
-showing. Too much cannot be said about the way these men took care of
-what seemed to be almost a hopeless task.</p>
-
-<p>October 15th again brought us under shell fire. About 8:00 P. M. we
-left our positions and marched through heavy rains to relieve a unit of the
-308th Infantry, west of La Folie Ferme. We took up our position about
-3:00 A. M. and despite the fact that we were wet through, made ourselves as
-comfortable as circumstances would permit, only to be awakened at 5:30
-A. M. to prepare to advance at once. While preparing, Jerry saluted us with a
-barrage that, while it lasted, was very annoying and upset the new men exceedingly,
-this being the first time they had ever been under shell fire. This
-lasted only for a few minutes and after their baptism they all acted like
-seasoned veterans. This relief having been made during the darkness of the
-night, the units encountered great difficulty in keeping the men together.
-There was considerable mixup on the road that led to Chevieres; three columns
-of troops and a transport train trying to pass at one time. This caused a great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-deal of confusion and the result was that many of the new men became separated
-from the company and did not rejoin us until the following morning. On
-October 17th Sergeants Levy and Wilson left for Officers’ Training School.
-This morning we lost Sergeant Lehy; he was killed just one hour before he
-was ordered to leave for Officers’ Training School.</p>
-
-<p>Oct. 18th: At 10:00 P. M. we took up a position in the front line to the
-west of Chevieres, relieving our 2nd Battalion. At 3:00 A. M. we stepped off
-in a line of combat groups in support of “C” company, and advanced through
-heavy artillery and machine gun fire. We reached our objective at daybreak
-and held same through the day under continual fire from the enemy snipers
-and machine guns. Enemy planes endeavored to locate our position and flew
-so low that the aviators were easily seen. Their object no doubt was to signal
-their artillery the location of our position, but judging from the heavy barrage
-that fell directly in back of us, their efforts were not crowned with success.
-We suffered quite a few casualties during this attack, among whom was Sgt.
-Welch, who had been recommended for a D. S. C. for bravery at St. Mihiel.
-He was wounded in seven different places by machine gun bullets, but refused
-to be evacuated until the other wounded men had been taken care of. Owing
-to our advanced position, and both the units on our flanks having failed to
-obtain their objectives, we were subject to such a heavy fire that it was impossible
-to evacuate our wounded until dark. Toward evening the enemy closed
-in on both flanks, and on our front, making our position untenable, and under
-cover of darkness drew close enough to drop hand grenades among our fox
-holes. This caused our officers to call for volunteers to carry a message to the
-Battalion Commander. After several runners had failed to get through, Sgt.
-White had volunteered to carry the message and reached Battalion Headquarters
-P. C. in safety and returned with instructions to have the company
-withdraw. He was awarded a D. S. C. for this brave act. His entire route
-was continually subject to heavy artillery and machine gun fire. By performing
-this deed he undoubtedly saved many lives and enabled the company to
-make an orderly retreat to the position they left that morning. He also assisted
-in directing the evacuation of the wounded; every man was removed without
-further casualties. During the activities the enemy continually sent up rockets
-and flares so that our movements could only be made during short minute
-periods of darkness. Too much credit cannot be given to both Lt. Lahey and
-Lt. Luhn. Their bravery and unselfish action in face of the enemy did much
-to keep up the morale of the men. We fell back to the position we had left
-that morning, and remained until 6:00 A. M. Then we fell back to railroad
-track running from Chevieres to Grand Pre, where we remained about four
-hours and then advanced again and took up our position along the River Aire.
-Here we remained for nine days and nights under continuous shell fire. While
-we suffered no casualties at this place from the enemy fire, several of our men
-were evacuated with influenza. One great difficulty that we experienced here
-was that of obtaining rations, as it was impossible to bring them up during the
-day, and at night Jerry threw over such a heavy shell fire that made the work
-of the ration parties extremely hazardous.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday evening, October 26th, we were relieved by the 310th<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-Infantry and took up a position in Brigade Reserve in the Bois de Negremont.
-This day Lt. Luhn was transferred to “D” Company, and we were again left
-with only one officer. Having lost a great many men, it was necessary to reorganize
-the company again. There were only sufficient men left to form two
-platoons. This position was subject to intermittent shell fire which caused
-occasional casualties.</p>
-
-<p>The night of October 29th-30th will be one that will be long remembered
-by those men who were present with us. The enemy had been shelling us the
-entire evening without causing any casualties. It was about 1:30 A. M. a
-shell, the last one he fired that night, struck a tree directly over our camp and
-exploded. It killed or wounded 14 men, and Lt. Lahey was also severely
-wounded. Lt. Lahey’s bravery at this critical period was such that his men
-never cease praising him. While wounded so seriously that he died two days
-later, he directed the evacuation of all the other wounded men and gave
-instructions to the non-commissioned officers left with the company, before he
-permitted himself to be evacuated. Sgt. Newell, then acting 1st Sergeant,
-was killed instantly by this same shell. Sgt. White was now in command of
-the company and did excellent work keeping the company organized until the
-arrival of Lt. Gardenier. The following day, October 30th, the enemy resumed
-their heavy shelling and we suffered several more casualties in killed and
-wounded. During our stay in the Bois de Negremont we were fortunate enough
-to get a bath by walking five miles for it, and a change of underwear, but
-seldom it was indeed that we received more than one meal a day, so continuous
-was the enemy shell fire.</p>
-
-<p>Oct. 29th: The position of the company was still in the Bois de Negremont,
-in Brigade Reserve. Pvt. Koehler was killed by shell fire during the
-day. Toward evening the shelling let up and was fitful and erratic from that
-time on. Lt. Gardenier arrived in the evening and took command of the company
-which was at the time in charge of Sgt. White.</p>
-
-<p>Oct. 30th: The morning was spent in reorganizing the company and
-issuing equipment preparatory to the drive which was to start the following
-day. The company was divided into two platoons, the first under Corporal
-Ahearn, and the second under Corporal Thomas White; with Sgt. White second
-in command of the company. Pvt. Koehler was buried at La Noua le Coq, near
-the chateau. There was considerable shelling during the afternoon, but there
-were no casualties, and the appearance of a big consignment of rations in the
-evening did much to hearten the men. Enemy shell fire had interfered with
-the rations considerably up to this time, as there was but one route the ration
-parties could take and it seemed to be quite familiar to the Boche artillerymen.</p>
-
-<p>Combat packs were made at night and the company was ready to move
-early in the morning as the 2nd and 3rd Battalions were to attack at dawn. In
-the afternoon a pirate 75 was moved up behind our position and engaged in
-an artillery duel with a Boche battery until late at night. The only result being
-a fairly continuous shelling of our area.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 1st: At 2:30 A. M. the barrage preparatory to the launching of the
-second phase of the Meuse-Argonne opened. The sky behind us was a flickering,
-gleaming red. The roar was as of myriad drums rolling almost in unison,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-and the air overhead seemed almost alive with whistling visiting cards to the
-departing Jerry. The effect of this on the men who had heard little but shells
-coming in their direction was tremendous. The men walked about the hills
-whistling and singing and the erstwhile quiet forest was alive with conjectures
-as to what was happening when the winged death that was flying overhead
-arrived at its destination. After the firing had ceased there was extreme
-quietness and there was no activity during the night.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 2nd: The company was held in readiness throughout the day, and
-after mess in the evening packs were slung and the Battalion moved out. It
-began to rain just at the start, and the path we followed in the pitch black
-forest was steep and slippery. We progressed slowly over the plain between
-la Noua le Coq and the Aire River and entered the shell-torn town of Grand
-Pre. Passing through the ruins along the Kron Printz Strasse, we went north
-to the road fork between Grand Pre and Ferme des Loges. Here the company
-was detached from the Battalion, Lt. Conroy was placed in command and we
-waited for trucks to enable us to overtake the now flying enemy. Trucks were
-boarded about 11:00 P. M. and we bumped over the shell-torn road in the
-general direction of Germany, until our way was blocked by a mine hole not
-yet repaired. We debussed and hiked to Briquenay, where we found the 312th
-Infantry had the situation in hand and with the exception of about twenty men
-who formed an ammunition detail for the 309th Machine Gun Battalion, we
-turned into some German billets about 2:30 A. M. The infantry advance up
-to this time had been so swift that the artillery had been unable to catch up
-to us, having set up their guns three times without firing a shot.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 3rd: During the day the 2nd Battalion passed through Briquenay
-and we were held there. Most of the time was spent in improvising meals and
-exploring the debris left by the enemy in his hasty flight. Toward evening
-about 200 American airplanes in combat formation flew over going north.
-Lt. Conroy returned to Battalion Headquarters. About 5:00 P. M. the rest of
-the Battalion moved out and through a misunderstanding the company was left
-behind. When our plight was discovered we set out for Germond, and after
-passing a Battalion of the 308th Infantry on the road arrived just in time
-to get the last available billets. Germond at that time held the four Regimental
-P. C.’s of our division, one of the 77th and somewhere in the neighborhood of
-2,000 troops.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 4th: At 5:00 A. M. we started for Authe, after the heartrending
-procedure of passing a battalion of the 308th Infantry lined up for a hot meal.
-We went through Authe to Brieulles under fairly heavy shell fire where the
-road had been blown up, six mines having been placed at a bridge and we
-were forced to make a long detour through a swamp. From there we proceeded
-to Les Petites Armoises as the advanced guard of the Brigade. It was a
-gruelling hike and considering the condition of the men, the spirit shown was
-remarkable, and we halted south of the town only four men less than we had
-left Germond with in the morning. Artillery was quite active there and we
-witnessed some wonderful work by German batteries and an airplane in
-destroying a group of buildings to the west of us.</p>
-
-<p>On entering the town we were greeted by delighted civilians who had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-been under German rule for four years and who gave us some atrocious black
-bread covered with lard which almost tasted good. They also warned us that
-the enemy had a machine gun nest to the north of the village.</p>
-
-<p>After deploying we started up the hill, and soon as scouts appeared above
-the crest machine guns opened up on them. In the subsequent reconnaissance
-Privates Sullivan and Burchell were killed by machine gun fire. One gun was
-located about 300 meters in front of us and in an effort to flank its position
-the right of the company was deployed along the crest of the hill, and was in
-position to rush it, but it was cut off by fire from the flank. After three
-attempts Sgt. White brought the left flank to a similar position only to have the
-advance halted by another machine gun. As it seemed impossible to advance
-without auxiliary weapons the company was withdrawn and dug in half way
-down the hill. “D” company established contact on our left but there was
-nothing on our right but German machine guns. Corporal Miller led a patrol
-in an effort to put the guns out of action, but was unsuccessful because of the
-covering fire from other guns and the openness of the country. About 3:00
-P. M. two airplanes arrived and one by his near presence causing a Boche
-plane to retire, dropped a message which said “There are Boche machine guns
-in a shell hole 200 meters to your front.” This information was somewhat
-superfluous, but the affair was interesting. The other plane, endeavoring to
-locate Company “D” flew too low and landed on a hill about 500 yards in front
-of our line. The aviator unhurt got out of the machine and in spite of the
-hails of our outpost he headed for Germany and was seen no more. The plane
-was dragged by the enemy to a point north of Tannay and demolished. About
-5:00 P. M. Boche artillery opened up and played a steady stream of fire on the
-town, and by no means neglected our position. A strong point made up of men
-from Company “C” was scarcely located in their new position when a shell
-severely wounded two of their men. The loss of our First Aid Man who was
-killed by a shell early in the evening greatly handicapped the evacuation of
-the wounded.</p>
-
-<p>From 5:00 P. M. to 1:00 A. M. there was a perfect hail of shells and
-machine gun bullets while enemy airplanes dropped bombs on the town itself.
-Corporal Peter did excellent work during this time keeping the outposts
-organized. Casualties—killed 5, wounded 9.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 5th: About 3:30 A. M. the enemy machine guns pulled out and at
-5:00 A. M. the company retired to les Petites Armoises for breakfast and then
-went on to Tannay. After reconnaissance by the Battalion a patrol of 30 men
-was called for to establish a strong point in a patch of woods northwest of the
-town. An effort was also to be made to obtain liaison with units on our right.
-The first platoon was called upon and though practically exhausted they responded
-promptly and went up to take their position. Lt. Gardenier with three
-runners went on until contact was established with the 165th Infantry just
-north of Sy. Sgt. Ahearn meanwhile, finding no opposition in the woods
-designated, pushed his jaded men to the edge of the Bois de Mont Diens, about
-two kilometers further on and began to exchange courtesies with a lonely
-machine gunner. To this detachment belongs the distinction of being the unit
-of the 78th Division nearest Germany when the relief came.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>When the 166th Infantry had leapfrogged us at 3:30 P. M., the company
-pulled back into Tannay at 4:15 P. M. just in time to begin hiking back. It
-was raining again, and it was a dismal hike to Les Petites Armoises where no
-billets were available, and the only alternative was Brieulles, 7 kilometers
-further on. Over a road pitted with shell holes, filled with troops, transport
-and artillery headed in the opposite direction, the company plodded on, arriving
-at Brieulles about midnight. A conservative estimate of the distance covered
-by the first platoon that day is thirty kilometers and all under the most trying
-conditions. On reaching Brieulles we shared a church with “C” company and
-while some sat up and others stood crowded into corners, everybody slept. We
-left Brieulles at 5:00 A. M. and hiked to Authe where, Nov. 6th, a hot breakfast
-put new life in the company, which was fortunate, because though we did
-not know it at the start, there were twenty-two gruelling kilometers in front of
-us. After hiking continuously until 5:30 P. M. we reached La Folie Ferme
-and stayed the night in these familiar haunts.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 7th: Packs were slung and we were on the move early in the
-morning and after hiking until 4:00 P. M. we were presented with a soaked,
-battered section of the Argonne not far from Appremont, and told to make
-ourselves comfortable. We were doing the best we could when there was an
-unholy din and a fireworks display, owing to a signal corps outfit hearing
-“Officially” that the war was over. We mistook it for a German air raid,
-however, so we did not derive much comfort therefrom. But it is worthy of
-notice because it was the beginning of the greatest conglomeration of rumors
-in the history of civilized warfare.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 8th: It took most of the day trying to follow out the order to make
-ourselves comfortable and we were just beginning to accomplish this when on
-the morning of November 9th we pulled out and hiked to Florent, remaining
-there the following day. Lt. Gartley, who had joined on November 8th, assisted
-the company commander in re-acquainting the jaded doughboys with the intricacies
-of the manual of arms and that evening the pearly notes of “Retreat”
-and The Star Spangled Banner made us feel nearly civilized again. The rumors
-were still running high.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 11th: On this historic day the 1st Battalion celebrated by taking
-its longest hike of the Meuse-Argonne Campaign. We moved from Florent to
-Varimont, a distance of twenty-nine good long kilometers. While we were
-passing through Ste Menehould, the French papers with gigantic headlines
-“C’EST SIGNE” were shown us and we passed innumerable grinning French
-men and women repeating over and over again the words which were like
-music to our ears—“la Guerre Finie.”</p>
-
-<p>We arrived at Varimont about 5:00 P. M. nearly exhausted and resumed
-back area existence at once.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 12th-14th: Our stay in Varimont was punctuated by determined
-efforts to get separated from Argonne Mud and getting policed up and generally
-put in shape for a Fifth Avenue parade, which was to come off very soon.
-Lt. Gartley left for the 1st Division.</p>
-
-<p>Nov. 15th: The company moved to Givry-en-Argonne to act as a loading
-detail for the Brigade which was to entrain, and the following day was spent
-in that occupation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>Nov. 17th: The company entrained about 11:00 P. M. and started on a
-two-day journey to Les Laumes, where they arrived about 3:00 P. M. on the
-19th. With much grunting and puffing the initial ascent of the now well
-known hill was made, and about 5:00 P. M. we arrived at Flavigny, which
-was to be our home until we began our journey homeward.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-FLAVIGNY-SUR-OZERAIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>It might be interesting to insert here a brief description of Flavigny, taken
-from a letter written home by one of the men:</p>
-
-<p>“To say the least, Flavigny is a town that is somewhat interesting. There
-is a bit of history attached to the place in that we are told that Caesar fought a
-battle against the Germanic people in this neighborhood about 55 B. C., using
-the plateau across the valley as his base for operations against a town a few
-miles from here.</p>
-
-<p>“Flavigny was then standing on its present site, although, perhaps, much
-smaller than it is today, and there are no evidences that any of the buildings
-then existing are now standing. It would hardly seem possible that they could
-be. Today, the village stands on the top of a high plateau, which is reached by
-a road winding around the mountain. Although it was a cold dismal day
-when we came here, we were dripping with perspiration by the time we reached
-the top.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a walled village—part of the wall being formed by some of the
-buildings—having three entrances large enough for vehicles and a fourth one
-large enough for only persons or animals in single file. The main entrance,
-‘La Porte du Bourg,’ opening to the road up which we came and which seems
-to have its ending in the centre of the town. About a quarter of a mile before
-reaching the town this road branches off to the left, winding around some farm
-buildings, and running along the outside of the wall overlooking the valley,
-and as it passes the rear of the village making a steep descent into the valley
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Opening into this road at about the centre of the village is the second
-entrance, ‘La Porte du Val.’ While this entrance seems to be of less importance
-than the others, as it is reached from the inside by a narrow alley, yet it
-is well protected, or was considered so as regards weapons of mediaeval warfare.
-There are two towers built of heavy stone, one on either side of the gate,
-each with peep-holes at the height of a man’s head. Between the towers and
-over the gate the wall is about twelve feet high, so built that soldiers standing
-on a ledge running behind the wall and over the gate from tower to tower could
-fire down on anyone along the road, or who might be trying to approach the
-town up the side of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything here is built of stone, of course, but with the exception of
-the more modern buildings there is decay everywhere. In many places the
-wall is crumbling and the houses are patched and crumbling and the thatched
-roofs are covered with moss, mould and dirt collected for ages. At ‘La Porte
-du Val,’ one of the gates which is still hanging being made of wood, worm-eaten<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-and decayed, looks as if a slight puff of wind would blow it to dust.</p>
-
-<p>“There are a very few new buildings. Some of these are stucco and seem
-to be quite modern.</p>
-
-<p>“A large church stands near the centre of the town in whose tower is a
-clock which rings out the time every fifteen minutes.</p>
-
-<p>“There is only one or possibly two streets in the town large enough to be
-called streets, but there is a great maze of little narrow alleys running everywhere
-and crossing, turning sharply around corners, sometimes leading into a
-barnyard, and again plumb into the side of a building and others seem to lead
-nowhere. Sometimes you will start for a store just a block down the alley,
-when suddenly you find you have chased yourself right back to where you
-started from, having reached nowhere, not even the end of the alley. It is one
-of these that begins in the centre of the town where the street through ‘La
-Porte du Bourg’ stops, and after winding and twisting around a bit leads you
-to the little entrance at the rear of the village from which a steep, narrow path
-leads to the Valley of the Ozerain.</p>
-
-<p>“The village is electrically lighted, gets its current from a little power-house
-down by the Ozerain River.</p>
-
-<p>“A convent building and grounds occupies a large portion of the village
-extending from near ‘La Porte du Val’ to the extreme lower corner of the
-town.</p>
-
-<p>“About half way between ‘La Porte du Bourg’ and ‘La Porte du Val’ is
-another entrance, just inside of which is a large and very old abbaye. Both
-this and the convent are now used for the accommodation of tourists and
-travelers.</p>
-
-<p>“Just outside this entrance the Y. M. C. A. building stands. The road
-going from this entrance leads to the inevitable wash-house where on wash-days
-congregate a large number of women with large bundles of clothes and
-plenty of gossip.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a Post and Telegraph Office combined, as is usual in France, a
-butcher shop, several grocery stores, a bake shop, drug store, barber, tailor,
-milliner, wooden shoe maker, barrel maker, rope maker, numberless cafes and
-little shops.</p>
-
-<p>“Inside the majority of homes are neat and well-kept even where one room
-has to serve as kitchen, dining room, living room and bed room, often serving
-all purposes at one time. There are, of course, more prosperous homes that
-are as pleasant and comfortable as those we have in America.”</p>
-
-<p>This was our home for over five months. That time will be merely
-sketched, as it was a monotonous existence punctuated by flurries of excitement
-caused by rumors of westward bound ships with which we never connected.
-Imaginary Bolsheviki were driven from every hillside; the Campe de Cesare
-was the slaughter house for thousands of imaginary machine gunners; and
-drills and manuevres of every sort made up the schedule. Mr. McNab tried
-(and failed) to get us excited about the gentle art of rifle shooting. French
-weather was at its abominable worst. But through it all, if the writer may
-insert a personal tribute into an impersonal history, through it all there was
-in Company “B” a bunch of boys whom it was both a pleasure and an inspiration
-to be with. Joking at discomforts, chafing, but bearing with as much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-courage as it took to face the Hun, the seemingly interminable wait and showing
-a spirit, a snap, and a dash which overcame everything, you formed a body
-of men which was a privilege to command and a pleasure to serve.</p>
-
-<p>The month of March arrived, bringing with it the news that the 78th
-Division would return to the United States in May. The weather was still
-unchanged, but notwithstanding that they were slopping around in the mud
-and wet from the continual rains, and every “good rumor” that came floating
-around was eventually salvaged, the men were still in fine spirits.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the end of the month it was officially announced that the Division
-would begin to move towards a port April 16th, and on April 6th it passed
-into the command of the S. O. S., but also came the rather disheartening news
-that our movement had been postponed for ten days, and by the time the 26th
-rolled around it had been further postponed until May 2nd, causing a downcast
-of spirits that had not obtained since our arrival in France. However it
-was quite evident that our time of departure was drawing near by the various
-preparations that were taking place, and when it finally became definitely
-known that we were to go direct to Bordeaux instead of having to pass through
-Le Mans, the spirit of the men took a remarkable jump and then, when it was
-announced that the movement from Flavigny would begin with Headquarters
-company’s departure on Sunday, May 4th, their joy was unbounded, and this
-was not noticeably marred by the last days of April being the bearer of the
-heaviest and longest snow storm that we had experienced. Saturday night,
-May 4th, Taps was blown by a quartette of cornets from the Regimental Band,
-and farewell parties were held in nearly every home in Flavigny.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-HOMEWARD BOUND</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>At 7:00 A. M. Monday, May 5th, “B” Company “fell in” in front of the
-Abbaye with full equipment, and at eight o’clock, with the command: SQUADS
-RIGHT, MARCH, moved out with the remaining troops, from the town that
-had been our home for nearly half a year, and our long journey homeward had
-at last really begun. By easy marches we reached Les Laumes-Alesia Station
-at 10:00 A. M., where we were given a big dinner by the American Red Cross,
-consisting of a good beef stew, bread, jam, coffee (with both milk and sugar
-in it), apple sauce, cigarettes and candy, which was followed by hot chocolate
-and cakes given to us by pretty Y. M. C. A. girls. At 12:30 P. M. we entrained
-in American “60 Hommes-20 Chevaux,” which we had lined with bed sacks
-filled with straw and about thirty-five men to a car, which proved the most
-comfortable ride we had had since our arrival in Europe nearly a year
-previous. We made several stops to get coffee or warmed corned beef. The
-trip lasted about 42 hours, arriving at St. Jean Station, Bordeaux, at 4:00
-A. M. May 7th, from which we marched to the “Entrance Camp,” reaching
-there at 9:00 A. M. and immediately having breakfast served. The men were
-kept pretty busy during the day on various details, and the following morning,
-May 8th, we left this camp and marched about a mile to the “Permanent
-Camp.” The memory of this camp will probably remain with most of us by
-reason of the “MILL,” which was the first thing to which we were introduced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-and which consumed most of the conversation during our stay here.</p>
-
-<p>The MILL was well named in every respect. First we were marched into
-a “hangar” very similar to those used to house air planes. This had a dirt
-floor and after unslinging packs the men filed along one side of the hangar
-leaving their rifles in a heap, then filed back to their packs. Next they took
-their blankets which had been rolled together before leaving the Entrance
-Camp, and threw them in a pile. Next, everything the soldier carried was
-placed in his shelter half and carried thru a wicket gate, by which stood a long
-desk behind which were several men. The first asked your name and army
-serial number, which he wrote on two slips of paper which you had to sign.
-This seemed quite natural because no one knew what they were signing, and
-if anyone should stop to ask he would be informed that he would learn that in
-due time, a statement which no one doubted because no one thought any more
-about that phase of it, probably for the reason that about one-tenth of a
-doughboy’s time is spent in signing papers he does not know anything about,
-the same being part of his military training.</p>
-
-<p>The next man took the “dog tags” and asked your name and number and
-compared your answer with the tags; if they agreed all well and good, if they
-disagreed something was checked on the slip of paper you had signed and you
-began to wonder how many checks you would get and if each check meant an
-additional month in France, or an extra tour of K. P. The next man gave you
-a Red Cross bag which often brought a smile because of the name—“American
-Red Cross” was stamped in ink on a white patch on the bag, otherwise you
-would have looked for a deduction on the next pay roll. At this time someone
-in the farthest corner of the building called out a number which sounded like
-a cell number, but which proved to be nothing more than their manner of
-ushering you to a certain litter into which you dumped everything you had,
-from your steel helmet which had just been painted to your last handkerchief
-which you had failed to wash. The object of this being for the man to see if
-you had more than he did. If you did not have as much, he handed you a
-barrack bag and helped you to put all your things into it except such personal
-things as your pocket book, tooth brush, shaving brush, etc. These you put in
-the Red Cross bag, then handed your slip of paper to the man who then asked
-what you had in the barrack bag or on your back. If you guessed right, all
-right; if you guessed wrong he checked an item on the slip of paper.</p>
-
-<p>If you did not like your blouse he would give you a chance to draw
-again. If your underclothes were too large for you he would give you a
-chance to draw a larger pair, and so on. After you were all out of breath
-talking to this man, you hung your Red Cross Bag around your neck, threw
-your Barrack Bag on your shoulder and marched out of the door across a wood
-pile to another building in which was another long row of desks, and for a
-moment you thought you were going to get your discharge papers toote de
-suite, but these hopes were soon dashed to the ground. An officer handed you
-your Service Record, which seemed rather a strange thing because the company
-clerk said that he had it when you asked him the day before you left
-Flavigny. Struggling along with this in one hand and dragging your barrack
-bag with the other you passed down the line until you came to a blank file
-with a typewriter and a man behind it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>Here you stopped and handed him your Service Record, after which he
-asked you your name, number, name and address of your wife or mother. He
-evidently wanted to know this in the event you did not come through the mill
-alive he could advise your nearest relative that you had been killed in action,
-or words to that effect. When you afterwards inquired what this slip was you
-were informed that it was a certificate to show that you had been through the
-mill. But why should they issue such a certificate before you had been through?
-Probably the government took a chance like the doughboy does when he signs
-the pay roll a month before he gets paid. If he did not sign re would not get
-paid and often when he does sign he don’t get paid, so “sanferriens.” Any way
-this man kept the Service Record, “mill slip,” and all, and you were ushered
-into the engine room.</p>
-
-<p>There was a great racket going on and your heart was beating like a trip
-hammer. You remembered you had not cut your toe nails for several weeks
-and you wondered if they would scratch your neck. You also wondered what
-part of your body went in first. Someone ordered you to move along, and
-along you moved until you came to a bin which reminded you of where your
-grandfather kept his potatoes. You looked around for the man who was
-administering the “Dope,” because you heard nobody scream or groan—or
-were some of those noises groans? Through the middle of this bin ran a railroad
-and in the middle of the track stood a man issuing orders, none of which
-you understood. Besides, the man in the bin behind you was talking louder
-than the man in your bin, so that you heard more of what he said than of what
-your man said; but after listening for a while you gleaned the fact that you
-were supposed to take off all your clothes, which you did.</p>
-
-<p>By that time two large doors in the side of the building opened and out
-came a car that looked like the ones they have in circuses to carry animals in,
-which was divided into compartments with numbers corresponding with the
-number of your bin, which were full of shelves and hooks. Into your compartment
-on this car you put everything you had except the articles in the Red
-Cross bag. This you still had hung around your neck. Everything had to be
-taken out of the Barrack bag; your puttees could not be wound; your underclothes
-and socks which you took off were not put in the car however. They
-said this was to kill the cooties, and suddenly you had a feeling of pity for the
-poor cootie. As suddenly as the car came out of these big doors it went back
-again and the doors were closed; then you were ordered to pick up your
-soiled underclothes and “move along.” A little further along you threw your
-soiled underclothes out of a window marked “Salvaged Clothes.” You were
-wearing your shoes but nothing else. As you passed out of this room you were
-handed a towel and as you entered the next room you were met by a couple of
-doctors who asked you if you had been to Paris and then refused to take your
-word that you had not. From here you entered the bath room where you had
-the grand and glorious feeling of a real shower bath, although the so-called
-soap was beyond description. From here you passed another long line of
-doctors that reminded you of your first day at camp, and then you passed into
-a room which reminded you of Gimbel Brothers at home. Your famous slip of
-paper which had been kept in your Red Cross Bag, now came into use and you
-began to learn the reason for it. Everything that your Supply Sergeant at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-Flavigny had refused to give you was handed to you here. First you were
-given a suit of underclothes and a pair of socks to take the place of the ones
-you had salvaged. Then down the line you went, getting new blankets for the
-ones you had left in the hangar, and new trousers for the ones you had said
-were no good, and even a new tape for your dog tags. From here you passed
-into another bin similar to the first one, and while you were putting on your
-underclothes out came the car with all your things on it, but everything so hot
-you could hardly touch them. Poor cooties, not a one remained alive to tell
-of what happened inside.</p>
-
-<p>After dressing, which you had to do in four seconds less than a minute,
-you stuffed everything into the barrack bag except your overcoat which you put
-on, and, with barrack bag over your shoulder and your slip of paper in your
-hand, you passed into another room. Here you handed said slip of paper to a
-man whom you could just see over the top of a heap of them, then passed by a
-man who examined the condition of your hair and then passed outside with the
-perspiration streaming down your face and marched about two blocks down
-the street to another building. There you completed your toilet and were
-guided to your company barracks which was either 212, 214 or 216, and there
-you set yourself down more exhausted than you were the day you marched
-from Florent to Varimont. But you were still in the army though not in the
-mill, and there was work to be done. The first detail was to carry all the
-rifles from the mill to the barracks. You were given dinner and then given
-more detail, and more detail the next day.</p>
-
-<p>Friday, May 9th, the commanding officer was notified that Company “B”
-would embark the next day, and accordingly, at 5:00 P. M. Saturday, May 11th,
-the company was lined up and marched to the American Docks, reaching them
-about 7:00 P. M. A peculiar coincidence it was, that during the greater part
-of this march it rained. It had been bright and clear all day but when we
-started on our last march in France the sky became darkened, with a heavy
-cloud, and shortly after we had started for the docks it began to rain and did
-not clear until after we had embarked. After reaching the dock, we were
-served sandwiches, chocolate, cigarettes, candy, and a handkerchief by the Red
-Cross. Miss Colby, the Y. M. C. A. worker who had been with us all winter
-at Flavigny, followed us to the dock and there bade us good-bye. She was not
-to return to America for several months. The rest of the Y. M. C. A. outfit
-had departed with Regimental Headquarters. Mr. Allen, the K. of C. worker
-who had been with us at Flavigny, returned to America with us. We embarked
-at 8:00 P. M. May 10th, on the good ship “OTSEGO,” formerly the Prince Eitel
-Fredrich III, one of the German liners that had been turned over to the American
-Government for the transportation of troops to America. It was her
-second trip in this service.</p>
-
-<p>The trip was long, somewhat tedious, and uneventful. The food was
-excellent, the best we had had since we had left home. The Azores lay along
-our route and we passed close enough to see some of the buildings. A couple
-of schools of small whales were sighted, and porpoises were continually playing
-about the ship. The third or fourth day out we began to have trouble with
-the boilers, which continued nearly all the way across, which accounted for the
-length of the voyage. On the morning of the 25th we passed the “Ambrose”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-Lightship and soon after sighted land. We expected to dock in the afternoon,
-but it was five o’clock when we entered the Upper Bay at New York and dropped
-anchor off St. Georges, S. I. Many small boats loaded with sight-seers
-came by. The Mayor’s Committee of New York City brought a band to play
-for us. The next morning, May 26th, 1919, about eight o’clock we weighed
-anchor and sailed up the river to Hoboken, where we docked a half hour later.
-We were given a light lunch by the Red Cross and were then put on a river
-boat and went to the West Shore docks, where we got on a train and went to
-Camp Merritt. It was a grand and glorious feeling to be riding in an American
-train once more. We arrived at Camp Merritt about 11:00 A. M. and had
-lunch shortly after. In the afternoon we again went through the mill or
-“Sanitary Process” and the next morning went to a different part of the camp,
-where the company was broken up into Casual Detachments. The men from
-most of the Southern and Western camps being assigned to Hoboken Casual
-Detachments, and the others into Camp Dix, Camp Upton, or Camp Grant
-Casual Detachments. We did not move out, however, until Sunday afternoon,
-June 1st. Passes were issued daily, however, and a majority of the men took
-advantage of this privilege and went home to visit their folks. At 2:00 P. M.
-June 1st, the Camp Dix C. D. entrained for Camp Dix, where we arrived at
-7:00 P. M. and immediately turned in all our equipment and then marched to
-the barracks formerly occupied by the Third Battalion.</p>
-
-<p>June 2nd: All company records were turned in and Company “B” was
-only a memory. The days dragged slowly by until Thursday, June 5th, when
-we had our final examination. One incident happened at this time which to us
-seemed almost tragical. A Welcoming Committee from Elizabeth came down
-Wednesday, June 4th, three days after we entered Camp Dix, to see the
-Elizabeth boys, and upon inquiring at Camp Headquarters for our location,
-were told that we were not in the Camp, as they had no record of us. This
-probably was the reason why several outfits that arrived in camp as late as
-Wednesday were discharged ahead of us. Saturday morning, June 7th, is a
-day in the lives of the remaining men of Company “B” 311th Infantry never
-to be forgotten, as it was then that we received our final pay and discharge
-from the Army and once more became civilians.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">COMPLETE ALPHABETICAL ROSTER<br />
-OF<br />
-COMPANY “B,” 311TH INFANTRY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Including all officers and men assigned to and present with the company
-upon arrival in France, and all replacements of men received overseas.</p>
-
-<p>The information shown in the following roster is compiled from data from
-the Company Records. The information regarding men who were wounded is
-taken from reports sent in to Personnel Headquarters of the Regiment by the
-Medical Detachment and Battalion Headquarters. All the information is shown
-regarding men killed in action that was obtainable from the records of the
-Regiment and from eye witnesses.</p>
-
-<p>All men shown as having joined prior to May 19th were with the company
-when it arrived in France; those who joined October 12, 1918, were replacements
-from the 86th Division.</p>
-
-<p>Men who were wounded or evacuated for other causes did not return to the
-company unless so stated. All other men returned to the United States with
-the company except a few who were kept at the port of embarkation on
-account of missing records, which was due to no fault of theirs.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<h3>ROSTER OF OFFICERS ASSIGNED TO AND SERVING WITH THE COMPANY
-AT VARIOUS TIMES FROM DATE OF LEAVING THE UNITED STATES,
-MAY 19, 1918, UNTIL DATE OF RETURN TO THE UNITED STATES,
-MAY 26, 1919.</h3>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Bell, John P., Capt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>109 Dauphin Street, Mobile, Alabama. Joined company April 20, 1919,
-and was in command from that date until the company was mustered out.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Colonna, B. Allison, Capt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>c/o C. D. Jackson &amp; Co., 140th St. and Locust Ave., New York, N. Y.
-Assigned to company late in the year 1917; was in command at time of
-departure for overseas and until September 28, 1918, when he left for
-detached service at Army School of the Line. Returned to company January
-4, 1919, and was in command until March 1st. Left March 3rd for
-detached service with A. E. F. University at Beaune, France. Transferred
-to 5th Division April 11th and returned to the United States in May, 1919.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Devereux, John C., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>413 Genesee Street, Utica, N. Y. Joined company April 6, 1919, and was
-in command from April 15th until April 20th. Returned to United States
-with company.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Dunn, Raymond B., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p>c/o R. B. Dunn &amp; Co., Knoxville, Tenn. With company as a 2nd Lieutenant
-at time of departure overseas; appointed 1st Lieutenant in October,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-1918. In command from September 28th until October 9th, on which
-date he was taken sick and evacuated. Mentioned in 78th Division General
-Orders No. 6 for bravery on September 26th.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Foulkes, Louis S., Jr., Capt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>c/o Rochester Stamping Co., Rochester, N. Y. With company as a 1st
-Lieutenant at time of departure overseas and was 2nd in command. Transferred
-and made 1st Battalion Adjutant July 11th; made Regimental
-Adjutant September 28th.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Gardenier, David, 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>Chatham, N. Y. Joined company October 29, 1918, and was in command
-from that date until January 4, 1919. Transferred and made 1st Battalion
-Adjutant April 6, 1919.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Lahey, William S., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>520 Summit Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Joined company October 9, 1918,
-and was in command from that date until October 29th, when he was
-severely wounded in left side of face and neck by shrapnel while in
-support lines behind Grand Pre. Died of wounds October 31st, and on
-same date orders arrived appointing him captain.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Merrill, Henry M., 2nd Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>72 Center Street, Brookline, Mass. Sailed for overseas with advanced
-party May 9, 1918. Rejoined company in Brunembert Area July 8th.
-Severely wounded in left foot by shrapnel September 24th while on outpost
-duty and returned to United States in October, 1918.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Norton, Robert H., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>482 Clinton Avenue, Albany, N. Y. Joined company January 8, 1919. In
-command from March 1st to April 15th, on which date he was transferred
-to M. P. Corps Replacement Camp, Parigne, L’Evaque, Le Mans Area.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Proctor, William S., 2nd Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>67 North Central Avenue, Columbus, Ohio. Joined company in April,
-1919, and returned to United States with company.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Schuyler, Roy A., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>(Andrew J. Schuyler, father), Pattersonville, Schenectady County, N. Y.
-Sailed for overseas with advanced party May 9, 1918. Rejoined company
-in Brunembert Area July 5th. Killed in action September 26, 1918, by
-shrapnel through head while leading his platoon in an attack upon enemy
-positions. Mentioned in 78th Division General Orders No. 6 for bravery
-on this date.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Shanks, Thomas H., 2nd Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>654 Kempton Street, New Bedford, Mass. Joined company December 4,
-1918, and returned to United States with company.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Vanderbilt, Herbert R., 1st Lt. U. S. Inf.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>17 Sherwood Avenue, Ossining, N. Y. With company at time of departure
-for overseas. Reported missing in action September 26th. Was prisoner
-in Camp Karlsruhe, Germany. Returned to Regiment in January, 1919,
-and assigned to Company “D.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<h3>COMPLETE ALPHABETICAL ROSTER OF MEN ASSIGNED TO COMPANY
-FROM DATE OF LEAVING THE UNITED STATES FOR OVERSEAS
-SERVICE, MAY 19, 1918, UNTIL DATE OF RETURN TO THE UNITED
-STATES, MAY 26, 1919.</h3>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="hangingindent">
-
-<p>Accetturo, Anthony, No. 2040459, Private, (Address unknown). Enlisted March
-29, 1918; joined company Sept. 9th. Taken sick Oct. 25, 1918, and
-evacuated.</p>
-
-<p>Ackerman, William, No. 1737299, Pvt. 1st Class, Miss Minnie Ackerman, sister,
-941 Washington Street, c/o The Lutheran Home, Buffalo, N. Y. Reported
-Missing in Action September 26, 1918. Was last seen by Cpl. Sutton
-leaning against a tree with a large hole in his neck. Advice received from
-Central Records Office that he died from wounds Sept. 26th. He enlisted
-April 2, 1918, and joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Ackerman, William, No. 2451126, Corporal, 860 Fox Street, Bronx, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Ahearn, Walter J., No. 2411094, Sergeant, Keansburg, N. J. Enlisted
-February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Albitz, Oscar, No. 3746398, Pvt. 1st Class, 928 South Third Street, LaCrosse,
-Wisconsin. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Aldridge, Joseph S. Jr., No. 2414730, Pvt. 1st Class, 319 Union Avenue,
-Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.
-Decorated for deed of bravery performed September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Allen, Frank C., No. 2568100, Corporal, 309 Pleasant Street, Petaluma,
-California. Enlisted March 10, 1918; joined company December 9th.
-Taken sick December 22d and evacuated.</p>
-
-<p>Amann, Walter G., No. 1749246, Pvt. 1st Class, 292 Terrace Avenue, Jersey
-City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Wounded
-by mustard gas burns October 22d; rejoined company December 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Anderson, George J., No. 1763315, Private, 24 Eddywood Avenue, Springfield,
-Mass. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Anderson, John A., No. 3752380, Corporal, Box 40, Route 2, Turtle Lake, Wis.
-Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Andrzejewski, Stanislaw, No. 1752094, Private, 176 Barnard Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Angevine, William A., No. 1748872, Private, 919 Park Avenue, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Served with
-Railhead Detachment during campaign.</p>
-
-<p>Anness, Peyton R., No. 1746065, Sergeant, “The Belnord,” Broadway &amp; 86th
-Street, New York City. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company
-October 11th. Transferred to Depot Division, 1st Army Corps, A. E. F.,
-July 27, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Annibalini, Aldo, No. 652015, Private, 251 South Division Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Wounded in
-action (degree undetermined) September 26th. Rejoined company
-December 16th.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>Apicelli, Joseph, No. 2410760, Corporal, (Salvatore Apicelli, father), 1505
-Somerfield Street, Asbury Park, N. J. Killed in action September 26th in
-Bois St. Claude, by sniper’s bullet through head while leading his squad
-to attack machine gun. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company
-same date.</p>
-
-<p>Arcuri, Carmine, No. 2450304, Private, (Reitano Arcuri, brother), 132 South
-Main Street, Port Chester, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action September 26th in Bois St. Claude, by sniper’s
-bullet through head while advancing with his automatic rifle in an attack
-on enemy positions.</p>
-
-<p>Ashlock, Newton C., No. 1757769, Corporal, Carrolton, Ill. Enlisted April 29,
-1918; joined company April 26, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Awe, John A., No. 3754195, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 4, Box 67, Greenwood, Wis.
-Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Baiano, Carmelo, No. 2451001, Private, Broadway, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Slightly wounded by shrapnel
-in right foot September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Ball, Walter V., No. 2451462, Private, 356 Upland Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Transferred to
-Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, June 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Barnes, Earl, No. 1765247, Pvt. 1st Class, 444 South Park Avenue, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Accidentally wounded September 20th. Returned to United States
-in December, 1918. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Barsamian, Hazar, No. 3329308, Private, 67 Minomona Avenue, South
-Milwaukee, Wis. Enlisted May 28, 1918; joined company October 12th.
-Slightly wounded by shrapnel in head November 4th. Returned to
-America in December.</p>
-
-<p>Baumann, William, No. 1749247, Pvt. 1st Class, 147 Congress Street, Jersey
-City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Bement, Mervin, No. 1752197, Private, Odessa, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918;
-joined company same date. Went with 303rd Sanitary Train on Detached
-service in July, 1918; taken sick and admitted to Base Hospital No. 42 in
-September, and after recovering took up his duties with that unit.</p>
-
-<p>Benzing, John M., No. 1737291, Pvt. 1st Class, 1058 Smith Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Reported missing in action September 26, 1918. Was prisoner at
-Camp Rastatt, Germany. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same
-date.</p>
-
-<p>Benzschawel, Joseph, No. 3754197, Mechanic, Route 3, Box 81, Thorp, Wis.
-Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Bernhard, John, No. 1749249, Private, 381 New York Avenue, Jersey City, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner in Camp Rastatt, Germany. Returned
-to company January 16, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Bernstein, Barnett, No. 2409686, Private, Sixteenth Avenue, Belmar, N. J.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Best, Harry C., No. 1737292, Pvt. 1st Class, 140 Zenner Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>Birk, William, No. 1737293, Private, 610 Broadway, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in action
-September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany.</p>
-
-<p>Bishop, Joseph, No. 2411096, Pvt. 1st Class, Everett, N. J. Enlisted February
-25, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in action September
-26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany. Rejoined company
-January 7, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Blair, James, No. 1765248, Private, 51 Mineral Spring Road, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Bloome, Peter, No. 3336326, Pvt. 1st Class, Box 147, Annawan, Ill. Enlisted
-June 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Bloomquist, Gust W., No. 3332154, Pvt. 1st Class, 1712 Eighth Street, Rockford,
-Ill. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Blount, George L., No. 2451251, Private, 738 East 137th Street, New York City.
-Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany.</p>
-
-<p>Boettcher, Walter, No. 2828102, Private, 868 22d Street, Milwaukee, Wis.
-Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Bogart, William D., No. 1747126, Pvt. 1st Class, 219 Catherine Street, Elizabeth,
-N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred
-to 1st Replacement Depot, February 16, 1919, for return to United States.</p>
-
-<p>Bogucki, Stanley F., No. 1737294, Private, 95 Detroit Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded by
-shrapnel in left arm September 19th.</p>
-
-<p>Borg, Edward, No. 3750612, Private, Route 1, Brantwood, Wis. Enlisted July
-24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Boucher, Joseph A., No. 1748003, Private, 3644½ Boulevard, Jersey City, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-left face September 26th; rejoined company January 11, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Boyle, Edward H., No. 1765249, Private, 1 Paul Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Transferred
-to 14th General Hospital, Boulogne, France, July 8th. Rejoined
-company April 27, 1919. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same
-date.</p>
-
-<p>Brand. Arthur F., No. 3329616, Pvt. 1st Class, 345 17th Street, Milwaukee,
-Wis. Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Brenner, Carl M., No. 3746407, Private, (address unknown); joined company
-October 12, 1918. Severely wounded by bullets in left arm, right side,
-and compound fracture of right leg.</p>
-
-<p>Brooks, Bertrand G., No. 1749251, Private, 579 Central Avenue, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 2 6, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
-wounded in right arm September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Broomhall, Harry R., No. 2932965, Pvt. 1st Class, 849 East Avenue, Akron,
-Ohio. Enlisted June 27, 1918; joined company December 10th.</p>
-
-<p>Brown, Elijah E., No. 2083783, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 6, Aledo, Ohio. Enlisted
-June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Buechler, Louis, No. 1749250, Private, 598 Tonnell Avenue, Jersey City, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick and
-evacuated October 18th.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>Burchell, Harold E., No. 1748085, Private, (Mrs. Kitty Burchell, mother), 621
-Main Street, Paterson, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action November 4th by machine gun bullet below
-heart during an attack on enemy machine gun nests, near Les Petites
-Armoises (Meuse-Argonne).</p>
-
-<p>Burke, John F., No. 1752093, Pvt. 1st Class, (Peter Burke, brother), 2000
-Seneca Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company
-same date. Severely wounded September 26th by shrapnel in arm, back
-and hips during general attack on enemy positions. Died in Evacuation
-Hospital No. 12, September 28th.</p>
-
-<p>Butler, William G., No. 2414732, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Hannah Mills, foster
-mother), 821 Jackson Street, Morristown, Penna. Enlisted April 2, 1918;
-joined company same date. Killed in action November 4th, near Les
-Petites Armoises (Meuse-Argonne), by shrapnel, while runner for Battalion
-Headquarters and while on road carrying messages.</p>
-
-<p>Byreiter, John F., No. 1737296, Pvt. 1st Class, 59 Thomas Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred to 311th
-Infantry Supply Company October 17th.</p>
-
-<p>Cahill, James E., No. 1749048, Private, (Miss Catherine Cahill, sister), 114
-Monroe Street, Hoboken, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action September 26th, at Bois St. Claude, by
-shrapnel, during general advance of the company.</p>
-
-<p>Calabrese, Dominick, No. 2451322, Sergeant, East Hampton, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Campanini, Frederick S., No. 1748532, Pvt. 1st Class, Washington Street,
-Northvale, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-Accidentally shot in foot and evacuated September 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Campbell, William J., No. 1765250, Pvt. 1st Class, 42 Edson Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Cantu, Peter E., No. 3340909, Private, (Mrs. Adabell Cantu, wife), 910 West
-Front Street, Davenport, Ill. Joined company October 12th. Killed in
-action November 4th, at Les Petites Armoises, by machine gun bullets
-through body, while acting as company runner, during an attack on enemy
-machine gun nests.</p>
-
-<p>Cardell, Anthony, No. 1765251, Pvt. 1st Class, 14 Pembino Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Carr, Charlie, No. 3746410, Pvt. 1st Class, 608 North Ninth Street, LaCrosse,
-Wis. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Cassely, Joseph R., No. 1749067, Private, 710 Jersey Avenue, Jersey City, N. J.
-Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick and
-evacuated November 5th; returned to company March 21, 1919, from Company
-“K,” 320th Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Centofante, Natale A., No. 1748533, Pvt. 1st Class, P. O. Box 41, Northvale,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Wounded by
-gas and evacuated November 4th.</p>
-
-<p>Chiaradio, Samuel E., No. 1748534, Pvt. 1st Class, South Palisade Avenue,
-Bloomfield, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.
-Slightly wounded by shrapnel in right shoulder September 26th; rejoined
-company November 2d; wounded by gas November 4th.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i093.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">3d Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.</p>
-
-<div class="hangingindent">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>Clark, Earl B., No. 3527729, Private, 322 East Mulberry Street, Lancaster,
-Ohio. Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company December 10th. Transferred
-to Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Clark, Frank W., No. 1746104, Sergeant, 11 High Street, Elizabeth, N. J.
-Enlisted September 6, 1917; joined company April 21, 1919. Went overseas
-with company “C,” 311th Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Closeman, Harry, No. 2076987, Private, 312 Seventh Street, Red Wing, Minn.
-Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded
-in right arm October 20th. Rejoined company November 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Cobble, Clarence R., No. 3874973, Private, Route 2, Midway, Tenn. Enlisted
-August 5, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Cocker, Herbert M. P., No. 1750235, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Marjorie Cocker,
-mother), 17 McKinley Avenue, West Orange, N. J. Enlisted April 1, 1918;
-joined company same date. Reported missing in action September 26th.
-Fate not known.</p>
-
-<p>Colaguori, Pietro, No. 2411608, Pvt. 1st Class, 136 Westwood Avenue, Long
-Branch, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Cole, Harry Lee, No. 1345828, Private, (address unknown). Joined company
-September 9, 1918. Killed in action October 20th, northwest of Grand
-Pre, during an attack on Ferme des Loges.</p>
-
-<p>Collura, Rosario, No. 2450663, Pvt. 1st Class, 34 Riverdale Avenue, Yonkers,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Congelosi, Joseph, No. 2085786, Corporal, (address unknown). Enlisted February
-27, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded in right
-leg by shrapnel November 4th.</p>
-
-<p>Connolly, Frank J., No. 2450135, Pvt. 1st Class, 87 West Carroll Street, City
-Island, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company same date. Taken
-sick and evacuated September 19th. Was later assigned to Co. G, 110th
-Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Cook, Elmer J., No. 1748573, Private, Highwood Avenue, Tenafly, N. J. Enlisted
-April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded September
-26th in both hands and head.</p>
-
-<p>Corbine, Charles, No. 3746635, Private, Odnah, Wis. Enlisted July 22, 1918;
-joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Cordes, Henry A., No. 1748874, Pvt. 1st Class, 119 Park Avenue, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Wounded by
-gas November 4, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Cottrell, Alonzo, No. 2409690, Private, Institute Street, Freehold, N. J. Enlisted
-February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick and
-evacuated December 24th.</p>
-
-<p>Cowser, Levi C., No. 1415491, Corporal, Goree, Texas. Enlisted May 27, 1918;
-joined company December 10th.</p>
-
-<p>Croft, Lawrence M., No. 1765253, Pvt. 1st Class, 20 Archer Avenue, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Culkowski, John E., No. 1737297, Pvt. 1st Class, 79 Townsend Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-to 1st Replacement Depot, St. Aignan, France, for return to United States
-in March, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Curcio, Joseph M., No. 1748875, Private, 719 Clinton Street, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded
-by shell fire in right leg September 19th; returned to company December
-19th; transferred to 1st Replacement Depot, St. Aignan, for return to
-United States March 10, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Curtin, Matthew V., No. 1765254, Private, 2 Paul Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in left
-leg September 26th. Returned to United States in December, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Czajka, Frank, No. 1765255, Private, 139 Weiss Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded in
-left hand and head September 26th. Returned to company January 6, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Daeschler, Michael, No. 1765256, Private, 48 Lester Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Damato, Guisseppe, No. 1738115, Private, 35 Sidney Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Accidentally wounded
-September 26th, received 1st Aid and returned to duty. Again accidentally
-wounded October 30th. Returned to company December 18th.</p>
-
-<p>Danielson, John, No. 2084548, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted June 24,
-1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded in hip October 22.</p>
-
-<p>Dash, Harvey R., No. 1765257, Corporal, 93 Macamley Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>deBruin, Walter, No. 1746077, Cook, Elberon, N. J. Enlisted September 21,
-1917; joined company same date. Burned by mustard gas October 30th,
-but was not evacuated.</p>
-
-<p>DeGrote, Walter, No. 2411100, Sergeant, Port Monmouth, N. J. Enlisted February
-25, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred to 1st Replacement
-Depot, St. Aignan, for return to United States, April 28, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Deile, Albert, Jr., No. 1749050, Pvt. 1st Class, 83 Jackson Street, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Deleskie, Stanley, No. 2824994, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Mary Kuczeuski, mother),
-2114 Front Street, East, Ashland, Wis. Joined company October 12, 1918.
-Killed in action October 20th, northwest of Grand Pre, by machine gun
-bullets while trying to cross road swept by machine gun fire, during an
-attack on Ferme des Loges.</p>
-
-<p>Denier, Louis F., No. 1738113, Pvt. 1st Class, 519 Glenwood Avenue, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred to
-Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, February 20, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Devine, Thomas E., No. 2450369, Pvt. 1st Class, 130 Old Pond Road, Beacon,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Taken sick
-and evacuated September 2d.</p>
-
-<p>Diskin, James J., No. 2414736, Private, 418 South Broad Street, Elizabeth,
-N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
-wounded in left leg September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Dollard, Joseph P., No. 3204125, Private, (Edmund A. Dollard, brother), 124
-Baker Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y. Joined company October 12, 1918. Killed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-in action October 28th, northwest of Grand Pre, by bullet wounds through
-chest, during an attack on Ferme des Loges.</p>
-
-<p>Donohue, John E., No. 1749068, Private, 179 Third Street, Jersey City, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded in
-back September 19th. Returned to company March 29, 1919, from Company
-“E,” 53rd Engineers.</p>
-
-<p>Dreher, Walter A., No. 2821474, Corporal, 1135 Lincoln Street, Klamath Falls,
-Oregon. Enlisted May 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Eastman, Wilbert A., No. 1976313, Sergeant, Route 2, Anna, Ill. Enlisted
-September 4, 1917; joined company December 10th, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Edgerly, Robert E., No. 2816271, Private, Sauk Center, Minn. Enlisted June
-24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Effingham, Harry, No. 2409695, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Howard Hartman, friend),
-Smithburg, R. F. D. 4, Freehold, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined
-company same date. Killed in action September 26th, by bullets through
-body during general advance of company.</p>
-
-<p>Ellison, William J., No. 1750236, Private, (Mrs. Mary Wallenbeck, mother),
-108 West Fourth Street, Watkins, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined
-company same date. Died from wounds received in action November 4th.</p>
-
-<p>Ely, Eugene, No. 1749069, Pvt. 1st Class, North Drake Street, Titusville, Pa.
-Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date. Was slightly wounded
-in left shoulder September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Emerson, William G., No. 2413210, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 4, Canton, N. Y.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick
-September 9th and evacuated. Was afterwards a member of the 4th company,
-4th Army Corps Replacement Battalion.</p>
-
-<p>Ennocenti, Alfredo, No. 3751617, Pvt. 1st Class, Box 59, Beloit, Wis. Enlisted
-July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Erickson, Albert C., No. 3752633, Private (address unknown). Joined company
-October 12, 1918. Died from wounds November 1st received same date,
-caused by shrapnel in left hip and arm while in support lines behind
-Grand Pre.</p>
-
-<p>Erlandson, Gustave F., No. 3338575, Pvt. 1st Class (Oscar Erlandson, brother),
-Route 1, North Branch, Minn. Joined company October 12th. Killed in
-action November 4th, at Les Petites Armoises, by bullet wounds while in
-advance patrol of company during an attack upon enemy machine gun
-nests.</p>
-
-<p>Ertwine, Maxwell B., No. 1746060, 1st Sergeant, Ringtown, Penna. Enlisted
-June 26, 1917; joined company September 5th; appointed 1st Sergeant
-February 23, 1918; transferred to Depot Division, 1st Army Corps,
-A. E. F., July 27, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Fahey, John F., No. 1765260, Corporal, 34 Weyand Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Fahey, Joseph H., No. 2414738, Sergeant, 42 Fulton Street, Medford, Mass.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-action September 26th in right foot and chest. Returned to company
-November 22d. Decorated for deed of bravery performed September 26th
-with both Distinguished Service Cross and Croix de Guerre.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>Farry, Lester E., No. 1746072, Mechanic, (George E. Farry, father), Farmingdale,
-N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date.
-Severely wounded September 19th by shrapnel in head and face while
-digging trenches, which caused his death in Evacuation Hospital No. 1 a
-few days later.</p>
-
-<p>Fay, Norman W., No. 2060023, Pvt. 1st Class, 52 North Long Avenue, Chicago,
-Ill. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company October 12th. Taken
-sick November 22d and evacuated.</p>
-
-<p>Feeney, Patrick J., No. 1748877, Pvt. 1st Class, 821 Park Avenue, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
-wounded in right arm September 26th; returned to company November 23.</p>
-
-<p>Fellows, Elmer, No. 2941531, Private, West Frankfort, Ill. Enlisted April 27,
-1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Fergus, Morris F., No. 3533664, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 3, Brookville, Ohio.
-Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company December 10th.</p>
-
-<p>Ferrians, Frank, No. 2062094, Private, Sauk Center, Minn. Enlisted June 24,
-1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Fielding, William H., No. 1749252, Private, 138 Manhattan Avenue, Jersey
-City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
-wounded by shell fire in arm September 19th; rejoined company December
-15th.</p>
-
-<p>Fischer, Jacob J., No. 1765262, Pvt. 1st Class, 369 South Park Avenue, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Fleischmann, Gustave E., No. 2410771, Pvt. 1st Class, 1608 Park Avenue, Asbury
-Park, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.
-Accidentally received a broken leg during bayonet practice on drill ground
-in Brunembert Area June 28, 1918. Returned to America in August, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Formes, Joseph H., No. 1749186, Private, 170 New York Avenue, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Was slightly
-wounded underneath left eye September 26th. Returned to United States
-in January, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Freedman, Sam, No. 1752476, Pvt. 1st Class, 305 Adams Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Was slightly wounded
-by shell fire on September 24th.</p>
-
-<p>Frey, Albert P., No. 1737302, Corporal, 566 Goodyear Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Furlong, William E., No. 2420056, Private, 454 First Street, Troy, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 5, 1918; joined company same date. Was slightly wounded
-in scalp September 26th; rejoined company January 22, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Gaier, Julius, No. 2410772, Private, 33 Montgomery Street, New York City.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded
-in both feet October 29th.</p>
-
-<p>Gantert, Othmar, S. B., No. 2084273, Corporal, 811 Fourteenth Avenue, North,
-Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Geoghegan, John A., No. 2414741, Sergeant, 177 Reid Street, Elizabeth, N. J.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>Glenn, Edward F., No. 1749253, Pvt. 1st Class, 165 North Street, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred
-to Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, July 15, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Goldberg, Israel, No. 2452893, Private, 269 South Second Street, Brooklyn,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company April 16th. Slightly
-wounded by shell fire in left forearm, September 24th.</p>
-
-<p>Golling, Paul E., No. 3341860, Private, Trochee, Alberta, Canada. Enlisted
-June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Goodman, Max, No. 4245461, Private, 3751 North Irving Street, Chicago, Ill.
-Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th. Taken sick
-December 21st and evacuated.</p>
-
-<p>Goodwin, Joseph F., No. 2450527, Cook, South Hampton, Long Island, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th. Transferred to 1st
-Depot Division January 20, 1919, for return to United States.</p>
-
-<p>Greenberg, Joseph G., No. 2414743, Private, 408 Jefferson Avenue, Elizabeth,
-N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Gress, Edward G., No. 1737305, Private, 184 Weaver Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick and
-evacuated October 14th.</p>
-
-<p>Griffin, Carl E., No. 2414744, Private, 720 Grand Street, Elizabeth, N. J.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred to Graves
-Registration Service January 28, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Haegerl, John, No. 3750635, Private, Route 1, Box 77, Butternut, Wis. Enlisted
-July 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Hagedorn, Otto C., No. 3752811, Private, Route 3, Box 60, Fall Creek, Wis.
-Enlisted July 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Hallock, Charles F., No. 2451048, Private, Sag Harbor, N. Y. Enlisted April
-2, 1918; joined company April 16th. Slightly wounded in left ankle
-October 20th.</p>
-
-<p>Halpern, Max, No. 1748878, Private, 924 Bloomfield Street, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Hansen, Emil L., No. 3329369, Corporal, R. F. D. 4, West Allis, Wis. Enlisted
-May 28, 1918; joined company October 12th. Taken sick and evacuated
-December 21st.</p>
-
-<p>Hansenberger, John G., No. 1750237, Pvt. 1st Class, (George Hansenberger,
-father), R. F. D. Odessa, N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action September 26th by shell which blew off both
-legs, during preparation for attack on enemy positions in Bois St. Claude.</p>
-
-<p>Hardies, William A., No. 2833530, Private, (Fred A. Hardies, father), 2231
-Cortez Street, Chicago, Ill. Joined company October 12, 1918. Killed
-in action October 30th, in Bois d’Negremont, by shrapnel in head and
-body while in support lines behind Grand Pre.</p>
-
-<p>Harriss, Raymond L., No. 2450329, Pvt. 1st Class, Rhinebeck, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 1, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded in left side
-of face by one pound shell, September 23d.</p>
-
-<p>Hauber, George, No. 1737306, Corporal, 916 Clinton Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-hand and leg by shell fire September 19th; rejoined company November 3d.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>Hayden, Alexander M., No. 1746070, Sergeant, 1129 First Avenue, Asbury
-Park, N. J. Enlisted September 4, 1917; joined company same date.
-Reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
-Germany; rejoined company January 27, 1919. Qualified for and attended
-the Inter-Allied Meet at Le Mans in April, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Haynes, Wilfred E., No. 2411615, Sergeant, Eatontown, N. J. Enlisted February
-25, 1918; joined company same date. Evacuated September 2d
-with injuries incurred on athletic field in July.</p>
-
-<p>Healey, James J., No. 2942194, Pvt. 1st Class, 116 Clinton Street, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Heck, George W., No. 2414746, Corporal, 306 Court Street, Elizabeth, N. J.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-left hand September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Heichberger, George A., No. 1737306, Pvt. 1st Class, 109 Clare Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick
-and evacuated January 3, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Heiple, Loran L., No. 2941539, Private, DeSota, Ill. Enlisted April 27, 1918;
-joined company same date. Slightly wounded in left thigh September
-26th; returned to United States in November.</p>
-
-<p>Heisler, Karl K., No. 1746305, Sergeant, 703 Broad Street, Beverly, N. J.
-Enlisted September 18, 1917; joined company January 5, 1919. Sailed
-for overseas service with Company “I,” 311th Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Henne, Fred, No. 1747743, Pvt. 1st Class, 963 Lafayette Street, Elizabeth, N. J.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-left shoulder September 26th; rejoined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Hennessey, Edward F., No. 2405759, Sergeant, Highlands, N. J. Enlisted
-February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Hess, John, No. 2060477, Corporal, 2860 West 22d Street, Chicago, Ill. Enlisted
-December 3, 1917; joined company October 12, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Heymer, Louis R., No. 1749254, Private, 118 Palisade Avenue, West Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Received
-compound fracture left femur by shrapnel October 29th.</p>
-
-<p>Hill, Joseph L., No. 2420051, Sergeant, 218 West St. Louis Street, West Frankfort,
-Ill. Enlisted April 27, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
-wounded in both feet and right leg by shell fire September 24th. Returned
-to United States in December, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Hillinski, Joseph, No. 2084238, Private, 300 Second Street, N. E., Minneapolis,
-Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Hoeck, Roy L., No. 1346490, Corporal, 1635 North Crawford Avenue, Chicago,
-Ill. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company December 10th.</p>
-
-<p>Hogan, George A., No. 1748879, Pvt. 1st Class, 1106 Grand Street, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Holly, Harold E., No. 1748541, Pvt. 1st Class, Demarest, N. J. Enlisted April
-26, 1918; joined company same date. Was taken sick and evacuated
-October 8th; afterwards a member of M. P. company 202, at Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Hughes, Eugene P., No. 1765263, Private, 1767 Seneca Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Wounded by gas
-November 4th.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>Hunterbrink, Charles A., No. 1749055, Corporal, 40 Thorne Street, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Huntley, Harry H., No. 2832015, Private, 1003 Wyman Street, New London,
-Wis. Enlisted May 25, 1918; joined company October 12th. Was slightly
-wounded in right arm October 20th; rejoined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Huston, Henry L., No. 1750238, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 1, Hector, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
-September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Jacobi, William, No. 1749056, Private, 260 First Street, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded
-in left leg and right thigh September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Janczjewski, Louis, No. 2833675, Private, 1115 Sixth Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis.
-Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded
-in upper arm October 20th. Returned to United States in January, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Janicki, Alexander, No. 1737309, Private, Box 90, Grotten Street, Forks, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-left hand September 26th; rejoined company November 21st.</p>
-
-<p>Jern, Erick P., No. 3332962, Private, 373 Marion Avenue, Aurora, Ill., C. B. &amp;
-Q. R. R. office. Enlisted June 23, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson, Carl E., No. 3753096, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 2, Box 109, Grand Rapids,
-Wis. Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly
-wounded by shrapnel in upper arm October 22d; returned to United
-States in December, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson, Charles W., No. 2941548, Private, Six Mile Run, Penna. Enlisted
-April 22, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in left arm
-September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson, Edward J., No. 1746078, Corporal, 258 West 128th Street, New York
-City. Enlisted September 22, 1917; joined company same date. Transferred
-to 14th General Hospital, Boulogne, France, July 8th.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson, Lloyd F., No. 3335191, Private, Route 2, Box 68, Balabon, Minn.
-Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th. Transferred to
-Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry, February 23, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson, Oscar E., No. 3754218, Private (address unknown). Enlisted July
-25, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded by shrapnel
-in shoulder November 4th.</p>
-
-<p>Jones, James E., No. 1746069, Corporal, 613 Fourth Avenue, Bradley Beach,
-N. J. Enlisted November 21, 1917; joined company same date. Company
-Clerk until July 21st. Fell from lorry July 21st, fracturing leg and ankle,
-and was transferred to Upper Southard Hospital, Dartford, England. Returned
-to United States in December, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Josephson, Emil B., No. 3746707, Private, P. O. Box 115, Hayward, Wis.
-Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Kahn, Leon L., No. 3337375, Private (address unknown). Enlisted June 26,
-1918; joined company October 12th. Severely wounded in face October
-29th and died from wounds November 4th. Buried at Villes Daucourt.</p>
-
-<p>Kane, Albert J., No. 1748880, Pvt. 1st Class, 1029 Park Avenue, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>Kapacius, Ignatius S., No. 2821449, Private, 12120 Halsted Street, West
-Pullman, Ill. Enlisted May 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Kapala, John J., No. 2084048, Mechanic, 1321 Third Street, N. E., Minneapolis,
-Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Karns, Jay B., No. 1765264, Corporal, 1899 Seneca Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Kaufman, Isidore, No. 2414750, Private, 356 Linden Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded by
-shrapnel in left leg September 26th. Returned to United States in
-November.</p>
-
-<p>Kazmierczak, John S., No. 2824702, Pvt. 1st Class, 400 Madison Street, Beaver
-Dam, Wis. Enlisted July 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Kelley, Leandrew T., No. 3270643, Pvt. 1st Class, Bradleyton, Alabama. Enlisted
-June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th. Transferred to 78th
-Division, M. P. Company, April 8, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Keyes, Paul, No. 17490 57, Private, 208 Harrison Street, Harrison, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Kilbourn, Henry, No. 1745902, Private, Jamesburg, N. J. Enlisted November
-19, 1917; joined company same date. Transferred to Headquarters Company,
-311th Infantry, September 10, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Kilburn, Vallie J., No. 1752091, Pvt. 1st Class, Chestnut Street, Cardiff, Md.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Kindt, Edward W., No. 1737311, Private, (Mrs. Mary Kindt, mother), 257
-Howard Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action September 24, 1918, in Bois St. Claude, by
-direct hit of shell, while on outpost duty.</p>
-
-<p>Kitson, John G., No. 1749073, Private, 275 Thirteenth Street, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred
-to Supply Company, 311th Infantry, November 13th.</p>
-
-<p>Klosiak, Stanley F., No. 1737312, Private, 1074 Smith Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-left knee and body by shrapnel September 24th. Was later assigned to
-Service Battalion Army Schools, A. E. F.</p>
-
-<p>Koegel, William, No. 1749256, Private, (Miss Caroline Koegel, sister), 102
-Leonard Street, Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action in Bois St. Claude, September 26, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Koehler, Herman G., No. 3337632, Private (Mrs. Mary C. Koehler, mother),
-2418 Ninth Street, Rock Island, Ill. Joined company October 12, 1918.
-Killed in action October 30th by shrapnel in back, while in support lines
-behind Grand Pre.</p>
-
-<p>Kopec, Antoni, No. 1763333, Pvt. 1st Class, 96 Lenora Street, Depew, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Koster, Theodore A., No. 3744398, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 5, Sterling, Ill.
-Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Kreiner, George J., No. 1749191, Private, 179 Hopkins Avenue, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company December 9, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Kronhelm, Joseph E., No. 2829687, Corporal, 760 First Avenue, Milwaukee,
-Wis. Enlisted May 28, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>Kropidlowski, Peter W., No. 3752668, Private (John Kropidlowski, brother),
-Route 1, Box 14, Amherst Junction, Wis. Joined company October 12,
-1918. Killed in action October 20th, northwest of Grand Pre during an
-attack upon Ferme des Loges.</p>
-
-<p>Krygier, Walter, No. 1737313, Private, 188 Coit Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded over
-right eye by shrapnel September 19th. Afterwards assigned to Company
-“A,” 110th Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Kuczkowski, Alexandre, No. 1737314, Private, (Mrs. Marion Kuczkowski,
-mother), 70 Woltz Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined
-company same date. Severely wounded in right side and chest by shrapnel
-September 26th. Died in Evacuation Hospital No. 12, September 28th.</p>
-
-<p>Kuecker, Carl A., No. 2082342, Pvt. 1st Class, Brownsville, Minn. Enlisted
-June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded by
-shrapnel in left arm October 30th; rejoined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Kunferman, George, No. 3752853, Pvt. 1st Class, 611 Babcock Street, Eau
-Claire, Wis. Enlisted July 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Lambert, John C, No. 1748887, Pvt. 1st Class, 70 Gautier Avenue, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company December 9th; sailed for
-overseas service with Company “E,” 311th Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Lammert, Will J., No. 3752450, Private, Verdi, Minn. Enlisted July 23, 1918;
-joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Lander, Irving W., No. 2451020, Private, Stone Avenue, Elmsford, N. Y.
-Enlisted March 30, 1918; joined company April 16th. Taken sick and
-evacuated October 14th.</p>
-
-<p>Lang, Joseph J., No. 2409708, Private, 27 Ward Street, Maspeth, Long Island,
-N. Y. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Missing
-in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany.
-Rejoined company December 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Lange, Fred C. H., No. 1748881, Private, 744 Park Avenue, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-right leg October 29th.</p>
-
-<p>Larkin, Philip J., No. 2825537, Corporal, (address unknown). Enlisted May
-28, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly wounded in right arm
-November 4th. Afterwards assigned to Company “I,” 320th Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Larson, Olaf A., No. 2074383, Private, 1401 Washington Avenue, Minneapolis,
-Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October 12th. Slightly
-wounded in right thigh by shrapnel, October 30th; rejoined company
-January 24, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Larson, Oscar L., No. 3333579, Private, 2728 Longfellow Avenue, Minneapolis,
-Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Laurencell, Harry J., No. 1765267, Pvt. 1st Class, (Joseph Laurencell, father),
-342 South Park Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined
-company same date. Killed in action September 24th in Bois St. Claude,
-by direct hit of shell while on outpost duty.</p>
-
-<p>LaVigne, Harry, No. 2452392, Private, 300 West 17th Street, New York City.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company April 16th. Slightly wounded in
-left leg September 26th; returned to United States in December.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>Lawton, John G., No. 1328335, Corporal, Garnett, Hampton County, S. C.
-Enlisted April 5, 1917; joined company December 9, 1918. Transferred
-to 30th Division (with which he went to France) March 11, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Ledwin, Joseph, No. 1752090, Private, 64 Zittle Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in right arm
-October 20th; rejoined company December 17th.</p>
-
-<p>Lehy, Howard C., No. 1746071, Sergeant, (Mrs. John Lehy, mother), Oakhurst,
-N. J. Enlisted September 4, 1917; joined company same date. Killed in
-action by shrapnel October 17, 1918, at La Folie Ferme.</p>
-
-<p>Leitzke, Edward A., No. 3750112, Private, (William F. Leitzke, father), Route
-1, Box 37, Burnett Junction, Wis. Enlisted July 24, 1918; joined company
-October 12th; wounded in stomach and left arm by shrapnel October
-31st, while in support lines behind Grand Pre; died in Mobile Hospital No.
-2, same date.</p>
-
-<p>Lent, Arnold W., No. 3338546, Private, Stacy, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918;
-joined company October 12th; severely wounded by shrapnel in left
-wrist October 31st.</p>
-
-<p>Leonard, Cyril T., No. 2414752, Private, 34 Sayre Street, Elizabeth, N. J. Enlisted
-April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Taken sick due to
-exposure in Limey Sector and evacuated October 13th; returned to United
-States in December.</p>
-
-<p>Letmolee, Kittel N., No. 2081589, Pvt. 1st Class, Perley, Minn. Enlisted June
-24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Levy, Joseph, No. 1746080, Supply Sergeant, Freehold, N. J. Enlisted November
-12, 1917; joined company same date. Appointed Supply Sergeant
-April 12, 1918; transferred to Army Candidate School October 10th;
-rejoined company December 10th; transferred to 1st Replacement Depot,
-St. Aignan, for immediate discharge April 8, 1919. Mentioned in 78th
-Division General Orders No 6 for bravery on September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Limbert, William D., No. 1755647, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted September
-7, 1917; joined company August 16, 1918; wounded by gas burns
-October 22d.</p>
-
-<p>Lineski, John A., No. 2084164, Private, 1601 California Street, N. E., Minneapolis,
-Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Lipowsky, Julius, No. 4566070, Private, 43 Rutgels Street, New York City.
-Enlisted August 27, 1918; joined company December 10th.</p>
-
-<p>Long, William G., No. 1737317, Corporal, 668 North Division Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Lotesto, Rocco, No. 2822865, Private, 523 West 80th Street, Chicago, Ill.
-Enlisted May 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Lueders, Emil A., No. 2829483, Pvt. 1st Class, (address unknown). Joined
-company October 12th. Taken sick and evacuated October 20th.</p>
-
-<p>Lush, Adam J., No. 1749075, Private, 145 Eighth Street, Jersey City, N. J.
-Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; rejoined
-company January 7, 1919; transferred to Headquarters Company, 311th
-Infantry, March 8th.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>Lusier, Albert J., No. 2409712, Cook, 228 West Hazard Street, Philadelphia,
-Penna. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Lykes, James H., No. 2409711, Pvt. 1st Class (Mrs. Catherine Lykes, mother),
-30 Bowne Avenue, Freehold, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined
-company same date. Killed in action September 26th, by bullet through
-body during general advance of company.</p>
-
-<p>McAslan, Walter W., No. 2450787, Pvt. 1st Class, 407 Second Street, Greenport,
-Long Island, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company April 16th;
-severely wounded in right shoulder and left hip September 26th; rejoined
-company November 21st.</p>
-
-<p>McCarthy, Frederick H., No. 2411625, Pvt. 1st Class, 180 Brighton Avenue,
-Long Branch, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same
-date; transferred to Headquarters Company, 311th Infantry June 28th.</p>
-
-<p>McCumber, Norman, No. 1751361, Private, 482 William Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded in
-right arm September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>McDonald, William, No. 2061019, Private, Curtis, Nebraska. Enlisted December
-7, 1917; joined company October 12, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>McGarrity, Joseph R., No. 2411623, Corporal, 142 Bridge Avenue, Red Bank,
-N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
-wounded in left elbow September 26, 1918. Mentioned in 78th Division
-General Orders No. 6, for bravery in action on September 24th.</p>
-
-<p>McGuire, James P., No. 2407801, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted
-February 25, 1918; joined company August 16th. Slightly wounded by
-shrapnel November 4th.</p>
-
-<p>McMahon, James C., No. 1749077, Private, 178 Eighteenth Street, Jersey City,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
-wounded in left foot September 25th.</p>
-
-<p>McMahon, William C., No. 1765269, Pvt. 1st Class, 48 Walter Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Mackley, James E., No. 2452441, Private, 117 West South Street, Frederick
-City, Md. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
-wounded in right lower leg September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Madsen, Christ, No. 3335322, Pvt. 1st Class, 718 West Hickory Street, Stillwater,
-Minn. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Magaski, William P., No. 3340770, Private, 2511 West Walton Street, Chicago,
-Ill. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th. Accidentally
-wounded in shoulder October 22d; rejoined company November 17th.</p>
-
-<p>Makowiecki, Boleslaw, No. 1747860, Private, (Mrs. Jadwiga Makowiecki, wife),
-205 Weimar Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action September 26th by shrapnel in body and
-head during general advance of company in Limey Sector.</p>
-
-<p>Malone, Edward M., No. 2414753, Pvt. 1st Class, 1019 Olive Street, Elizabeth,
-N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Severely
-wounded in back September 26th; rejoined company December 9th; again
-evacuated on account of old wound December 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Mandinach, Oscar, No. 4566060, Pvt. 1st Class, 556 East 105th Street,
-Brooklyn, N. Y. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>Marcinkiewicz, Frank J., No. 2833843, Corporal, 1326 Fourth Avenue, Milwaukee,
-Wis. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Martin, Charles H., No. 2085824, Corporal, 3258 North California Avenue,
-Chicago, Ill. Enlisted February 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Martocci, Salvatore, No. 2670129, Corporal, 160 West 100th Street, New York
-City. Enlisted April 4, 1918; joined company April 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Maske, Louis A., No. 1760024, Private, (Louis Maske, father), 82 Baumann
-Street, Rochester, N. Y. Joined company August 16, 1918; severely
-wounded by shrapnel in right thigh September 26th; died while on way
-to hospital.</p>
-
-<p>Meister, John C., No. 1748543, Pvt. 1st Class, Washington Street, Dumont,
-N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Meltzer, Sam M., No. 4566099, Private, 241 Madison Street, New York City.
-Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Mergan, Lewis W., No. 3746816, Private, 1610 Ohio Avenue, Superior, Wis.
-Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Mero, John, No. 2414755, Private, 44 James Place, Staten Island, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date; slightly wounded in
-right leg September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Miller, Michael J., No. 1737318, Corporal, 441 Emslie Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Morath, Paul, No. 1760050, Private, (address unknown). Joined company
-August 16th. Severely wounded in left leg September 26th; died of
-wounds (date unknown).</p>
-
-<p>Morelli, Angelo, No. 2411627, Pvt. 1st Class, 215 Jane Street, Long Branch,
-N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Moroshick, Max, No. 4566061, Private, 488 Hinsdale Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
-Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Morris, L. P. Morton, No. 2410780, Corporal, 128 Heck Avenue, Ocean Grove,
-N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
-wounded in left foot September 26th. Returned to United States in
-February, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Morrison, John W., No. 3747447, Private, Route 20, Winneconne, Wis. Enlisted
-July 22, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Mouser, Charles J., No. 2411111, Pvt. 1st Class, Lincroft, N. J. Enlisted
-February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; rejoined
-company January 25, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Murphy, Thomas J., No. 1764987, Private, 295 Bailey Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Evacuated to hospital
-in September, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Murphy, Robert A., No. 2827853, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted May
-27, 1918; joined company October 12th. Taken sick and evacuated
-November 1st.</p>
-
-<p>Nelson, Carl E., No. 2084434, Pvt. 1st Class, 1422 James Avenue, North, Minneapolis,
-Minn. Enlisted June 22, 1918; joined company October 12th;
-wounded (degree undetermined) in right elbow and forearm October 20th;
-rejoined company December 3d.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>Nelson, Otto, No. 3339872, Private, Route 1, Box 65, Stanchfield, Minn.
-Enlisted June 28, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Ness, Sander O., No. 3340000, Private, (address unknown). Enlisted June 27,
-1918; joined company October 12th. Evacuated to hospital sick November
-1st.</p>
-
-<p>Neuffer, Rinehart J., No. 1737319, Private, 50 Wagner Place, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded in
-left leg and thigh September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Newell, Clendenon S., No. 1748544, Sergeant, (Mrs. Leona D. Newell, mother),
-165 Leonia Street, Leonia, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action October 20th by shrapnel through head from
-shell which struck a nearby tree and exploded, killing him while lying in
-his tent, while in support lines behind Grand Pre.</p>
-
-<p>Newell, James McC., No. 1773758, Sergeant (Officer Candidate), (James W.
-McConnell, Uncle), 800 Russell Street, Nashville, Tenn. Enlisted May 5,
-1917; joined company October 27th; appointed 2nd Lieutenant effective
-June 1, 1918, and attached to Company “G,” 311th Infantry, July 15th;
-killed in action October 16, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>North, Harry E., No. 3534857, Private, 1325 West 117th Street, Cleveland,
-Ohio. Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company December 9th. Evacuated
-to hospital December 21st.</p>
-
-<p>Norton, William H., No. 2414757, Sergeant, 1089 Magnolia Avenue, Elizabeth,
-N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Transferred to
-1st Replacement Depot, St. Aignan, for immediate discharge February 13,
-1919.</p>
-
-<p>O’Connell, James M., No. 2450203, Pvt. 1st Class, 2070 Eastern Parkway,
-Brooklyn, N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company April 16th;
-reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp
-Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company December 15th.</p>
-
-<p>O’Gara, John J., No. 1749059, Pvt. 1st Class, 72 Garden Street, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date. Reported wounded
-September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company
-December 15th.</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara, William F., No. 2414066, Private, 267 Pearl Street, Burlington, N. J.
-Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company July 15th. Killed in action September
-19th by shrapnel through head, while digging trenches—the first
-death casualty in company.</p>
-
-<p>O’Neill, William E., No. 1749060, Private, 222 Willow Avenue, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>O’Reilly, John J., No. 2942195, Pvt. 1st Class, 1036 Willow Avenue, Hoboken,
-N. J. Enlisted April 25, 1918; joined company same date. Wounded by
-gas burns October 30th; returned to United States in January, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>O’Rourke, Bernard J., No. 1764989, Private, 78 Eleventh Avenue, New York
-City. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly
-wounded in heel September 19th.</p>
-
-<p>Ohin, Carl L., No. 3341710, Private, Box 6, Osco, Ill. Enlisted July 10, 1918;
-joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>Osterweis, Dayton, No. 2411112, Sergeant, Hotel Endicott, New York City.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Ovrid, Imbert A., No. 3758119, Private, Caperon, Ill. Enlisted August 3, 1918;
-joined company October 12th; reported missing in action October 20th;
-was wounded by piece of rock being thrown against his knee by an
-exploding shell same date; rejoined company December 21st.</p>
-
-<p>Pankow, Arthur F. W., No. 3747293, Bugler, R. F. D. 6, Box 36, Merrill, Wis.
-Enlisted July 23, 1918; joined company October 12th. Evacuated to
-hospital April 24th.</p>
-
-<p>Perry, George H., No. 1746063, 1st Sergeant, 75 Heck Avenue, Ocean Grove,
-N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date; transferred
-to Depot Division 1st Army Corps, A. E. F., July 27th; rejoined
-company October 9th; appointed 1st Sergeant October 10th; evacuated to
-hospital October 26th; rejoined company December 27th; transferred to
-1st Depot Division January 20, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Peter, Charles, No. 1749195, Supply Sergeant, 208 Sherman Avenue, Jersey
-City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date; appointed
-Supply Sergeant November, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Peterson, Elmer J., No. 3334575, Private, Route 1, Box 9, LeRoy, Minn.
-Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Peterson, Lawrence R., No. 1737320, Private, 54 Alma Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Admitted to 14th
-General Hospital July 11th; rejoined company November 1st.</p>
-
-<p>Peterson, Theodore A., No. 1746062, Sergeant, Manasquan, N. J. Enlisted
-September 21, 1917; joined company same date; went on detached service
-with Division Headquarters June 26; dropped from rolls in January, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Pettys, Levi M., No. 1752088, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 5, Cuba, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date; transferred to 153rd Field
-Artillery Brigade July 15th.</p>
-
-<p>Picciano, Michael, No. 1748545, Private, Maple Avenue, Dumont, N. J. Enlisted
-April 26, 1918; joined company same date; reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; returned
-to United States in January 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Pilarski, Walter E., No. 1737322, Pvt. 1st Class, 77 Townsend Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date; severely
-wounded in left apex lung September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Pitarro, Frank, No. 2411636, Pvt. 1st Class, 216 West Front Street, Red Bank,
-N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; reported
-missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany;
-rejoined company January 7, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Pitzrick, William G., No. 3752487, Pvt. 1st Class, Barron, Wis. Enlisted July
-23, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Price, Lory L., No. 2941581, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 6, Marion, Ill. Enlisted
-April 27, 1918; joined company same date; reported missing in action
-September 26; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; rejoined company
-January 7, 1919; mentioned in 78th Division General Orders No. 6 for
-bravery in action September 26, 1918.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>Przyczkowski, Joseph J., No. 2833893, Private, 1041 First Avenue, Milwaukee,
-Wis. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th; wounded in
-left leg (degree undetermined) October 20th; rejoined company December
-12th; taken sick and evacuated to hospital December 28th.</p>
-
-<p>Pushner, Jacob, No. 2954387, Private, 75 Bay Street, Brockton, Mass. Enlisted
-June 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Ranalletta, Achille, No. 3678854, Private, 531 State Street, Rochester, N. Y.
-Enlisted July 22, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Rasmussen, Leslie L., No. 2832009, Corporal, R. F. D. 2, Belmont, Wis.
-Enlisted May 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Ratkiewcus, John, No. 2828386, Private, 2929 West 40th Street, Chicago, Ill.
-Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Reed, Thomas P., No. 2669133, Private, 80 Ravine Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Reid, William M., No. 1746064, Sergeant, 114 West 39th Street, New York City.
-Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date; transferred to
-Army Candidate School September 28th. Mentioned in 78th Division
-General Orders No. 6 for bravery in action September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Renski, John J., No. 1737324, Private, 140 Coit Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded in right
-shoulder and neck September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Richman, Fred, No. 4566016, Private, 8 Vernon Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
-Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Richter, Otto R., No. 2410784, Corporal, Lewis Street, Oakhurst, N. J.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; served with
-Regimental Supply Company during campaign.</p>
-
-<p>Riedel, George I., No. 3747108, Pvt. 1st Class, Mosinee, Wis. Enlisted July 23,
-1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Riess, Eugene, No. 2450873, Private, 141 West Sidney Avenue, Mt. Vernon,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th.</p>
-
-<p>Riskey, John F., No. 3340152, Private, 924 Farrington Avenue, St. Paul, Minn.
-Enlisted June 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Robbins, Charles A., No. 1746061, 1st Sergeant, 150 Summit Street, South
-Manchester, Conn. Enlisted July 3, 1917; joined company September 7th;
-appointed 1st Sergeant August 1, 1918; slightly wounded by shrapnel in
-left leg September 26th; rejoined company December 17th; transferred to
-1st Replacement Depot January 20, 1919; returned to United States in
-March 1919. Decorated with Distinguished Service Cross for bravery in
-action September 26, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Rogers, George H., No. 1746067, Sergeant, Keyport, N. J. Enlisted September
-22, 1917; joined company same date. Gassed September 19, 1918;
-rejoined company November 15th.</p>
-
-<p>Ryan, William H., No. 2413606, Pvt. 1st Class, 157 Chestnut Street, Red Bank,
-N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; reported
-missing in action September 26; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany;
-rejoined company January 7, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Sanders, Will., No. 3662370, Private, Mott, Texas. Enlisted August 8, 1918;
-joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>Sapienza, Sabastiano, No. 2830845, Private, 2910 Wentworth Avenue, Chicago,
-Ill. Enlisted May 25, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Sasso, Aniello, No. 2410785, Private, 110 Aitkens Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Slightly wounded
-in thumb November 4th; rejoined company January 15, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Sawyer, Elwood L., No. 1751858, Sergeant, 413 Morgan Avenue, Palmyra, N. J.
-Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company November 13th. Sailed for overseas
-service with Supply Company 311th Infantry. Transferred to that
-company March 13, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Schelter, John D., No. 1749263, Sergeant, (Mrs. Madeline Schelter, wife), 213
-Terrace Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action by shrapnel September 26th while on
-outpost duty.</p>
-
-<p>Schiefer, Jacob, No. 1764991, Private, 93 Kilburn Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date. Reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; returned
-to United States in January 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Schmid, Alfred, No. 4561896, Corporal, 756 Cauldwell Avenue, Bronx, New
-York. Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Schmidt, Jack, No. 2828065, Corporal, 787½ Fifteenth Street, Milwaukee, Wis.
-Enlisted May 27, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Schmidt, Walter J., No. 1976622, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 1, Binkmille, Ill.
-Enlisted September 17, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Schreiner, George, No. 2832956, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Frances Schreiner,
-mother), 332 Seventeenth Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. Joined company
-October 12, 1918; killed in action October 20th northwest of Grand Pre,
-during an attack on Ferme des Loges.</p>
-
-<p>Schultz, Martin L., No. 2083969, Pvt. 1st Class, 1516 Grand Street, N. E.,
-Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company December 9.</p>
-
-<p>Schultz, Walter, No. 1737326, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Mary Schultz, mother), 223
-Metcalf Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action September 26th by machine gun bullets while
-resisting an enemy counter-attack.</p>
-
-<p>Schwenk, Michael A., No. 1737327, Private, 1012 Smith Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Sciancalepore, Louis, No. 1749063, Private, 229 Clinton Street, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Scory, John, No. 2481989, Mechanic, Box 94, Lansing, Ohio. Enlisted June
-24, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Sculthorp, Warren D., No. 1746059, Mess Sergeant, 165 Riddle Avenue, Long
-Branch, N. J. Enlisted September 5, 1917; joined company same date;
-appointed Mess Sergeant October 1st; transferred to II Army Corps in
-August, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Sculthorpe, Harold, No. 1746075, Cook, 25 Main Street, Asbury Park, N. J.
-Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date; burned by
-mustard gas October 30, 1918; rejoined company December 10th.</p>
-
-<p>Sheridan, Edward J., No. 1745938, Private, Ocean Avenue, Sea Bright, N. J.
-Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date but was afterwards<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-transferred to Headquarters Company, same Regiment; rejoined
-company January 12, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Sheridan, Leon J., No. 4563935, Private, 98 East Court Street, Cortland, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company December 9th; transferred to
-Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Shipman, Maurice, No. 3661183, Pvt. 1st Class, Route 6, Honey Grove, Texas.
-Enlisted August 5, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Siems, Walter, No. 2833423, Pvt. 1st Class, (address unknown). Joined company
-October 12, 1918; severely wounded by shrapnel in right side of
-head and back November 4th.</p>
-
-<p>Skillen, Edmund S., No. 1747131, Corporal, 155 Madison Avenue, Elizabeth,
-N. J. Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date; slightly wounded
-in left leg September 26th; returned to United States in December, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Slover, Luke E., Jr., No. 2411118, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Eva Smith, friend),
-Main Street, Keansburg N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company
-same date. Killed in action in Limey Sector September 26th, by shrapnel,
-while carrying messages for company headquarters. Awarded Distinguished
-Service Cross for bravery in action September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Smith, James E., No. 1738837, Private, 1146 Pierce Avenue, Niagara Falls,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company August 16th; evacuated
-to hospital September 2d; rejoined company December 17th; evacuated
-to hospital December 28th.</p>
-
-<p>Smogola, Anton F., No. 2833924, Private, 1039 Third Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis.
-Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Sobol, Jacob I., No. 4561914, Private, 877 East 105th Street, Bronx, New York.
-Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Sokoloski, Martin J., No. 3330105, Corporal, 1016 West Denham Street, South
-Bend, Ind. Enlisted June 19, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Soldner, Raymond A., No. 1978502, Pvt. 1st Class, Kinmundy, Ill. Enlisted
-October 2, 1917; joined company December 9, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Spensberger, John, No. 3306369, Pvt. 1st Class, 119 East 13th Street, Pittsburgh,
-Kansas. Enlisted June 23, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Stankiewicz, John, No. 2086296, Pvt. 1st Class, 857 North May Street, Chicago,
-Ill. Enlisted February 26, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Stiles, Bert W., No. 2414760, Sergeant, 511 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date. Appointed Company
-Clerk July 21st.</p>
-
-<p>Storck, William H., No. 2932855, Private, Fiat, Ohio. Enlisted June 27, 1918;
-joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Stringfield, Jasper, No. 3498489, Private, R. F. D. 1, Wheat, Tenn. Enlisted
-June 27, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Stuhser, Frank H., No. 3347505, Private, (Peter Stuhser, father), 728 Second
-Street, Manasha, Wis. Joined company October 12, 1918. Killed in action
-October 30th by shrapnel while in support lines behind Grand Pre.</p>
-
-<p>Sullivan, John L., No. 1764992, Pvt. 1st Class, (Mrs. Martin Kelly, aunt), 141
-Babcock Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company
-same date; killed in action November 4th, at Les Petites Armoises, by
-machine gun bullets, during an attack upon enemy machine gun nests.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>Sullivan, William, No. 3751681, Private, 314 von Minden Street, St. Paul, Minn.
-Enlisted July 25, 1918; joined company October 12th; transferred to
-Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Sutton, Lewis Z., No. 1745988, Corporal, 324 West Main Street, Moorestown,
-N. J. Enlisted September 18, 1917; joined company May 3, 1918; reported
-missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
-Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Suwalski, Jan, No. 1737331, Pvt. 1st Class, 102 Montgomery Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Sweeney, Hugh J., No. 1746066, Sergeant, (William Sweeney, father), 123
-West Main Street, Moorestown, N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined
-company same date. Slightly wounded in foot by ricochet bullet September
-26, 1918, but nothing further was heard from him.</p>
-
-<p>Switalski, Ignatz W., No. 3329487, Private, Cudahy, Wis. Enlisted May 28,
-1918; joined company October 12th; slightly wounded in left hip October
-25th; rejoined company December 4th.</p>
-
-<p>Szymczak, John, No. 1737332, Private, 911 Smith Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Tannenbaum, David, No. 4566084, Private, 55 East Second Street, New York
-City. Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Taras, Sebastiano, No. 1748548, Private (John Taras, brother), 128 Central
-Avenue, Leonia, N. J. Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same
-date. Wounded in action September 26th (degree undetermined); reported
-died of wounds (date and place unknown).</p>
-
-<p>Tarlack, Bernard, No. 2060527, Private, 3128 Lincoln Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
-Enlisted September 19, 1917; joined company October 12, 1918.</p>
-
-<p>Tatoian, John C, No. 3329255, Corporal, 11700 Lowe Avenue, West Pullman,
-Ill. Enlisted May 3, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Tauber, Gustave, No. 2670074, Private, 25 McKibben Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 4, 1918; joined company April 16th; reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; rejoined
-company January 7, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Thompson, George M., No. 1746073, Mechanic, 210 Academy Street, Trenton,
-N. J. Enlisted September 8, 1918; joined company same date; reported
-missing in action September 26, 1918; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
-Germany; rejoined company January 7, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Tietje, John F., No. 4 561770, Private, 175 Park Avenue, Corning, N. Y. Enlisted
-August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th; transferred to
-Graves Registration Service January 28, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Tuthill, George L., No. 2450789, Mechanic, (Mrs. E. W. Tuthill, mother),
-Jamesport, New York. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April
-16th; wounded in right arm October 20th; died of Hypostatic Pneumonia
-February 25, 1919, at Base Hospital No. 77, caused by wounds; buried in
-grave number 363, American Burial Plot, assigned, Beaune, Cote d’or,
-France.</p>
-
-<p>Ullrich, Lewis W., No. 2061989, Private, 3711 North Troy Street, Chicago, Ill.
-Enlisted March 12, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i113.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">4th Platoon, Flavigny, France, 1919.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="hangingindent">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>Vafiadis, William K., No. 2412153, Private, 182 Broadway, Long Branch, N. J.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Severely wounded
-in right shoulder and face September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Venche, Tony, No. 2411124, Pvt. 1st Class, Matawan, N. J. Enlisted February
-25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Vermette, Gilbert W., No. 4563913, Private, R. F. D. 2, Malone, N. Y. Enlisted
-August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Vieths, Friedrich G., No. 2082894, Corporal, Box “F,” Goodhue, Minn. Enlisted
-June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th; transferred to 1st Replacement
-Depot, St. Aignan, April 6, 1919, for immediate discharge.</p>
-
-<p>Vorta, Nicholas, No. 2450906, Private, (Mrs. Agnes Vorta, mother), 1444
-Edwards Avenue, Bronx, Westchester County, N. Y. Enlisted April 1,
-1918; joined company April 16th; slightly wounded in scalp September
-20th, received 1st Aid and returned to duty same date; killed in action
-September 26th by pistol bullet in head, shot by German officer, during
-general advance of company.</p>
-
-<p>Vrieze, Reuben, No. 2080897, Private, Route 1, Lime Spring, Iowa. Enlisted
-June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Viscuso, Frank, No. 1749080, Private, 641 Grove Street, Jersey City, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Wallace, Walter R., No. 3659523, Private, Carlsbad, New Mexico. Enlisted
-August 5, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Wandry, Carl, No. 3347495, Mechanic (address unknown). Enlisted July 22,
-1918; joined company October 12th; slightly wounded in right leg
-October 30th.</p>
-
-<p>Warner, Theodore H., No. 2450897, Private, c/o Mrs. T. W. Sadlier (sister),
-Quoque, New York. Enlisted April 1, 1918; joined company April 16th;
-reported missing in action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt,
-Germany; rejoined company January 16, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Webb, William, No. 2409728, Pvt. 1st Class, 170 Jefferson Street, Trenton,
-N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; slightly
-wounded in right hand September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Weber, Benjamin, No. 1746086, Mess Sergeant, 355 Joline Avenue, Long
-Branch, N. J. Enlisted November 19, 1917; joined company same date;
-with sergeant Welsh captured the first prisoner taken by the company;
-appointed Mess Sergeant November 10th.</p>
-
-<p>Weidman, John C., No. 1737335, Corporal, (Mrs. Justina Weidman, mother),
-364 Watson Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company
-same date; killed in action September 24th by direct hit from shell while
-on outpost duty.</p>
-
-<p>Weinstein, Nathan, No. 4561941, Private, 603 Prospect Avenue, Bronx, N. Y.
-Enlisted August 26, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Wekony, Julius, No. 2059420, Cook, 4907 West Eddy Street, Chicago, Ill.
-Enlisted October 4, 1917; joined regiment October 12, 1918; joined company
-November 23d.</p>
-
-<p>Welsh, Edward J., No. 2409727, Sergeant, c/o Margaret Eisenberg (sister),
-1719 Carlton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Enlisted February 25, 1918;
-joined company same date; with sergeant Weber captured the first prisoner<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-taken by the company; severely wounded by seven machine gun bullets in
-right wrist and both arms October 20th; cited for bravery in Limey Sector;
-decorated with Distinguished Service Cross for bravery in Meuse-Argonne
-fight.</p>
-
-<p>Westlund, Gust V., No. 2074345, Pvt. 1st Class, 229 Twentieth Avenue, South,
-Minneapolis, Minn. Enlisted June 24, 1918; joined company October 12th.</p>
-
-<p>Wheeler, Raymerd, No. 2932858, Pvt. 1st Class, Peoli, Ohio. Enlisted June
-27, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>White, Henry R., No. 1746087, Bugler, Center Street, Sea Bright, N. J. Enlisted
-September 21, 1917; joined company same date; slightly wounded September
-26th; returned to United States in December.</p>
-
-<p>White, Thomas A., No. 1764994, Corporal, 291 Babcock Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
-Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>White, Tracy S., No. 2410793, 1st Sergeant, 1215 L Street, Belmar, N. J.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date. Appointed 1st
-Sergeant November 10th; decorated with Distinguished Service Cross for
-bravery in Meuse-Argonne battles.</p>
-
-<p>Willett, Cornelius V. S., No. 2411126, Mechanic, Port Monmouth, N. J. Enlisted
-February 25, 1918; joined company same date; slightly wounded
-October 20th.</p>
-
-<p>Williams, Claude L., No. 1750243, Corporal, R. F. D. 1, Hector, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Williams, John, No. 1749065, Corporal, 116 Bloomfield Street, Hoboken, N. J.
-Enlisted April 26, 1918; joined company same date; slightly wounded
-in left hip September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Willmore, Herbert McK., No. 2941605, Pvt. 1st Class, R. F. D. 3, West Frankfort,
-Ill. Enlisted April 27, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Wilson, Carol, No. 2413196, Sergeant, New Street, Sea Bright, N. J. Enlisted
-February 25, 1918; joined company same date; Mess Sergeant from July
-21st to October 20th, at which time he was transferred to Army Candidate
-School; rejoined company December 17th; transferred to Headquarters
-Company, 311th Infantry, and appointed Regimental Color Sergeant,
-February 3, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Winemiller, Robert B., No. 1746088, Bugler, 320 Tuttle Avenue, Spring Lake,
-N. J. Enlisted September 21, 1917; joined company same date; slightly
-wounded in left hand September 26; rejoined company December 1st.</p>
-
-<p>Wise, Henry B., No. 2670038, Pvt. 1st Class, 215 West 101st Street, New York
-City. Enlisted April 4, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Wolcott, George T., No. 2411649, Corporal, (Mrs. Harriet Wolcott, wife), 214
-Newark Avenue, Bloomfield, N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined
-company same date; killed in action September 26th by machine gun
-bullet while rushing an enemy machine gun.</p>
-
-<p>Wolff, George C., No. 3454499, Pvt. 1st Class, 1808 Emma Street, Menominee,
-Mich. Enlisted July 14, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Wolfskeil, John E., No. 2414764, Corporal, 318 Linden Street, Elizabeth, N. J.
-Enlisted April 2, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>Wolley, Harry T., No. 2410794, Corporal, 132 Main Avenue, Ocean Grove, N. J.
-Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date; slightly wounded
-in right hand September 26th; returned to United States in February 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Wolotkin, Benjamin, No. 4566100, Private, 24 Cannon Street, New York City.
-Enlisted August 28, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Woolley, Francis P., No. 2411651, Corporal, 388 Columbus Place, Long Branch,
-N. J. Enlisted February 25, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-
-<p>Woolley, James B., No. 2409730, Corporal, Farmingdale, N. J. Enlisted February
-25, 1918; joined company, same date; reported missing in action September
-26th; was wounded and evacuated to hospital same date; rejoined
-company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Worsfold, Albert J., No. 3335949, Private (Mrs. Hannah Worsfold, mother),
-Stark, Ill. Enlisted June 25, 1918; joined company October 12th; killed
-in action November 4th near Les Petites Armoises.</p>
-
-<p>Zalace, Dan C. Z., No. 3656966, Private, Eaton, Colorado. Enlisted June 24,
-1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Zanni, Michael, No. 2450800, Private, (Raffaeli Santone, friend), Ardsley, N. Y.
-Enlisted March 30, 1918; joined company April 16th; killed in action by
-sniper’s bullet through head, September 26th.</p>
-
-<p>Zenzian, Kajetan, No. 2422045, Private, 437 Fourteenth Street, West New York,
-N. J. Enlisted May 29, 1918; joined company December 9th.</p>
-
-<p>Ziefski, Frank, No. 1764997, Private, 224 Winona Street, Buffalo, N. Y. Enlisted
-April 3, 1918; joined company same date; reported missing in
-action September 26th; was prisoner at Camp Rastatt, Germany; rejoined
-company January 7, 1919.</p>
-
-<p>Zwolinkiewicz, Frank, No. 1737337, Corporal, 132 Detroit Street, Buffalo,
-N. Y. Enlisted April 3, 1918; joined company same date.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ROSTER OF THE COMPANY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p class="ph3">When Sailing Overseas<br />
-Replacements from 86th Division<br />
-Replacements from other Units of the 311th Infantry<br />
-All other Replacements</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<h4>WHEN SAILING OVERSEAS</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<p class="center">1st Sergeant</p>
-<p>Maxwell B. Ertwine</p>
-
-<p class="center">Mess Sergeant</p>
-<p>Warren D. Sculthorp</p>
-
-<p class="center">Supply Sergeant</p>
-<p>Joseph Levy</p>
-
-<p class="center">Sergeants</p>
-<p>James McC. Newell<br />
-Charles A. Robbins<br />
-Theodore A. Peterson<br />
-George H. Perry<br />
-William M. Reid<br />
-Peyton R. Anness<br />
-Hugh J. Sweeney<br />
-George H. Rogers<br />
-Alexander M. Hayden<br />
-Howard C. Lehy<br />
-Wilfred E. Haynes<br />
-Carol Wilson</p>
-
-<p class="center">Corporals</p>
-<p>James E. Jones<br />
-Edward J. Johnson<br />
-Robert B. Winemiller<br />
-Harry T. Wolley<br />
-Edward F. Hennessey<br />
-John A. Geoghegan<br />
-Walter DeGrote<br />
-Joseph H. Fahey<br />
-George T. Wolcott<br />
-Francis P. Woolley<br />
-Bert W. Stiles<br />
-Joseph Apicelli<br />
-Frank Zwolinkiewicz<br />
-Joseph R. McGarrity<br />
-L. P. Morton Morris<br />
-Tracy S. White<br />
-Dayton Osterweis<br />
-Walter J. Ahearn<br />
-John C. Weidman</p>
-
-<p class="center">Mechanics</p>
-<p>Lester E. Farry<br />
-George M. Thompson<br />
-George L. Tuthill<br />
-Cornelius V. S. Willett</p>
-
-<p class="center">Cooks</p>
-<p>Harold Sculthorpe<br />
-Walter deBruin<br />
-Albert J. Lusier<br />
-Joseph J. Lang</p>
-
-<p class="center">Buglers</p>
-<p>Henry R. White<br />
-James H. Lykes</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates 1st Class</p>
-<p>William B. Ackerman<br />
-Joseph S. Aldridge<br />
-Earl Barnes<br />
-John M. Benzing<br />
-William G. Butler<br />
-Dominick Calabrese<br />
-William J. Campbell<br />
-Samuel E. Chiaradio<br />
-Herbert M. P. Cocker<br />
-Lawrence M. Croft<br />
-Albert Deile, Jr.<br />
-Thomas E. Devine<br />
-Eugene Ely<br />
-William G. Emerson<br />
-John F. Fahey<br />
-Gustave E. Fleischmann<br />
-Sam Freedman<br />
-John G. Hansenberger<br />
-Raymond L. Harriss<br />
-George W. Heck<br />
-George A. Heichberger<br />
-George A. Hogan<br />
-Henry L. Huston<br />
-Isidore Kaufman<br />
-Vallie J. Kilburn<br />
-Harry J. Laurencell<br />
-Frederick H. McCarthy<br />
-Edward M. Malone<br />
-Charles J. Mouser<br />
-Clendenon S. Newell<br />
-Bernard J. O’Rourke<br />
-Charles Peter<br />
-Levi M. Pettys<br />
-Walter E. Pilarski<br />
-William H. Ryan<br />
-John D. Schelter<br />
-Walter Schultz<br />
-Edmund S. Skillen<br />
-Luke E. Slover, Jr.<br />
-Lewis Z. Sutton<br />
-Tony Venche<br />
-Theodore H. Warner<br />
-William M. Webb<br />
-Benjamin Weber<br />
-Edward J. Welsh<br />
-Thomas A. White<br />
-John E. Wolfskeil<br />
-James B. Woolley</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates</p>
-<p>William Y. Ackerman<br />
-Walter G. Amann<br />
-George J. Anderson<br />
-Stanislaw Andrzejewski<br />
-William A. Angevine<br />
-Aldo Annibalini<br />
-Carmine Arcuri<br />
-Carmelo Baiano<br />
-Walter V. Ball<br />
-William Baumann<br />
-Mervin Bement<br />
-John Bernhard<br />
-Barnett Bernstein<br />
-Harry C. Best<br />
-William Birk<br />
-Joseph Bishop<br />
-James Blair<br />
-George L. Blount<br />
-William D. Bogart<br />
-John F. Byreiter<br />
-Stanley F. Bogucki<br />
-Joseph A. Boucher<br />
-Edward H. Boyle<br />
-Bertrand G. Brooks<br />
-Louis Buechler<br />
-Harold E. Burchell<br />
-John F. Burke<br />
-James E. Cahill<br />
-Frederick S. Campanini<br />
-Anthony Cardell<br />
-Joseph R. Cassely<br />
-Natale A. Centofante<br />
-Pietro Colaguori<br /><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-Rosario Collura<br />
-Frank J. Connolly<br />
-Elmer W. Cook<br />
-Henry A. Cordes<br />
-Alonzo Cottrell<br />
-John E. Culkowski<br />
-Joseph M. Curcio<br />
-Matthew V. Curtin<br />
-Frank Czajka<br />
-Michael Daeschler<br />
-Guisseppe Damato<br />
-Harvey R. Dash<br />
-Louis F. Denler<br />
-James J. Diskin<br />
-John E. Donohue<br />
-Harry Effingham<br />
-William J. Ellison<br />
-Patrick J. Feeney<br />
-Elmer Fellows<br />
-William H. Fielding<br />
-Jacob J. Fischer<br />
-Joseph Formes<br />
-Albert P. Frey<br />
-William E. Furlong<br />
-Julius Gaier<br />
-Edward F. Glenn<br />
-Israel Goldberg<br />
-Joseph F. Goodwin<br />
-Joseph G. Greenberg<br />
-Edward G. Gress<br />
-Carl E. Griffin<br />
-Charles F. Hallock<br />
-Max Halpern<br />
-George Hauber<br />
-James J. Healey<br />
-Loran L. Heiple<br />
-Fred Henne<br />
-Louis R. Heymer<br />
-Joseph L. Hill<br />
-Harold E. Holly<br />
-Eugene P. Hughes<br />
-Charles A. Hunterbrink<br />
-William Jacobi<br />
-Alexander Janicki<br />
-Charles W. Johnson<br />
-Albert B. Kane<br />
-Jay B. Karnes<br />
-Henry Kilbourn<br />
-Edward W. Kindt<br />
-John G. Kitson<br />
-Stanley E. Klosiak<br />
-William Koegel<br />
-Paul Keyes<br />
-Antoni Kopec<br />
-Walter Krygier<br />
-Alexandre Kuczkowski<br />
-Irving W. Lander<br />
-Fred C. H. Lange<br />
-Harry LaVigne<br />
-Joseph Ledwin<br />
-Cyril T. Leonard<br />
-William G. Long<br />
-Adam J. Lush<br />
-James E. Mackley<br />
-Boleslaw Makowiecki<br />
-Salvatore Martocci<br />
-Walter W. McAslan<br />
-Norman McCumber<br />
-James C. McMahon<br />
-William C. McMahon<br />
-John C. Meister<br />
-John Mero<br />
-Michael J. Miller<br />
-Angelo Morelli<br />
-Thomas J. Murphy<br />
-Rinehart J. Neuffer<br />
-William H. Norton<br />
-James M. O’Connell<br />
-John J. O’Gara<br />
-William E. O’Neill<br />
-John J. O’Reilly<br />
-Lawrence R. Peterson<br />
-Michael Picciano<br />
-Frank Pitarro<br />
-Lory L. Price<br />
-Thomas P. Reed<br />
-John J. Renski<br />
-Otto R. Richter<br />
-Eugene Riess<br />
-Aniello Sasso<br />
-Jacob Schiefer<br />
-Louis Sciancalepore<br />
-Michael A. Schwenk<br />
-John L. Sullivan<br />
-Jan Suwalski<br />
-John Szymczak<br />
-Sebastiano Taras<br />
-Gustave Tauber<br />
-William K. Vafiadis<br />
-Frank Viscuso<br />
-Nicholas Vorta<br />
-Claude L. Williams<br />
-John Williams<br />
-Herbert McK. Willmore<br />
-Henry B. Wise<br />
-Michael Zanni<br />
-Frank Ziefski</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<h4>JOINED OVERSEAS</h4>
-
-<p class="center">From Other Units of the 311th Infantry</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p>Frank W. Clark<br />
-Karl K. Heisler<br />
-John C. Lambert<br />
-William F. O’Hara<br />
-Elwood L. Sawyer<br />
-Edward J. Sheridan</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center">From 86th Division</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p>Oscar Albitz<br />
-John A. Anderson<br />
-John A. Awe<br />
-Hazar Barsamian<br />
-Joseph Benzschawel<br />
-Peter Bloome<br />
-Gust W. Bloomquist<br />
-Walter Boettcher<br />
-Edward Borg<br />
-Arthur F. Brand<br />
-Carl M. Brenner<br />
-Elijah E. Brown<br />
-Peter E. Cantu<br />
-Charlie Carr<br />
-Harry Closeman<br />
-Joseph Congelosi<br />
-Charles Corbine<br />
-John Danielson<br />
-Stanley Deleskie<br />
-Joseph P. Dollard<br />
-Walter A. Dreher<br />
-Robert E. Edgerly<br />
-Alfredo Ennocenti<br />
-Albert C. Erickson<br />
-Gustave F. Erlandson<br />
-Norman W. Fay<br />
-Frank Ferrians<br />
-Othmar S. B. Gantert<br />
-Paul E. Golling<br />
-John Haegerl<br />
-Otto C. Hagedorn<br />
-Emil Hansen<br />
-William A. Hardies<br />
-John Hess<br />
-Joseph Hillinski<br />
-Harry H. Huntley<br />
-Louis Janczjewski<br />
-Erick P. Jern<br />
-Carl E. Johnson<br /><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-Lloyd F. Johnson<br />
-Oscar E. Johnson<br />
-Emil B. Josephson<br />
-Leon L. Kahn<br />
-Ignatius S. Kapacius<br />
-John J. Kapala<br />
-John S. Kazmierczak<br />
-Leandrew T. Kelley<br />
-Herman G. Koehler<br />
-Theodore A. Koster<br />
-Joseph E. Kronhelm<br />
-Peter W. Kropidlowski<br />
-Carl A. Kuecker<br />
-George Kunferman<br />
-Will J. Lammert<br />
-Phillip J. Larkin<br />
-Olaf A. Larson<br />
-Oscar L. Larson<br />
-Edward A. Leitzke<br />
-Arnold W. Lent<br />
-Kittel N. Letmolee<br />
-John A. Lineski<br />
-Rocco Lotesto<br />
-Emil A. Lueders<br />
-William McDonald<br />
-Christ Madsen<br />
-William P. Magaski<br />
-Frank J. Marcinkiewicz<br />
-Charles H. Martin<br />
-Lewis N. Mergan<br />
-John W. Morrison<br />
-Robert A. Murphy<br />
-Carl E. Nelson<br />
-Otto Nelson<br />
-Sander O. Ness<br />
-Carl L. Ohrn<br />
-Imbert A. Ovrid<br />
-Arthur F. W. Pankow<br />
-Elmer J. Peterson<br />
-William G. Pitzrick<br />
-Joseph J. Przyczkowski<br />
-Leslie L. Rasmussen<br />
-John Ratkiewcus<br />
-George I. Riedel<br />
-John F. Riskey<br />
-Sabastiano Sapienza<br />
-George Schreiner<br />
-Jack Schmidt<br />
-Walter S. Siems<br />
-Anton F. Smogola<br />
-Martin J. Sokoloski<br />
-John Spensberger<br />
-John Stankiewicz<br />
-Frank H. Stuhser<br />
-William Sullivan<br />
-Ignatz W. Switalski<br />
-Bernard Tarlack<br />
-John C. Tatoian<br />
-Lewis W. Ullrich<br />
-Friedrich G. Vieths<br />
-Reuben Vrieze<br />
-Carl L. Wandry<br />
-Gust V. Westlund<br />
-Julius Wekony<br />
-Albert J. Worsfold</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="center">Miscellaneous</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p>Anthony Accetturo<br />
-Frank C. Allen<br />
-Harry R. Broomhall<br />
-Levi C. Cowser<br />
-Earl B. Clark<br />
-Harry Lee Cole<br />
-Newton C. Ashlock<br />
-Clarence R. Cobble<br />
-Wilbert A. Eastman<br />
-Morris F. Fergus<br />
-Max Goodman<br />
-Roy L. Hoeck<br />
-George J. Kreiner<br />
-Julius Lipowsky<br />
-John G. Lawton<br />
-William D. Limbert<br />
-Oscar Mandinach<br />
-Max Moroshick<br />
-Sam Meltzer<br />
-Louis A. Maske<br />
-Paul Morath<br />
-James P. McGuire<br />
-Harry E. North<br />
-Jacob Pushner<br />
-Fred Richman<br />
-Achille Ranalletta<br />
-Alfred Schmid<br />
-Jacob I. Sobol<br />
-Jasper Stringfield<br />
-Maurice Shipman<br />
-Will Sanders<br />
-Leon J. Sheridan<br />
-John Scory<br />
-Walter G. Schmidt<br />
-Raymond A. Soldner<br />
-William G. Storck<br />
-James E. Smith<br />
-Martin L. Schultz<br />
-David Tannenbaum<br />
-John F. Tietje<br />
-Gilbert W. Vermette<br />
-Walter R. Wallace<br />
-Nathan Weinstein<br />
-Benjamin Wolotkin<br />
-George C. Wolff<br />
-Raymerd Wheeler<br />
-Kajetan Zenzian<br />
-Dan C. Z. Zalace</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">NUMBER OF OFFICERS AND MEN IN THE COMPANY BY STATES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-
-<tr><td>&#160;</td><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Original Company</td><td class="tdc" colspan="2">&#160; &#160; Replacements &#160; &#160;</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc">State</td><td class="tdc">Officers</td><td class="tdc">Men</td><td class="tdc">Officers</td><td class="tdc"> &#160; &#160; Men </td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>Alabama</td><td colspan="2">&#160;</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>California</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Colorado</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Connecticut</td><td class="tdr" colspan="2">1</td><td colspan="2">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Illinois</td><td class="tdr" colspan="2">5</td><td class="tdr" colspan="2">30</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Indiana</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Iowa</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Kansas</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Maryland</td><td class="tdr" colspan="2">2</td><td colspan="2">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Massachusetts</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Michigan</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Minnesota</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">23</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Nebraska</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>New Jersey</td><td class="tdr" colspan="2">115</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">8</td></tr>
-<tr><td>New Mexico</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>New York</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">100</td><td class="tdr">3</td><td class="tdr">17</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Ohio</td><td class="tdr" colspan="3">1</td><td class="tdr">8</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Oregon</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Pennsylvania</td><td class="tdr" colspan="2">6</td><td colspan="2">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr><td>South Carolina</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Tennessee</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr" colspan="2">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Texas</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">3</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Wisconsin</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">37</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2">—</td><td class="tdr">——</td><td class="tdr">—</td><td class="tdr">——</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2">6</td><td class="tdr">232</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">140 </td></tr>
-<tr><td>Canada</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Unknown</td><td class="tdr" colspan="4">17</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2">—</td><td class="tdr">——</td><td class="tdr">—</td><td class="tdr">——</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdc">Total</td><td class="tdr">6</td><td class="tdr">232</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">158</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="ph4">NUMBER OF CASUALTIES IN THE COMPANY</p>
-
-<table>
-<tr><td>&#160;</td><td class="tdc">Officers</td><td class="tdc">&#160; &#160; Men</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Killed in Action</td><td class="tdr"> 1</td><td class="tdr">35</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Died of Wounds</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">12</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Died of Disease</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2"> —</td><td class="tdr">——</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2"> 2</td><td class="tdr">47 </td></tr>
-<tr><td>Wounded in Action</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">83</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Accidentally Wounded</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Gassed</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">10</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Missing in Action</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">22</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2"> —</td><td class="tdr">——</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tdc">Total—all classes</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">168</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF CASUALTIES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h4>KILLED IN ACTION</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p class="center">1st Lieut.</p>
-<p>Roy A. Schuyler</p>
-
-<p class="center">Sergeants</p>
-<p>Lehy, Howard C.<br />
-Newell, Clendedon S.<br />
-Newell, James McC.<br />
-Schelter, John D.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Corporals</p>
-<p>Apicelli, Joseph<br />
-Weidman, John C.<br />
-Wolcott, George T.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Pvts. 1st Class</p>
-<p>Butler, William G.<br />
-Deleskie, Stanley<br />
-Effingham, Harry<br />
-Erlandson, Gustave F.<br />
-Hansenberger, John G.<br />
-Laurencell, Harry J.<br />
-Lykes, James H.<br />
-Schreiner, George<br />
-Schultz, Walter<br />
-Slover, Luke E.<br />
-Sullivan, John L.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates</p>
-<p>Arcuri, Carmine<br />
-Burchell, Harold E.<br />
-Cahill, James E.<br />
-Cantu, Peter E.<br />
-Cole, Harry L.<br />
-Dollard, Joseph P.<br />
-Hardies, William A.<br />
-Kindt, Edward W.<br />
-Koegel, William<br />
-Koehler, Herman G.<br />
-Kropidlowski, Peter W.<br />
-Makowiecki, Boleslau<br />
-O’Hara, William F.<br />
-Stuhser, Frank H.<br />
-Vorta, Nicholas<br />
-Worsfold, Albert J.<br />
-Zanni, Michael</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<h4>DIED OF WOUNDS</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<p class="center">1st Lieut.</p>
-<p>William S. Lahey</p>
-
-<p class="center">Mechanics</p>
-<p>Farry, Lester E.<br />
-Tuthill, George L.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Pvts. 1st Class</p>
-<p><a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>Ackerman, William B.<br />
-Burke, John F.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates</p>
-<p>Ellison, William J.<br />
-Erickson, Albert C.<br />
-Kahn, Leon L.<br />
-Kuczkowski, Alexandre<br />
-Lietzke, Edward A.<br />
-Maske, Louis A.<br />
-Morath, Paul<br />
-Taras, Sebastiano</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<h4>GASSED</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<p class="center">Sergeant</p>
-<p>Rogers, George H.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Cooks</p>
-<p>deBruin, Walter<br />
-Sculthorpe, Harold</p>
-
-<p class="center">Pvts. 1st Class</p>
-<p>Amann, Walter G.<br />
-Centofante, Natale A.<br />
-Chiaradio, Samuel E.<br />
-Cordes, Henry A.<br />
-O’Reilly, John J.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates</p>
-<p>Hughes, Eugene P.<br />
-Limbert, William D.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<h4>ACCIDENTALLY WOUNDED</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<p class="center">Corporal</p>
-<p>Jones, James E.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Pvts. 1st Class</p>
-<p>Barnes, Earl<br />
-Campanini, Frederick S.<br />
-Fleischmann, Gustave E.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates</p>
-<p>Damato, Guisseppe<br />
-Magaski, William P.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<h4>WOUNDED IN ACTION</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<p class="center">2nd Lieut.</p>
-<p>Henry M. Merrill</p>
-
-<p class="center">1st Sergeant</p>
-<p>Charles A. Robbins</p>
-
-<p class="center">Sergeants</p>
-<p>Fahey, Joseph H.<br />
-Hill, Joseph L.<br />
-Sweeney, Hugh J.<br />
-Welsh, Edward J.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Corporals</p>
-<p>Congelosi, Joseph<br />
-Hauber, George<br />
-Heck, George W.<br />
-Larkin, Phillip J.<br />
-McGarrity, Joseph R.<br />
-Morris, L. P. Morton<br />
-Skillen, Edmund S.<br />
-Williams, John<br />
-Wolley, Harry T.<br />
-Woolley, James B.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Mechanics</p>
-<p>Wandry, Carl L.<br />
-Willett, Cornelius</p>
-
-<p class="center">Buglers</p>
-<p>Winemiller, Robert B.<br />
-White, Henry R.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Pvts. 1st Class</p>
-<p>Chiaradio, Samuel E.<br />
-Ely, Eugene<br />
-Feeney, Patrick J.<br />
-Freedman, Sam<br />
-Harriss, Raymond L.<br />
-Henne, Fred<br />
-Huston, Henry L.<br />
-Johnson, Carl E.<br />
-Kaufman, Isidore<br />
-Kuecker, Carl A.<br />
-McAslan, Walter W.<br />
-Malone, Edward M.<br />
-Nelson, Carl E.<br />
-O’Rourke, Bernard J.<br />
-Pilarski, Walter E.<br />
-Siems, Walter S.<br />
-Webb, William M.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates</p>
-<p>Annibalini, Aldo<br />
-Baiano, Carmelo<br />
-Barsamian, Hazar<br />
-Bogucki, Stanley F.<br />
-Boucher, Joseph A.<br />
-Brenner, Carl M.<br />
-Brooks, Bertrand G.<br />
-Cook, Elmer W.<br />
-Curcio, Joseph M.<br />
-Curtin, Matthew V.<br />
-Czajka, Frank<br />
-Danielson, John<br />
-Diskin, James J.<br />
-Donohue, John E.<br />
-Fielding, William H.<br />
-Formes, Joseph<br />
-Furlong, William E.<br />
-Gaier, Julius<br />
-Goldberg, Israel<br />
-Hallock, Charles F.<br />
-Heiple, Loran L.<br />
-Heymer, Louis R.<br />
-Huntley, Harry H.<br />
-Jacobi, William<br />
-Janczjewski, Louis<br />
-Janicki, Alexander<br />
-Johnson, Charles W.<br />
-Johnson, Oscar E.<br />
-Klosiak, Stanley E.<br />
-Krygier, Walter<br />
-Lange, Fred. C. H.<br />
-Larson, Olaf A.<br />
-LaVigne, Harry<br />
-Ledwin, Joseph<br />
-Lent, Arnold W.<br />
-McCumber, Norman<br />
-McGuire, James P.<br />
-McMahon, James C.<br />
-Mackley, James E.<br />
-Mero, John<br />
-Neuffer, Rinehart J.<br />
-Ovrid, Imbert A.<br />
-Przyczkowski, Joseph J.<br />
-Renski, John J.<br />
-Sasso, Aniello<br />
-Switalski, Ignatz W.<br />
-Vafiadis, William K.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<h4><a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a>MISSING IN ACTION</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<p class="center">1st Lieut.</p>
-<p>Herbert R. Vanderbilt</p>
-
-<p class="center">Sergeant</p>
-<p>Hayden, Alexander M.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Corporal</p>
-<p>Sutton, Lewis Z.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Mechanic</p>
-<p>Thompson, George M.</p>
-
-<p>Pvts. 1st Class</p>
-<p>Benzing, John M.<br />
-<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a>Cocker, Herbert M. P.<br />
-Mouser, Charles J.<br />
-O’Connell, James M.<br />
-<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a>O’Gara, John J.<br />
-Pitarro, Frank<br />
-Price, Lory L.<br />
-Ryan, William H.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Privates</p>
-<p>Bernhard, John<br />
-Birk, William<br />
-Bishop, Joseph<br />
-Blount, George L.<br />
-Lang, Joseph J.<br />
-Lush, Adam J.<br />
-Picciano, Michael<br />
-Schiefer, Jacob<br />
-Tauber, Gustave<br />
-Warner, Theodore H.<br />
-Ziefski, Frank</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">MEMBERS OF COMPANY “B,” 311TH INFANTRY WHO WERE DECORATED<br />
-WITH THE DISTINGUISHED SERVICE CROSS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>FIRST SERGEANT, CHARLES A. ROBBINS.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two kilometers
-northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, Sergeant Bobbins, although painfully wounded
-in the knee, during advance, he continued to the objective, rendered valuable
-assistance in reorganizing his company and refused to retire until ordered to do
-so by Company Commander. He thereupon helped to carry several other
-wounded to the First Aid Station before his own condition was observed and
-he was evacuated.</p>
-</div>
-<p>FIRST SERGEANT, TRACY S. WHITE.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>For extraordinary heroism in action near Ferme des Loges, France, 19th
-October, 1918. When the position his company held was enfiladed and communication
-to the rear cut off, he volunteered to carry a message to the battalion
-commander after several runners had been killed in the attempt. Crossing
-ground swept by intense machine gun and artillery fire, he delivered the
-message and returned with orders as to the disposition of the company.</p>
-</div>
-<p>SERGEANT, JOSEPH H. FAHEY.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two kilometers
-northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, when his platoon was enfiladed by several enemy
-machine guns, made three attempts to rush same, retiring only when he and his
-companions had been badly wounded or killed.</p>
-
-<p>Sergeant Fahey was also decorated with the French Croix de Guerre.</p>
-</div>
-<p>SERGEANT, EDWARD J. WELSH.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 24, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two kilometers northeast
-of Vieville-en-Haye, while his platoon was holding the outpost line, under
-heavy shell fire and in the open, Sergeant (then Corporal) Welsh’s platoon
-commander and all platoon sergeants were killed or wounded. He promptly
-took charge, reorganizing his platoon, and held his sector until relieved.</p>
-</div>
-<p>PRIVATE 1st CLASS, JOSEPH S. ALDRIDGE, JR.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On the night of September 24-25, 1918, at Bois de Grande, Fontaine, two
-kilometers northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, Pvt. 1st Class Aldridge carried messages
-repeatedly between Company and Battalion Headquarters through a
-heavy enemy barrage; also took place of a wounded litter bearer and brought
-in wounded under shell fire.</p>
-</div>
-<p>PRIVATE 1st CLASS, LUKE E. SLOVER, JR. (Deceased).</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On the night of September 24-25, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, two
-kilometers northeast of Vieville-en-Haye, Private 1st Class Slover carried
-messages repeatedly between Company and Battalion Headquarters through a
-heavy enemy barrage; also took place of a wounded litter bearer and brought
-in wounded under heavy shell fire.</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">MEMBERS OF COMPANY “B,” 311TH INFANTRY MENTIONED IN<br />
-78TH DIVISION GENERAL ORDERS NO. 6</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>EXTRACT: “The Division Commander desires to record in the General
-Orders of the 78th Division some of the deeds of men of this command which
-were marked by the display of the highest of soldierly qualities—initiative,
-dauntless courage, self-sacrifice and steadfast devotion to duty which offered a
-constant inspiration to all who came to have knowledge thereof and which contributed
-largely, in the aggregate, to the success of the division’s operations
-against the enemy.”</p>
-
-<p>1st LIEUT. ROY A. SCHUYLER, (Deceased)</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, after holding outpost
-line with his platoon for three days under continuous shell fire, without shelter
-and under most trying weather conditions on being ordered to advance, led his
-men with most conspicuous gallantry through a heavy barrage, took his
-objective, reorganized his command, where, while posting men in observation
-in front of his position, with utmost disregard of his personal safety, he was
-killed.</p>
-</div>
-<p>2nd LIEUT. RAYMOND B. DUNN.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, advanced with his
-platoon through heavy enemy barrage; after heavy losses joined company at
-objective with remaining five men, showing great coolness and courage in
-organizing and defending new position under fire.</p>
-</div>
-<p>SERGEANT WILLIAM M. REID.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, after his platoon
-leader was killed, took command of platoon and handled same most gallantly
-and efficiently, repulsing two enemy counter-attacks.</p>
-</div>
-<p>SUPPLY SERGEANT JOSEPH LEVY.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, exhibited continuous
-gallantry in action. Several times he brought up ration parties through heavy
-shell fire to the outpost line. During enemy counter-attacks he assisted company
-commander to reorganize right flank of company.</p>
-</div>
-<p>CORPORAL JOSEPH R. McGARRITY.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 24, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, when his platoon
-leader and sergeants were killed or wounded, assisted Corporal Welsh to reorganize
-his platoon under heavy shell fire, and to hold position until relieved.</p>
-</div>
-<p>PRIVATE LORY L. PRICE.</p>
-<div class="blockquot2">
-<p>On September 26, 1918, at Bois de Grande Fontaine, being posted to cover
-his company’s left flank with his automatic rifle, held his post under heavy
-shelling and machine gun and rifle fire and was mainly responsible for repulsing
-repeated enemy counter-attacks from 6:00 A. M. to 6 P. M. He thus set for his
-comrades a remarkable example of devotion to duty and cool and unhesitating
-self-sacrifice.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> Reported missing in action.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[B]</a> Taken prisoners and were released after the signing of the armistice.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[C]</a> The writer was unable to learn what became of Cocker.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[D]</a> Reported wounded.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
-</div></div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HISTORY OF COMPANY B, 311TH INFANTRY IN THE WORLD WAR ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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