Eu, '9~ Gi ATTENTION! BAR CODE IS LOCATED ON NEXT PAGE ,o r i,4: - t. - 4 LV" '-"""..-:,L. lien County Public Library 00 Webster Street '0 Box 2270 ort Wayne, IN 46801-2270 Dedicatory;* HIS LASTING and printed appreciation, which will carry to generations yet un____ born the story of Menominee County's part in the Great World War of 1917,.__.1918 and 1919, has been prepared after more than a year of unselfish work on the part of its compilers and an expense of thousands of d-lollars to make it really worth while. Its printed word will carry through years which none may number a tribute of love and appreciation to those who, in their country's and the world's great hours of travail d(lid with their might what their hands found to do. To the brave men who wvill sleep beneath the poppies of France until the Judgment day, to the mothers of those who left home not to return, to the families of our sleeping heroes this book is (ledicated in affection and appreciation. To those who offered their all, but from whom the supreme sacrifice was not required; to the returned soldiers, sailors and marines, in health or in the scars of battle or the ravage of disease; this volume is offered as a tribute so well deserved. To those who, in the second and third lines of defense, from the men and women of finance to the humblest Boy Scout; to every one in every capacity who did his or her duty as Americans this book is dedicated, a record of their unselfish devotion. May future generations in Menominee city and county read and take note of these achievements, and find inspiration to a nobler citizenship in this record of those whose devotion and patriotism made so gallant and so, tremendous a record in the Great World War. THE PUBLISHERS. August ist, 1921. Allen County Public Libray 900 Webster Street *0PO Box 2270 Fort Wayne, IN 46801-2270 , -,..... i Dedicatory p HIS LASTING and printed appreciation,,_ - which will carry to generations yet un-. born the story of M enominee County's part in the Great World War of 1917, 1918 and 1919, has been prepared after more than a year of unselfish work on the part of its compilers and an expense of thousands of dollars to make it really worth while. Its printed word will carry through years which none may number a tribute of love and appreciation to those who, in their country's and the world's great hours of travail did with their might what their hands found to do. To the brave men who will sleep beneath the poppies of France until the Judgment day, to the mothers of those who left home not to return, to the families of our sleeping heroes this book is dedicated in affection and appreciation. To those who offered their all, but from whom the supreme sacrifice was not required; to the returned soldiers, sailors and marines, in health or in the scars of battle or the ravage of disease; this volume is offered as a tribute so well deserved. To those who, in the second and third lines of defense, from the men and women of finance to the humblest Boy Scout; to every one in every capacity who did his or her duty as Americans this book is dedicated, a record of their unselfish devotion. May future generations in Mlenominee city and county read and take note of these achievements, and find inspiration to a nobler citizenship in this record of those whose devotion and patriotism made so gallant and so, tremendous a record in the Great World War. THE PUBPLISHIERS. August ist, 1921. Copyright, 19021 The Herald-Leader Company, Menominee, Michigan, Publishers 777 777 $44 P-7 [F U / ( IL riilL ->1 j 7K-k -4 V K Yk / h I' p I / hi Jr i >(/h K- j j F ) /KQ ( -; I >' ID -,.I'- I, —! I 'i -.. -..- -- - ~I | itGENERAL JOHN 1.PERSHING COPYRIGHT BY CLINEDINST '3 -. j'. JH. -- w-vW.ww...e ow:so&w ---#-\M., S:.....S<,,,.h...w sS. -w-n wwwwo -w cNW M.. d sF..of;::-tM<7 o,-}.:.:.%::~:~- q.v........................................................:'.:,..........-.........::................... ~ v:,:..o d:::,,.<:,!i. t,. ]_. /' i:/:?i 171)1 i~ ) ix..; " II: N( )'i( J'!~ 1lj~>' Ii~ 'i ~:t i1L I j 1~,x:)II Kj~,(')j I ~3 I~I ENERL JO N PESHIN x: — COPYRIGHT BY.C.NEINS \Jr LI Allen County Public Library 900 Webster Street P0 Box 2270 Fort Wayne, IN 4680 1-2270 - re,~ Qf: G A: -- O -. ir, H K'I I.: i i1 PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON COPYRIGHT - — Ils — -' --- I -- -"` --- Y - s-ll —~ --- — `- I --- — - ----- — `- --- r-I 40 m 4$ E~_ " -— *". b I — eA -- | 4~ Itlll fTfMfMffc ___ w -C ww~ ww 1 - I —'......- -- - __ ~ ~!ll - 7-111[iE i I ~ i i..Kzi I I 1 111I I II I II I *1*:II * Semper Fidelis We are down amid the tropics as of old; Sure, the mercury is high, And our throats forever dry, But we've still a nation's honor to uphold; And we're spurred with memories Of the crosses overseas, As we hear the mighty cadence of the hep, two, three, four Hear the mighty cadence of the step. The column's not as long as in the days When we trod the fair expanse Of the fields of northern France, With the world a'chanting paeans in our praise; And from out the burning sky We think our buddies sigh, As they hear the mighty cadence of the hep, two, three, fourHear the mighty cadence of the step. 1 4 4 4 I I I. 4 * * 191 4i i -I* '.III I II. I &I I ' --- --. ~. ~W.... ni ^,;!w I 'lom..YwI {L... - -.;[= -C: 1 11 11 i 7I[= -3I =:IC H MICHIGAN S WAR GOVERNOR-HON. ALBERT E. SLEEPER Governor Sleeper made a record of service and patriotism during the World War which placed Michigan in a pre-eminent position for service and devotion to the country's common good. He took a particular interest in Menominee County and its service men, and sent a member of his staff to personally welcome home at New York, under the shadow of the Statue of Liberty, the returning heroes of Company L. Nothing was too much for Governor Sleeper to do for the winning of the war, and his devotion to the welfare of the men in the ranks set an example worth while to every state in the Union. Albert E. Sleeper, of Bad Axe, Michigan, was born at Bradford, Vermont, on December 31st, 1862. He came to Michigan in 1884 and his record as a banker, merchant, legislato- and executive has made him a prominent figure in Michigan history. He was governor of Michigan from January 1st, 1917, until January 1st, 1921. - n — n 4. CAPTAIN OSCAR FALK OF MENOMINEE Original Commander Company L. 125th Inf., 32nd Division [111 I _,r oz 1 4 -- - 3 —4 6 1;C/ 40 M - wm ~ -- II ---- ~.0. 1. 4. 14 - - J 7r 4 Bne Story of the Oorld (ds 0 4 June 28, I914, Frederick Francis Ferdinand, Austrian Archduke, and wife were assassinated at Sarajevo, Bosnia. This furnished the excuse for the world war which ended five years later, June 28, 1919, with the signing of the treaty of peace at Versailles. The shot which led to the war was fired by a student named Prinzip. Austria made demands on Serbia for a hand in Prinzip's trial. International complications followed, which resulted in the World War. Prinzip died of tuberculosis in jail long before the war ended. Fought mainly in Europe, the war falls into periods briefly characterized thus: I914-The year of the German rush across Belgium and into Northern France, with its staying at the Marne, and hopes based on the Russian "steam roller" in East Prussia and Poland. 1915-The year of the second Russian advance, and its repulse; of the Gallipoli adventure; of Italy's entrance against Germany, and Bulgaria's with Germany; of Serbia's disaster. SINKING OF LUSITANIA On May 7, I915, occurred an event which filled the world with horror. This was the sinking by a German submarine of the great Cunard liner Lusitania without the slightest warning or giving the least opportunity for her people to escape. The result was the loss of II34 noncombatants, about half of them. women and children and more than 200 of them Americans. K UNITED STATES DECLARES WAR After two years of effort on the part of President Wilson to recall Germany to observance of the laws of civilized warfare the break finally came on January 3ISt. On that day Berlin decreed to itself the ownership of about half the Atlantic ocean for its submarines and assumed to bar out of this "war zone" not only all enemy, but all neutral vessels, under penalty of destruction. [12] On February 3, the German Ambassador to the United States was handed his passports. On April 2 President Wilson asked Congress to make a formal declaration of war, which was passed and signed on April 6-Good Friday. I916-The year of Verdun and the Somme; of Rumania's entry and betrayal. I917-The year of America's entry; of the Russian revolution and collapse; of Italy's disaster and retreat to the Piave; of the British victories in Mesopotamia and Palestine. 918 —The year of the last German drives, to the turning of the tide at Chateau Thierry; the year of Bulgaria's, Turkey's, Austria's collapses and.ubmission; the year of victory and the signing of the Armistice, November I, I9I8. THE GREATEST SINGLE HERO Out of all the millions who went to war, a Tennessee soldier from the little town of Pall Mall has been declared the greatest single hero of the conflict,-by Marshall Foch, and by the United States Congress who voted him the Congressional Medal of Honor for the most splendid individual achievement of the war. Sergeant Alvin York killed twenty Germans, took I32 prisoners and put 36 machine gun nests out of working order all "on his own." And this particular American was a "conscientious objector" at that; in other words, he didn't believe in killing. It's no wonder the Germans quit when the Americans got into action. FOUR MILLION MEN About 4,000,000 men served in the Army of the United States during the war (April 6, I9I7 to November II,:918). The total number of men serving in the armed forces of the country, including the Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the other services, amounted to 4,800,000. It is almost true that among each Ioo American citizens 5 took up arms in defense of the country. 9s 4 4 i) 4 4 1 4 1 jr f I 1 ~, ----- IIIF. — 1 1111 111 11-~111111 I hff hd r I I ~~ - - & - ~ ~ -r I AUUXUL0 * * It ycm 4, e . —s0 ^B^'r^^i *^^^:\:^J^ ^ I I - A.0 -.. e q m 9 - I I During the Civil War 2,400,000 men served in the Northern armies or in the Navy. In that struggle Io in each Ioo inhabitants of the Northern States served as soldiers or sailors. The American effort in the war with Germany may be compared with that of the Northern States in the Civil War by noting that in the present war we raised twice as many men in actual numbers, but that, in proportion to the population, we raised only half as many. It would be interesting and instructive to make comparisons between the numbers in the American armies during the present war and those of France, Great Britain, Italy, and Germany, but unfortunately this is most difficult to do fairly and truly. The reason for the difficulty lies in the diverse military policies of the nations. It was the policy of France, for example, to mobilize and put into uniform most of the able-bodied men in the population who were not beyond middle age. Some of these were sent into combatant forces and services of supply of the active armies. Thousands of others were put to work in munition factories. Others worked on railroads or cultivated their farms. In general, it was the policy of the government to put its available manpower into uniform and then assign these soldiers to the work that had to be done, whether it was directly military in nature or not. In the United States it was the policy to take into the Army only those men who were physically fit to fight and to assign them, save in exceptional cases, only to work directly related to the ordinary duties of a soldier. The work of making munitions, running railroads, and building ships was done by men not enrolled in the armed forces of the Nation. It was not until the German drive was under way in March, 1918, that the Allies called upon America for the supreme effort that carried a million and a half soldiers to France in six months. The first registration, June 5, 1917, covered the ages from 21 to 31. The second registration one year later (June 5, 1918, and August 24, 1918), included those who had become 2I years old since the first registration. The third registration (September 12, I918), extended the age limits downward to I8 and up to 45. In the physical examinations the States of the Middle West made the best showing. Country boys did better than city boys; whites better than colored; and native born better than foreign born. In this war twice as many men were recruited as in the Civil War and at onetwentieth of' the recruiting cost. There were 200,000 Army officers. Of every six officers, one had previous military training with troops, three were graduates of officers' training camps, and two came directly from civil life. THE AVERAGE MIAN The average American soldier who fought in France had six months training here, two months overseas before entering the line, and one month in a quiet sector before going into battle. Most soldiers received their training in infantry divisions which are our typical combat units and consist of about 1,OO0 officers and 27,000 men. Forty-two divisions were sent to F rance. More than two-thirds of our line officers were graduates of the officers' training camps. France and England sent to the United States nearly 800 specially skilled officers and non-commissioned officers who rendered most important aid as instructors in our training camps. THE TANSPORTATION MIRACLE During our 19 months of war more than 2,000,000 American soldiers were carried to France. Half a million of' these went over in the first 13 months and a million and a half in the last 6 months. The highest troop-carrying records are those of July, I918, when 306,000 soldiers were carried to Europe and May, 19I9, when 330,000 were brought home to America. I I I I f 4 6 i i i f mm m # ) N f f THE SELECTIVE SERVICE The willingness with which the American people accepted the universal draft was the most remarkable feature in the history of our preparation for war. * ( i i i * * 1 [13] I-, - - I,, -, I -- I.- - A I I - -U- t LA 4L 61 m 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 r, 4 (r 0. &. A. 1 A + * I 4 4 I 4 I Ir I ~P -w'w - I.. Wj4JL.Most of the troops who sailed for France left from New York. Half of them landed in England and the other half landed in France. Among every Ioo Americans who went over 49 went in British ships, 45 in American ships, 3 in Italian, 2 in French and I in Russian shipping un:ler English control. Our cargo ships averaged one complete trip every 70 days and our troop ships one complete trip every 35 days. The cargo fleet was almost exclusively American. It reached the size of 2,600,000 deadweight tons and carrie to Europe about 7,500,000 tons of cargo. The greatest troop-carrier among all the ships has been the Leviathan, which landed I2,000 men, or the equivalent of a German division, in France every month. The fastest transports have been the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific, which have made complete turnarounds, taken on new troops, and startel back again in 19 days. No such troop movement as that of the summer of 1918 had ever been contemplated, and no movement of any such number of persons by water had ever previously occurred. The record has been excelled only by the achievement in bringing the same men back to the shores of the United States. The total number of men brought home in May, I919, was nearly 330,000. LEFT AMERICA FROM TEN PORTS Troops left America from ten ports, four of them Canadian, in the following numbers: -Quebec,:.;i,ooo; Montreal, 34,000; Halifax, 5,000; St. Johns, i.ooo; Portland, 6,000; Boston 46,00oo; New York (including Hoboken and Brooklyn), I,656,ooo; Philadelphia, 35,000oo; Baltimore, 4,000, and Norfolk (including Hampton Roads), 288,000. More than three-quarters of all the men went from New York. Half of the troops landed in England and the other half in France. Most of those who landed in England went directly to Liverpool and most of those who lanled in France went to Brest. The statistics of landings at the various European ports are as follows: Glasgow, 45,000; Manchester, 4,000; Liver[14] pool; 844,00o; Bristol Ports, 11,000;.Plymouth, I,ooo; Falmouth, I,000; Southampton, 57,000; London, 62,000; LeHavre, 13,000; Brest, 79I,000; St. Nazaire, 89,000oo; La Pallice 4,000; Bordeaux, 50,000, and Marseilles, I,ooo. To Italy went 2,090 American troops. THE PROBLEM OF BUYING In the spring of I917 there were in the 1U nited States some 4,000,000 young men wnho were about to become soldiers, although they little suspected the fact. Before they entered the Army, as well as after they were in it, these men consumed such ordinary necessities of life as food, coats, trousers, socks, shoes and blankets. These simple facts lead directly to the mistaken conclusion that the problem of supplying the necessities of life for the soldiers in the Army was the comparatively simple one of divertinginto the camps substantially the same amount of food and clothing as these young men would have used in their homes if there had been no war. These men constituted about one twenty-fifth of the population of the country and undoubtedly consumed before the war more than one twenty-fifth of the food and clothing used in the United States. But after every possible allowance has been made for the requirements of youth and the wastefulness of war, the figures of Army purchases still present surprising contrasts with those of civilian use in normal times. DISTRIBUTION OF SUPPLIES Distributing supplies. to the American forces in France was in the first place a problem of ports, second a problem of railroads, third a problem of motor and horse-drawn transportation, and fourth a problem of storage. The ports and railroads of France were crowded with war traffic and fallen into disrepair. It was not necessary to build new ports, but American engineers added 83 new berths together with warehouses and dock equipment. It was not necessary to build new railroads, for France already had a railway net denser per square mile than that of the United States, but it was desirable to increase the carrying capacity by nearly I,ooo II 4 4 4 4 4 I 4 4 4 +i 4 4 4 f 0 0 0 0 I I I i I f I Ill,a 'o -] d~b -4 - - 1, 40- 40 -- Ji I'M %- J W~f - w - - -MMI .0 a4 0 ---— "S-^gS^^^l dh dh m r, 4 - -W -.- 0 1 "4 ---- -NW lw 11 I' miles of new trackage, and by switching facilities at crucial points, by new repair shops and round houses, and by new rolling stock. These things were done by the Engineers. The problems were not wholly solved. There were never enough docks to prevent some loss of time by vessels waiting to clock, but the capacity for handling American cargo was tripled from Io,ooo tons per day in the spring of I918 to 30,000 tons by November I and the waiting time of ships was shorter than in commercial practice. There were never wholly adequate railway facilities, but with the help of locomotives and freight cars shipped from this side freight was carried inland about as fast as it was landed. In order to operate the transportation of supplies in France, a new system of communication had to be set up; so the Signal Corps strung its wires over nearly every part of France. FOOD AND CLOTHING AT TH[E FRONT The real test of the efficiency of the supply service comes when an arm3 engages in battle. Measured by that test the work of feeding, clothing, and equipping the American Arrmy was well done for, in the main, the expleditionary foices received what they neede(l. WTitlhin the limits of this report no account can be given in detail of how fully the supplies received overseas met the needs of the troops. A few typical and fundamentally important items only can be selected. Food and clothing are the most essential. At no time was there a shortage of food in the Expeditionary forces. Soldiers sometimes went hungry in this as in all other wars, but the condition was local and temporary. It occurred because of transportation difficulties during periods of active fighting or rapid movement when the units outran their rolling kitchens. The stock of food on hand in depots in France was always adequate. In the matter of clothing also, the supply services rose to the emergency of combat. There were periods in the history of many individual units when needed supplies could not be immediately obtained, but as in the case of footd, the difficulty was one of local transportation. The records of the Quartermaster show that during the six months of hard fighting, from June to November, the enlisted man in the A. E. F. received on the average: Slicker and overcoat, every 5 months. Blanket, flannel shirt, and breeches, every two months. Coat, every 79 days. Shoes and puttees, every 51 days. Drawers and undershirt, every 34 days. Woolen socks, every 23 days. REQUIREMENTS GREAT The problems of feeding and clothing the Army were difficult because of the immense quantities involved rather than because of the difficulty of manufacturing the articles needed. Requirements for some kinds of clothing for the Army were more than twice as great as the prewar total American production of the same articles. To secure the articles needed for the Army the Government had to commandeer all the wool and some other staple articles in the United States and control production through all its stages. The distribution of supplies in the Expeditionary Forces required the creation of an organization called the Services of Supply, to which one-fourth of all the troops who went overseas were assigned. American Engineers built in France 83 new ship berths, I,ooo miles of standard guage track, and 538 miles of narrowguage track. The Signal Corps strung in France Ioo,ooo miles of telephone and telegraph wire. Prior to the armistice 40,000 trucks were shipped to the forces jn France. Construction projects in the United States cost twice as much as the Panama Canal, and construction overseas was on nearly as large a scale. PNEUMONIA DEADLIER THAN BATTLE The American battle losses were 48,909 killed and 236,000 wounded. Of every ioo American soldiers and sailors who took part in the war with Germany, two were killed or died of disease during the period of hostilities. Russia's losses were 35 times as great; Germany's 32 times as great; France's 28 times and England's I8 times. I I I I I I I 4 1 1 4 I I 1 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 I 4 f II 0I I [15] 4 I I — I, — - I I I- - -.4 2 L II.- I * *.I. --- *4 - I - ---- 40. - 41. -W -—.AmIKRIIKNIIK 4. lw I -, - F-W.1 - --- I I -.- 9 F- -.1- - -- -i — - _m, C: I 4 4 4 The pneumonia-influenza epidemic killed more American soldiers than were slain in battle; this plague caused 83.6 per cent of all the deaths from disease, claiming more than 40,000 victims, mostly in the United States, although thousands died in France. In the entire American army, both in France and in this country, there occurred 11I 2,432 deaths in battle and from disease. Of these 48,909, or 43 per cent, were battle deaths, while 56,99I, or 51. per cent, were due to disease. To other causes, including accident, were due 6,522 deaths, or 6 per cent. The war was undoubtedly the bloodiest that has ever been fought. From 1793 to 1914 (including the Napoleonic era) total deaths in war may be safely estimated at under 6,000ooo,000. Battle deaths alone from 1914 to I918 totaled about 7,450,000. In the American army the casualty rate in the infantry was higher than in any service, the air force and the tank corps ranking second and third in deadliness. The casualty rate for officers was higher than for men, because all flyers were commissioned men. For every man killed in action seven were wounded. Five out of every six men sent to hospitals for wounds were cured and returned to duty. In the expeditionary forces battle losses were twice as large as deaths from disease. In this war the death rate from disease was lower and the death rate from battle was higher than in any previous American war. How AVIATION SERVICE GREW When war was declared the United States had two aviation fields and 55 serviceable airplanes. The National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics advised that 51 of these were obsolete and the other four obsolescent. Before the end of the war the Allies furnished us with 3,800 service planes. Aviation training schools in the United States graduated 8,602 men from elementary and 4,028 from advanced courses. The total personnel of the air service increased from i,200 at the outbreak of the war to nearly 200,000 at its close. More than 5,000 pilots and observers were sent overseas. The first flyers wearing the American uniform were members of the Lafayette Escadrille, who were transferred to the American service in December, I917. The American air force at the front grew from 3 squadrons in April, I918, to 45 squadrons in November. On November II, the 45 squadrons had an equipment of 740 planes. American air squadrons played important roles in the battles of Chateau-Thierry, St. Mihiel and the Meuse-Argonne. They brought down in combat 755 enemy planes, while their own losses of planes numbered only 357. TRACTORS AND TANKS An innovation in this war, development of which in the future promises to be even more important, was the increased use of motor transportation. As applied to the artillery, this meant the use of caterpillar tractors to haul the big guns, especially over rough ground. When we entered the war no suitable designs existed for caterpillar tractors of size appropriate for the medium heavy artillery. But new 5-ton and Io-ton types were perfected in this country, put into production, and I,IOO shipped overseas before November I. About 300 larger tractors were also shipped and 350 more secured from the French and British. The tank was an even more important application of the caterpillar tractor to war uses. The efforts of this country in the case of heavy 30-ton tanks were concentrated on a co-operative plan, by which this country was to furnish Liberty motors and the rest of the driving mechanism, and the British the armor plate for 1,500 tanks for the I919 campaign. It has been estimated that about one-half the work on the American components for this project had been completed before November II, and the work of assembly of the initial units was well under way. For immediate use in France, this country received 6'4 heavy tanks from the British. STRIKING INVENTIONS THAT HELPED WIN THE WAR Few facilities and little experience ex-, -1^A 1^;. *; ^ - 1,^- 4C^~ 411 -0 4. 4 1 I i.4 1 lSLeU at Lf Dug1ini g o le Wdel 1 1 i tn1i development of many of the delicate in 11 [16 - -1.. ff * * * A. - t 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 0 40.0 MW. 4- * mmummo q --- - 0 0 struments and intricate mechanisms required in the equipment of service planes. Intensive research brought some notable results, of which several deserve especial mention. These are: The oxygen mask, equipped with telephone connections which enabled the flyer to endure the rarified air at an altitude which his plane could reach without losing speaking contact with his companions. The military parachute which was developed to unprecedented safety. This was used principally for escape from burning balloons, and was improved so that it would bring down safely the entire balloon basket with its load. During the entire war there was not an American casualty clue to parachute failire. The electric heated clothing for aviators on high altitude work. The electric.4. - 4. 4. -*I will 4 suit, developed in the latter months of the war and used at the front, was lined with insulated coils through which current was driven by means of a small dynamo actuated by a miniature propeller driven by the rush of the plane through the air. Long-focus, light-filtration cameras by which good photographs could be taken through haze from altitudes of 3 miles or more. Primary credit for this belongs to Europe, but America improved the mechanism and standardized the design for quantity production. The wireless telephone, by which the aviator is able to converse easily with other planes and with ground stations. This development came too late to be of any substantial use at the front, but its value for peace as well as for any future war is obvious. m A: TWO HUNDRED DAYS OF BATTLE Two out of every three American soldiers who reached France took part in battle. The number who reached France was 2,084,oo000, and of these i,390,000 saw active service in the front line. American combat forces were organized into divisions, which, as has been noted, consisted of some 28,oo000 officers and men. These divisions were the largest on the western front, since the British division numbered about 15,000 and those of the French and German about 12,000 each. There were sent overseas 42 American divisions and several hundred thousand supplementary artillery and service of supply troops. Of the 42 divisions that reached France 29 took part in active combat service, while the others were used for replacements or were just arriving during the last month of hostilities. The battle record of the United States Army in this war is largely the history of these 29 combat divisions. Seven of them were Regular Army divisions, I I were organized from the National Guard, and I were made up of National Army troops. American combat divisions were in battle for 200 days, from the 25th of April, 1918, when the first regular division after long training in quiet sectors, entered an active sector on the Picarcly front, until the signing of the armistice. During these 200 days they were engaged in 13 major operations, of which iI were joint enterprises with the French, British, and Italians, and 2 were distinctively American. At the time of their greatest activity in the second week of October all 29 American divisions were in action. They then held 101ioi miles of front, or 23 per cent of the entire allied battle line. From the middle of August until the end of the war they held, during the greater part of the time, a front longer than that held by the British. Their strength tipped the balance of man power in favor of the Allies, so that from the middle of June, 1918, to the end of the war the allied forces were superior in number to those of the enemy. The total battle advances of all the American divisions amounted to 782 kilometers, or 485 miles, an average advance for each division of 17 miles,nearly all of it against desperate enemy resistance. They captured 63,000 prisoners, I,378 pieces of artillery, 708 trench mortars, and 9,650 machine guns. In June: I 11 4 * I - I e-. — W^^1^"11 - [17] 4.. - g. -41. 4 —.0 4. 4.~ 4A S I 4 4 4 4 r * 6 I m 41. m 3D LAILAkL AN, Mq&- 0. 0% - -- a~~~ 41 - b. >0oc-=2 and July they helped to shatter the en emy advance toward Paris to turn retrea into a triumphant offensive. At S Mihiel they pinched off in a day a enemy salient which had been a constan menace to the French line for four years In the Argonne and on the iMeuse the carried lines which the enemy was de termined to hold at any cost, and cut th enemy lines of communication and sup ply for half the western battle front. 1 -Lt t. n it S. y e ) ON EVERY STRETCH OF WESTERN FRONT American troops saw service on practically every stretch of the western front from British lines in Belgium to inactive sectors in the Vosges. On Oct. 21, 1917, Americans entered the line in'the quiet Toul sector. From that date to the armistice American units were somewhere in line almost continuously. With the organization of the American First Army on August io, under the personal command of Gen. Pershing, the history of the American Expeditionary Forces entered upon a new stage. The St. Mihiel (September I2-I6) and Meuse-Argonne (September 26-November I ) offensives were major operations planned and executed by American generals and American troops. In addition to the operations above mentioned, American troops participated in the Battle of Vittorio-Veneto (October 24 to November 4), which ended in the rout of the Austrian Army. the salient within 24 hours from the beginning of the movement. Two comparisons between this operalion and the Battle of Gettysburg emphasize the magnitude of the action. About 550,000 Americans were engaged.t St. Mihiel; the Union forces at Gettysburg numbered approximately Ioo,ooo. St. Mihiel set a record for concentration of artillery fire by a four-hour artillery preparation, consuming more than i,ooo,ooo rounds of ammunition. In three days at Gettysburg Union artillery fired 33,000 rounds. The St. Mihiel offensive cost only about 7,000 casualties, less than onethird the Union losses at Gettysburg. There were captured I6,ooo prisoners and 443 guns. A dangerous enemy salient was reduced, and American conmmanders and troops demonstrated their ability to plan and execute a big Ame!lcan operation. THE BATTLE OF THE MEUSE-ARGONNE The object of the Meuse-Argonne offensive, said Gen. Pershing in his report of November 20, I9I8, was "to draw the best German divisions to our front and to consume them." This sentence expresses better than any long description not only the object but also the outcome of the battle. Every available American division was thrown against the enemy. Every available German division was thrown in to meet them. At the end of 47 days of continuous battle our divisions nad consumed the German divisions. The goal of the American attack was the Seldan-Mezieres railroad, the main line of supply for the German forces on the major part of the western front. If this line were cut, a retirement on the whole front would be forced. This retirement would include, moreover, evacuation of the Briey iron fields, which the Germans had been using to great advantage to supplement their iron supply. The defense of the positions threatened was therefore of such importance as to warrant the most desperate measures for resistance. When the engagement was evidently impending the commander of the German Fifth Army sent word to his forces, calling on them for unyielding' resistance and pointing out that defeat in 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I I~ II I:! THE BATTLE OF ST. MIHIEL The first distinctly American offensive was the reduction of the St. Mihiel salient carried through from September 12 to September I5, largely by American troops and wholly under the orders of the American commander-in-chief. In the attack the American troops were aided by French colonial troops. The Americans were also aided by French and British air squadrons. The attack began at 5 a. m., after four hours of artillery preparation of great severity, and met with immediate success. Before noon about half the distance between the bases of the salient had been covered an-i the next morning tloops of the First and Twenty-sixth Divisions met at Vigneulles, cutting off 1# 4 BY I [18] -- -, 0 " E — ~L - l 0.60 w w - k W, 0~Y Y r II- - 4b. 410 46 k 46 4 f 4 * f 40 - - - 7 q 1 - qp 4 lr 0. this engagement might mean disaster for the fatherland. On the first (lay, the 26th of September, and the next day or two after that, the lines were considerably advanced. Then the resistance became more stubborn. Each side threw in more and more of its man power until there were no more reserves. Many German divisions went into action twice, and not a few three times, until, through losses, they were far under strength. All through the month of October the attrition went on. Foot by foot American troops pushed back the best of the German divisions. On November I the last stage of the offensive began. The enemy power began to break. American troops forced their way to the east bank of the Meuse. Toward the north they made even more rapid progress, and in seven lays reached the outskirts of Sedan and cut the Sedan-Mezieres railroad, making the German line untenable. In the meantime (October 2 to 28) our Second and Thirty-sixth Divisions had been sent west to assist the French who were advancing in Champagne beside our drive in the Argonne. The liaison detachment between the two armies was for a time furnished by the Ninety-second Division. RESEMBLED BATTLE OF THE WILDEnRNESS In some ways the Meuse-Argonne offers an interesting resemblance to the Battle of the Wilderness, fought from May 5 to 12, 1864, in the Civil War. Both were fought over a terrain covere 1 with tangled wood and underbrush. The \ilderness was regarded as a long battle, marked by slow progress, against obstinate resistance, with very heavy casualties. Here the similarity ends. The Meuse-Argonne lasted six times as long as the Battle of the Wilderness. Twelve times as many American troops were engaged on the union side. They used in the action ten times as many guns and fired about one hundred times as many rounds of artillery ammunition. The actual weight of the ammunition fired was greater than that used by the Union forces during the entire Civil War. Casualties were perhaps four times as heavy as among the North ern troops in the Battle of the Wilderness. The battle of the Meuse-Argonne was beyond compare the greatest ever fought by American troops, and there have been few, if any, greater battles in the history of the world. Some of the more important statistics of the engagement are presented here: 4tAmerican data for the Meuse-Argonne Battle. Day of battle -—......- -—.... ---.. 47 Ame-ican troops engaged --- —---—. --- —---— 1,200,000 Guns employed in attack -----—.. - 2,417 Rounds of artillery ammunition fired-.4,214,000 Ai-planes used.......... --- —-------------- 840 Tons of explosives d r o p p e d by planes on enemy lines --- —-- ------ 100 Tanks used ---- ------—.. --- —-------------- 324 Miles of penetration of enemy line, maximum ----------------------------------- 34 Square kilometers of territory taken 1,550 Villages and towns liberated --- —-—.- 150 Prisoners captured --- —--------------------------..16,059 Artillery pieces captured --- —---. --—. 6S Machine guns captured --- —----------------—. 2.864 Trench mortars captured --- ——. --- —--------- 177 American casualties ----------------—.. 120,000 Twenty-nine combat divisions achieved the successes and bore the losses of active operations. The story of their achievements cannot be told within the limits of this account. STAGGERING STATISTICS Of every 100 American soldiers and sailors, who served in the war with Germany, two were killed or die:l of disease during the period of hostilities. Total battle deaths of all nations in this war were greater than all the deaths in all — the- ars in the previous 100 years. 1 4 I I 4 4 4 I 4 1 Russian battle deaths were 34 times as heavy as those of the United States, those of Germany 32 times as great, the French 28 times, and the British 18 times as large. The number of American lives lost was 122,500, of which about 10,000 were in the Navy and the rest in the Army and the marines attached to it. In the American Army the casualty rate in the Infantry was higher than in any other service and that for officers was higher than for men. For every man killer in battle seven were woulded. I I' 4 [19] — — __. I_ 7 ~ I i — _-. I — 1u1 - -- - - ~ -, I - III(LLE~IIIIIIII,l..0 l9al - - 6 w -b -11 OPM A W -W v. I Rumommom 4. - MOM; 0- 0. 4. 4. "a, dh m 40. lw lw lw 9 MMIMWAMMW 'W 'W - QTr" I -I.- - I -U II I Five out of every six men sent to the hospitals on account of wounds were cured and returned to duty. In the expeditionary forces battle losses were twice as large as deaths from disease. In this war the death rate from disease was lower, and the death rate from battle was higher than in any other previous American war. Inoculation, clean camps, and safe drinking water, practically eliminated typhoid fever among our troops in this war. Pneumonia killed more soldiers than were killed in battle. Meningitis was the next most serious disease. During the entire war available hospital facilities in the American Expeditionary Forces have been in excess of the needs. A MILLION DOLLARS AN HOUR The total direct costs of the war amount to about $I,86,ooo,ooo,ooo, of which the United States expended approximately $22,000,000,000. Germany, with $39,000,000,000, spent nore than any other country; Great Britain is a close second, with $38,000,ooo,ooo; France is third, with $26,ooo,ooo,ooo, and the United States fourth. This country spent about one-eighth of the entire cost of the war, and something less than one-fifth of the expenditures of the allied side. The war cost the-United States something more than $I,ooo,ooo an hour for over two years. The total cost to the United States was nearly enough to pay the entire cost of running the Government from 1791 up to the outbreak of the European War. Our expenditures in this war were sufficient to have carried on the Revolutionary War continuously for more than I,oo000 years, at the rate of expenditure which that war actually involved. In addition to this huge expenditure, nearly $IO,OOO,OOO,OOO have been loaned by the United States to the Allies. The army expenditures have been over $14,000,000,000 or nearly twothirds of our total war costs. BATTLE DEATHS IN HISTORY'S BLOODIEST WAR Statistics compiled by the War Department show that in four years of the war there were nearly a million and a half more men killed in battle than lost their lives in all the wars from 1793 to 194._ The United States stands twelfth on the list, our losses being less than half those of Bulgaria. The table follows: Russia ------------------------—....... -..-. — 1,700,000 Germany —. —.. --- — —. --- —------ - 1,600,000 France -----------------------— 1,385,300 Great Britain ---------------------- 900,000 Austria -------------- --------------------------------- 800,000 Italy ------------------------------ 330,000 Turkey --------------—.. ------------ 250,000 Serbia and Montenegro ------------- 125,000 Belgium ------------—.. --- —---- 102,000 Rumania -------------- 100,000 Bulgaria ------------—.. ---.. --- —----- 100,000 United States ---------------------— 48,900 G-eece -------------------------------------------------- 7,000 Portugal ---------------------------- 2,000 Total ----------------------— 7.450.200 — l * 4 I 4 e 9- - I ~ - m - -. - - 4 Ir -W. [201 _ ' ' — ' - 1 - - I... I - I i% fi I ) l Ienominee's Stars of Gold. 0 6 0 4 4 I, 1, 4 KILLED IN ACTION Leonard Anderson William Baker Peter J. Boivin Carl L. Bowman Louis Bueltman John Bureson John De Vilice Harry M. Elkey George Erickson Emilio Floriano John Hannon Walter H. Hass Albert Johnson Anton Johnson Harold Johnson Antonio Kossewski Eugene La Belle Herbert Larson Peter Lentz Arthur Lueskow Walter H. Pada Frank Pivonka Fred St. Peter John E. Schultz Stanley J. Semrau John Stauber John Teichler DIED OF WOUNDS Oscar Falk Earl Hebert Fred Murray Elmer V. Nelson Joseph Slavick 4 4 4 4 V 4 4 4 DIED OF DISEASE OR ACCIDENT Godfrey Anderson Henry E. Bacon James Beiley Carl O. Beyersdorf Joseph Brickner Raymond Davis James Dillon Arthur Eastberg Warner Eckman William Erdman Raymond J. Flynn Emil Grantz Charles N. Haggerson Corry C. Hermanson Christ Johnson Rudolph L. Krueger John Kass Franklin V. Laughton Edward Menard Henry Miller Joseph Neumeier Henry Peterson Tony Revord Charles E. Saxe Joseph Schmidt Chester Schultz - Arthur B. Siegel Walter Thomas Irving Vanderstone 4 4 4 0 1 1 0 0 * [21] NM - a — e 4 ---lr' Doo w- -rr -4- r. 4!! nowmm% a A - ~I - e I if _ __ List of Menominee service men, city and county, who were killed in action, died of disease, wounds, or the results of disease contracted while in the United States Army and Navy during the war. Only officially accepted cases which have been verified appear on the following list. 4 III -~ I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 Name of Man in Service 1. Corp. Henry Miller........ 2. Sgt. Rudolph L. Krueger.. 3. Harold Walter Hass...... 4. Sgt. Fred Murray........ 5. Antonio Kossewski....... 6. Otto Carl Beyersdorf.... 7. John E. Schultz.......... 8. Corp. Peter Joseph Boivin. 9. Sgt. Harold Johnson...... 10. William Baker........... 11. Corp. Walter Pada........ 12. John Stauber............. 13. Arthur Lueskow.......... 14. Carl L. Bowman.......... 15. Corp. Albert Johnson.... 16. Sgt. John Teichler........ 17. Emil Grantz.............. 18. Joseph Brickner.......... 19. William Erdman.......... 20. Walter Thomas........... 21. Warner Eckman.......... 22. Godfrey Anderson........ 23. Joseph Schmidt........... 24. James Dillon.............?5. Chester Schultz........... 26. Stanley J. Semrau........!7. Joseph Neumeier..........,8. Christ Johnson............ S9. Capt. Oscar Falk......... 30. James Beiley.............. 31. George Erickson.......... 12. Joseph Slavick............ 13. Edward Menard.......... 34. Henry Peterson.......... J1 M A A A M A Ji J1 J1 J1 J1 J1 Killed in Action, Date of Death Branch of Service Died of Disease or Wounds. une 10, 1917.........Army........ Died of Disease... [ar. 31, 1918... Army.............. Died of Disease... pr. 9, 1918 Army..............Killed in Action... ug. 6, 1918 Army............. Died of Wounds... ug. 6, 1918. Army.............. Killed in Action... Lay 14, 1918 Navy.............Died of Disease... ug. 1, 1918. Army.............. Killed in Action... uly 31, 1918. rmy.............. Killed in Action... uly 31, 1918......Army.............. Killed in Action... uly 31, 1918...... Army............. Killed in Action... ugly 31, 1918......Army.............. Killed in Action... uly 31, 1918......Army............. Killed in Action... Name of Parents, Wife or Next of Kin v July 31, 1918...... Oct. 11, 1918...... Aug. 4, 1918...... July 31, 1918...... Sept. 25, 1918...... Oct. 9. 1918...... Oct. 12, 1918...... Oct. 12, 1918..... Oct. 12, 1918...... Oct. 12, 1918...... Oct. 18, 1918...... Oct. 18, 1918...... Mar. 22, 1918...... Sept. -28, 1918..... Oct. 19, 1918...... Sept.' 24, 1918.... Aug. 1, 1918...... Oct. 26, 1918.... Sept. 1, 1918...... Oct. 1, 1918...... Oct. 19, 1918...... Nov. 13, 1918...... Address Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Killed in Action... Army.............. Killed in Action... Army.............. Killed in Action... Navy.............Died of Disease... Army........... Died of Disease... Army............ Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............ Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............ Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Killed in Action... Navy............. Died of Disease.. Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Wounds.. Navy.............. Died of Disease... Army.............Killed in Action... Army............. Died of Wounds Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Diseae... Mr. and Mrs. Jens Miller, 501 Pearson Ave., Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Krueger..................N.. athan, Mith. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hass......................Menomine?, Mich. Mrs. Josephine Murray, (mother), 307 Ogden Ave., Menominee. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kossewski.................. Wallace, Mich. Mr. William Beyersdorf, 609 Somerville Ave., Menominee, Mich. Mrs. Edwin Klatt, (sister)...................... Daggett, Mich. Mrs. Peter Boivin (widow), 1718 Holmes Ave... Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Johnson, 514 Pearson Ave., Menominee, Miei'. Mr. and Mrs. Baker, Lakeview Ave.,.......... Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pada, 316 Spencer Ave., Menominee. Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Stauber, 505 Michigan Ave.,...Menominee. Mrs. C. Lueskow, (mother) 805 Martha Ave., Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bowman...............Menominee, Mich. John Mellberg, (uncle)............................ Oconto, Wis. Edward A. Teichler, (brother), Spies Ave., Menominee, Mich. Frank Grantz, (father).......................... Daggett, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. John Brickner, 1110 Somerville Ave., Menominee. Mr. and Mrs. Julius Erdman, State Road,....Menominee, Mich Mrs. Sarah Mattard Thomas (wife)..............Nadeau, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. John Eckman,......................Daggett, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Anderson, R. F. D. No. 2, Stephenson, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Schmidt, Greenwoods, Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. James Dillon, 216 Van Auken St., Menominee, Mich. Mrs. Jane Schultz, (mother)................. Stephenson, Mieh Mr. and Mrs. John Semrau, 420 Wells Ave., Menominee, Mici. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Neumeier, 319 Somerville Ave., Menominee. Mr. William Johnson,...................... Hermansville, Mich. Mrs. Oscar Falk, (widow), 356 Ludington Ave., Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Beiley, 914 Michigan Ave., Menominee. Mich Mr. and Mrs. Gustaf Erickson, 912 Holmes Ave., Menominee. Mrs. Anna Slavick (wife).........................Wallace, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Menard,.........................Nadeau, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Peterson,..............Menominee, Mich. if 2 3 3 3 3 3 v T T D T I.0 ~o 0, 0 4. 40 1 V r a I ~1~` 1~ I ~ ~_ - _, evr_ e -O1_ -- - -- A Am limit - - - - rI. Killed in Action, Name of Man in Service Date of Death Branch of Service Died of Disease Name of Parents, Wife or Next of Kin Address or Wounds. 35. Louis Bueltman........... Oct. 15, 1918...... Army............. Killed in Action... Mrs. Margaret Bueltman, R. F. D.............Menominee, Mich. 36. John Bureson............. Oct. 1, 1,918...... Army............. Killed in Action... Mr. and Mrs. Bureson........................ Stephenson, Mich. I 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. Frank Pivonka............ John (Bacon) De Vilice... Lieut. H. E. Bacon........ Eugene La Belle.......... Elmer Victor Nelson...... Arthur E. Eastberg...... Tony Revord.............. Earl Hebert............... Charles Haggerson........ Irving Vanderstone........ Arthur Benjamin Siegel... Leonard Anderson......... Corry C. Hermanson...... Emilio Floriano........... Anton Johnson........... PeFftr Lentz.............. John Hannon............. Herbert Larson.......... Harry M. Elkey.......... Charles E. iSaxe.......... Raymond J. Flynn........ Fred St. Peter............ Franklin Vivian Laughton John Kass................ Raymond Davis........... Oct. 31, 1918...... Oct. 5, 1918....... Dec. 19, 1918...... Aug. 30, 1918..... S'ept. 15, 1918.... Jan. 6, 1919....... Nov. 15, 1918..... Oct. 16, 1918...... Jan. 5, 1919........ Jan. 4, 19 9...... Jan. 22, 1919...... June 28, 1918...... Oct. 23, 1918...... Oct. 18, 1918...... Aug. 3, 1918...... Oct. 31, 1918....... Jan. 19, 1919...... Oct. 11, 1918...... Oct. 25, 1918...... Feb. 18, 1919...... Oct. 17, 1918...... July 31, 1918...... Sept. 25, 1919...... Mar. 31, 1919...... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Accidentally Shot.. Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Died of Wounds... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Accidental Death.. Army............. Died of Wounds... Army............. Died of Disease... Army.............. Died of Disease... Merchant Marine Died of Disease... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Killed in Action... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Disease... Army............. Died of Disease... Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pivonka................... Tisch Mills, Wis. Mrs. De Vilice, rem. to Janesville, formerly Menominee, Mich. Mrs. H. E. Bacon (wife)......................Marinette, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Jules La Belle.................Montreal, Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nelson,......................Daggett, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Otto E.astberg, Stephenson Ave., Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Revord,................. Hermansville, Mich. Mrs. Jerome Laduron (mother) 1416 Holmes Ave., Menominee. Mrs. G. H. Haggerson, State St.,............Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vanderstone, 2700 Broadway, Menominee. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Lundberg, 4330 Grand Blvd.,....Menominee. Mrs. Carrie Anderson,....................... Menominee, Mich. Mrs. Mary Hermanson (mother) 2814 Broadway, Menominee. Mrs. Augusta Floriano, (wife).............. Hermansville, Mich. John Mellberg (uncle).......................... Oconto, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Lentz, Old State Road, Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hannon, Wabash Ave., Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Larson..................Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Elkey,.................Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Erick Saxe,.................Hermansville, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Dominick Flynn,...............Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Ovid- St. Peter, 633 Almyra St., Menominee, Mich. Mrs. Katherine Stiles Laughton, (wife),.....Menominee, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kass,......................... Birch Creek, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. John Davis.................... Menominee. Mich. I,....................., —. --- -- -,................................... - -.1..................................... - " - - - - - -, -,-. -... Ii I < { A I 0. - - & ^ 0 - -. - 4. W 4 4 I 00o 'mKnw w= I 11 4 4 4 I-11 4. 401- 410 V. A;mm^n Iran 3m lw I I 0 lwqo IL *I ML AL ALL AL, - 41, 4. 4k- 4. - - - __ - --- 4 0 Th e Achievement Division 1st................... 2nd......................... Ath......................... 5th......................... 6th......................... 7th......................... 26th........................ 27th................. 28th................ 29th..................... 30th................... 32nd........................ 33rd....................... 835th........................ 365th..................... 37th..................... 42nd........................ 77th.................... 78th........................ 79th........................ 80th.................. 81st......................... 8n...............,:..... 90th........................ 91st........................ 92nd......................... Kilometers Advanced 60 41 24'1/2 29 37 11 10 7 2 9 /2 36 36 12 1/2 21 30%2/ 55 71%/ 21 1 91/2 37 51/2 17 36 34 8 Prisoners Token Off icers Men 4 1I657 228 31 72 48 1 61 65 10 98 40 65 13 18 26 14 13 6 1 103 18 192 32 12 6,304 11,738 2,209 2,684 2,357 68 3,087 2,292 911 2,187 3,750 2,113 3,922 768 531.1,469 1,303 737 392 391 1,710 827 4,869 1,844 2,400 Ordnance Taken Artillery Mach. Guns 343 1,350 51 1,501 44 31 98 802 28 16 132 16 63 21 250 81 426 21 190 93 414 24 85 9 294 29 263 25 495 44 323 4 43 32 275 88 641 11 311 127 455 42 230 33 4,71 1,252 19,073 IDistinguished ISer. Crosses_ 279 646 231 5 7 143 10 30 222 135 149 176 -133 6 5 1 7 24 2 5 204 145 8 1 8 0 4 1 1 9 34 9 7 5 7 132 2 1 T 3,310 0 0 4 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 4 1 I I 4 4 60,863 1,332 41 I - I I - I - I - - - - I - - - I - 4 * ~[24] ~ IvLL.-1v v 0. *JU.01 *0 w W - - - Imw 'WI lw WI -And the Price MAJOR CASUALTIES Division ( 1st. 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th 32nd 35th 36th..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... Casualties 5,248 5,260 3,617 2,986 2,504 122 326 2,864 2,194 3,890 1,117 1,772 3,213 1,733 869 Division 37th 42nd 77th 78th 79th 80th 81st 82nd 88th 89th 90th 91st 92nd 93rd I..................................................... Casualties 1,250 2,950 2.692 1 825 2 389 1,355 270 1,592 6S 1,525 1,585 1,702 211 489 57,616 Naval Deaths.................10,000 AMERICAN LOSSES By battle........................... 48,909 By disease..................... 56,991 By other causes.................. 6,522 The Total............... 112.422 [25] 4 4 IT Soldier's Creed 1 l In this victory for Democracy-and world-wide fray, I've tried my best to not betray * |The honor of our nation's flag, * gAnd live the traits of which I brag; * Of being an American, in mind and deedMy country serve in time of need. l |I've sought to yield some honest toil, l |That would protect our nation's soil; l |I've kept in mind the debt I owe, l |To those who died that I might know l |Our country prosperous and free, A heritage they passed to me. I've always tried in trouble's hour To add my bit to Freedom's power; To defend my faith that we may live l |And each his fellow freedom give. - I've tried to work and tried to plan l To be a real American., I've done my best that we may be, l |Respected both on land and sea; l lI'll always try to squarely stand To guard the glory of our land; American in mind and deed; God grant me strength to keep this creed. [26]1 I A if ZA 'p 4 ~1 (I 0 - --- - _,L _ I~;cz —s-~I *1 b J. 0~ I~~ I 1 ) j 1 i 0 0 Roster of Original Company L, 33rd Regiment, Michigan National Guard, Menominee Later mustered in as Company L, I25th Infantry, 32nd Division. Col. John B. Boucher Lieut. Col. Ed. Heckel Major Chas. D. Mathews Company Officers Capt. Oscar Falk Second Lieut. Merritt Wilson First Lieut. Grover Thompson First Sergeant J. Paul Coogan Supply Sergeant Frank Reel Sergeants l4 I I Ernest Spoerke Fred Baverfeldt Charles O'Brien George Vanderhee Joseph Stauber Arthur Vincent Mechanic John Parsek Fred Glanz Sigmund Kudlidcki Corporals Eugene LaBelle Joseph Jozwiak Walter Pada Anthony Schick Raymond Kubiak Victor Schick Clerk Walter Jans n Cooks f 0 1, i ) i 4 Buglers Roy Baldwin Robert Ackerman Harry Allard Oliver Allard Arthur Anderson Edward Anderson William Anderson John Bacon Slavick Bailey Henry Baker Anton Bauer John Beguin Emil Benson John Blahnik Peter Boivin Gustav Brown Henry Brummer Isaac Chandler Emil Cherney Joseph Cormier Will Cumbrey Alphonse Demers W iI h l -h rt T-) o1,,I -i G. Donald Fergusson WVill Floras Roy Freiss George Grenier August Hackeman John Hartl Corry Hermansen Joseph Hornick Charles Jessel Albert Johnson Anton Johnson Harold Johnson Henry Kahlow Sylvester Kalando Clarence Kelley Edward Kimber Albert King Frederic Klaus Alfred Larsen Conrad Lauzer Gilbert Letourneau - -...... ' - _ Edward Miller Henry Miller WValter Nelson Alfred Nyberg Harry O'Brien Arthur Olson Frank Parsek Lawrence Reiter Edward Rian Otto Regner George Slavinski Ernest Solway Frank Steberl Earl Tebo Frank Todish August Schwartz John Seidl Joseph Slavick John Stauber John Teichler Eugene Therriault 4 ( ^ < Vv 1JIt 1.1 -ocrli2 J~Ivlagnlus Iviagn Clarence Duford John Marston. George McDor [27] 'I 0 usen nald fLrank Wilson | Ed. Younk w 0 X. I -~ 4 - O\Alv"M.M"ll km PN V% - WN -w w wU '~/al I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 X fenominee Countp Men in 330th Field /Irtillery, Batterp D "As We Were" 4 4 0 4 0 4 I 0 0 I I W\illiam An:lerson Emil A. Bilo:leau Clarence E. Gauthiei Edward C. Kellner Siguard AI. Knutson Edward Birmingham Howard Dennis. Clarence Dionnc. Soren C. Jensen. Emile L. Cossoi. \Valter M. Everso.~ Paul E. Bergquist Daniel Dumas Victor E. Blom Joseph S. Fellne: Walter Imhof Joe Christian Ferdinand Depatie Sylvester L. Dorinski Michael J. Finnerty. Joe Gagne John J. Bellmore. Luigi Diguigiovanni. Eugenio Guiotto.Menominee M. enominee M. enominee. Menominee. Menominee..... Menominee. Menominee ~. encminee A Menominiree.. Mlenominee. Menomiinee. Stephenson. Stephenson. Iaggett. Daggett Pa( aley N. adeau. Carney. Powers. Powers Hermansville Hermansville Hermansville 0 4 I4 4 * t * I i 4* [28] 4 4 4 *:: I ~ — - w I H Harry N. Stoneberg Son of Nels and Selma Stoneberg - - - Menoniinee Born Aug. 25, 1898. Menominee. Enlisted at Green Bay, Wis., Jan. 18, 1918, in Forestry Engineering. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and American University, Washington, D. C. Reached Brest Mar. 10. Trans- I 1 ferred to 22nd Co., 20th Engineers. Reached U. S. June 27; discharged July 8, 1919, Camp Custer. Gust A. Anderson Son of Arthur and Bertha Anderson - Menominee Born July 22, 1893. Entered service Nov. 20, 1917. To Canmp Custer, 337th Inf. Reached Liverpool Aug. 2, 1918. Promoted to corporal. Transferred to 4th Div. at Commercy. To front Nov. 9. Served in A. of 0. Arrived in U. S. June 16; discharged June 24, 1919. Ernest A. Lauzon Son of Gilbert and Mary Lauzoni - - - Menominee Born Dec. 5, 1892, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Assigned to Co. D, 337th Reg., 85th Iiv. Sailed July 22. Stationed at Cosne, France. Reached U. S. June 19; discharged June 27, 1919. ono Carl J. Ackerman Son of Charles and Christine Ackerman - Menoninee Born Dec. 28, 1892, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 23, u 1917, St. Paul, Minn. Assigned to 135th Inf. on border. Reached Liverpool July 1, 1918. Assigned to Base Hospital 1i, London. Reached U. S. Feb. 27; discharged Mar. 14, 1919. *! Hector Poquette Son of Louis and Zeraphine Poquette - Menomlinee Born Apr. 12, 1893, Duluth. Enlisted Apr. 19, 1917,l Duluth, in Signal Corps of Regular Army. To 9th Signal Bn., San Antonio. Reached St. Nazaire May 13. 1918. Active in Bar sur Aube, Die, Frapelle, St. Mihiel | sectors. Luxemburg. Reached U. S. July 15; discharged Aug. 4, 1919. George C. Wolff Son of Philip and Hermina Wolff - - - Menominee | Born Feb. 24, 1893, Menominee. Entered service July 14. 1918, Valparaiso, Ind. To Camp Sherman, O.. and Camp Mills. Reached Liverpool Sept. 13. W4, ith 1' I 84th Div. at Le Mans until Armistice. Transferred to Co. B, 311th Inf., 78th Div. Reached U. S. May 26; discharged June 5, 1919. Raymond Freiss Son of Edhnund and Minnie lreiss - - -Menonlinee Born Oct. 8, 1890, Menominee. Enlisted June 19, 1916, in Co. L. Service on border. Promoted to Sgt. Jine 19. 1919, Camp Custer. -- - Joseph Freiss Son of Ednitnd amid Minnie Freiss - - - Menomninee * Born June 11, 1892, Menominee. Entered service Apr. 29, 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer and Camp Mills. Reached Liverpool Aug. 3. Transferred to Signal Corps, and followed Meuse-Argonne drive. Reached U. S. Apr. 2: discharged Apr. 12, 1919, Camp Custer. J Edward E. Freiss Son of Edinunid and Minnie Freis - - Menoiminee Born Jan. 8, 1889, Menominee. Enlisted June 11, 1917, with Co. L, Escanaba. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Alsace front. Wounded in Aisne-Marne. Transferred to Convalescent Co. Reached U. S. Mar. 30; (lisclarged Apr. 19, 1919, Camp Custer. Clarence Lindstrom Son of Charles and Ida Lindstrom - - - Menominee Born Aug. 29, 1895, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 191.8. Assigned to 160th F. A. Brigade, Camp Custer. Reached Liverpool Aug. 6. Active in St. Mihiel and Toul sectors. Transferred from 85th to 89th Div. Reached U. 5. Apr. 12; discharged Apr. 21, 1919, Camp Grant. [29] HI!r now!c I -- I *[i - m — - 0 4]Y 40 11 I ow% jIL Al 0 0.. I I Clayton E. Putrow Son of Theodore and Isabeile Putrow - Menomninee Born June 6, 1895. Enlisted June 9, 1917, Chicago, L |Motor Truck Co. 109. To Fort Creek, Neb., Fort Harrison, Ind., and Camp Merritt. Reached Liverpool Jan. 22, 1918. Attached to First Army M. T. C. Transferred i to Ammunition Train. Reached U. S. July 7; discharged July 15, 1919, Camp Grant. John Schick Son of John and Anna Schick - - - Menomninee 4 Born Aug. 19, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 19, 1917, in Regular Army. To Fort Caswell, N. C., Coast Artillery. Transferred to 9th Anti-Aircraft Battery. i. Assigned to A. E. F. Transferred to detached service at Hoboken, N. J. il 1918. LieroJyed in Roa, ans a * Charles F. Stoneberge Son of Nels and Selma Stoneberg - - - Menominee Born Sept. 18, 1891. Entered service at Menominee! Mar. 30, 1918. Assigned to 55th Engineers, Camp Custer, and Camp Merrill. Reached Brest July 12. Promoted to corporal. Assigned to Engineers who built f Pershing Stadium near Paris. Reached U. S. July 14, d discharged July 21, 1919. * Joseph L. Hranach Son of John and Emily Hranach - - - Menoinee 1 | BSorn Sept. 30, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted July 22, * i 1918, Escanaba. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and Camp Hill, Va., 328th Supply Regiment. Reached Brest Sept. Reached U.. July 18, discharged July 25, 1919, Camp Grant. Siguard Magnusen Son of Loui and Karen Magnusen - - Menominee Born May 5, 1898. Enlisted Mar. 8, 1918, Green Bay, Wis. Assigned to 20th Engineers. Reached Brest May 23, 1918. Engaged in construction and road operations [ i in Alsace sector. Reached U. S. June 4, discharged June 11, 1919, Camp Grant. Fred Moritz Son of John and Libby Moritz - - - - Menoninee Born Mar. 4, 1887, Germany. Entered service May 25. 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 85th Div., 338th Inf., Co. K. Reached Liverpool Aug. 3. Transferred to [ Co. D, 7th Inf., 3rd Div. St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives. Promoted to motor mechanic. With Army of Occupation. Reached U. S. June 26, 1919. Entered l. Ft. Sheridan Hospital. Discharged Aug. 13, 1919, Camp Grant. It ~ Reider D. Holter 4 Son of N. P. G. and Ragna Holter - Christiania, Norway Born Dec. 28, 1892, Norway. Served in C. A. C., 134th Co., 1913-1915. Expert rifleman. Enlisted June 27, 1918. Assigned as 1st C1. Pvt. to Co. K, 339th Inf. Reached Liverpool July 31. Served in Russia, and was gassed and shell-shocked on the Valogda front. Reached U. S. Dec. 21, 1918; discharged Jan. 6, 1919. Robert Salewsky Son of Edward and Henrietta Salewsky - Marinette * Born Nov. 10, 1896, Menominee. Entered service, Menominee, June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th F. A. Bat. E. To Camp Mills. Reached Liverpool Aug. 6. * Proceeded to France. Reached U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. * John E. Watson Son of Samnuel and Anna Watson - - - - Wallace Born Oct.;5, 1893. Entered service, Detroit, June 4 1 15, 1918. Assigned to Co. K, 339th Regt. To Camp Mills. Reached Liverpool Aug. 4, and proceeded to Russia. In action in 1st and 2nd Kadish offensives. I Returned to U. S. Discharged July 19, 1919. Bruno Wozniak Son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Wozniak - Menominee Born Mar. 29, 1893. Entered service Sept. 10, 1918. Assigned to Inf., 90th Div. Served overseas. Discharged July 28, 1919. P [, 4+. * I 0 F k pI | Carl Westman Sonl of Nels anul Christine V estntan Menoininee Born Mar. 4, 1900. Entered service, Menominee Mar. 20, 1918. To Camp Glordon. Ga.. and Newport News, Va. Assigned to 27Sth Div., 102nd Regt., Ist Co. Reah(a d Brest May 27. Assigned to Ammunition Section, M. T. C., Bordeaux to Argonne-Meuse sector. Reachied U. S. * Mar. 11| discharged Apr. 1, 1919. Oscar Westman Son 4f N el and Christine Westinan - Menonlinee Born Mar. 5, 1895. Entered service Mar. 20, 1-918. To Fort RileyMdia Crs On way overseas was picked up by fishermen when H. M. S. Messanasie was torpedoed and sunk. erdinhsitals in England. Reached U. S. Jan. 25; discharged May 16, 1919. * George R. Schrank Son of Albert and Anelia Sehrank - - - Menoininee *Born June 16, 1892. Entered service Aug. 28, 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, Tank Corps. Sailed for France Oct. 27, 1918, arriving Liverpool. Trained at Longeau. Served at Castillon. Reached U. S. May 13 ~rj discharged May 21, 1919, Camp Grant. Robert Ackerman Son of Charles and Mary E. Ackerman - Mlenominee I Born Nov. 27, 1886. Enlisted June 20, 1916, in Co. L. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Active * in Alsace, Chateau-Thiierry and Mouse-Argonne. Wounded at Chateau-Thierry. With Army of Occupation. Reached U. S. May 18; discharged May 29, 1919, * Camp Custer. Arthur W. Olson Son of Swan and Marie Olson Menoilnee *Born June 7, 1888, Menominee. Entered service Apr. 29, 1918. To Camp Custer, 85th Div. Transferred to and sailed with 79th Div. Aug. 13. In action at Grand Montagne and in Meuse-Argonne. Reached U. S. May 27; discharged June 5, 1919, Camp Custer. William E. Buelow Son of Albert and Lucy Buelow -— Menonilnee Born Mar. 6, 1896, Menominee. To Camp Custer, Headquarters Co., 330th F. A. Reached Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. In training at Rimaucourt, Haute-Maine. Reached U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. Nicholas Gemuenden * Son of Nicholas and ]Katherine Gecniitienden - MenondineeA Born Feb. 20, 1887, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 85th Div., 337th Jnf. Reached Brest Mar. 4, 1918, with * 24th Engineers, after transfer. Took part in St. Mihiel and Argonne-Meuse offensives. Reached U. S. May 30:. discharged June 10, 1919, Camp Custer. John Biahnik Soni of John and Josephine Blahnik - - enoininee * Born Jan. 20, 1897. Enlisted June 14, 1915, in Co. L. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Active in Alsace sector, Aisne-Marne, Oise-Aisne and Mouse-Argonne offensives. Promoted to Cpl. Gassed + on Nov. 11. A. of 0. Reached U. S. May 4; discharged May 17, 1919. V ictor Schick Son of Antone and Angelina Schick — Menonilnee Born July 19, 1894. Enlisted at Menominee May 19, 1916. in Co. L. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Promoted to Cpl. May 1 and to Sgt. Aug. 8 for gallantry in action. Alsace, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, second Marne battle. Wounded at Juvigny. * Recommended for commission. In hospital three m-onthis. Reached U. 5. Apr. 24; discharged Apr. 29, 1919. *Stanley H. Walker Son of Autgunst and Georgiana Stadibaner (Walker) Menoi tee Born Jan. 2, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted, Menominee, ~ June 7, 1917. To 303rd Inf. Band. Private, 1st Class,. s July 1. Arrived in France July 14, 1918. Slightly gassed near Soissons Aug. 2. Promoted to Sgt.-Major May 13, 1919. Reached U. S. Aug. 3; discharged Aug. 1. 6, 1920. [31] I~ A IA AL *: -, * * * * * *A * * - M -M =U0 —W 1 we t3 K Charles J. O'Brien Son of Charles and Mary O'Brien - Stevens Point, Wnis. Born Apr. 12, 1893. Enlisted, Menominee, in Co. L. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Active in Alsace sector, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons-Meuse and Meuse-Argonne offensives. Wounded near SoisSons. A. of O. Reached U. S. May 18; discharged May 30, 1919.!l ~Walter G. Seidl 'Son of Peter Seidl and Ba.rbara Seidl Reindl - - - Menoniinee Born Aug. 21, 1897. Menominee. Entered service I Apr. 29, 1918. To Camp Custer, 55th Engineers. -. I Reached France July 12, 1918. On convoy duty out of Gievres, and in Paris after the Armistice. Reached | rtU. S. July 14; discharged July 21, 1919. { I Lawrencs G. Rank Felix A. Trudell Son of Charles and Melia Zsehan - - - Menominee Born June 8, 1895. Entered service, Menominee, Sept. 22, 1917. To Camp Custer, Camp MacArthur and Camp Merritt. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. To Headqtrs. Co. 125th Inf., 32nd Div. At Alsace sector and Chateau-Thierry. Wounded near Soissons. Officially reported dead through erro r in records. Reached U. S. Feb. 26; discharged Mar. 4, 1919. Lawrence G. Reiter Son of Joseph ald Malrie Reiter - - - Menominee Born Sept. 12, 1896. Enlisted May 24, 1915 in Co. L. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Assigned to signal duty. Alsace, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons. Aisne, Meuse-Argonne. Wounded in Argonne. Reached U. S. Feb. 18; discharged Mar. 11, 1919, Camp Custer. Frank Polaski Son of William and Mary Polaski - - Menominee Born Dec. 9, 1895, Menominee. Entered service June 3 i1 27, 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 330th F. A. Bat.. Reached Liverpool Aug. 3. Served in France until Mar. 31. 1919. Discharged Apr. 27, 1919, Camp Custer.!: Walter F. Nelson Son of Fred and Christine Nelson Floodman - - Menominee Born Apr. 3, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted in Co. L[ Feb. 7, 1916. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Alsace, Chateau-Thlierry, Soissons, MeuseArgonne fronts, and A. of O. Promoted to Corporal, Army of Occupation. Discharged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. Edward C. Birmingham Son of James and Ida Birmingham - - Menoninee Born Apr. 28, 1895, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th F. A. Bat. D.. pReached Liverpool Aug. 6. Arrived at front Oct. 28. Reached U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. * ~: / Nicholas J. Rank Son of Charles and Margaret Rank - - Menominee Born Sept. 17, 1886. Enlisted July 14, 1918. To Valparaiso, Ind., and Camp Crane, Pa. Reached Liverpool Nov. 24. Attached to French Army for ambulance duty in Bridgehead area. Reached U. S. June 4; dis* lcharged June 16, 1919, Camp Custer. Louis A. Bouford *.a Son of Joseph aind Adele Bonford - - - Menoninee Born July 26, 1894. Enlisted June 22, 1918. To Camp Raritan. Reached Liverpool Sept. 16, 1.918. Active in operations between Meuse and Moselle, in Mobile Ordnance service. A. of O. Reached U. S. June 28; discharged July 6, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph P. Seneca Son of Peter and Delia Seneca - - - Menomninee Born Oct. 7, 1891. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. To Camp Custer, Co. E, 102nd Ammunition Train, 27th Div. Reached Brest June 26. Stationed on Verdun front. Promoted to Pvt. 1st. C1. Reached U. S. Mar. 11; discharged Apr. 2, 1919, Camp Custer. [32] * A& I I I I I * -G I Ak 1:a ~ * >Ok - S: 5,C — ~,,J~-~-~-p -*r - I & - AL ALL A& f. lw w — '* - J1 I 0 I, Frank Julius Kasmarek Son of Peter sand P:auline lasmlnirek - - Menominee Born Mar. 15, 1895. Entered service June 24, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th F. A., 85th Div., Co. E. Reached Liverpool Aug. 6. Trained at Rimaucourt, HauteMarne. Reached U. S. Apr. 12: discharged Apr. 26. 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph V. Ruatti Son of Foire and Margaret Ruatti - - Menominee Born Nov. 11, 1893. Entered service, Menominee. To Camp Custer. 330th F. A., Bat. E. Reached Liverpool Aug. 6. Trained at Rimaucourt. Reached U. S. Apr. 12; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. John G. Kohel Son of John and Francis Kohel - - - Menominee Born Sept. 24, 1892. Enlisted, Menominee, July 12, 1918. To Lansing, M. T. C. Served overseas. On motor transport duty between Paris and St. Nazaire. Reached U. S. Oct. 18; discharged Oct. 19, 1919. Nicholas J. Baker Son of John D. and Mary B. Baker -. Menolinlee Born April 17, 1896. Entered service Sept. 22, 1917, Menominee. To Camp Custer, M. G. Co., 337th Inf.. 85th Div. Reached Liverpool July 28, 1918. Verdun sector, and in support in three battles. Served with A. of O. Reached U. S. Apr. 19: discharged May 8. 1919. Camp Custer. Charles G. Metzdorf Son of Michael and Mary Metzdorf Kiefer - Menoininee Born Jan. 4, 1890, Menominee. Enlisted July 14, 1918, in Medical Corps. To Valparaiso, Ind., and Camp Crane, Pa. Reached Liverpool Nov. 24. With 5th Div.. A. of O., in Luxemburg. Reached U. S. July 21: discharged July 29, 1919. Alberico Dedamos Son of Anton and Josephine Dedamlos - Menoninee Born Sept. 23, 1896, Norway. Enlisted May 7, 1918, Green Bay, Wis. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., F. A. To 53rd Pioneer Inf. at Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Reached Brest Aug. 18. Promoted to Corporal. Active in St. Mihiel, Argonne and Argonne-Meuse drives. Discharged July, 1919. Peter W. Newhouse Son of Peter and Philoinine Newhouse - Menoininee Born April 12, 1890. Enlisted in U. S. M. C., Duluth, Minn., July 17, 1917. Sharpshooter. Overseas. Discharged Aug. 18, 1919. Edward M. Martinek Son of Jacob and Agnes Martinek - - Menoninee Born Oct. 13, 1895. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917, Menominee. Reached Brest Mar. 10, 1918. Transferred from 85th to 42nd Div. Baccarat, Champagne, ChateauThierry, St. Mihiel and Meuse fronts. Appointed Sgt. Nov. 11. A. of O. Attended French University. Reached U. S. July 3; discharged July 17, 1919. Dr. Henry T. Sethney Son of Andrew and Ellen Sethney - - -- Norway- (Menominee) Born May 31, 1882. Enlisted June 4, 1917. Commissioned 1st Lieut. July 23. To Fort Benjamin Harrison and Camp Sheridan, Ala. Regt'l Surg. 147th Inf., 37th Div. Lorraine, Baccarat, Avocourt, Meuse-Argonne, Pennes, Ypres-Lys and Ypres-Lys Ascut fronts. Front line trench service. Reached U. S. Mar. 23; released from active duty Apr. 19, 1919, with rank of Major, at Camp Sherman. Andrew B. Callari Son of Albert and Marie Callari - - - Menominee Born Apr. 17, 1897. Enlisted. Marinette, May 28, 1917, in Co. I. Reached Brest Mar. 4, 1918. Alsace, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Argonne fronts. Three months in hospital. Served in A. of O. Reached U. S. May 5; discharged May 18, 1919. 4 I 4 i 4 I I 4 1 110 Y III Y 4 -.0 - [33] ------- W -h- AL, A& --- h L- - i I s m n IrI A.il~I~~ L A I m = U~I ~, ggl^ -, - - 4-1 1,:,- = 3_.^_ I 0 0 0 0 George A. Wellner Son of Fre:l and Bertha WVellner - - - Menominiee Born July 19, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted, Green Bay, Wis., Jan. 19, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., 25th Co., 20th Engineers. Reached Brest Apr. 18. Saw action in the Vosges Mountains. Reached U. S. June 1, 1919; discharged June 11, 1919. Frank W. Lemieux Sitn of Albert and Mary,eImieux - - - Menomlinee Born Sept. 11, 1891. Enlisted, Menominee, with Photographic Air Service. Reported for duty May 28, 1918. To San Antonio, Tex. Reached Brest Sept. 25. Established training studios at Tours. Assigned to 50th Air S(quadron. Attended Candidate School. Made survey of battle fields for War Dept. Reached U. S. May 3; discharged May 15, 1919, Camp Custer. George E. Lemieux Soan of Albert and Mary Lemieux - - - Menominee Born Oct. 20, 1888. Enlisted, Chicago, Dec. 1, 1917, with 20th Engineers, 6th Bat., Co. E. To Camp Humphrey, Va. 6th Pro. Eng. Reached St. Nazaire June 28, 1918. Transferred to 40th Engineers. Served as interpreter and buyer for camouflage factory. Reached U. S. Jan. 27; discharged Feb. 14, 1919. Carl V. Peterson Son of Peter and Marie Peterson - - - Menominee Born July 23, 1890, Menominee. Entered service Apr. 28, 1918, Milwaukee. To Camp Custer, 340th Inf., 85th Div. Reached London Aug. 1, 1918. Transferred to 35th Div. Active in Verdun sector. Reached U. S. Apr. 25; discharged May 2, 1919, Camp Grant. Arthur E. Peterson Son of Peter and Marie Peterson - - - Menoininee Born June 21, 1893. Enlisted, Akron, O., May 27, 1918. To Camp Gordon, Ga., 330th Inf., 83rd Div., Co. A. Reached Liverpool Aug. 2. Assigned to rifle range duty in France as instructor. Received special praise from Gen. Pershing. In five months instructed 30,000 men in front line duties. Promoted to Cpl. June 15; to Sgt. July 15, 1918. Reached U. S. Jan. 30; discharged Feb. 13, 1919. Edward Nohlechek Son of John and Anna Nohlechek - - - Menominee Born Feb. 13, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 21, 1917, in 337th Inf., 85th Div. Promoted to Cpl. Nov. 28, 1917; to Sgt. May 14, 1918, and to Platoon Sgt. June 1, 1918. Sailed July 22 with 337th Inf. Assigned to Motorcycle Corps. Injured on duty. Trans. 291st Secret Service, La Mans. Reached U. S. July 28, 1919. Assigned to Ward 56, Hospital No. 28, Fort Sheridan. Gust Pearson Son of Swan and Marie Pearson - - - Menomlinee Born May 2, 1886, Sweden. Enlisted Apr. 28, 1918, Escanaba. To Douglas, Ariz., Co. B, 17th M. G. Bn., 6th Div. Reached La Havre July 20. Active in Gerardine and Vosges sectors, and in Meuse-Argonne offensive. Promoted to Supply Sgt. Dec. 8. Reached U. S. June 11; discharged June 25, 1919. Norman E. O'Connor Son of Thomas and Belle O'Connor - - Menominee Born Aug. 29, 1894, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 337th Inf., 85th Div., Co. C. Promoted to Cpl. Reached Brest Mar. 7, 1918. Transferred to 117th Field Sig. Corps Bn., 42nd Div. Baccarat sector; Champagne, AisneMarne, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives. A. of O. Reached U. S. Apr. 29; discharged May 29, 1919. Chester Devoe Son of Joseph and Mary Devoe - - - Menominee Born Feb. 3, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted in U. S. M. C. May 9, 1918, Buffalo. Qualified as sharpshooter. Reached Brest Aug. 25. Transferred to 84th Co., 6th Marines, 2nd Div. Active in St. Mihiel, Champagne, Meuse-Argonne offensives. Wounded Nov. 1. A. of 0. Reached U. S. July 14; discharged July 23, 1919, Quantico, Va. Stanley A. Przalomski Son of Andrew and Frances Przalomski - Menominee Born May 9. 1896, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. To Camp Custer, Co. E, 337th Inf. Promoted to Cpl. Nov. 28; to Sgt. June 23, 1918. Automatic rifle specialist. Sailed July 22. Active between Meuse and Moselle. Reached U. S. Mar. 23; discharged Apr. 21, 1919, Camp Custer. [34] w 1 I 4 1 4 4- 4- 4-". W1 EWEW 4.. t I a - w _ - %AkA6AwOF - I ~ I a1 IL;~~~ CJ I.. MM. Robert H. Rose Son of Jolmu ndiid Elsie Ilse - - - - Ieieokininee Born Mar. 18, 1894. Menominee. Entered C. A. C., 68th Rcgt.. Battery C, Juneau, Wis. Reached England Aug. 81, 1918. Stationed at Le Bourne, France. Rt1eached U. S. Feb. 10; diseharged Mar. 8. 191-9, Camp Grant. August Schwartz * Son of John and Anna, Schwartz Kajeski - Menontinee Born Jan. 5, 1887, Menominee. Enlisted in Co. L, June 20, 1916. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918, with 32nd Div. Active on Alsace, Aisne, Vesle River, Aisne-Mlarne fronts. Gassed at Soissons. Treated at seven hospitals. A. of 0. Reached IT. S. May 17; (Iischarged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. George F. Rose Son of John and Elsie Rose - - - - Menomninee Born Sept. 20, 1896, Menominee. Entered service, Menominee, Aug. 28, 1918. To Camp Custer, Depot Brigade, Camp Colt, Pa. Trans. to Tank Corps. Overseas Oct. 20, 1918. Served on Verdun front. Reached U. S. Mar. 12; discharged Mar. 29, 1919, Camp Grant. Walter Nowack Son of Ferdinand C. and Caroline Nowack - Menoniinee Born Nov. 7, 1889, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 10, 1917, Marinette. Reached Brest Dec. 22, 1917, with 6th Engineers, 3rd Div., Co. A. With British in Somme sector; with 3rd Div. in Champagne-Maine defensive; Aisne-Marne, St. Mihiel, Mouse-Argonne offensives. Promoted to Corporal Nov. 20, 1918. Reached U. S. Aug. 25; discharged Sept. 2, 1919, Camp Grant. William E. Ryan S Son of John and Rose Ryan - - M- enominee Born May 6, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted, Green Bay. Wis., Feb. 15, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, 4th F. A. * i Bat. D. To Fort Shelby, Miss. Reached Brest Oct. 8, with 83rd Regt., 8th Div., Readqtrs. Co. Assigned as body-guard for President Wilson. Assigned to prison guard. Reached U. 5. Jan. 18; discharged Feb. 20, 1919, Camp Knox. Martin J. Ferry Son of Joseph and Emily Ferry - l enontlneP Born Sept. 13, 1893, Menominee. Entered service, *, Menominee, Nov. 19, 1917. To Camp Custer, Co. 1), 337th Inf., 85th Div. Promoted to Sgt.-Major Mar. 12, 1918. Reached France May 28, with 10th M. G. Bn., 4th Div. Active at Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry, Vesle sector, Toulon, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne. With A. of 0. near Coblenz. Arrived U. 5. July 27. 1919; discharged Aug. 13, 1919, Camp Grant. * IMartin Anderson Son of John and Carrie Anderson - enoininee Born Aug. 22, 1890, Menominee. Entered service, Milwaukee, May, 1918. To Camp Custer, 104th F. A. Sig. Bn., 29th Div. Arrived overseas July 2. Gassed on Verdun front and sent to Base Hospital No. 11. * Reached U. 5. Jan. 18; discharged Feb. 18, 1919, Camp 4 Sh erman. Oliver Fred Allard * Son of Joseph and Mary Allard - - - Menomninee Born Apr. 5, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted in Co. L and served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Active on Alsace front; at Juvigny, Soissons; in Argonne Forest and Argonne-Meuse offensives. A. of 0. Promotions-Cpl., Oct. 22, 1916; Sgt., Sept. 12, 1917; Sgt.Major, Aug. 17, 1918; 2nd Lieut., Nov. 11, 1918, being recommended for commission by Gen. Pershing for + gallantry in action on Oct. 25, 1918. Reached U. S. May 24; discharged June 13, 1919. *I Otto Adolph Lemke Son of Theodore and Anna Lenke - - Menominee Born Oct. 27, 1892, Menominee. Enlisted June 6, l i 1917, in Co. L, Escanaba. Reached Brest Feb. 24. Alsace front; Soissons, Aisne-Marne, Oise-Aisne. Wounded at Chateau-Thierry July 31. At Base Hospital in * Limoges to Nov. 28. Reached U. S. Jan. 3; discharged Feb. 3, 1919. Walter D. Johnson Son of Sainnel and Anna Johnson Menouiulnee Born July 25, 1893, Menominee. Entered service, Menominee, July, 1918. To M. A. C., Lansing. Reached Liverpool Oct. 31, with Repair Unit, 307th M. T. C. Promoted to Pvt., 1st Cl. Reached U. 5. July 23; disl I charged July 30, 1919, Camp Grant. 135] 'a. 4I -4 Ad lop. *I - - f 40., 0. hm m / www.0. 41. m 9 ffi, I*..41. PRM!!!!!9 MMMONOMMEMW lw lw lw 4 4 4 4 James F. Boucher Son of Aug ust and Mary Boucher - - Menominee Born Nov. 17, 1895. Enlisted, Co. L, May 1, 1917. Border service. Arrived at Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Alcace front. Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Argonne Forest, Argonne-Meuse offensives. A. of O., in which he performed outpost duty. Promoted to cook, June, 1917. I'. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 29, 1919, Custer. James F. Garbell Son of Gei)rge maid Rse Garbell - - - Menominee Born July 18, 1896, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 6. 1917, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 337th Inf., 85th Div., Co. E. Promoted to Cpl. Feb. 6, 1918. Transferred to 345th Inf., 87th Div. Reached Liverpool Sept. 5, 1918. Stationed at Camp Foecey, France. Ut. S. Jan. 5, 1919; discharged Jan. 29, 1919, Custer. Hector J. Boivin Son of Joseph and Albertine Ioivin - - Menominee Born June 10, 1892, Menominee. Entered service June 15, 1918. To Houghton C. of M. To Washington. D. C. Sailed Sept. 1, 1918. Did railroad duty and ser ed as interpreter lor Co. B, 68th Engineers. Promoted to Corporai Feb. 18, 1918. Stationed at Montiershaume. Left Bordeaux May 21, 1919; reached U. S. June 10; discharged June 19, 1919, Camp.Custer. Elof Klar Son of Olaf and Anna Klar - - - - - Menominee Born Sept. 6, 1892, Menominee. Entered service May 25, 1918. To Camp Custer. Reached Liverpool Aug. 3. Assigned to Co. B, 7th Inf., 3rd Div. In action in St. Mihiel and Argonne offensives. In hospital at Contrixville and Bordeaux. With A. of 0. Left Brest Aug. 14. 1919; U. S. Aug. 22; discharged Aug. 28, 1919, Grant. Theodore F. Dion Son of Peter and Armena Dion - - - Menominee Born Sept. 30, 1893. Enlisted, Cleveland, O., Oct. 4, 1917. To Camp Sherman, 332nd M. G. Bn., Co. B. Assigned to 1st Army Headqtrs., Co. E, Reg. Sailed Mar. 1, 1918. Reached France Mar. 13. Saw action on first army fronts. Reached IT. S. Jan. 21, 1919. Discharged Mar. 17, 1919, Camp Custer. Frank X. St. Peter Son of Ovid and Marie St. Peter - - - Menominee Born Mar. 28, 1893, Menominee. Entered service Terre Haute, Ind., Apr. 26, 1918. To Camp Taylor. 159th Depot Brigade. Reached Liverpool Aug. 10, with 85th Div. In action at St. Mihiel, Argonne Forest and in Argonne-Meuse offensive. Gassed. Five weeks in Base Hospital 27, Limoges. Left St. Nazaire Apr. 6, 1919; U. S. Apr. 16. Dis. May 16, 1919, Taylor. Michael J. Telot Son of Maximilian and Lydia Telot - - Menominee Born Oct. 5, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted May 31, 1918, Green Bay, Wis. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Reached Liverpool Oct. 11. Stationed at Is-sur-Tille, St. Nazaire and Montaigne. Left France Sept. 21, 1919; reached U. S. Sept. 29; discharged Oct. 7, 1919. Promoted to Corporal Aug. 5, 1918. Sergeant Sept. 12, 1919. Franklin A. Bemus Son of Franklin and Mary Bemus - - Menominee Born Mar. 1, 1892, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918,Camp Custer. Sailed July 27. Reached Brest Aug. 6. Assigned to 310th Ammunition Train, transporting from Bordeaux to various fronts, including Lens, Armantiers, Arras, Lille, Pouilly, Rheims. U. S. Apr. 20, 1919; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Mills. Alphonse Demars Son of Aleide and Mrs. Demars - - - Menominee Born Jan. 6, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Apr., 1914, Co. L. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Appointed 1st Bugler of 3rd Bn., 125th Inf. Alsace, Oise-Aisne, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Argonne Forest. Awarded French medal for bravery at Verdun. Gassed. Rejoined Reg. in A. of 0. Reached U. S. May 21, 1919; discharged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. George T. Gilbert Son of Louis and Esther Gilbert - - - Menominee Born Mar. 10, 1890, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 23, 1918. To Camp Custer. Reached Liverpool July 7. Assigned to 28th Inf., 1st Div. Active in St. Mihiel and Argonne offensives. Volunteered as despatch rider. Twice wounded. Decorated in hospital by Gen. Mangin. U. S. Mar. 20, 1919; discharged May 1, 1919. [-36] 4 4 4 4 4 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 m e 4 $ 0 7 `,, 4,, Iiol iN 4 4 I * 1 4. AD O'L a TI. 0 _ _ _ T i~ r IMF lw lw 14 * - - - Sigurd M. Knutson Son of Carl and Sophie Knutson - - - Menoniunet Born Feb. 7, 1896. Entered service June 24. 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th F. A., 85th Div. Reached Liverpool Aug. 6. In training at Pipriac, Coetquidan andcl Rimaucourt. Orders to proceed to front cancelled Nov. 8. Promoted to Pvt, 1st Cl. Reached U. S. Mar. 30. 1919; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. *'1 Joseph R. Mulholland @ I Son of Robert and Margaret Muiholland - Menominee Born Aug. 17, 1889, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, Bat. E, 330th F. A. Reaclhed Liverpool Aug. 6. In training at Pipriac, Coetquidan and Rimaucourt. Orders to proceed to front cancelled Nov. 8. Left Brest Mar. 31, 1919: reached U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. * John Jacques Son of Jnleu C and Eleanor Jacques - - Menoinine. X= Born May 24 1892. Menominee. Entered service Apr., 29, 1918. To Camp Custer. Arrived at Brest June 8. --- witl Co. E, 82nd Inf., 1st Div. Active in St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives. WMith A. of 0. from aec. 13 to Aug. 15, 1919. Discharged Aug. 15, 1919, Camp Grant. George A. Trautner Son of George and Theresal Traitner - Menonlilnee Born Jan 27, 1897, Menominee. Entered service. Milwaukee, Nov. 10, 1917. To Camp Custer. Promoted to Corporal May 3 1918. W;ith Co. D, 58th Inf., 4lth I)iv.. reached Brest May 20. In action at Marne. Ourcq and Vesle rivers, and at St. Mihiel. With A. of 0. Returned with "Pershing's Own" Sept. 10, 1919. Discharged Sept. 23, 1919, Rockford, Ill. ~ 3 Fred C. Goldammer Son of Theodore and Sophie Goldalinuer - MenonineeBorn Jan. 8, 1900, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 1, 19. 17. Sailed Feb. 10, 1918. Reached Brest Feb 24. Assigned to Motor Repair Camp near Brest. Left * Brest May 18, 1919: reached U. S. May 29; discharged June 5, 1919. Paul A. Goldammer Soi of Theodore andn Sophie Goi.dainner - 1Senon inee Born Sept. 22, 1891. Entered service Sept. 15, 1917. To Camp Custer. Med. Det., 337th Inf.. 85t1 Div. Sailed July 26, 1918. Reached Liverpool Aug. 3. Active in Meuse-Argonne drive. Left France Oct. 30S 1919. Reached U. S. Nov. 19; discharged No. 22 19191 Alfred W. Hansen Son of Carl r L.andl Henriette Hanell - - nlenolnineelle Rorn Nov. 17, 1895, Menominee. Entered se rvice Nov. 17, 1917. To Camp Custer, 337th Tnf., 85th rdiv Sailed July 25, 1918. Stationed at Let Mans. Lanres and Cours. Reached U. S. Mar. 1, 1919: discharged Mar. 10. Promotions-Curl).. Mar. 29. 1918: Sergt, * June 25; 2nd Lieut., Nov. 18. 1918. Ferdinand Stephenson Son *f Aindrew C. andl Pheleia Stepleso ---Ienotn-li niee 1 Born Sept. 14, 1886, Menomninee. Entered service J June 27,, 1918. To Camp Custer, 310th T. M., Bat. I. Sailed July 30. Reached Liverpool Aug. 9. Assigned to 92nd' Div.. and later to 91st Div. Promoted to Corp - - Oct. 27 and to Sergt. Nov. 20. 1918. Returned to U. S. Mar. 21, 1919: discharged Mar. 24. 1919. Chester H. Vanderlip Son of Albert and Anna Vanderlip - enoniinee Born Nov. 20. 1892, Menominee. Enlisted May 25. 1917, Army Ambulance Service. Resigned from 3rd 0. T. C. and returned to Camp Crane. Promoted to 1st Sergt. Sailed Aug. 30, 1918. Stationed at St. Nazaire. Sailed July 10, 1919: reached U. S. July 19; discharged July 21, 1919, Camp Dix. Lewis F. Gadbois Son of Mrs. E. L. Gadbois --------- Menonidnee Born Feb. 7. 1894. Menoniince. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Washington Barracks, 35th Eng. Sailed Aug. 26 aboard the Persia, which was torpedoed and sunk en route. Reached London Sept. 9. Served in freight car construction at La Rochelle. Promoted to Sergt. Feb. 18, 1919. Reached U. 5. Apr. 27; discharged May 14, 191-9, Camp Grant. [37] I I I- - I I - ~ - 4 -, t. I ---- - - P - i - - 41 f f 414 Grover C. Thompson Son of George and Emma Thompson - Menomlinee 1Arn July 14, 1887. Husband of Teresa Pladwell. Enlisted in Co. L Nov. 27, 1903. Elected 2nd Lieut. Aug., 1914. Served on border. Promoted to 1st Lieut. July 30, 1918. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 191.8. Active in Alsace and on Maine. Wounded at Juvigny. To Base Hospital, Paris. Returned to duty in Meuse-Argonne offensive. Promoted to Capt. Oct. 7, 1918. A. of 0. Remained in command of Co. L until its mustering out. May 29, 1919. Arrived U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged June 5, 1919, Camp Custer. Robert J. Hutchinson Son of Charles W. and Ada Hntchinson - Menomlinee Born June 4, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted in Co. I. Marinette. Border service. Overseas. Active in Alsace sector and in Aisne-Marne offensive. Gassed and wounded at Fismes. In hospital for remainder of year Left for U. S. Jan. 10; arrived Jan. 19, 1919. Earl Hansen Son of Hilmer and Katherine Hansen - Menominee Born Aug. 19, 1899, Menominee. Entered service Apr. 27. 1919, Indiana Harbor, Ind. To 0. T. C., Camp Lee, Va. Transferred to Camp Beauregard, La. Assigned to 159th Depot Brigade. Promoted to Corp. D-schargede Feb. 7, 1919, Camp Grant. John A. Peterson S on of Peter and Emma Peterson - - - Mlarinette Born April 11, 1890. Enlisted, Minneapolis, June 12. 1918. Entered Radio School. Reached France June 28. 1918. Transferred to Engineers. Engaged in construction work. Stationed near Bordeaux. Reached U. S. May 13, 1919; discharged May 15, 1919. Cyril R. Valcq Son of Hector and Odel Valcq - - - - Menominee Born Feb. 27, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted July 11. 1918. To Jefferson Barracks and Camp Jos. E. Johnson. Assigned to Motor Transport Corps No. 304. Sailed Sept. 11. Active in Toul sector and in MeuseArgonne offensive, with 334th M. T. C. With A. of 0. seven months. Reached U. S. Aug. 10, 1919; discharged Aug. 16, 1919, Camp Grant. Carl J. Johnson S an of Peter J. and Hannah C. Johnson -Menominee Born Aug. 24, 1889. Enlisted, Chicago, June 5, 1917. Assigned to 17th Engineers, 34th Co., Atlanta, Ga. Reached Liverpool Aug. 10, 1917. On duty in St. Nazaire one year. Transferred to St. Luce. Promoted to Sergt.. 1st Cl., Apr. 10, 1919. Reached U. S. Sept. 20, 1919: discharged Sept. 21. 1919, Camp Dix. Joseph M. Stauber Son of Anton and M.-arie Stauber - - - Menoninee Born July 7, 1892, Menominee. Enlisted in Co. L. Served on border. Reached Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Active in Alsace sector, and in Oise-Aisne and AisneMaine offensives. Wounded at Chateau-Thierry July 31. Spent seven months in hospital. Returned to U. S. a casual; discharged Jan. 30, 1919. Paul H. Erdman Sonm of Julimus and ILena Erdman - - - Menomunee Born Jan. 13, 1897. Enlisted Aug. 28, 1918. Sent to Camp Custer and assigned to Headqtrs. Co., 78th Inf. lischargel Jan. 21, 191.9, Camp Custer. Joseph Doubek Sion of Frank and Margaret Donbek -Menominee Porn Apr. 6, 1896, Menominee. Entered service July 28, 1917. To Camp Custer, 2nd Engineers. 6th Co. Overseas, Sept., 191.8. Attached to 85th Div. Left France Mar. 12, 1919; reached U. S. Mar. 24; discharged Mar. 27, 1919. George C. Payne Son of William and Nellie Payne - - - Menominee Born Feb. 12. 1895. Entered service May 26, 1918. To Camp Custer, Medical Corps. Assigned to Base Hospital No. 30 at Liverpool. On duty there for a year. Sailed for U. S. May 26, 1919; arrived June 3: (lis llarged Juiie 5, 1919. 1133] I I --— ~ r 31 1 I ~TI I —'1 --- CC III 4 4 4- 4 4 4 4 4I 4 4I 4 a a 4k *I t Hans Paulson Son of Jens B. and Kathrine Paulson - - Menomlniee Born Oct. 8, 1899. Enlisted Marinette, Wis., July 15, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., 328th Supply Co., Q. M. Corps. Arrived at Brest Sept. 20. Stationed at Menton, France. Arrived U. S. July 17; discharged July 26. 1919, Camp Grant, Ill. Arthur J. Laduron Son of Ernest and Flora laduron and husband of Ida Desehaine - - - - - - - - - Menominee Born Dec. 4, 1895. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. From Camp Custer to Camp Gordon, Ga., 321st Field Artillery, Battery B. Arrived at Brest, June 27th. Camp La Courtinne, Marseilles. In action Sept. 12 in the St. Mihiel drive and the Argonne-Meuse offensive. Gassed Oct. 10. One month at Base Hospital No. 95 at Langiers. Arrived U. S. Mar. 29, 1919; discharged Camp Custer Apr. 8, 1919. Louie C. Larsen Son of Nels and Sophie Larsen - North Menontinee Husband of Amanda E. Palmquist. Born Jan. 16, 1895, Menominee. Entered service Aug. 28, 1918. Camp Custer, Casual Co. A Tank Corps. Overseas from Camp Mills Oct. 18, 1918. Arrived Liverpool Nov. 3, 1918. Stationed at Castillion, France, to Apr. 15, 1919. Left from Bordeaux for U. S. Apr. 23, 1919; arrived May 5, 1919: discharged May 23, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph E. Hlinka Son of John and Annie Hlinka - - - Menonlinee Born July 30, 1893, Menominee. Entered service May 10, 1918. To 7th Ammunition Train, Columbus Barracks, O. At Camp MacArthur, Waco, Tex. Promoted Sergt. June 18, 1918. Arrived Brest Aug. 10. To Ploermel, France, then Vannes Artillery Range to Oct 1, 1918. At Dieulard until armistice. With A. of O. in Germany Feb. 20, 1919. Arrived U. S. June 22. Camp Mills, Camp Funston. Promoted to Battalion Sergt. Oct 14, and Sergt.-Major Jan 1, 1919. Discharged at Camp Grant. Arthur Marcouiller Son of Maxime and Avelie Marcouiller - Menoininee Born Apr. 19, 1891, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, 85th Div., Bat. E. Overseas, July 29, 1918. Knotty Ash, Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac; Rimaucourt. Haute-Marne. Left for U. S. from Brest Mar. 31, 1919: arrived Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. Charles August Choitz Son of Charles A. F. and Emmal Choitz - Menonlinee Born Feb. 17, 1894. Enlisted June 14. 1918. To Baltimore, Camp Holabird and Camp Merritt. Overseas Oct. 20, 1918. To Motor Transportation Corps No. 307, Co. D. Left Nantes May 29, 1919, for St. Nazaire. To hospital July 5, 1919. Arrived U. S. July 28, 1919; discharged Aug. 5, 1919. Died Oct. 26, 1919, from an accident while hunting. Buried Oct. 29, 1919, Marinette. wis. Samuel H. Schumacher Son of Henry and Mary Sehumaclher - - Menoninee Born June 8, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1918, Menominee, in Regular Army. To Camp Syracuse and later Camp Upton and Camp Devins. Assigned to Camp Dix, Co. 9, 22nd Bn. Discharged Nov. 28, 1918, Camp Dix. Emil L. Cosson Son of l.ouis and Mary Cosson - - - Menominee Born Oct. 20. 1890, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, Battery D, 330th Field Artillery, 85th Div. Overseas July 29, 1918. Camp Coetquidon-Rimaucourt, France. Left Brest Mar. 31 1919: arrived Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 25, 1919. Camnp Custer. Joseph Lucier Son of John and Mary Lueier - - - - Stephenson Born Sept. 18, 1893. Entered service June, 1918. To Camp Custer. 339th Inf., Co. M, 85th Div. Overseas July 22, 1918. Southampton. La Havre. Arrived U. S. July 1: discharged July 7, 1919, Camp Custer. Oscar E. Peterson Son of Theodore and tMarie Peterson - - Menomninee Born May 1, 1891, Sweden. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. To Camp Custer and Waco, Tex., Co. H, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Overseas Feb. 10, 1918. Arrived Feb. 24. In action at Alsace front, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne. Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. in Germany. Arrived from Brest May 8, 1919; discharged May 21, 1919, Camp Custer. [39] AIL' 4h. 40.i~iiii:ii -: — I 4 4 4 4 4 4 l f 4 0 4 4 0 k -- ~ I I~rr- -I --- — ~ —e I -- I I I I I I I. II L - -. -. ^ t d. -0... I - w A. 4 4 4 S S -- - I, 0 0 i Siguard Pearson Son of Swan and Marie Pearson - - - Menominee Born July 10, 1895. Enlisted Mar. 15, 1918, with Coast Artillery. Sent to Camp Monroe, Va., as 1st class gunner. Transferred to Camp Hamilton, N. J. Discharged Dec. 25, 1918, Camp Grant. Lawrence E. Clausen Son of Fred and Wilhelmina Clausen - - Menominee Born July 25, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 5, 1917, Escanaba, 20th Eng., 14th Co. To Columbus, O., and Camp Belliveau, Washington, D. C. Arrived Brest Feb. 15, 1918. Stationed at Sensyone. Arrived U. S. June 23, 1919; discharged July 2, 1919, Camp Custer. Wilfred E. Bushek Son of Anton and Celia Buslhek - - - Menolminee Born Apr. 12, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted, Menominee, June 28, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, Motor Truck Div. Arrived Brest July 29, 1918. At Longiers, carrying supplies to the front. Injured Jan. 10, 1919. Hospital until May 10, when returned to U. S., Base Hospital, N. Y., and Base Hospital, Detroit. Discharged July 9, 1919. Dr. H. R. Bell Menomninee Divisional Secretary, Y. M. C. A., Headqtrs. Co. Overseas from Montreal Sept. 10, 1918. Arrived London Sept. 26. Winchester, Southampton. La Havre, France. Proceeded to Camp de La Courtine Artillery Camp and later to Angiers Casual Camp for officers and men. Returned to U. S. May 3, 1919. Paul B. Paulsen Son of Jens B. and Kathrine Panlsen - - Menominee Born Apr. 20, 1892, Menominee. Enlisted, Jefferson Barracks, Mo., Apr. 28, 1917. Assigned 11th Inf., Camp Douglas, Ariz. Supply Sergt. Aug. 7. Entered 3rd 0. T. C., Ft. Ogelthorpe. Overseas Ap-r. 30. Arrived St. Nazaire May 12, 1918. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. June 1, 1918. Assigned to 92nd Div. as instructor. Transferred to 6th Div., Regular Army, Aug. 15. Vosges Mountains. In Argonne-Meuse drive Oct. 28 to Nov. 11. Arrived U. S. from Brest June 12; discharged Aug. 30, 1919, Camp Grant. Clarence Gauthier Son of Jean and Marie Ganuther - - - Menominee Born Sept. 11, 1895. Entered service June 27. 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery. 85th Div., Bat. D. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6 1918. Camp Knotty Ash, Southampton. Cherbourg-Pipriac, Camp Coetquidan in training. Rimaucourt, HauteMarne. Later at Le Mans. Arrived U. S. from Brest Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 25. 1919, Camp Custer. Adolph Allard Son of Onezinte and Clariee Allard - - Meno-minee Entered service in U. S. Army and assigned to 29th Inf., Co. A. Overseas one year. Discharged Aug., 1919, Camp Grant. Walter G. Barthels Son of John and Eliza Barthels - - - Menominee Born Feb. 27, 1893. Menominee. Entered service Sept. 22, 1917. To Camp Custer, 337th Reg., Co. E. 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 4, 1918. Proceeded to Southampton-La Havre. In action on Meuse and Moselle rivers Nov. 9, 10, 1 1. After armistice stationed Damous and Toule. Arrived U. S. from Bordeaux Apr. 14; discharged Apr. 21, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph A. Maihofer Son of Joseph and Frances Maihofer - Menonminee Born Oct. 12, 1896. Menominee. Enlisted, Racine, Wis., Apr. 29, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks. Mo. Entered Ft. Benjamin Harrison Post Hospital. Arrived Brest Aug. 12. Moved to Isurtille and assigned to 79th Co., Transportation Corps. At Villers Le Sec. Returned to U. S. from St. Nazaire June 28, 1919; discharged July 10, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph H. Perry Son of Henry and Emily Perry - - - Menomninee Born Aug. 10. 1888, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 310th Reg. Engineers, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3. WinchesterSouthampton-La Havre, France. With A. of 0. in Germany. Returned to U. S. July 16, 1919; discharged' July 28, 1919. [40] 1 4 4 1 4 Il IL - I I B. A -- a aCIPltIllla a C. -s No= ' - I,' IN - ~( 9- b l 1 Joseph Hruska Son of Joseph ianld Marie Hruska - - - Menonilnee Born Aug. 2, 1890, Bohemia. Camp Custer, 28th inf., Co. E, 1st D)iV. Arrived July 26, 1918, Liveripool. \Vinchester, Southamnpton, La Havre. In action St. Mihiel offensive and Argonne Forest. WVounded Argonne Forest Oct. 5, left hand and left lung. Field Hospital No. 12 and No. 10 and Base Hospitals 30, 31 and 65. Arrived T. 5. Nov. 28. 9D i scharged May 5, 1918, Canmp Griant. Walter M. Longlais Son of Joseph and Marie Ianglais - - Meno*ninee Born Feb. 26, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted May 23, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks and Jacksonville, Fla. Overseas from Newport, Va. Arrived Aug. 25, 1918, Brest. Ar Jevres and Dijon. Arrived from Brest 'Sept. 18, 1919; discharged Sept. 30, 1919, Camp Grant. William Knudsen Son of Jens and Klatherine Knlllndsen - - Menonlinee Born Mar. 17, 1890, Menominee. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917. To Camp Custer and Camp Grant, 21st Engineers, Co. A. Arrived Brest Jan. 10, 1918. To Camp Duquesne, St. Mihiel and Argonne Forest. Recommended for bravery by Capt. Charles Wood, 21st Engineers, Co. A, Nov. 1, 1918. Arrived U. S. June 9, 1919; discharged June 16, 1919, Camp Custer. Albert Kmieciak Son of Stanley and Mary KDnieicik - - Menoninee Born Apr. 24, 1896. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, Co. M, 339th Inf., 85th Div. Camp Mills and overseas July 22, 1918. In Russia for eleven months. In five battles. Left Russia for Brest. France, June 21, 1919. U. S. July 12, 1919; discharged July 19. George H. LaPerriere Son of Denis and Marie LaPerriere - - Menominee Born Jan. 8, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 15, 1918, Chicago. Assigned to 73rd Reg., Bat. D, Coast Artillery, Boston. Arrived Liverpool Oct. 9, 1918. To Winchester. Southampton, La Havre, France. At Mailly, France, three months. Arrived U. S. from Brest Ilec. '22, 1918; discharged Jan. 10, 1919, Camp Custer. John Heidinger Son of Frank and Frances Heidinger - Menonitnee Born Sept. 24, 1889. Germany. Entered service June 28, 1918. To Camp Custer, 339th Inf., Co. K. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3. To Russia via North Sea, Arctic Ocean, White Sea and IDvina River. In battles of Siletska, Trokla, Emtski River. Kadish and Apta. To Archangel June 25, 1919. Returned to Brest June 26, leaving for IT. S. July 11, 1919. Discharged July 25, 1919, Camp Grant. Frank J. Holub Son of Albert and Anna Holub - - - - Menoninee Born Mar. 20, 1888, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. To Camp Custer, 310th Engineers, Co. A, 85th Div. Overseas July 21, 1918. From Liverpool through North Sea to the Dvina River. Arrived Bresnik Sept. 20; Azenkursk Jan. 19, 1919. Relieved by Co. B, Engineers. Archangel, IKodman and Onega. To Brest June 26, leaving for U. 5. July 11, 1919. Camp Mills July 18; discharged July 25, 1919, Camp Grant. Frank L. Evans Son of Jamces and Mary Evans - - - - Menoilinee Born June 4, 1897. Enlisted May 6, 1918, Escanaba. Assigned 62nd Engineers, May 23, 1918. Camp Upton, N. Y., July 8, 1918. Arrived Liverpool July 26. Camp Romsey, Southampton, July 28, Cherbourg July 29. Verdun, Tours, Le Mans, Chateau-Thierry, St. Florentine. Arrived U. S. June 28, 1918; discharged July 10, 1919, Camp Custer. Scoffie G. Todish Son of Thonmas and Katie Todish - - - Menominee Born July 12, 1898, Menominnee. Enlisted Nov. 21, 1917, Milwaukee. To Jefferson Barracks, Co. I, 7th Inf., 3rd Div. Arrived Brest Apr. 14, 1918. In;action at Belleau Woods, 2nd battle of Marne-Chamipaigne offensive, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne. W-Vith A. of O. in Germany at Andernach, Germany. Arrived JU. S. Aug. 29, 1919; discharged Sept. 4, 1919, Camp Grant. Son of Tony and Flora Derrick - - - Menonlminee Born May 18, 1893, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 28, 1918. To Green Leaf, Ga., Medical Dept. Casual Co. Arrived overseas May 10, 1918, at St. Nazaire. At Brest, Savinay, Paris. Arrived U. S. from Brest Oct. 28, 1919; discharged Nov. 4, 1919, Camp Dix. Promoted to private, first class, Nov. 1, 19.18, Paris. [411 * *r * - -a,-', - a a I 4 4..:,. 4.hM b 10 1*1A..iIP * 4 - i 4 4 I i I Carl O. Peterson Son of Theodore and Marie Peterson - Menominee Born Jan. 5, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted July 1, 1917, Escanaba, Co. L of Menominee. Border service. Overseas Feb. 24, 1918. In action Alsace front, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. at Horhausen. Arrived U. S. May 8; discharged May 21, 1919, Camp Custer. James M. Kelly Son of Andy and Carrie Kelly - - - - Faithorn Born Feb. 27, 1899, Koss, Mich. Enlisted Feb. 2, 1917. From Camp Douglas to 107th Eng. Arrived at Brest Feb. 2, 1918. At front, Alsace sector, Lorraine, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. at Oberlieber. Arrived U. S. May 18: discharged May 27, 1918, Camp Grant. Agnar Alfredson Son of Alfred and Anna Olson - - - Menominee Born Aug. 15, 1890, Sweden. Entered service Menominee. Camp Custer, 124th Field Artillery, Bat. E. Arrived at St. Nazaire June 28. Transferred to Camp La Courtine, 33d Div. At St. Mihiel, Sept. 12 to Sept. 16. Argonne Sept. 26 to Oct. 11. Meuse Nov. 1 to Nov. 11. Returned to U. S. May 24; discharged June 5, 1919. William Champe Son of John and Johanna Chanipe - - Menominee Born May 21, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 1. 1918, Escanaba. Assigned to Medical Corps, Unit 27. Arrived Brest May 5. Remained with Medical Corps in France until Aug. 1. Arrived U. S. Aug. 10: discharged Aug. 13, 1919. Charles O. Carlson Son of Axel and Christine Carlson - - Menominee Born June 6, 1889, Menominee. Entered service Feb. 27, 1918, Camp Grant, 32nd Reg. Engineers. Arrived Brest June 28, 1918. At St. Sulpice, Talmont, Genicarte. Arrived in U. S. from Bordeaux June 9, 1919: discharged June 18, 1919, Camp Grant, as private, first class. Melbourne C. Vanderlip Son of Albert and Anna Vanderlip - - Menominee Born Apr. 4, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted May 30, 1917, Detroit. To Columbus Barracks, to Fort Ringgold, Tex. Discharged Apr. 6, 1919, Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio. Re-enlisted Sept. 1, 1919. From San Francisco to Siberia, Russia, Nov. 18, 1919. Still in service. Michael J. Sporrer Son of Michael and Theresa Sporrer - - Menominee Born Oct. 30, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Feb. 15, 1918, Washington, D. C. Assigned to Governor's Island. Overseas Dec. 28, 1918. Assigned 5th section Gen. Pershing's staff as secretary. Assigned to American section of the Inter-Allied Commission on the repatriation of prisoners of war at Berlin, Germany. Arrived U. S. from Brest Sept. 18, 1919; discharged at Hoboken Sept. 19, 1919. John J. Orth Son of Bernard and Mary Orth - - - Menominee Born June 8, 1891, Menominee. Entered service July 31, 1918, St. Paul, Minn. To Camp Wadsworth, Minn., 3rd Pioneer Inf., Co. C. Arrived overseas Sept. 12. At Meuse-Argonne fronts. Transferred to Demobilization Corps, picking up bombs in houses marked by Germans, "Keep Out" or "Danger." Transferred convoy duty, Prison Camp, Jevres. From St. Nazaire to U. S., arriving July 23; discharged July 31, 1919, Camp Dodge, Ia. Walter M. Everson Son of Charles and Anna Everson - - Menominee Born Aug. 20, 1893, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 330th Heavy Field Artillery, Bat. D, 85th Div. Liverpool Aug. 6. To La Havre, France. Camp Coetquidon seven weeks training. Rimaucourt, Haute, Marne awaiting motor equipment. Left Brest Mar. 31, 1919, arriving New York Apr. 11. To Camp Mills, L. I.; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Charles H. Lemke Son of Theodore and Anna Lemke - - Menominee Born Feb. 5, 1891, Menominee. Entered service June 14, 1918. To FIoughton College of Mines, 27th Eng., Co. D. Overseas Sept. 13, 1918. At'Glasgow, Scotland, Sept. 25, 1918. Active on Meuse-Argonne front. From St. Nazaire to U. S., arriving Mar. 20; discharged Apr. 6, 1919, Camp Custer. Promoted to wagoner at Corney Argonne, Nov. 5, 1918. [42] i[ I 4 4 4 I _ 1!T T l0 I. x 0 -If I1L3llrlllplllll 13 111~ ` -------— ' I C ---C —- LIII 4. 4. 4. 41. K 4~. - 4. 4. 'I., v - ^e mmmm" * 9:o^^p4F^O^4A 'rNi - - — dMIN 4. AEL i I v -.. - -, 1 Ernest F. Wistrand Son of John aind Ania Wistrand (Radunz)-Menominee | Born Apr. 23, 1897, Menominee. Assigned 5th Regt., 49th Co., 2nd Div. Arrived Brest May 4, 1918. At 1 Belleau Woods, Soissons, Ponta Masson sector, St. Mi- I hiel, Chanipaigne, Meuse-Argonne. Gassed. A. of 0. Discharged Aug. 20, 1919, Camp Quanticoe, Va. Herbert H. Hass Son of Albert and Carrie Hass - - - - Menominee I Born Dec. 31, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted May 31, 1917, Detroit. To Harper Base Hospital Unit 36. Ar* rived at Brest Nov. 5, 1917. At Wittel, France, as ambulance driver. Arrived U. S. from St. Nazaire Apr. 125, 1919. )ischarged May 2, 1919, Camp Custer. un e 8 Albert Lemieux 6 Son of Alb-rt aind Mary D. Lemieux - - Menoninee Born Feb. 10, 1887, Menominee. Entered service 1 May 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, Co. K, 338th Inf., 85th I Div. Arrived Liverpool July 29, 1918. To Isurtille. U. S. Aug. 23, 1919; discharged Sept. 4, 1919, Camp Grant. | Silvester L. Dorozienski Son of Albert and Mary ilDorozienski - - - Powers *~ Born Jan. 1, 1896, Jacksonville, 0. Entered service 11 June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Knotty Ash, 1 Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac, Camp Coetquidon in training. Rimaucourt, Haute, Marne. Arrived U.' S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. * John Peter Hansen Son of Jens P. and Anna Hansen - - - Menominee Born Jan. 23. 1895, Vordingborg, Denmark. Entered 11 service Sept. 18. 1917, Fond du Lac, Wis. Camp Grant, 331st Field Artillery; later to 503rd Engineers. Landed I Cat St. Nazaire overseas Dec. 10, 1917. Construction work on the Verdun front. Arrived U. S. May 19, 1919; 1+ discharged May 26, 1919, Camp Grant. IKenneth 0. Doyle Son of Mietael J. and Marie Doyle - - Menolminee I Born July 7, 1894. Entered service May 25. 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K. Arrived J Liverpool Aug. 1. To La Havre. Transferred to 85th Headqtrs. Co., Toul. Trinity Law College at Dublin. 'Ireland. Arrived U. S. from Brest July 27, 1919: disJ*1 M -charged Aug. 1, 1919, Camp Mills. ~ Walter D. Cleary Son of Daniel and Emma Clear - - - Menominee Born Mar. 5, 1890. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. Camp Custer, 337th Jnf., Co. E. Promoted Corp. Jan. 1, 1918. Arrived Aug. 3 at Liverpool. Winchester, South* ampton, La Havre. With 85th Div. at Cosnes. Promoted Sergt. Sept. 18. To Chateau De Loire. To Quartermaster Div. Nantes. Left St. Nazaire for U. S. July * 9; discharged July 29, 1919, Camp Grant. Isaac Chandler Son of George and Mathildai Clianidler - Menomninee Husband of Priscilla Chandler. Born July 18, 1896. Enlisted Co. L, Menominee, June 21, 1916. Corp. July 16, 1917. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. At Alsace sector, Oise-Aisne. Wounded ChateauThierry July 31, 1918, and Argonne-Meuse Oct. 9. Dec- + orated twice for extraordinary heroism. A. of 0. U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 29, 1919, C'amp Custer. * Merritt B. Wilson Son of Merritt and Isabelle Wilson - - Menoninee I Husband of Lillian Granger. Born in Menominee, March 11, 1885. Enlisted Co. L, 1912. 2nd Lieut. 1917. To + Co. F, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Arrived overseas Feb. '24, 1918, at Brest. At Alsace sector and at Oise-Aisne, battle [ of Fismes, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry July 30 to Aug. 5. Slightly wounded. At Meuse-Argonne in command of! Co. H, 125th Inf. Wounded again Oct. 9. To Vitale Hospital. Returned Nov. 11 in command of Co. F. With A. * of 0. at Harschbach. Arrived U. S. May 1, 1919; discharged May 26, 1919. Camp Custer. Decorated by Gen. Haan, D. S. C., for heroic work Aisne-Marne drive, Aug. 2, 1918. Croix de Guerre from French government. Walter Sjogren Son of Peter and Alna Sjogren - - - Menomninee Born Apr. 10, 1894, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 22, 1918. Camp Custer, Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24. Isurtille, Alsace front, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry, Argonne-Meuse and Argonne Forest. Gassed. U. S. *! May 18; discharged May 19, 1919, Camp Custer.![43] I. 441" ~ dC -- - - --- Om I r.. jj-I AF - W% ---—.- l --- — -— r ----!Mr- ---— ~-R --- - -- - il *1 0 0~! Harry H. Shatusky Son of Marcel anld Mary Shatusky - - Menominee Born Jan. 12, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Mining Engineers June 15, 1918. Attended Houghton C. of M. From J7. S. arrived Glasgow, Scotland, Sept. 13. At Charmony Sept. 20, 1918. In Meuse and Argonne offensive. With Engineers Aug. 7 to Nov. 9 at Argonne and Meuse rivers, building 29 bridges in 27 days. Arrived in U. S. Mar. 20; discharged Apr. 3, 1919, Custer. Arvid Walter Siegel Son of August Siegel and Selina Siegel (Lundberg) Menominee Born Nov. 18, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 29, 1917. To Camp Jos. E. Johnston, Jacksonville, Fla., 5th Div. Supply Train, Co. B. Arrived Brest June 19, 1918. To 5th Div. Vosges Mountain sector, in St. Mihiel drive and Meuse-Argonne offensive. After armistice at Kayl, Luxemburg. Promoted Corp. Feb. 1, 1919. Arrived IU. S. July 21; discharged July 29, 1919, Grant. Elmer C. Lundberg Son of Charles and Selina Siegel Lundberg-Menominee Born Jan. 6, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 29, 1917. To Camp Jos. B. Johnston, Jacksonville, Fla., 5th Div. Supply Train, Co. B. Promoted to Corp. May 20, 1918. Arrived Brest June 19, 1918. In the Vosges Mountain sector, St. Mihiel drive and Meuse-Argonne. A. of O. U. S. July 21; discharged July 29, 1919, Grant. August Siegel Son of August and Selma Siegel (Lundberg)- - - Menoininee Born Dec. 28, 1895, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. Camp Custer, 160th Depot Brigade. Camp Lee, Va. Promoted Sergt. Overseas June 30 from Camp Lee with 51st Railway Engineers, Co.. C. Arrived Brest July 9, 1918. Assigned to Pantanazen Barracks, entrained for Pierre Court, operating French trains until June 23, 1919. Arrived in U. S. July 17, 1919; discharged July 24, 1919, Camp Sherman. Emil A. Bilodeau Son of Paul and Hattie Bilodeau - - - Menominee Husband of Ora Collette. Born May 3, 1891. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. D. Overseas Aug. 6, 1918. At Rimaucourt, Gen. Pershing's headquarters, until after armistice. U. S. Apr. 11, 1919. Dis. Apr. 25, 1919, Custer. Walter Baldwin Son of Roland Walter and Anna Baldwin - Menominee Husband of Martha M. Larsen. Born Apr. 27, 1894, Chicago. Enlisted Feb. 21, 1916, Co. L. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. In action Alsace front, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry, Juvigny, Soissons, Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. at Krankel. Arrived U. S. May 17, 1919; discharged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. Promoted Sergt. Aug. 12, 1918. Frank J. Jopek Son of Joseph and Cecelia Jopek - - - Menominee Born June 17, 1889, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 22, 1917. To Camp Custer, Ambulance Co., 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. Stationed at Nice, Dongermaine, Vosges Mountain. Arrived U. S. Apr. 17, 1919; discharged May 7, 1919, Camp Custer. Herman D. Boettcher Son of Charles and Augusta Boettcher - Menominee Born Jan. 20, 1886, Menominee. Entered service May 25, 1918. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K, 85th Div. Transferred to 7th Inf., Co. I, 3rd Div. Arrived Liverpool June 22, 1918. St. Mihiel, Argonne Forest, and wounded Oct. 4, 1918. Arrived U. S. Jan. 1914; discharged Jan. 21, 1919, Camp Custer. Frank Moerchen Son of Frank and Theresa Moerchen - Menominee Born Nov. 28, 1889, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 20, 1918. Medical Corps. Overseas with Field Hospital, 4th Div. In action at Alsace, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, including Chateau-Thierry and Argonne-Meuse. With A. of 0. in Germany. Arrived U. S. Aug. 4, 1919; discharged Aug. 14, 1919, Camp Grant. Eino H. Maliniemi Son of Henry and Mary Maliniemi - - Menominee Born Oct. 23, 1892. Entered service Mar. 3, 1918. Camp Custer, 321st Field Artillery, Bat. A, 82nd Div. Arrived Brest June 28. To Toule sector, St. Mihiel offensive, Marbach sector, Meuse-Argonne. Arrived U. S., May 20; discharged June 5, 1919, Camp Custer. [44] I i + 4 0 I 4 4.I1 4 II ~ +~~ -- ~I - --- --- — ' - ___ a --- I __ ~1, f N4: - -L; t — -- Edgar W. Butzin Son of William and Anna Butzin - - - Menominee Born June 29, 1892. Enlisted Dec. 26, 1917, Chicago. Assigned Air Service, University of Illinois, Champaign, Ill. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Discharged from active service Dec. 19, 1918, Chanute Field. Adolph Madsen Son of Jens and Mary Madsen - - - - Menominee Born Apr. 7, 1892, Denmark. Enlisted Mar. 12, 1918. Racine, Wis., with Coast Guard. Transferred to Kenosha, Wis., and later transferred hack to Racine. Discharged Mar. 11, 1919. Ewald Schulz Son of Charles and Mlary Schulz - - - Menominee Born Dec. 12, 1892, Menominee. Enlisted May 12, 1917. To Paris Island, S. C., 12th Div., 4th Prov. Reg. Left June 9, 1917, for Cuha, Haiti, San Domingo. In battles with bandits at San Iomingo. Stahhed above right eye and sent to hase hospital at Saho. Arrived in U. 5. Aug. 2, 1919; discharged Aug. 27, 1919, Detroit. 1 i Promoted to Corp. July 10, 1918; Sergt. June 14, 1919: Q. M. Sergt. Mar. 8, 1919. f iAnton G. Maihofer Son of Joseph and Frances Maihofer - - Menorninee Born June 14, 1898, Menominee. Appointed field clerk Aug. 27, 1918, Washington, D. C. Arrived Sept. 29, Glasgow, Scotland. To Winchester, La Havre. Assigned to Headquarters Army Corps at Argonne Forest, Argonne-Meuse. With A. of 0. at Leuwied. Asrived U. S. July 29, 1919; discharged Aug. 8, 1919, New York. Paul G. Christensen Son of Theodore and Emmrta Christensen - Menomiinee Born Oct. 20, 1894. Menoininee. Hushand of Ruth Bruce Christensen. To Camp Custer Apr. 28, 1918. Assigned 4th 0. T. C. Transferred to Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Oct. 5, 1918. Assigned 49th Field Artillery, Fort Worth, Tex. 'Discharged Dec. 13, 1918. * Harry E. Scott Son of James and Margaret Scott - - - Menominee Hushand of Anna Marie Scholz. Born July 25. 1893. Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 7, 1918, Evanston, Ill. Assigned to 18th Detachment 0. T. School. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Nov. 30, 1918, and discharged. John Milton Gregory Son of Williant B. and Mar-y E. Gregory - Menomilnee Born May 31, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 19, 1917. To Camp Custer. Assigned Depot Brigade, Camp Lewis, Wash. Entered 0. T. C. Jan. 3, 1918. l a Commissioned June 1, 1918, as 2nd Lieut. Discharged Dec. 19, 1918. Harry Bagley * Son of John and Isabelle Bagle-y Menominee Born June 3, 1892. Enlisted U. S. Army May. 1917. To Camp Douglas and Mexican border. Promoted to * Q. M. Sergt. Overseas Feh., 1918. In France thirteen months. With A. of 0. in Germany. Arrived U. S. May 20, 1919: discharged May 28. 1919. Harry E. Murray Son of Thomas and Anna Murra-y - Menomninee Born May 12, 1896. Enlisted Aviation Section Dec. 22, 191.7, Champaign, Ill. Called May 20, 1918. To Camp Dix and later to aviation field, Mount Clemens. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Nov. 25, 1918. Discharged Dec. 22, 1918. Harris Stephenson McCormick Son of Lewis4 Hess and Nellie Stephenson McCornick - - - - - - - - - - - T-Menominee Born Jan. 24, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 27, 1917, Chicago. To Aviation School. Columbus, 0. Later assigned to Co. C, 310th Ammunition, 85th Div. Promoted to 2nd Lieut., Infantry, Aug. 10, 1918, at Camp Lee, Petersburg, Va. Discharged Dec. 27, 1918, Bowie, 6 Texas. *1 [45] 4. 4.. 4 4.4. 4 4. "W -W 4. ]WKI 1 4 4 (I 4 I '~L L *I 4. - - 0. H %0 - 41. 41. 4b. - - - m 4p lp -.- - 1 4 Orrin Gould Watson Son of Jatmes and Laura WXatson - Marinette, Wis. Husband of Glen Emerson. Born Feb. 27, 1888, Marinette. Enlisted July, 1918. Motor Transport Corps. Called Oct. 25, 1918. Commissioned 2nd Lieut., Camp Holabird, Baltimore, Md. Honorably discharged. Died Battle Creek, Mich., Feb. 8, 1920. Walter E. Heimerdinger Son of Charles aInd Elizabeth Heinlerdinger - - - Menominee Born Feb. 12, 1889. To O. T. C., Ft. Sheridan, Ill., Aug. 27, 1917. Commissioned 2nd Lieut., Field Artillery, Nov. 28, 1917. Overseas Dec. 24, 1917. Assigned to R. R. Division at Bordeaux-Monte Carlo. Made 1st Lieut. Feb. 1, 1918. Arrived U. S. July 20. 1919; discharged Aug. 12, 1919, Camp Grant. Eugene J. Parent Son of Joseph and Marie Jane Parent - Menominee Born Mar. 28, 1890, Menominee. Enlisted May 4, 1918. Columbus Barracks with Ordnance Corps. Transferred to Edgewood, Md., Arsenal. Later to Chemical Warfare service. Promoted to Sergt. 1st Cl., in charge of purchasing, Chlorine Battalion. Recommended for commission by Col. Vaughn. Discharged Feb. 8, 1919. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Feb. 12, 1919. Frank E. Stoppenbach Son of E. arnd Florti Stoplenaeh - - - - - Jefferson, AWis. (MIenominee) Husband of Antoinette Stephenson Jennings. Born May 7. 1889. First O. T. C., Fort Sheridan, 111., April, 1917. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Aug. 18, 1917; 1st Lieut. Feb. 12, 1918: Capt. June 29, 1918; Major, Sept. 12, 1918. On Major-Gen. Kennedy's staff. Arrived overseas July 30, 1918. Returned Mar. 30, 1919; discharged May 8, 1919. Dr. Calvin R. Elwood Menoininee Medical Dept., Chemical Gas Defense Plant. Commissioned Lieut. Medical Reserve Corps June 27, 1917. Long Island City. N. Y., Feb. 13. 1918. Appointed Asst. Surgeon. Commissioned Capt. Aug. 3, 1918S Chief Surgeon Sept. 24, 1918. Promoted to Major June 10, 1919. County Chairman Y. M. C. A. Drive Committee. Examining Surgeon County Medical Board. Lieut. Lotha A. Smith Son of Lothia and Lena K. Sith - - - Menoinee Born Jan. 8, 1896. Enlisted Jan., 1917, Chicago. To Vancouver, Wash., Barracks May 31, 1917. To San Diego, Calif. Air Service. Commissioned 1st Lieut. Oct. 7, 1917. Transferred to Wraco, Tex., as instructor. Arrived Brest Oct. 15. Day aeroplane patrol duty at front. Returned to IU. S. Feb.. 1918. Still in service. Dr. William F. Nohlecheck Son of John and Annia Nohle-ilheek - Birch Creek, Mich. Born Oct. 10. 1892, Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1917, Chicago, U. S. Veterinary Corps. Assigned as 1st Li eut. to Camp Hancock, Ga. Discharged at Camp Hancock. Joseph E. Soults Son of Joseph E, iand Christina Soults - Menominee Born June 26, 1900, Menominee. Entered service May 29, 1918, Sudbury, Ontario, Co. D. Left Halifax July 3, 1918. Arrived Liverpool July 25. Entered Camp Frenchen Pond, England. Transferred to Witley. Arrived Canada July 3, 1919; discharged July 6, 1919, Toronto, Can. Leroy H. Tupper Son of Ezra and Elida Tupper - - - Menominee Born Sept. 15, 1880. Enlisted Feb. 22, 1918. Superior, Wis. Canadian Forestry 116th Co. C. F. C., Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England. Overseas Mar. 20, 1918, Glasgow. Scotland. Stationed at Tun-Wells, Longmoor Hauts, England. Arrived in Canada May 15; discharged May 17, 1919, Toronto. Frank Fred Suchorski Son of John and Kate Suehorski - - - Menominee Born Oct. 1, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 30, 1916, Detroit, Mich. Battery A, 64th Artillery, 37th Div. Arrived Liverpool July 23. In action at Argonne Woods. Later at Angiers and Paris, France. Arrived U. S. Mar. 23, 1919; discharged Apr. 3, 1919, Camp Custer. Promoted Corp. Jan. 28, 1918. Gunner Mar. 12, 1918. [46] 1*!.4 I *I.1iWa t I.. Il I.. I O00_ i. - I I I D00, V. 4. - & le. - 10, 11-11- 4. 410 Henry Robert Kahlow Son of Henry and Exilia Kahllow - Schaffer, Mieh. Born Dec. 26, 1896. Enlisted June 21, 1916. Camp Harris. Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Border service. Promoted to Corp. Arrived overseas Feb. 24, 1918, Brest. In action Aisne-Marne, Oise-Aisne, Meuse-Argonne offensive. With A. of 0. Arrived U. S. May 18; discharged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. Arthur Desotell Son of Joseph andl Mary Desotell - - - Menominee Born May, 1889. Entered service May, 1918. Overseas, in active service for fourteen months. In three battles. In Germiany with A. of 0. Returned to U. S. May 15, 1919. r, I I Roland C. Compney Son of Henry and Lillie Conlpney - - Menouninee Born July 13, 1895. Entered service May 25, 1918. Camp Custer and Camp Merritt. Arrived Liverpool June 29. Transferred to 1st Div., 26th Inf., Co. L, and to Co. F, 338th Inf., 85th Div. Killed in action Oct. 5 in the Argonne forest. No further particulars given by War 1)epartment. Ernest Fred Beyer,Son of Ernest tancd Augusta Be-yer - - MeInoinilee Born Sept. 27, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Feb. 4, 1918. To Vancouver Barracks, Wash.. 421st Aero Construction Squadron, U. S. Signal Corps. Discharged Jan. 31, 1919, Camp Custer. John F. Parsek Son of John and Marie Parsek - - - Menoininee Born Jan. 20, 1881, Menominee. Enlisted with Co. L June 20, 1916. Mechanic Sept. 1, 1916. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Assigned 63rd Brigade. Active at Alsace sector, Aisne-Marne, Oise-Aisne and Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. Arrived U. S. May 18. 1919: discharged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. Andrew S. Armstrong Son1 of Emery.and Anna Melllen A rnstrong-Menomlinee Born June 13, 1896. Enlisted Jan. 12, 1918, Milwaukee. 331st Engineers, Jefferson Barracks. Arrived St. Nazaire July 18, 1918. Railroad service as engineer between Saumar and St. Nazaire carrying troops and wounded to seaports. Arrived UT. S. July 23, 1919: discharged July 29, 1919, Camp Grant. Maurice P. Johnson Son of Christia:n and Benal Johnson - - Menominee Born July. 1895, Menominee. 4th Inf., Co. C, 3rd Div. Arrived St. Nazaire Mar. 14, 1918. In action at Chateau-Thierry and Belleau Woods. Gassed and wounded in right hip. Sent to base hospital at Royet, France. and St. Nazaire. Promoted to Corp. Dec. 5, 1918, at Paris. I)islharged. Camp Custer. William A. Wolfe Son of Mathias Itndl Ernestinet Wolfe - Menomminee Born July 2, 1890, Menominee. Entered service Aug. 2S, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 40th Field Artillery, Bat. F, 14th Div. Discharged Jan. 15, 1919. Carl J. Anderson Son of.Anders and Kaysa Nelson - - - Menominee Born Sept. 11, 1889, Sweden. Entered service July 25, 1918. Camp Custer and Camp Sherman. Promoted to Corp. Feb. 1. 1919. Discharged Mar. 1919. Reenlisted Apr. 22, 1919, for one year. Joseph Jozwiak Son of Joseph.and Anna Jozwiak - - MIenominee Born Feb. 26, 1894, Germany. Enlisted Mar. 8, 1918, Menominee. Fort McKinley, Me., 72nd Art. C. B. C. Promoted to Corp. Arrived England Aug. 15. To France, at St. Leonard. Arrived in U. S. from Bordeaux Mar. 29; discharged Apr. 17, 1919, Camp Grant. [47] 4 4 + r-r i r ill I ----~I - ---- r —l --- I "- L C — - _ — I - - - I, c r w l - - lw - - - i < 4 N -N *Henry E. Flom Son of John and Katherine Flom I- - - Menominee I1 Born July 6, 1896, Norway. Enlisted Q. M. Corps, Escanaba, May 10. 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, Headquarters Staff. Clerical work. Discharged Dec. 29, Albeit J. McGuire Son of Thoialls and Minnie McGuire - - Menoininee R! Born July 4, 1892, Menominee. Entered service, Camp Custer, 156th Depot Brigade, assigned to undetached service. Discharged at U. S. General Hospital No. 21, Denver, Colo., Mar. 31, 1920. i.1 I Joseph A. Vojcahosky Son of John and Victoria Vo.jeahosky - Menolninee Born July 25, 1891. Entered service Aug. 4, 1918, Chicago. Camp Syracuse, N. [., later transferred to Camp Alfred Vail, Co. D, 425th Telegraph Bn. Signal Corps. Promoted Corp. Nov. 1, 1918, at Camp Alfred Vail, N. J. Discharged Feb. 3, 1919, Camp Grant. Slavick Beiley Sin of Frank and Anna Beiley - - - Menolninee Born Oct. 16, 1895, Menoininee. Enlisted Jan., 1918. Assigned Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 25, 1918. In action Alsace front sector, AisneMarne, Oise-Aisne, Meuse-Argonne offensive to Nov. 11. With A. of 0. in Germany. Arrived U. S. May 18; discharged May 28, 1919, Camp Custer. Made Sergt. while overseas. Elmer C. Lindberg Son of leonard and Josephine Lindberg - Menolinee Born Dec. 14, 1895. Entered service July 26, 1918. To Camp Custer, assigned to military police. Discharged June 20, 1919. Louis W. Smalter Son of John and Susan Snialter - - - Menoninee Born Feb. 11, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 8, 1917, Marinette. Camp Douglas, Co. I, 127th Inf., 32nd 1)iv. Border service. Arrived overseas Mar. 2, 1918. At Alsace Lorraine, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, ChateauThierry, Meuse-Argonne. Wounded in Argonne forest and gassed. To base hospital, Chaumont. With A. of 0. at Neuwied. Arrived U. S. Aug. 3, 1919; discharged Aug. 11, 1919. Made Corp. Sept. 7, 1917; Sergt. Nov. 18, Hans P. Larsen Son of i.ars and Kirsten Larsen - - - Menominee Born June 11, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 27, 1917, Marinette. Jefferson Barracks, 50th Inf., Co. L, 20th Div. Sent to Syracuse, N. Y., Camp Green, S. C., Washington, D. C., Camp Sevier, S. C., Camp Dix, N. Y. Discharged Aug. 12, 1919, Camp Grant. 0. Hjalmar Anderson Sin of Swan Daniel and Josephine M. Anderson - - Menolninee Born June 22, 1888. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Headquarters detachment Inf. Unattached, 14th Div. Camp McArthur, Tex. Discharged Feb. 21, 1919, Camp Custer. Made Corp. Dec. 17, 1918. Oscar G. Falk Son of Carl Oscar anld Elvira Falk - - - - - - Sweden (Menoininee) Born Aug. 12, 1863, Stockholm, Sweden. Husband of Lena Sharon. Co. L, May 31, 1889. Ist Lieut. Nov. 21. 1903. Capt. Feb. 24, 1908. Mexican border. Arrived Feb. 24, 1918, at Brest. In action Vosges sector, Alsace front, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry, Vesle River and Sierges. Wounded at Jomblets Woods, near Cierges. To Field Hospital No. 125. Hospital was bombed. He was carried out and died on the way. Buried Aug. 1, 1918. Later reburied, June 9, 1919, in Grave No. 85, Plot 2, Section F, American Cemetery, Belleau, Aisne, France. He received the following posthumous decorations and citations: From the French Government: Croix de Guerre with palm, also citation at Cierges July 31, 1918. From U. S. Army: Citation for distinguished and exceptional gallantry at Vesle River, France, July 25, 1918. William M. Larsen Son of Lars and Kirsten Larsen - - - Menomninee Born Mar. 3, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted July 7, 1917, Menominee. Jefferson Barracks and Fort Snelling, Minn. Promoted Corp. Aug. 1, 1918; Sergt. Oct. 1, 1918. Camp Sheridan. Discharged Jan. 18, 1919, Camp. Custer. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 [48].. 4 8 —. - I j * ~,, * 7r, - lL,'V2 — = a o: I I em <''+ A a James Wizner Son of George and Frances Wizner - - Menominee Born June 3, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 16. 1918, Superior. WVis. To Greenleaf, Ga. Arrived Liverpool Sept. 1, 1918. To Brest and Londeaneau. Arrived in U. S. Oct. 6, 1919; discharged Oct. 11, 1919, Camp Dix. Roy Hoegh Son of John and Ida Hoegh - - - - - Menominee Born May 7, 1895, Menominee. Entered service Jan. 25, 1918, Chicago. Camp Grant, Ambulance Co. No. 343, 86th Div. Arrived at La Havre, France, Sept. 6, 1918. Argonne front. Arrived U. S. Feb. 7. 1919: discharged Feb. 27, 1919, Camp Grant. Carl R. Samuelson Son of Charles:and. Amelia Samulelson - Menominee Born Feb. 4, 1894. Enlisted Feb., 1918, Spruce Division, Vancouver, Wash. Discharged Feb., 1919. Herbert V. Samuelson Son of Charles and Ainelia Stanuelson - Menominee Born Feb. 26, 1891. Enlisted Mar., 1917. Served in France. Discharged July, 1919. John P. Parsek Son of Frank and Martha Parsek - - - Menominee Born Mar. 23, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Feb. 14. 1918, Menominee. Aviation Section Signal Corps. To Vancouver Barracks air-craft production. Also at Lakeside, Ore. Discharged Jan. 15, 1919, Camp Custer. Howard H. Wright Son of Herbert and Elizabeth %Wright - Menominee Born Sept. 18, 1892, Menominee. Entered service Oct. 3, 1917, Chicago. Camp Grant, 124th Machine Gun Bn., Co. B, 33rd Div. Arrived Brest May 24. In action St. Mihiel, Meuse-Argonne offensives with the British. Slightly gassed. With A. of O. at Waldbillig, Luxemburg. Arrived U. S. May 19: discharged May 30, 1919. Camp Grant. Frank T. Tauscheck Son of Anton and Grecenzia Tauseheck - Menominee Born June 12. 1893, Menominee. Entered servicJune 27, 1918, Menominee. Provost Guard Co., Camp Custer. Promoted to Corp. Oct. 7, 1918. Discharged Mar. 20, 1919, Camp Custer. Charles Neil Haggerson Son of George H. and Minnlie C. Haggerson-Menominee Born July 23, 1887. Enlisted June 5, 1917, Co. L, 125th Inf.. 32nd Div. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Transferred to Headqtrs. Co., 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Trench Mortar Corps on Apr. 15, 1918. In action Chateau-Thierry, Soissons and Verdun. Offered promotion but declined. Argonne Forest twenty days as runner. Meuse front until armistice. Died Evacuation Hospital No. 49, Coblenz, Germany, Jan. 5. 1919, tubercular meningitis. Buried in Grave No. 34, Plot 1, Section E, American Cemetery, Coblenz. Arthur L. Anderson Son of Peter and Anna Anderson - - - Menominee Born Aug. 12, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted July 25, 1917, 1 25th Inf., Co. L, 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24. Insurtille, Alsace front, Soissons, Oise-Aisne, AisneMarne offensive. Wounded at Chateau-Thierry July 31, 1918. Operated on at Base Hospitals Nos. 8 and 15. Left Brest for UT. S. Mar., 1919; discharged Mar. 28, 1919, Camp Custer. Harold John Payne Son of John A. and Mary E. Payne - - Menominee Born Jan. 30, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 2, 1918, Des Plaines, Ill. Jefferson Barracks, 23rd Co. Arrived Brest Aug. 12, 1918. At Toul and Verdun. Arrived U. S. Apr. 23. 1919: discharged Apr. 30, 1919. Camp Grant. Made Corp. Nov. 24, 1918, at Verdun. [49]. O m1- j i ~-^^ -"0-^ Al., 6 rw -- I l + Ij::f::1 - 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 4 1 4 0 + BI f 4 a i f >wcI d J~f~ l 4 8( I + I~ 11 - - or -,w - - - A& - - * 4 Frank Zimmer 4 4 Son of Peter and Katherine Zirner - - Menominee Born Jan. 6, 1893, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Transferred to Camp Cody, New Mexico. Assigned to the Ambulance Corps, 97th Div. Promoted to C'orp. and Sergt. Discharged Dec. 6, 1918. Norman Langill I:+ C!::Son of Bayne and Roina Langirl - - - Menominee Born Aug. 23, 1897. Enlisted Co. I, Marinette, 1916. Mexican border. Promoted to Corp. Commissioned nd Lieut. Sept. 22, 1918. Overseas with Co. I. In action Alsace front, Oise-Aisne, 2nd Battle of the Maine, Chateau-Thierry, Argonne Forest, where he was gassed. Arrived U. S. Apr. 5; disclharged Apr. 28, 1919. James M. Dooley Son of John and Marie Dooley -Menomiinee Born May 2, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Detroit, U. t t0- S. Marines. Sent to Paris Island, S. C., 31st Drill Co. ~ Cuba Feb. 20, 1918. Overseas Oct. 1, 1918. Returned U. S. Aug. 7; discharged Aug. 14, 1919. Medals for marksmanship and sharpshooting. Training for sniper. James J. Scott 8 |Son of James antd Margaret Scott - - - Menominee Born June 19, 1887, Menominee. Entered service May 4, 1918, Minneapolis. Camp Wadswortlh, S. C., Co. U, 53rd Inf., 6th Div. Left for overseas July 6, 1918. lasgow, Scotland; Cherbourg, France. In action at l l Alsace (Gerrdmier sector), Argonne. Wounded near *- c. rand Pre. Hospital at Vichy, France. Arrived U. S. M- ar. 13, 1919; disclharged Apr. 12, 1919, Camp Custer. Cromoted to Corp. at Sexfontaines, France, Aug. 7, 1918. IHjalmar E. Rundquist Son of Gnst and Ida Iunndquist - - - Menon-iinee Born May 29, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Aug., 1916, a Detroit, U. S. Marines. To Paris Island, S. C., 124th 'o., 9th Reg. Quantanamn Bay. Cuba. Discharged F0 eb. 11, 1919, at Galveston, Te-x. * *.. a William H. Bell S n of Henry and My N-rtle Bell - - - - Menominee * 4 Born July 6, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 5, 1918, Green Bay. Sent to Newport News, Va. Transferred Camp Jackson, S. C., 48th Inf., Co. I. Discharged A pr. 24, 1919. Edgar H. Auerswald Son of Rev. Chlarles and Lent ANerswald - Menoininee 4 I orn Apr. 22, 1894. Entered service May 28, 1-918, f West Bend, Wis. Camp Grant, 34th Co., 161st Depot ** I s rigade. To Raritan Arsenal, Metuchen, N. Y. To 1st rdnance band. Discharged Mar;' 26, 1919, Camp Grani. Promoted May 28, 1918, to Instructing Sergt. Camp *rant; Oct. 3, 1918, Ordnance Corps at Raritan Arsenal. Henry G. Dufrisne Son of Anthony and M1ary i)tufrlsne - - Menominee C. Born Dec. 6. 1896. Beavy Artillery, Bat. C, 67th Reg. C. A. C. Presidio at San Francisco. Overseas in France * ne year. Discharged July, 1.919. Albert Lauzon Son of Gilbert and M1arie Lanzon - - - Menominee Born Mar. 7, 1882, Menominee. Enlisted Kansas City. To Camp Kearney, Linda Vista, Cal. Assigned as cook, later promoted to Mess Sergt. Disch-irged Apr., 1919, Camp Kearney. Albert A. Anderson Son of Peter and Anna Andersoni - enoin-inee Born May 17, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 4, 1917, Marinette. To Jefferson Barracks, 50th Tnf., Co. L, 20th Div. Syracuse, Washington, D. C., Camp Sevier, Camp Dix, N. J. Discharged July 3, 1919, Camp. *B Custer. Promoted to Corp. Apr. 5, 1918. [50] * 0 ~I, ~~~irii ~ ~re — ~- -~r _ ~.1_ ~ ~ ~e ~ ~ - -~CII I~~ Harold J. Hamernik Son of Joseplh and Maud Hanernik - - Menoininee Born July 25, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 28, 1917, Milwaukee. To Jefferson Barracks, 10th Co. Air Service Mecpt., 2nd Reg. Arrived Liverpool Mar. 12, 1918. To Champaign, Buccon, St. Miliel. Arrived U. S. May 24, 1919; tlischarged June 8, 1919, Camp Grant. Promoted Corp. May 1, 1918, at Burron, France. Received citation from French army. John J. Dooley Son of Johne and a n rieD ey- - - Menominee Born Jan. 9, 18931, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 12,rvice. 117ne, etroi98. To Jfferson Barracks, Columbus,, 7t Div. Arrived BorOrdnance D)ept., Provisional Co. No. 1, undetached service Aug. 0. B. F. Arrived Brest Apr. 20, 1918. Ar — rived U. S. June 10, 1919; discharged June 24, 1919. P Born Nov. 12, 1891, Menominee. Entered service June, 1918. To Columbus, o., 7th Dniv. Arrived Bordeaux Aug. 25, 1918. Active on Toul sector and Metz. Arrived U. S. June 28, 1919c discharged July 6, 1.919, Camp Grant. D o- 1 Walter J. Pelnar Son of James F. andll llry Pelnrllr - - -lreno minee - Born July 11, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 8, 1.917, Green Bay, Wis. To Camp Logan, Houston, Tex.. Bat. F, 123rd F. A., 58th Brigade, 33rd Div. Arrived liverpool June 7r, 1918. In action Tol sector, St. Mi* hiel, Meuse-Argonne. With A. of 0. at Lintgen, Lux- Aux' e Arrived U. S. May 24: discharged June 5. 1919, Camp Custer. Finn Erickson Son of Anion atind Dorothy Erickson -- enonlnee il I 1 Born July 21, 1,896, Norway. Enlisted Dec. 5, 1917. Milwaukee, 28th Engineers, Co. B. Arrived St. Nazaire Feh. 25, 1918. Active at Vertuzey and in the St. Mihiel, Argonne-Mouse offensive. Ieturned to Sorcy. Arrived. S. July 6: discharged July 12, 1919. Camn p - ust er. George H. Dittmore Son of Gnst:illi Annie Ditlnorere - -Menomineel Born Sept. 15, 1887, Menoinee. Enlisted Nov. 1, 1917, Detroit. Medical Corps, Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Arrived Brest May 14. To Toul sector and on AisneMairne offensive. Argonne Forest, Verdun, St. Mih.iel, Argonne-Meuse. A. of 0. at Mnlayen, near Coflenz. Arivled UV. S. Junte 18: discharged June 28, 1919, Camo 1 C_'u ster. Michael J. Kasmarek Soin of TnPeter a11d- Paumiine Kasnarek - enolin lee Born nDec. 5, 1S90. 1ushand of Catherine Parsek. Entered service June 24, 1918, Menomninee. Canip Custer, 310th B-g., Co. B, 85th Div. Overseas July 2 4, 1918. Liverrpool, Winchester. Southalpton, Le Havre. 1 In St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives. With A. of 0. at Trier and Cohlenz. Arrived UT. S. June 28, 1919: discharged July 3, 1919, Camp Custer. Henry Lacourciere Son of Heruna -and Mar-y Laco-urciere De Canitp -.Menomninee * Born 'Dec. 1, 1891. Entered service Sept. 22. 191.7. Camp Custer. cook French Training Officers' Camp. Overseas with the 85th IDiv., unattached. In France assigned to Motor Transport Corps picking up the dlead. Arrived T. S. Mar. 12: discharged Mar. 28, 1919, Caimp Custer. Gilbert M. Peterson Son of Timeolore:and Marie Petersoml - -Menominee Born June 6, 1895, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 30. 1918, Menom-inee. Canip Custer, 110th F. A., Bat. E. A Arrived Liverpool July 11. 1918. Winchester, South- + amlpton, La Havre. Arrived UT. S. May 18: discharged May 27. 1,919. Camip Custer. John A. Carr Son of Bedford amnd Lenat Carr - - - - Menoninee Born June 4, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 20, 1917. To Jefferson Barracks, 35th Tnf. Machine Gun Co. Promnoted Corp. Sept. 7. 1917. Promoted Sergt. Apr. 19, 1918. Promoted 2nd Lieut. June 1, 1918, at Camp Cordon, Ca. Discharged Dec. 23, 1918, Camp Hancock. [51 ] " ` l~lir~~ ~ c~-~ —~-~- e ~- ~ ~ ~ ~ ur ~ ~ f4 1' -' -- f 11 MWANOMNOW"Ilk w "-I I i I Charles M. Kaufman Son of Fred and Catherine Kanuf man - Menominee Born June 15, 1894, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. Camp Custer, Co. E, 337th Inf., 85th Div. Promoted Corp. Oct. 21, 1917; Sergt. Jan. 1, 1918. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3. Winchester, Southampton, La Havre, Cosnes training area. 1st Sergt. Sept. 25. Moved to Meuse Oct. 29. After armistice to Fort Dongerman until Jan. 13, 1919. Arrived U. S. July 15, 1919; discharged July 19, 1919, Camp Sherman. Walter H. Pada Son of Albert and Ottilia Pada - - - Menominee Born June 14, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Border service. Arrived at Brest Feb. 24. Stationed at Is-sur-tille. In action Alsace sector, Oise-Aisne, Soissons, Aisne-Marne and Argonne Forest. - Killed in action July 31, 1918. George W. Colburn Son of Alonzo and Elizabeth Colburn - Stephenson Born Apr. 18, 1896, Stephenson. Enlisted May 15, 1917, Escanaba. Jeffervson Barracks, 19th Field Artillery, Bat. 1). Arrived May 30, Brest. Transferred to Bordeaux and in action in second battle of Marne, July 29 to Aug. 3. Vesle River, Toulon, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensive. A. of 0. at Bushel, Ahrweiler and Coblenz. Arrived U. S. Aug. 2, 1919; discharged Aug. 9, 1919. George J. Treml Son of Anton and Frances Treml - - - Menominee Born Feb. 3, 1893, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. Camp Custer, Medical Corps. Arrived Liverpool June 21, 1918. To France, assigned Camp Hospital No. 39, Rochefort. Arrived U. S. June 21, 1919; discharged July 1, 1919, Camp Custer. Philip H. Wolff Son of Philip and Hermina Wolff - - - Menominee Born July 14, 1891, Menominee. Entered service June 14, 1918. To Houghton, 27th Engineers, Co. E. Transferred to Washington, D. C. Arrived Glasgow, Scotland, Sept. 13, 1918. To La Havre, France. In action in Meuse-Argonne offensive. At Gievres, France, and Verteau. Arrived U. S. Mar. 28, 1919; discharged Apr. 2, 1919, Camp Custer. Gilbert Letourneau Son of Oniseme and Angeline letourneau - Menomninee Born Dec. 10, 1887, Menominee. Enlisted Feb. 16, 1918. To Vancouver, Wash., Spruce Division. Injured and lost two fingers of right hand. Base hospital, Vancouver. Discharged Jan. 16, 1919. Albert J. Pfaffl Son of Albert and Barbara Pfaffl - - Menominee Born July 15, 1892, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. Camp Custer, 85th Div., 337th Inf., Co. E. Arrived at Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. To Cosnes, France. In action on the Meuse and the Moselle rivers. Promoted to Corp. Aug. 29, 1918. Arrived U. S. Apr. 15: discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Peter Joseph Boivin Son of Joseph and Albertine Mary Boivin - Menomninee Husband of Catherine Mary Hornick Boivin. Entered service July 22, 1917, Escanaba, Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. In action Oise-Aisne offensive, Aisne-Marne offensive, ChateauThierry. Killed July 31, 1918, at Cierges. Buried in Grave No. 253, Plot 5, Section H., American Cemetery No. 608, at Serginges-et-Nesles, Aisne. Howard R. Williams Son of John and Mary WXilliams - - - Ingallston Born Nov. 5, 1895. Enlisted Mar. 9, 1918. To San Antonio, 42nd Balloon Co. Arrived Brest July 12. 1918. In action St. Mihiel, Meuse-Argonne. Also served with 3rd Corps. Arrived U. S. May 3, 1919; discharged May 19, 1919, Camp Custer. George Albert Skovinski Son of Martin and Flora Skovinski - - Menominee Born Mar. 8, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Co. L; discharged in 1916 on account of illness. Re-entered June 27, 1918, at Menominee. To Camp Custer, Co. D, Div. Brigade No. 1. Sent to Camp Benjamin Harrison. Discharged Dec. 9, 1918. Promoted to Corp. while at Camp Custer. i N 9i F e yh l N F! 1 t! II *0 * i JM VI' -1 [: [52] +1 4. 410- -W lwm - MLRIK w w v. liJL- %AJA- - -#w ~F ~I~k~~el~ *C ~e ~I Samuel W. Watson Son of Samluel and Anna WVatson - - - Menominee Born Dec. 17, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted at Menominee, Spruce Div., Feb. 23, 1918. Left for Vancouver Barracks and South Bend, Wash. Discharged Dec. 10, 1918. Emery J. Bonville Son of Philip and Elizabeth Bonville - Menoniinee Born July 12, 1894, Marinette. Entered service Mar. 29, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 101st Inf., C. E. 26th D)iv. Arrived St. Nazaire May 18. Active at Chateau-Thierry, St. Mihiel and Argonne Forest. Arrived U. S. Apr. 14; discharged Apr. 17, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph F. Bonk Son of Frank and Blanche Bonk - - - Menominee Born Jan. 29, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 15, 1918, Green Bay. Motor Transport Corps. Arrived Brest July 21, 1918. Attached to 1st Army Corps. Active at Chateau-Thierry, St. Mihiel and ArgonneMeuse. Near Tonnerre from Nov. 29 until Apr. 1. Arrived U. S. July 5; discharged July 12, 1919, Camp Grant. William G. Stauber Son of Wolfgang- and Frances Stauher - Menomninee Born Feb. 21, 1895, Menominee. Entered service Jan. 18, 1918, Akron, O. To Camp Sherman, 332nd Inf. M. G. Co., 5th Div. Camp Forrest, Chickamauga Park, Ga. Arrived Brest May 4, 1918. In action at Munster, Vosges, St. Die. Gassed at St. Die. Hospitals St. Die, Bruyeres, Dijon, Montaban, St. Nazaire. Arrived U. S. Oct. 21, 1919; discharged Mar. 4, 1919, General Hospital No. 13. Henry E. Bacon Son of Henry Elbridge and Jennie G. Bacon - - - L.a -Crosse, WVis. (Menominee) Husband of Helen Vivian Cook, Marinette. First O. T. C., Fort Sheridan, Ill., May 8, 1917. 2nd Lieut. Aug. 13, 1917. Ordered to Vancouver Barracks, Wash., Co. C, 44th Inf. Sept. 17 1st Lieut., 44th Reg. Appointed battalion adjutant 2nd Battalion Sept. 18, 1918. Transferred to the Presidio, San Francisco, Cal., Dec. 14, 1918. Wounded Dec. 18, 1918, by accidental discharge of a gun. Died Dec. 19, 1918. Buried at Spokane, Wash., Dec. 24. Martin N. Minne Son of Rev. Nels and Bertha Minne - - Menominee Born Dec. 2, 1889. Husband of Clara Bernice Charlson. Enlisted Feb. 22, 1918, Canton, S. D., Ordnance Dept. Promoted to inspector in the ammonium nitrate plant at Perryville, Md. Discharged July 22, 1919, Camp Dodge, Ia. Received commission July 22, 1919, as 2nd Lieut. Raymond J. Flynn Son of Dominick and Josephine Flynn - Menominee Born May 25, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted May 25, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, 546th Motor Tr. Co., 428th Motor Sup. Train. Overseas Sept. 26, 1918. Died of pneumonia Oct. 17, 1918. Disinterred and reburied in Grave No. 26, Plot 1, Row 2, American Military Cemetery No. 531, Lambevellec, Finnistere. Fred Willis Murray Son of Tholmas and Josephine Murray - Menomninee Born Sept. 1, 1881, Menominee. Enlisted in Sept., 1916, Co. I, Marinette. To Mexican border. Discharged Mar., 1917. Re-enlisted July 31, 1917, Co. I, 127th Regt., 32nd Div. Arrived overseas Feb. 18, 1918. Promoted to Sergt. Killed in action Aug. 6, at Fismes. Buried American Cemetery, Chierry, Row 2, Grave 59, Department of Aisne. Joseph J. Pivonka Son of Jamles and Katherine Pivonka - Menonlinee Born July 30, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 16, 1918, Superior, Wis. To Jefferson Barracks, Co. F, 116th Engrs., 41st Div. Arrived Brest Apr. 17, 1918. Stationed at Angiers, France. Arrived U. S. Feb. 23; discharged Camp Custer, Mar. 8, 1919. Promoted to Corp. Nov. 9, 1918, at Angiers, France. John J. Prohuska Son of James and Marie Prohuska - - Menoininee Born May 12, 1896, Menominee. Entered service May 10, 1918. To Camp MacArthur, Waco, Tex., Hq. Co., 80th F. A., 7th Div. Arrived Brest Sept. 2, 1918. Stationed at Pont de Musson. Arrived U. S. May 24, 1919; discharged June 12, 1919, Camp Custer.,,I. Abk Alkk Alk jf -~Zl~ ~ ~~ * - 4 N O'.0. 7 4 4 i 4 4 4 f I > 9I II I r,11III I ~~ [53] _ L - — ~ IL__~~~ L_7 -— —L —~~ ---l Cd W — I wI 4 1 * * 40. 0C;=rsr ~I I I ~ -="MeI ON ^ - I.......... Ellsworth L. Sturdy Son of Gustavus and Olive Sturdy - - Menominee Born Mar. 11, 1899. Enlisted June 11, 1917, Milwaukee. To Jefferson Barracks, 8th Cavalry, Troop I. Hospital Marfa, Tex., after injury at Presidio, Tex. Discharged Apr. 15, 1919, Fort Bliss, Tex. William Lentz Son of Peter and Katherine Lentz - - ---- R. F. D., Menominee Born Dec. 23, 1893. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1917, Minneapolis. Assigned as cook at Camp Joseph E. Johnston, Jacksonville, Fla. Edward H. Jungling Son of Jacob and Mary Jungling - - - Menominee Born May 25, 1894, Menominee. Entered service July 25, 1918. To Camp Custer. Transferred to Department Hospital at Waynesville, N. C. Discharged Feb. 7, 1919. John S. Daley Son of John and May Daley - - - - - Menominee Born June 13, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted June 6, 1917, Detroit, Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Alsace front, Oise-Aisne offensive, Aisne-Marne offensive, Chateau-Thierry, Verdun front. Taken ill at Chateau-Thierry, to Base Hospital No. 1, No. 5 and at Vichy. Arrived U. S. Jan. 1, 1919; discharged Feb. 1, 1919, Camp Sherman. Promoted to Corp. Verdun, France, Oct., 1918. Joseph M. Lacourciere Son of Herman and Mary Lacourciere (De Camp) - Menominee Born Oct. 24, 1893. Entered service May 28, 1918. To Camp Custer, 337th Inf., 85th Div. Arrived Brest Aug. 13. Awarded five stars for action at Soissons, OiseAisne, Aisne-Marne, Vosges and Argonne-Meuse. With A. of O., Germany. Arrived U. S. Oct. 18; discharged Oct. 20, 1919, Camp Custer. 4 Edward N. Kartheiser Son of Frank and Elizabeth Kartheiser - Menominee Born Oct. 12. 1894. Entered service July 25, 1918, Infantry. To Camp Custer and transferred Oct. 22 to 42nd Machine Gun Battalion. Promoted Corp. Nov. 1, 1918; discharged Jan. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. James E. Dillon Son of James and Irene Dillon - - - - Menominee Born Mar. 16, 1894. Entered service July 15, 1918. Assigned to Motor Truck Division at East Lansing. Transferred Oct. 12 to O. T. C. at Camp Grant. Died at Marine Hospital at Chicago Oct. 19, 1918. Evert Hansen Son of Andrew and Andrea Hansen - - Menominee Born July 29, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 28, 1917, Marinette. To Jefferson Barracks, 44th Motor Truck Co. Transferred to 403rd and 404th Motor Transport Co. at Marfa, Tex. Promoted to Corp. in Quartermaster's Dept. Apr. 13, 1918. Discharged June 12, 1919, San Antonio. Robert A. Gadbois Son of Eugene and Bertha Gadbois - - Menominee Born Dec. 10, 1891, Menominee. Entered service July 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, 23rd Co., 160 Depot Brigade. Transferred Aug. 28, 1918, to Medical Dept. 4 of 160th Depot Brigade. Later to 42nd Field Artillery. Discharged Jan. 15, 1919. Joseph F. Frankard Son of John and Mary Frankard - - - Menominee Born Mar. 28, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted July 14, 4 1918, for special service. Assigned to Valparaiso, Ind. Transferred Aug. 13 to Carnegie Technology School, Pittsburgh, Pa. Moved to Fort Totten, N. Y., Oct. 12. Assigned to 37th Coast Artillery, By. F. Left for Camp Eustis, Va., Oct. 18, 1918. Camp Stuart, Newport News, Va., Nov. 6. Left U. S. Nov. 21, 1918. Called back to New York Nov. 25. Discharged Dec. 16, 1918, Camp Custer. [54] 4 01 Y --- le _ ____ I, Ab. *:0.01 4 i - - AL jft AL --- - 4 4- 0 I 0 I 0 4 0 f 4 4 4 4 0 0 0 4 4 4 4 1 I i I 0 1 0 0 0 4 4 Howard Dennis Son of Frank and Josephine Dennis - - Menominee Born Aug. 20, 1895, Menominee. Entered service June 24, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, 85th Div., Bat. D. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Camp Knotty Ash, Southampton. Embarked for France. Cherbourg, Pipriac, Camp Coetquidan in training. Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 22, 1919, Camp Custer. Charles W. Lovell Son of Benjamin and Janet Lovell * - Menolninee Born Jan. 6, 1890. Husband of Laurine Brink. Enlisted Sept. 20, 1917, Wilkinsburg, Pa. To Camp Lee, Va., 3rd Training Bn, 9th Co. Transferred to Headquarters Chemical Warfare Service, Washington, D. C. Made Sergt., first class, Jan., 1918, at American University, Washington, D. C. Discharged Dec. 16, 1918. Henry G. Nellis Son of Nicholas and Anna Nellis - - - Menominee Born Apr. 1, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Feb. 28, 1918, Milwaukee. To Jefferson Barracks. Promoted Corp. July, 1918. Attended Officers' Training School. Discharged Dec. 12, 1918, Waco, Tex. Clarence E. Kelley Son of John and Mary Kelley - - - - Menomninee Born Oct. 14, 1896. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1916, Co. L. 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. In action Bellfort sector, Alsace, OiseAisne, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry, Juvigny. Gassed Aug. 1, 1918, at Juvigny. Arrived U. S. Apr. 20, 1919; discharged May 5, 1919, Camp Custer. Promoted to first class private Sept. 30, 1916. Corp. Apr., 1917. Adelbert D. Longcoy Son of Adelbert and Marie Longeoy - - Menolinee Born Sept. 27, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted May 5, 1917, Escanaba, Medical Corps. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and Fort Benjamin Harrison General Hospital No. 25. Arrived Brest Sept. 25, 1918, with 21st Eng., 4th Bn., Co. K. In Toule sector, Meuse-Argonne. Arrived U. S. Aug. 1, 1919; discharged Aug. 7, 1919, Long Island. Emery Lovell Son of Benjarmtin and Janet Lovell - - Menominee Entered service 1918. Discharged May, 1919. Paul B. Mass Son of Albert and Anna Mass - - - - Menominee Born June 15. 1890. Fought for two years with French army previous to U. S. entering war. Returned to New York and enlisted July, 1917, with A. E. F. Sent Camp Sherman, O., to assist training for overseas service. Returned to France. At ChateauThierry, Argonne Forest, Moselle, Meuse, Toule sector, Soissons. Arrived U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 27, 1919, Camp Custer: Harry A. Allard Son of Joseph P. and Elizabeth Allard - Menominee Born May 5, 1896, Menominee. Husband of Ellen Sundling. Enlisted Co. L, Menominee, May 6, 1915. Promoted to Corp. Feb. 10, 1917. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. In action at Alsace, OiseAisne offensive, Aisne-Marne offensive, Chateau-Thierry and Soisons, where he was wounded by shrapnel. Arrived U. S. Feb. 11, 1919; discharged Mar. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. 40, 4 4 4 4 $ 0 4 I 4 4 6,[ t 'IM Michael A. Stauber i Born June 19, 1892, Menominee. Entered service Feb. -.., 14, 1918. Assigned to Spruce Division, XVash. Dis-!.i charged Jan. 18, 1919. Camp Custer. Everett Nylund Son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nylund - - - Menominee Born Mar. 4, 1896. Entered service May 24, 1918, in U. S. Infantry. Discharged July 15, 1919... I E 4 S -[55J 0 1.I - ALML I'10'm.1 ~ r —.0 —. -- ~-1lll II0~s, -~ IC~ *1111 _FJ~ IB — r Q~ ~a D~ s d_z a 5 B '1 0 - I 11 iiOiiiii!oi i Dr. Earl V. McComb Son of Dr. I. N. and Anna McComb - Brillion, Wis. Born Dec. 27, 1882. Enlisted June 25, 1917, Menominee. Commissioned 1st Lieut. M. R. Corps July 28, 1917. Assigned to Fort Riley Medical Officers' Training Camp. Aviation camp, Waco, Tex. Carlstrom Field, Arcadia, Fla. Capt. July 20, 1918. Door Field, Arcadia, Fla., as Post Surgeon, Discharged Dec. 2, 1918. Howard S. George Son of Williani H. anid Ella Stephenson George - - Marinette Born Aug. 17, 1888, Marinette. Husband of Florence Carpenter George. Entered service Sept. 5, 1917, Camp Custer, Ambulance Co. 338, 310th Sanitary Camp. Promoted Sergt. Oct., 1917. Third O. T. C. Jan. 1, 1918. To Camp Lee, Va. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Inf. June 1, 1918. Transferred to Camp Lewis, Wash., 166th Depot Brigade. Ist Lieut. Nov. 1, 1918. Discharged Dec. 19, 1918, Camp Lewis, Wash. William S. Carpenter Son of Warren Spencer and Elizabeth Armstrong (Stephenson) Carpenter - - - - - - Menominee Born Oct. 10, 1888, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 30, 1917, Walworth, Wis. Entered first O. T. C., Ft. Sheridan, Ill. Commissioned Capt. Aug. 14, 1917. To Fort Sill, Okla., as instructor in gunnery. Promoted to Major July 30, 1918. Transferred to Camp Meade, Md. Organized 32nd Field Artillery. Discharged Dec. 10, 1918. Robert E. Jennings Son of Robert and Emma Stephenson Jennings - - Menominee Born Jan. 19, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted June, 1917, at Great Lakes Naval Station, as 2nd class seaman. Naval aero service. Promoted to chief quartermaster. Transferred to Key West Naval Air station. Transferred to Miami as instructor in advanced flying. Commissioned Ensign in U. S. N. R. F. June 14, 1918, in command 7th Naval Training Squadron. Promoted Lieut. Ordered to inactive duty Apr. 9, 1919. John P. Herscheid Son of John and Helen Herscheid - - Menominee Born Nov. 21, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 17, 1917, Washington, D. C., Medical Corps. Arrived France Oct. 10. Assigned to General Medical Department. Newport News, May 14, 1918. Discharged Feb. 17, 1919. Olaf H. Rasmussen Son of Samuel Rasmussen and Anna Jenkins - - - Menomninee Born June 24, 1894, Menominee. Entered service June 28, 1917. To Camp Custer, Depot Brigade, mechanic. At Defiance, O. Discharged Dec. 21, 1918, Camp Custer. Albert Johnson Son of August and Bertha Johnson - Little River, Mich. Born Apr. 22, 1888. Enlisted Co. I, Marinette, 1915. Later Co. L, Menominee. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Oise-Aisne offensive, Aisne-Marne offensive and Chateau-Thierry, where he was killed July 31 on Hill 212. His brother, Anton Johnson, killed three days later. Emil Kramer Brother of Mrs. Biggin - - - - - - Menominee Entered service in U. S. Infantry. Served 14 months. Discharged July, 1919. Harry C. Anderson Son of Anton and Sophie Anderson - - Menominee Born Dec. 14, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 10, 1917. Camp Hancock, Ga. Jefferson Barracks, aviation section. Arrived Liverpool Mar. 12. To La Havre, France. Tank Corps. On Champaigne front, St. Mihiel, under Gen. Estienne. Received insignia French L'Artellerie d'Assault, presented to 2nd Bn. 2nd Regt. Arrived IU. S. June 19, 1919; discharged July 1, 1919, Camp Custer. William H. Anderson Son of John and Mary Anderson - - - Menominee Born Apr. 19, 1892. Entered service June 26, 1918, Cleveland, O. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. D, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne. Ordered to front opposite Metz Nov. 8. Arrived U. S. Apr. 12, 1919; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. [56] 4 4 1 4 j 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 4 1 4 1 1 I 4 $ ~ * (II ~ 1L i~I. 1,I 4 4 ~ k - II -r I I -rr I I 1 4 q4.0. ~6 I p ^ -- -,. .~-~~9 ~~T~ig d 41 g Harold C. Larson Son of louis and Lena Larson - - - - Menominee Born June 25, 1892, Menominee. Entered service July 27, 1918, as electrician. Camp Custer, 85th Div., wireless operator. Overseas and returned U. S. May, 1919; discharged May, 1919, Camp Custer. Frank O. Wilson Son of Carl and Mrs. XVilson - - - - Menolinee Born June 24, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted with Co. L of Menominee. Mexican border. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Alsace front, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry, Argonne Forest and Argonne-Meuse. A. of O. Returned to U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 27, 1919, Camp Custer. Alfred Lindholm Son of Alfred Iandl Iathilda Lindhohln - Menoninee Born June 19, 1891. Entered service Apr. 3, 1918, Marinette, Wis. To Fort Flagler, Wash., 21st Co. P. S. Transferred to 48th Coast Artillery, Bat. E. Overseas Oct. 10, 1918. Stationed at Angiers, Montchieraume and Ladangemire. Arrived U. S. Mar. 13, 1919; discharged Mar. 29, 1919, Camp Grant. Promoted to mechanic Aug. 15, 1918. Herbert Lindholm Son of Alfred and Mathilda iindholn - Menoininee Born Feb. 28, 1900. Enlisted June 17, 1918, Green Bay, Wis. Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and Camp Johnston, Fla. Detailed to office Quartermaster General, Washington, D. C. Discharged Camp Meigs, Wash., Dec. 18, 1918. Joseph G. Slavick Son of Peter and Carrie Slavick - - - Menominee Born Mar. 3, 1895. Husband of Anna Kameciak. Enlisted with Co. L July 10, 1913. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. In action Alsace front, Soissons, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry and Argonne forest, where he was wounded Sept. 28, 1918. Died of wounds Oct. 1. Buried at Communial Cemetery at Very Dept. of the Meuse, Grave No. 11. Otto S. Newlin Son of Ole and Nettie Newlin - - - - -Wallace Born Apr. 24, 1896. Entered service July 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, Co. P, 40th Inf., 14th Div. Transferred to Camp Sherman, 0. Discharged May 16, 1919 Camp Sherman. Ernest H. Spoerke Son of Hernalln and Louise Spoerke (Suhr)-Menonlinee Born June 15, 1890. Enlisted with Co. L May 17, 1909. Corp. June 1, 1914. Sergt. Sept. 1, 1916. Sergt, first class Feb. 1, 1917. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. In action at Alsace front, ChateauThierry, battle of Ourcq, Cierges, second battle of the Marne, in the Aisne-Marne offensive. Gassed at the Vesle River, losing fourteen teeth as result. Arrived U. S. Sept. 15, 1918. First returned service man assigned to Camp Sherman as grenade and bayonet instructor. Refused promotion to 2nd Lieut. Discharged Dec. 10, 1918. Arthur F. Faber Son of Nicholas and Hulda Faber - - Menominee Born Jan. 5, 1893. Entered service at Camp Custer Mar. 30, 1918, Co. 7, 4th Motor Mech. Regt. Air service, Camp Green, N. C. Arrived Liverpool, England, July 29. Aviation camps at Langes, Toule, Commercy, St. Dizier. At St. Mihiel and Metz. Shell shocked Base Hospital No. 214, Savenay, France. Sent to U. S. General Hospital No. 43, National Soldiers' Home, May 30, 1919, where he died from injuries received overseas. James C. Stenstrup Son of Niels and Anna Stenstrup - - - Menonlinee Born May 25, 1893, Denmark. Entered service June, 1918. Camp Custer, 160th Depot Brigade. Promoted to Sergt. in Demobilization Detachment May 8, 1919. I)ischarged June 4, 1919, Camp Custer. Alvin W. Floodstrand Son of Hjalinar and Thekia Floodstrand - Menominee Born Apr. 26, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 16, 1918. To San Antonio, Construction Corps, Co. 7. Transferred to Camp Sevier, S. C., and arrived Apr. 1, 1918, Liverpool. Remained in England. Arrived U. S. Apr. 1; discharged Apr. 2, 1919, Camp Custer. [57] 'mM a sk - ~ Z:1.:'! i 4 4 $ + eI 4 l 4T. -* -4. 4 CI_ 1_1_ IPIII__~~III___YIIII_1___I1IYII_(-~l A" 1 W A k, I m 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.4. 4 ~ lw w wF"L, ---, --- ~ - w' —~.F -- - - a - - ra -- r LAlkAkI Adolph R. Sorensen Son of Mads i il Rosa Sorenlsenl - - '- Menoninee Born Aug. 6, 1891, Norway. Entered service Nov. 20, 1917. Camp Custer, Eng. Co. A, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Oct. 17, 1918. Antigony, Le Grand, France. Arrived U. S. Mar. 32 19l9scarged Mar. Ju14 1919, Canp1919 Ari|nee. Assigned to. Camp nCuter in, tr; Left New Iil Custer. Proimoted to Corp. Mar., 19198. Elmer G. Christensen I li^ _ lj K Soni of Theodore and Ennina Christensen - Meroninee l l Born Nov. 11, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 14, I B S. 918. Menominee. To Valparaiso, Ind. Transferred to Iowa City and assigned A to Wireless Telep one Scliool. i'-B Tgo Signal Corps to Dec. 14, 1918, and then discharged. Edward A. Stauber Son of Wolfgaiag aiind Frances StanBer 1- Menominee Born Apr. 3, 1892, Menominee. Entered service I IHH HHJune 27, 1918. Camp Custer, 338th lef. Supply Co., 1: BB il K 5th Div. Transferred to 11th Inf., Cth Div., Co. B. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3. In action St. Mihiel and rgonne. Wounded at Argon ne and sent to Base Hospital No. 84. At Esch, Luxemhurg, with A. of 0. Ar— H^^^^i —^H:- r ived U. S. July 21, 1919: discharged July 29, 1919, Cam-p Sherna an. Joseph Dumochelle Son of Joseph anad Elizabeth Dunnoohelle - Menomninee *.,I~ 6Born Miar. 6, 1894, Me nominee. Enlisted in MenomineT. Assigned to Camp Custer in training. Left New York for ov-\erseas. DrchFiarged Apr. 6. 1919. Ervin J. Eagen Son of ill!(hobel atnd Ann Eagen - - - 3enoininee i'1 Born Sept. 6, 1896, MIenominee. Enlisted July 25, 1918. Meno-iomiin. Camp Custer, Headquarters Detachi ent, 2nd Bat., 160thi Depot Brigade. Transferred to 4 rAtholetic Office. Discharged Mar., 1919, Camp Custer. Edwin H. Raymaker Son of Henr-y and Annie layinaker -Menoininee Born May 14, 1888. Entered service June 22, 1918, St. Paul. Camp Grant, 332nd Field Artillery, Bat. E, 86th Div. Arrived Liverpool Sept. 24, 1918. At Camp * Hunt, Le Corneau, Apremont, Camp De Souge, Geni-?court. Arrived U. S. Feh. 15, 1919; discharged Mar. 8, 1919, Camp Custer. Carl F. Schmidt Son of Cl.arl -and Ernestine Schmidt - Menoininee Born July 14, 1894, Menominee. Entered service lJune 24, 1918. Camnp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Camp Knotty Ash and Southiampton. Cherhourg, Pipriac, Camp Coetquidan. Rimnaucourt, Haute-Marne, Le Mans. Arrived S. 5. Apr. 11, 1.919: discharged Apr. 22, 1919. Camp Custer. Christian Burger Son of Gottfried aend Soioniat Burger -Menominee + Born Feh. 3, 1896, Menominee. Entered service at Cam-p Custer, Headquarters Detachlment, 14th Ammunition Train. Discharged Jan., 1919, Camp Custer. Ben Farnlof Son of Amndrewv arnd Anna Farniof - Menomninee.Born May 27, 1893. Entered service July 25, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 40th Inf., Co. G, 14th Div. Transferred Camp Sherman. Promoted Corp. Oct. 1, 1918. Discharged Apr. 24, 1919. Re-enlisted in Motor Transport Corps, Camp Levy, Jeffersonville, Ind. Discharged Apr. 25, 1920. Archie D. Stainer Son of Theodore and Mary Stainer - Menominee Born Nov. 10. 1892, Menominee. Enlisted June 15, 191.8. Houghton School of Mines. Engineering Corps. To Camp Hancock. Ga.. 667th Motor Transport Co. Discharged M!ar. 14, 1919. Camp Hancock. Ga. Iii~ H-.Crl F. St __ _ 0 1 0 1 1 --- — — II - ^ c'^^S~~~i lI i A AL A fefcl:JI I 0 Elmer G. Brisbon Son of Patrick and Mary Brisbon - - - Menominee Born Nov. 2, 1894. Entered Spruce Division, Vancouver Barracks. Discharged Jan. 2, 1919. Re-enlisted U. S. Army. Now in service. Emil Cherney Son of Joseph and Antoinette Cherney - Menoininee Born Oct. 11, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted with Co. L June 21, 1916. Released Apr. 28, 1917, on account of dependent family. Re-entered service July 25, 1918. Camp Custer. Fort Benjamin Harrison. Promoted Corp. Sept. 2; Sergt. Sept. 17. Discharged Dec. 18, 1918, Camp Custer. Alfred F. Collard Son of Felix and Adeline Collard - - - Menomninee Born Jan. 3, 1895, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. Camp Custer, assigned to Medical Corps. Arrived Liverpool June 20. Southampton, Cherbourg, France. Assigned to Evacuation Hospital No. 3 at Rimaucourt. Fermilone. In Aisne-Marne offensive, St. Mihiel, Oise-Aisne, Meuse-Argonne, Champagne. A. of O. at Trier. Arrived U. S. Aug. 10, 1919; discharged Aug. 18. 1919, Camp Grant. Daniel Wells Son of John WT. and Isabell ells els - - Menominee Born Mar. 19. 1875. Enlisted in 1898 as private in 1st N. Y. Vol. Inf. To Hawaiian Islands. In 1899 reentered 30tli Inf. as 1st Lieut. In Philippines insurrection, 1899 to 1901. At end of Boxer War to Peking and Tientsin, China. To France May, 1917, as volunteer driver American Ambulance, attached French army. Entered Y. M. C. A. with Rainbow Division. Wounded at Lorraine front. Returned to U. S. Aug., 1919. Robert M. Buckley Son of Michael and Maryl- Buckley - - Menorninee Born Dec. 30, 1888, Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918,,30th Field Artillery, Bat. C. Camp Custer. Camp Mills. Arrived England Aug. 14. Stationed at Rimaucourt, France. Returned to U. S. Apr. 11, 1919: discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Carl Olson Son of Peter and Hannath Olson - - - Menominee Enlisted Aug. 15, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Discharged July 10, 1919, Camp Grant. Sterling W. Greenman Son of George G. and lTydin G. Greenman - Menoninee Born Oct. 23. 1898. Menominee. Enlisted Ambulance Corps. Mustered into federal service, Ambulance Co. No. 127. Transferred to 23rd Inf.. 1st Bat., 2nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24. Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, St. Mihiel, Champagne, Argonne-Meuse. A. of O., Valandorf. Arrived U. S. Aug. 14. 1919: discharged Aug. 14, 1919, Camp Grant. Received Croix de Guerre for special heroism at St. Mihiel-Aux Armes front. Also special citation from Field Marshal Petain and MajorGen. Laurin for "great heroism and devotion," Oct. 3-9, 1918. Joseph W. Seidl Son of lXolfga:lg and Rosa Seil - - - Menomiinee Born Apr. 16. 1895. Menominee. Entered service June 27, 1918. Camp Custer. Medical Corps. To Mobile Hospital No. 104 at Camp Crane, Allentown, Pa. Arrived Nov. 29. 1918, Liverpool. To La Havre, France. To Joinville, Haute, Marne. Arrived U. S. Ma:r. 3, 1919; discharged Mar. 10, 1919. John Richard Stauber Son of Michael and Katherine Stauber - Menoininee Born Nov. 25, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted with Co. L, 33rd M. N. G., 1915: later Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24. In action Alsace sector, OiseAisne, Aisne-Marne offensive. Killed at ChateauThierry near Cierges July 31, 1918. Ernest D. Tebo Son of Michael and Millie Teho - - - Menominee Born Mar. 8, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 7, 1918. To Vancouver, 445th Squadron Spruce Div. Transferred 38th Aero. Promoted to Corp. May, 1918. Discharged Jan. 14, 1919, Camp Custer. 8.01 4- A IM t Ifl i /~L 4 4- 0 -1 41 40 e [59] 1 1111 1 I Mr. 4b l NOFM^r n wlv -- 11.1. -11% AL Ak AIRL 4 'o ldp - I ---. 'I 4 I -j! - Arthur C. La Perriere Son of Dennis and Marie La Perriere - Menomninee Born Oct. 19, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 16, 1917, Chicago. To Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind. Promoted to Sergt. Arrived Brest Dec. 16, 1917. Assigned to Tours, France Headquarters. Promoted 2nd Lieut. Nov. 1, 1918. Arrived U. S. Aug. 20, 1919; discharged Aug. 20, 1919, Camp Merritt. Mathew A. Tierney Son of WXilliam and Bridget Tierney - - Menomninee Born Jan. 26, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Milwaukee, Quartermaster's Corps, Dec. 8, 1917. Assigned to San Antonio, Fort Sa m Houston. Transferred 5th Eng. Training Regt. Co., Humphrey, Va., Mar., 1918. Discharged Dec. 16, 1918, Camp Humphrey. Julius E. Tappen Son of James and Eva Tappen - - - - Menominee Born Feb. 22, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Nov. 10, 1916, Chicago, U. S. Cavalry, 17th Reg. Overseas Mar. 10, 1918, with supply troops, Hawaiian Islands. Olget V. Peterson Son of John and Mathilda Peterson - - Menominee Born June 18, 1893. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. Camp Custer. To Camp MacArthur, Waco, Tex., Headquarters Co. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Alsace front trenches, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons sector, Argonne, Argonne-Meuse. Promoted Corp. Oct. 8, 1918. A. of 0. at Herl-ausen. Arrived U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. John Wolfgang Seidl Son of Wolfgang and Rosa Seidl - - - Menominee Born Feb. 11, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Nov., 1916, with Co. L. Border service. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Alsace Lorraine. In action Chateau-Thierry, Vesle, Soissons. -Wounded Aug. 29, Soissons, shell concussion. Returned with casuals Mar. 13, 1919; discharged Apr. 14, 1919, Camp Custer. Dr. Frank J. Erdlitz Son of Frank and Bertha Erdlitz - - - Menominee Born Apr. 27, 1887, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 17, 1918. Commissioned 1st Lieut., Medical Dept. Air Service. To Houston, Tex. Discharged Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Md. Gideon Brisette Son of Octave and Caroline Brisette - - Menominee Born Apr. 16, 1888, Menominee. Husband of Christine Bostrom. Entered service June 27, 1918, Camp Custer, Co. A, 310th Ammunition Train, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 9, 1918. Made ammunition wagoner Sept. 1, 1918, at La Havre. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. Frank Lamanski Son of Steven and ~Waleriya Lanmanski - Menonminee Born Dec. 4, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 21, 1917, Aberdeen, S. D. To Fort Barrancas, Bat. A, 63rd Coast Artillery. Arrived Brest Sept. 30, 1918. At Lemoges and Tours. To Base Hospital No. 24 at Lemoges. Returned to U. S. Feb. 27, 1919, to General Hospital, Detroit. Discharged Apr. 1, 1919, Camp Grant. I I I 0 1 0 4 0 1I i + 1 Robert Mulholland Son of Robert and Margaret Mulholland - Menomlinee Born Jan. 31, 1894. Menominee. Enlisted July 15, 1918. Buffalo, N. Y. To 0. T. C. Hancock, Ga., 17th Co., Machine Gun Div. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. at Camp Hancock, Ga. Discharged Dec. 14, 1918, Camp Hancock, Ga. Elmer St. Martin Son of Archie and Louise St. Martin - - Menominee Born June 6, 1895. Enlisted May 10, 1917, Escanaba. Camp Custer, 38th Field Artillery, Bat. E. Promoted to Corp. Arrived Brest Feb. 24. In action Alsace, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Chateau-Thierry and Argonne-Meuse. Gassed once, wounded twice. Returned to U. S. and discharged Feb. 10, 1919. [60] m 4 4...... I *. -4.. -.. i4 4 4, 4. -1 1 -- -- — a-r I I I i I I I I I *- ' - - s Walter A. Harteau Son of Charles and Alice Hartean - Menominee Born May 13, 1888. Entered service Oct. 4, 1918. To Columbus Barracks, 0., 10th Recruiting Co., G. S. I. Discharged Nov. 27, 1918. Joseph W. Rovinsky Son of William and Valeria Rovinsky - Menominee Born June 22, 1894, Menominee. Entered service Apr. 24, 1918. Overseas June 27, 1918. At Oise-Aisne offensive, second battle of the Marne, Aisne-Marne on s gc di: Tensive and the iveuse-Argonne. w oundea at Ar-.nne Oct. 11, 1918. Returned to U. S. May 28, 1919; scharged June 12, 1919. Corporal July, 1918. I Edward F. Everard Son of Joseph and Clemence Everard - Menominee Born Feb. 4, 1897, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 19, 1918. To East Lansing, Mich., M. A. C. Motor Truck School. Discharged Dec. 20, 1918. Charles J. Everard Son of Joseph and Clemence Everard - Menominee Born Jan. 30, 1893, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. To Camp Custer. Replacement Div. Discharged Dec. 23, 1918, Camp Gordon, Ga. Promoted to Sergt. June 18, 1918. George G. Everard Son of Joseph and Clemence Everard - Menominee Born Apr. 17, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 21, 1918. To Camp Custer, Base Hospital, 14th Div. Promoted first class private Oct. 15, 1918. Discharged Jan. 27, 1919, Camp Custer. Henry E. Miller Son of Jens and Marie Miller - - - - Menominee Born Mar. 13, 1892. Enlisted Mar. 4, 1912,. with Co. L. Re-enlisted June, 1915. Border service and at Escanaba. Died at St. Francis Hospital, Escanaba, Mich, June 10, 1917. Buried at Riverside Cemetery, Menominee. Promoted to Corp. Oct. 26, 1916, El Paso. Fred Baverfeldt Son of Alexander and Anna Baverfeldt - Menominee Born Sept. 15, 1891, Menominee. Enlisted June 23, 1916, Co. L. Corp. June 24, 1916; Sergt. Sept. 1, 1916. Border service. Overseas Feb. 24, 1918. In action Alsace front, Aisne-Marne offensive, Chateau-Thierry, Oise-Aisne. Wounded Aug. 2. To Base Hospital No. 20. In Meuse-Argonne offensive. A. of O. Coblenz and Bridgehead. Arrived U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 29, 1919, Camp Custer. Lawrence J. Coman Son of John S. and Clara Coman - - - Menominee Born June 17, 1892, Menominee. Husband of Agnes Rice. Entered service Dec., 1917, Two Harbors, Minn. To Presidio, San Francisco, 2nd Prov. Reg. C. A. C. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Fort Monroe, Va., Sept. 8, 1918. Assigned to Camp Eustis, Va., 33rd Reg. C. A. C. Discharged Dec. 15, 1918, Camp Eustis, Va. Joseph Neumeier Son of Anton and Mary Neumeier - - - Menominee Born May 31, 1895, Menominee. Entered service May 26, 1917. Milwaukee. To Camn Grant. 4th Reg.. 57th 4 * Div. Camp Logan. Discharged Aug., 1 gan. * Henry L. Coman Son of John S. and Clara Conan - - Born Dec. 7, 1889, Menominee. Husba ine White. Enlisted Jan. 5, 1918, Chicq Sherman, O. O. T. C., 322nd Field Arti Liverpool June 4. In Meuse-Argonne. C. Famur, France. A. of O. at Coblenz Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Arrived U. S * discharged May 12, 1919..919, Camp Lo- Menominee and of Katherago. To Camp llery. Arrived Entered O. T. and Wittberg. 3. May 7, 1919; [61] I T C-IUI~r~lL~ — c — - -— II I -"Mowe W -W 4 "no -- 0 to- 4^ 1 I, - I. wwlw o ii-11 1 t ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~ A AM ~ MN 0: W - - - - >Oooc-= = — * Emil Toberg Son of Magnus and Carrie Toherg - - - Daggett Born Feb. 4, 1890. Entered service at Menominee Aug. 20, 1918. To Camp Custer, 214th Signal Bn., Co. C, 14th Div. Discharged Jan. 24, 1919, Camp Custer. Harrison G. Deacon Son of Dan and Margaret Deacon - - - - Ingalls Born Nov. 27, 1892. Entered service July 25, 191S, Menominee. 40th Inf. Regt., Co. E, Camp Custer. First class private. Transferred to Camp Sherman, 0., Dec. S. IDiseharged June 24, 1919. * George H. Bergstrom Son of Olaf and Minnie Bergstrom - - - Daggett Born Jan. 6, 1895, Menominee. Entered service May 11, 1918. To Columbus Barracks, 0., 19th Machine Gun Bn., Co. A. To Waco, Tex., Camp MacArthur. Overseas Aug. 18, 1918. Active in Puvenelle sector. With ) I 2nd army in offensive Nov. 9 to 11, 1918. Arrived U. S. June 24; discharged June 28, 1919. * Francis Clark Son of M1r. and MrVs. Joseph Clark - - - Menominec Born Nov. 25, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted in U. S. * Marines, Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 5, 1918. To Paris Island. 363rd Co. of En. H. Transferred to Quantico, later to Norfolk, Va. Left for San Domingo Feb. 18, 1919. San Pedro and Macoris. Returned U. S. Sept. 10, 1919; discharged Sept. 15, 1919, Philadelphia Navy Yard. n of e Christian Andersen Son of NielsAndersen and Mary Andersen Paulsen - Menonilnee * Born Aug. 15, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 2, 1918, Fort McDowell, 16th Co. C. A. C. Sent to Manila, Philippine Islands. Stationed at Fort Mills. Returned U. 5. Apr. 24, 1920; discharged May 5. 1920, Camp Mc* DowellI]. Promoted Corp. Jan. 1, 1918. John Williams Son of Schnyler and Eliza Williams - Cedar River I i Born Feb. 22, 1887. Enlisted June 5, 1918. To Columbus Barracks. Assigned to Home Guard and later transferred to Motor Truck Div. as inspector. Overseas. In France ten months. On front sixty-one days.. Discharged Mar. 2, 1919. Albert La Rock Son of Joe and Ida La Rock Cedar River Born 1896. Entered service Mar. 11, 1917. Arrived France May 11. In action Chateau-Thierry. Gassed and sent to hospital. Returned U. 5. July 4, 1919. Member of the 85th Div., Co. E, 337th Inf. Re-enlisted to return to France. Still in service. Clement P. Damm Son of Charles atnd Katherine Danm - - - Ingalls Born Aug. 22, 1895. Enlisted June 1, 1918, Superior, Wis. To U. S. Eng., 54th Reg., Co. C, 1st Bn. Camp Dix. Overseas July 7, 1918. Cherbourg-Perigeaux, *) France. building base hospitals. To Russia via Arctic 4 Ocean. down the Kola River, to Murmansk and Saroka. Left Brest Aug. 8 for U. S., arriving Aug. 17, 1919: I I discharged Aug. 26, 1919, Camp Grant. Stanley Joseph Semrau * Son of John and Steila Semran - - - Menoninee,,, $ Born Nov. 10, 1895, Menominee. Entered service May 10, 1918, Menominee. To Columbus Barracks, 0. To * I Waco, Tex., 56th Inf., Co. H. Overseas Aug., 1918. Transferred to 58th Div., Co. D, while on the firing line in France. Killed in action Sept. 28, 1918, at Argonne Forest. Re is buried in Grave No. 79, Section 35. Plot 2, Argonne American Cemetery No. 1-232, Romagnesous-Montfaucon, Meuse. Edward E. Burch Son of John and Martha Burch - ------- -Wallace Born Dec. 25. 1888. Enlisted at Menominee Mar. 24. 1918. Left for Vancouver, Wash., Barracks and as* signed as coast guard. Ilischarged Dec. 24, 1918. [81] 4 =No - *:I %% IBHBBM^IMM "WVMMm q + +mm i, 1I I William A. Newbauer Sonl of Robert and Margareth New-baner - Daggett Born Sept. 20, 1892. Enlisted Aug. 15, 1918, Waukesha, Wis. To Indianapolis, Motor Transport Corps. Transferred to Camp Crane, Allentown, Pa. Transferred to Debarkation Hospital No. 3, New York City. To Camp Merritt and Camp Grant. Discharged Aug. 27, 1919, Camp Grant. I Rudolph Blanchette Son of M:r. and Mrs. Blanchette - - - Arthur Bay l iBasBorn June 10, 1895. Entered U. S. Army June 3, 1918. Assigned to 14th Div., 40th IRegt. Discharged July 18, 1919. Alvin H. DamT m Son of Willian and Myra Danm - - - - Ingalls I Born Mar. 8, 1886. Enlisted June 4, 1917, Antigo, Wis. Assigned to 46th Inf., 42nd Div., Co. E, at Montgomery, Ala. Transferred to Q. M. Dept. June 18, 1918. Seth Ferdon | | 1Son of Cad Ferdon and lMary Haney Ferdon (Lord) Ingalls Born Mar. 23, 1894, Ingalls. Enlisted U. S. Inf. June 28, 1917, 41st nf., Co. Ke. Injured and transferred to Medical Dept., Fort Creek, Nob. Discharged Jan. 27, 1919, Camp Grant. John B. Watry Son of Mr. and Mrs. Watry- -- --- -- - - - Wallace Born Mar. 14, 1897. Entered U. S. service after declaration of war with Germany. Machine Gun service. In service twenty months. Discharged May 10, 1919. Russell A. Kesler Son of James and Katherine Kesler - - - Daggett Born Aug. 15, 1895. Entered service July 26, 1918. To Camp Custer, 40th Light Field Arty., Bat. A, 14th Div. Promoted to mechanic, second class. Promoted chief mechanic Nov. 1, 1918, Camp Custer. Discharged Ian. 14, 1919, Camp Custer. Harry D. Toberg Son of Magnus and Carrie Toberg - Dnaggett, R. F. D. Born Aug. 7, 1892, Menominee. Enlisted Feb. 24, 1918, Menominee, in Spruce Div., Vancouver, Wash. To Brighton, Ore. Transferred to 149th Aerial Squadron Signal Corps. Recalled to Vancouver Nov. 13, 1918. Discharged Jan. 23, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph C. Berton Son of Fred and Angeline Berton - - - - Ingalls Born Sept. 26, 1893. Husband of Pearl Leanna. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917. To Camp Custer, 41-4th Eng., Co. B. Transferred to Dayton, 0., casual dept. Discharged Jan. 3, 1919. Edward Joseph Leanna Son of George and Olive Leanna - - - - Wallace Born Jan. 9, 1892. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. To Camp Custer. Transferred to Camp Humphrey. Overseas July 1, 1918. Assigned to 307th Ammunition Train, Co. E. Arrived in U. S. May 14, 1919; discharged May 16, 1919, Camp Custer. Henry Chaltry Son of Joseph and Emina Chaltry Stephenson Born June 1, 1897. Entered service Sept. 3, 1918, Munising, Mich. To Camp Custer, 34th Reg., Bat. B, C. A. C. To Camp Eustis, Va. Discharged Dec. 19, 1918, Camp Custer. [82] 4Pr 4 I 14 ND: Louis Frederiksen Son of John and Elsie Frederiksen - - Stephenson Born Dec. 31, 1894. Entered service June 27, 1918. Camp Custer July 11. Overseas July 22, 1918, arriving Liverpool Aug. 3. St. Mihiel, Meuse-Argonne front. With A. of 0. Bronchitis Feb. 24, Trier, Germany. Sent to hospital No. 59, Rimaucourt, France, and to Nantes, France, Hospital No. 228. Arrived U. S. May 9, U. S. Army Hospital, N. Y. To Camp Grant. Discharged June 19, 1919. George Burger Son of Fred and Saloma Burger - - - Menominee Born Sept. 25, 1894, Menominee. Entered service July 25, 1918. Infantry, Camp Custer. Transferred Camp Sherman Dec. 8, 1918. Discharged Jan. 20, 1919. Elmer Erickson Stephenson Entered U. S. service May 22, 1918. Assigned to U. S. Inf. Overseas one year. Served on four fronts. Returned to U. S. in July, 1919. Discharged July, 1919. Walter P. Winter Son of Albert and Katherine Winter - - Stephenson Born Nov. 10, 1900. Enlisted Feb. 16, 1918. To Jefferson Barracks, 4th Field Artillery. Overseas July 24, 1918. Transferred in France to 8th Motor Battery. Returned to U. S. Jan., 1919, on U. S. transport Northern Pacific. Stranded on Fire Island Jan. 12, 1919. Many wounded lowered over the sides in baskets and taken to New York in life boats. Arrived in New York Feb. 1, 1919; discharged Feb. 17, 1919. * Matthew Doyle Son of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Doyle - Stephenson Born May 27, 1897. Enlisted Fort Bliss, El Paso, Feb., 1918, 18th Field Artillery, Bat. F, 3rd Div. Landed Bordeaux Apr. 24. In action at Chateau-Thierry, Soissons and St. Mihiel. Wounded Sept. 14, 1918, St. Mihiel. Evacuation Hospital and Base Hospital No. 26 at Allery, France. Transferred to Base Hospital No. 22 at Bordeaux. Arrived U. S. on hospital ship Jan.. 26, 1919. To Camp Merritt hospital. To Camp Custer. operated and discharged Mar. 27, 1919. Promoted to Corp. in France. Leon J. Neuville Son of August and Emma Neluville - - Stephenson Born Sept. 13, 1894. Husband of Emma Vassaw. Elnlisted Washburn, Wis., July 7, 1917, Co. D, 6th Wisconsin. Transferred to Regular Army, 32nd Div.. at Camp Douglas, WMis. To Waco, Tex., Camp MacArthur, Oct. 18, 1917. Overseas Apr. 28, 1918, at St. Nazaire Apr. 28. Transferred to Co. B, 107th Military Police. In action on Belfort sector, Aisne-Marne, Fismes sector, Oise-Aisne, Verdun sector, Meuse-Argonne offensive. Transferred to Army M. P. Bn.. Co. A, at Trois, France. Transferred to 279th Co. M. P. Dispatch carrier at Chateau-Thierry, Juvigny and Soissons. Arrived U. S. May 21, 1918; discharged May 27,' 1919. Henry V. Larson Son of Nels and Caroline Larson - - - Stephenson Born Feb. 28, 1896. Entered U. S. service, assigned to the Coast Artillery Corps, 13th Reg., 75th Div. 1 Fred J. Beaudoin Son of Rene and Lea Beaudoin - - - Stephenson Born May 20, 1890. Entered service July 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, 41st Field Artillery. Bat. E. 14th Div. Promoted to Corp Nov. 25, 1918; discharged Jan. 29, 1919. * Charles G. DeMelle Son of Charles and Lena DeMelle - - Stephenson * Born Jan. 6. 1891. Enlisted at Fort Sheridan. Arrived overseas July 24, 1918, at Liverpool, England. In France as interpreter, assistant to chief salvage office. Promoted Corp. May 15, 1918. Entered hospital Nov. 14. 1918. Arrived U. S. Sept. 2, 1919. Hospital, Fort Sheridan, Ill. Discharged Oct. 15, 1919. Louis Gobert Son of I.ambert and Louise Gobert - - Stephenson Born Aug. 23, 1891. Entered service July 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 49th Inf., Co. H. 14th Div. Camp Sherman, O. Discharged Jan. 18, 1919. [83] ) M I W.- -.0 lah, AM& 4 OF W - --- 1# I Jw I WMNNNNNmmk AlL, -ALL -AkL. A 4. 0 14. F Wwl Q " — — I, I i. f 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 14 4 1 1 Earl L. Tebo Son of Mitchel J. and Rose N. Tebo - - - - - - Stephenson, R. F. D. Born Apr. 6, 1891. Entered service July 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, Co. H, 40th Inf., 14th Div. Discharged Apr. 24, 1919, as private, first class, at Camp Sherman, 0. Re-enlisted Xpr. 25, 1919, with Motor Transport Corps, 342nd Co. Promoted to Corp. June 4. 1919. Discharged Apr. 24, 1920. John Sobotta Son of Rudolph and Charlotte Sobotta - Stephenson Born Dec. 2, 1894. Entered service Camp Custer, June, 1918, 40th Regt., Co. A, 14th Div. Transferred to Camp Sherman, 0. Discharged Jan. 18, 1919. Rudolph Sobotta Son of Rudolph and Charlotte Sobotta - Stephenson Born Nov. 11, 1892, Germany. Entered service. Sent to Camp Custer, 310th Supply Train, Co. 5, 85th Div. Transferred to Vancouver Dec. 3, 1917, and assigned to aviation section Signal Corps. Transferred to 15th Spruce Squadron. Discharged Dec. 14, 1918, Vancouver, Wash. Louis J. Decaine Son of Victor and Mary Decaine - - - Stephenson Born Dec. 17, 1896. Entered service Aug. 28, 1918. To Camp Custer, 78th Inf., Co. A, 14th Div. Promoted to Corp. Dec. 14, 1918. Discharged Jan. 28, 1919, Camp Custer. o jf 1:1 charged June 24, 1919. [84] lw lw "W rm-ol%- - mmrlw I -t I Harry C. Fredrickson Son of Mr. and Mrs. Fredriekson - Carney Entered U. S. Army May 22, 1918. Was in service fourteen months. Discharged when army was demobilized. Hubert Hammerberg Son of Erick and Charlotte Hammerberg - Carney Born Feb. 27, 1889, Sweden. Entered service Feb. 6, 1918, Medical Dept., St. Paul, Minn. Transferred to Air Service, Ellington Field, Houston, Tex., Aug. 31, 1918. Discharged July 5, 1919. Steve Raboin Daggett Entered U. S. service. Was overseas fourteen * months. Decorated for special work and returned to K U. S. June 25, 1919; discharged July 12, 1919. Fred E. Wachter Son of Frederick and Rosana WVaehter - - Bagley Born Jan. 28, 1894, Germany, during visit of parents. (Frederick Wachter, Sr., has been a citizen of U. S. for 30 years and U. S. Army veteran.) Entered U. S. * Recruiting Co., Regular Army, Nov. 17, 1917. Sent to Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Promoted to Corp. Mar. 19, 1918. Sergt. Aug. 26, 1918. Discharged Feb. 1, 1919, Jefferson Barracks. Oscar Dahlberg Son of Rev. and Mrs. P. 0. Dahlberg - - - Daggett Born Jan. 17, 1896. Entered service Apr. 15, 1918, Detroit. Sent to Holabird, Md. Assigned to 7th Co. Motor Transport Service. Injured June 25 and entered general hospital July 2, 1918. Arthur Edmund Hanson Son of Hans and Augusta Hanson - - - Daggett Born Feb. 12, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 160th Depot Brigade. 12th Co. Trans- -| ferred to Co. A, 77th Inf. Promoted to Corp. Oct. 1, 1918. Discharged Jan. 18, 1919, Camp Custer. Elmer C. Hanson Son of Andrew and Elizabeth Hanson - - Carney Born Aug. 27, 1897. Enlisted at Detroit in U. S. Army. Sent to Camp Sheridan and assigned as cook. August Turnvall Son of John and Christina Turnvall - - - Daggett Born Apr. 7, 1895, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 31, 1918. From Camp Custer to Camp Hancock, Atlanta, Ga. Transferred to 27th Ammunition Train. Arrived overseas at Brest July 4. In action on Soissons-Chateau-Thierry. Arrived U. S. Mar. 28, 1919: discharged Apr. 2, 1919, Camp Custer. Max A. Tessmer Son of Charles and Wilhelmina Tessmer - Daggett Born Jan. 23, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, Headquarters Co., 330th Field Artillery, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6, Southampton, Cherbourg, Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, HauteMarne. Arrived U. S. Apr. 12; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph O. Forgette Son of Adolph and Marie Forgette - - Nadea Born Feb. 22, 1896. Entered service Aug. 28, 1918. To Camp Custer, Co. A, 78th Inf., 14th Div. Discharged Jan. 22, 1919, Camp Custer. [85] A — __*I~ A.~-I~ ~L~III ii xncn - r, a a -0 _____ _ --- * - ---- Walter Hanson Son of Mr. and Mrs. Hanson - - - - - - Carney Entered U. S. Army Sept. 22, 1917. In service 18 months. Discharged when army was demobilized. Joseph S. Fellner Son of John and Barbara Fellner - - - - Nadeau Born Mar. 10, 1893. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. E, 85th 1)iv. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Knotty Ash, Southamlpton, Cherbouirg, Pipriac, Camp 'Coetquidon in training. Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Camp Custer Apr. 25, 1919. Emil A. Hammer Son of August and Gustava Hammer - - - Carney Born Mar. 14, 1890. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917. To Camp Custer, 337th Inf., Co. D. To Newark, N. Y. Promoted to Sergt. Aug. 14, 1918. Discharged Mar. 20, 1919. Camp Custer. Anton Weber Son of Anton and Georgiana Weber - - - Nadean Born Aug. 19, 1896. Entered service May 26, 1918. To Camp Custer, 339th Inf., Co. L. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 4. Stationed at Aldershot training camp. Left England for Russia Aug. 22, 1918. Arrived at Archangel Sept. 3. In action at Volodga River, Ketze River, Volodga Railroad, Kodish and Yamze River and Verst. Arrived T. S. June 30, 1919; discharged July 18, 1919. Edward C. Hanson Brother of Walter Hanson - - - - - - Carney Entered U. S. Army Feb. 10, 1918. Served fifteen months. Discharged July 28, 1919. Donald L. Garrigan Son of Peter and Ruth Garrigan - - - - Carney Born Sept. 16, 1890. Entered service July 25, 1918. Camp Custer to Nov. 30, 1918, when he was honorably discharged. Arthur Bergstrom Son of Olaf and Minnie Bergstrom - - - Daggett Born Feb. 9, 1896. Entered service May 25, 1918. Assigned to 19th Co. of 160th Depot Brigade. Assigned to Co. K, 338th Inf., 85th Div. Transferred to Co. D, 77th Inf., 14th Div. Promoted to Corp. Dec. 11, 1918. Discharged Jan. 28, 1919, Camp Custer. Clarence Olive Son of Henry and Roseana Olive - - - Whitney Born Dec. 24, 1897. Enlisted June 26, 1917, Escanaba, Mich. Transferred to Waco, Tex., to U. S. Army. — ct. 14, 1917. At Alsace, Oise-Aisne offensive July 28 to Aug. 7, Aisne-Marne offensive, Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. Arrived U. S. May 9, 1919. Rank of Farrier. In Co. L and Co. K, 125th Inf,, Headquarters Vet. Corps, 32nd Div., 63rd Brigade, and supply comnany, 125th Inf. Discharged May 21, 1919, Camp Custer. Edward Brabant Son of Frank and Sarah Brabant Daggett Born Mar. 28, 1888. Enlisted at Miles City, Mont., Mayv 1917. Assigned to 16th Regt., Co. E, 1st Div. Overseas eighteen months. Discharged Sept. 21, 1919. Louis J. Servais Son of Joseph and Kate Servais - - - - Nadeau Born Sept. 6, 1894. Enlisted Mar. 10, 1917, Philadelphia, Pa. Stationed at present with 112th Ordnance Co. at Camp Pike, Kan. Commissioned 1st Lieut. [86] Louis B. Nadeau Son of Louis and Frances G. Nadeau - - - Nadean Born Apr. 25, 1895. Husband of Helena Keener. Enlisted Dec. 22, 1917, Chicago. Called into service Apr. 13, 1918, University of Illinois, Aviation School, Cadet Corps. Transferred to Chanute Field July 13, 1918. Discharged Nov. 30, 1919. George W. Nadeau Son of Barney and Hattie Nadeau - - - - Nadeau Born Mar. 10, 1888. Entered service July 25, 1918. Camp Custer, 40th Inf., Co. F, 14th Div. Transferred to Camp Sherman, 0. Discharged Jan. 22, 1919. Joseph P. Vachon Son of Philip and Malvina Vachon - - - Spalding Born Jan. 30, 1899. Enlisted in U. S. Army Apr. 10, 1918. Assigned to H. G. Cavalry, Douglas, Ariz. Discharged May 20, 1919. George A. Olson Son of Gust and Annie Olson -icel -i -Carney Born Apr. 27, 1897. Entered service Aug. 28, 1918. Camp Custer, Depot Brigade. Washington, D. C., assigned to 57th Eng. Transferred to 480th Eng., Camp riHumphrey, Va. D ischarged Dec. 28, 1918, Camp Custer. Joseph Blazek Son of Albertma and Marie Blazek - - - - Wilson Born Jan. 10, 1893. Enlisted Sept. 12, 1917, Etscanaba, Mich. To Jefferson Barracks and Gettysburg, Pa. Charlotte, N. C., Camp Green and Camp Merritt. Arrived France Apr. 28, 1918. Voges Mts. sector and Chateau-Thierry, Verdun, St. Mihiel, Argonne Woods and Argonne-Meuse. Wounded three times. With A. of 0. Arrived U. S. July 20, 1919; discharged July 26, 1919. John F. Cota Son of Mose and Bridget Cota ----..... — owers Born July 20, 1884. Enlisted Apr. 7, 1917, Green Bay, Wis. To Jefferson Barracks, 1st Cavalry, Troop E. Transferred to H. Q. Troop. 24th Cavalry. Transferred to H. Q. Co., 82nd Field Artillery, and promoted to Corp. Nov. 1, 1917; Sergt. Dec. 1, 1918. Discharged Jan. 29, 1919, Fort Bliss, Tex. Walter J. Cory Son of John and Mary Cory -.. ------- - Powers Born Mar. 20, 1897. Enlisted Sept. 3, 1917, Escanaba, Mich. To Camp Force, Ga., 54th Inf., Co. B, 6th Div. Promoted to Corp. Apr. 1, 1918; Sergt. Apr. 20, 1918. Arrived Liverpool July 17. 1918. To Winchester, La Havre and Bricon, in the Vosges sector. Transferred to Meuse-Argonne. At Minot. With A. of 0. near Bruck. Arrived U. S. June 20, 1919; discharged June 25, 1919. Harry F. Bruner Son of Joseph and Carrie Bruner - - - Spalding 4 Born Dec. 8, 1891. Entered service Sept. 5, 1917. Sioux City, Ia. Signal Corps, Co. C, 313th Field Signal Bn., 88th Div. At Camp Dodge, Ia. Promoted to Corp. May 1, 1918. Arrived Liverpool July 4, 1918. Southampton, La Havre. Transferred to 317th Field Signal Bn., 42nd Div. Transferred 313th Field Signal Bn. In action St. Mihiel and Argonne. Arrived U. S. May 26, 1919; discharged June 12, 1919, Camp Dodge, la. Michael J. Finnerty Son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Finnerty - - Powers Born Mar. 20, 1896. Entered service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. D. Arrived overseas at Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. Knotty Ash, Southampton. To Cherbourg, France. Pipriac, Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne, Le Mans. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Arthur E. Bryson Son of Thomas and Celina Bryson - - - Spalding Born May 12, 1893. Enlisted Dec. 12, 1917, St. Louis, Mo. 3rd Heg. Eng. at Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Transferred to Presidio, Cal. Left for Philippines Mar. 1, 1918. Still in service. Promoted to Corp. July, 1918. [87] 00"0% -Al A116, AIL - 0 - Ab-. - p ---e --— h=A - - William J. Wheeler Son of Barclay and Jane Wheeler - - - - Powers Born Aug. 31, 1894. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917, Milwaukee, Wis. To Camp Custer, 340th Inf., Co. G. Transferred to Camp Green, N. C. Promoted to Corp. Arrived Brest May 25, 1918. Calais, active AisneMarne offensive. Wounded July 29, and transferred to Base Hospital No. 9, Chateaux Roux. Sent to Savigny Jan. 1, 1919. Arrived U. S. Jan. 25, 1919; discharged Mar. 12, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph Grapel Son of Charles and Caroline Grapel - - - Powers Born Oct. 30, 1887. Enlisted 1912, U. S. Regular Army, St. Paul, Minn. 86th Regular Co., Coast Artillery. To Philippine Islands Jan. 26, 1914. Promoted to Corp. Returned 1916 to Angel Island, San Francisco. Transferred to 71st Co., Coast Artillery. Transferred to Reserve Force Nov. 28, 1916. Recalled to Regular Army May 19, 1917. To Fort Sheridan, Ill., 5th Co., Coast Artillery, Fort Wadsworth, N. Y. Transferred to 32nd Coast Artillery as instructor. Assigned to 1st Co., Coast Artillery. Transferred to Reserve Feb. 19, 1919. Irving N. Shannon Son of Michael and Barbara Shannon - - Spalding Born Apr. 28, 1892. Enlisted July 20, 1917, Escanaba, Mich. To Jefferson Barracks, Signal Corps, Co. A, 5th Field Bn. Transferred to Fort Leavenworth. Promoted to Corp. Dec. 1, 1917. Arrived Brest Mar. 10. To Marmesee, France. In action Marne-Aisne offensive, Champagne-Marne offensive, Vesle sector. Promoted Sergt. St. Mihiel drive, Meuse-Argonne offensive. With A. of O. at Andernach. Arrived U. S. Aug. 25; discharged Aug. 30, 1919, Camp Sherman, O. Otto O. Leger Son of Joseph and Corinne Leger - - -Spalding Born Dec. 15, 1891, Canada. Husband of Ida Christian. Entered service July 25, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. Camp Sherman. Discharged Jan. 18, 1919, Camp Sherman. Joseph Ravet Son of Oliver and Adele Ravet - - - - Spalding Born Feb. 23, 1898. Enlisted June 17, 1918, Milwaukee, Wis. U. S. Cavalry. Sent to Camp Zachary Taylor, 69th Field Artillery, Bat. E. Discharged Dec. 20, 1918, Camp Knox. Jean A. Fortier Son of Jean and Lydia Fortier Blair - - -Powers Born Oct. 6, 1895. Entered service July 24, 1918, Ashland, Wis. To Camp Grant, 161st Depot Brigade, 9th Co. Transferred to H. Q. Detachment, 1st Training Bn., infantry, unassigned. Back to 161st Depot Brigade. Transferred H. Q. Detachment, demobilization group. Discharged July 24, 1919, Camp Grant. Harry Lawrence Son of Mr. and Mrs. George Lawrence - - Powers Born Aug. 6, 1896. Enlisted Mar. 6, 1918, Escanaba. To Columbus Barracks, 20th Eng. To Washington, D. C., American University. Guard duty. Shot a spy who had laid bombs in basement Historical Building, preventing destruction of building. Arrived Brest May 23. At Pastoris, Vosges Mountains. Hospital one month. Assigned 2nd Eng., 2nd Div. Awarded service stars Chateau-Thierry, Champagne front, St. Mihiel and Argonne-Meuse offensive. With A. of O. at Angiers. Arrived U. S. Aug. 20; discharged Sept. 2, 1.919. 919. Royal Harris Son of Joseph and Rose Harris - - - - Spalding Born Aug. 15, 1889. Enlisted May 6, 1918, Escanaba, Mich. To Jefferson Barracks, 1st Cavalry, Troop D. Transferred to Camp Harry J. Jones, Douglas, Ariz. Discharged Feb. 8, 1919, Camp Jones. George Fontana Son of Jacob and Anna Marguerite Fontana - Powers Born Sept. 12, 1894. Graduated Forestry Ann Arbor. To Allentown, Pa., June 18, 1917. Assigned ambulance unit, Camp Meade. O. T. C., Camp Lee, Va. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. Promoted 1st Lieut. Camp Custer, charge rifle range. Mustered out. Fred LeBeau Son of Mr. and Mrs. LeBeau - - - - Menominee Born June 20, 1896. Entered service May 28, 1918, Menominee. Served six months. Developed tuberculosis and is still at sanatorium. [88] w S * I - ^ W ~T- -^ w - ^ 4 4 q D 4. e I A I I,M - la Id - > I f~f^^ o" I -— ^AA'f~ —*,I^^ s^ _J ^ 5^ ^.,_ __+L.A_ Anton Pfankuch Son of George and Mary Pfankueh - Soperton, Wis. Born Apr. 2, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted May 4, 1918, Detroit, Mich. To Waco, Tex., 867th Aviation Section. Transferred to Galveston. Discharged May 18, 1919. John Pfankuch Son of George tand Mar)y Pfankuch - Soperton, Wis. Born June 27, 1887, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 22, 1917, Soperton, Wis. To WVaco, Tex., 324th Q. M. Dept. Discharged Apr. 25, 1919. Emilio Floriano Son of Joseph and Anna Floriano - - Hermnansville Born Sept. 6, 1895. Italy. Husband of Augusta Scholtz. Entered service May 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K, 85th Div. Arrived Brest Aug. 10. Transferred to 7th Inf., Co. L, 3rd Div. Wife notified Jan. 25, 1919, that Floriano had been killed Oct. ^ 18, 1918. Burial place unknown. Lawrence Nidifski Son of Joseph and Barbara Nidifski - - Menominee Born Aug. 10, 1892, Menominee. Entered service * June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery. Coi. E. Discharged Mar. 15, 919,1 Beauregard, La. i William Menard Son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Menard - - - Talbot Born Aug. 24, 1896. Enlisted May 26, 1917, Park 9 Falls, Wiis. To Camp Douglas, 119th Machine Gun Bn., Co. B, 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Mar. 18, 1918. In action Alsace sector, Aisne-Marne offensive, ChateauA Thiery, Juvigny, Meuse-Argonne. WTith A. of 0. Pro- i moted to first class private May 1, 1918. Decorated with D. S. C. Apr. 20, 1919. for "distinguished bravetlry on the Meuse-Argonne offensive." Arrived U. S. May 28: discharged June 1, 1919, Camp Grant. Henry J. Norton Son of Jamles. and B Sertina N orton.- - - - Central Lake, -Mich. Born July 26, 1895. Enlisted Dec. 8, 1917, Iron Mountain. To Camp Dodge, Ia., 160th Depot Brigade. To Ordnance Corps. Arrived Brest Apr. 27. To Camp Atelier De Mehun Sur Jevres. To Lingres. Arrived U. S. Mar. 23; Discharged Apr. 3, 1919. Promoted to Corp. in France. Julius E. Slack Son of Walter and Ann1a Sriek - - - Herniansville Born Nov. 21, 1898. Entered U. S. Military Academy, West Point, June 14, 1917. Graduated and commissioned 2nd Lieut. Nov. 1, 1918. To France with class of 1921 for a tour of observation. Walter N. Fortier Son of Jeaan and lydia Fortier (Blair) - - Powers Born Sept. 17, 1900. Enlisted July 30. 1918, Duluth. Medical Dept. To Jefferson Barracks, H. Q. printing office. Discharged Dec. 22. 1918. Clifford Menard Son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Menard - - Talbot Born June 14, 1886. Entered service Apr. 29, 1918, M enominee, 338th lITnf., Co. M. 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 12, 1918. Winchester, Southampton, La Havre. Moved to Alsace front and Verdun. Promoted Nov. 1, 1918. Arrived U. S. May 24, 1919; discharged June 5, 1919, Camp Custer. Eugenio Guiotto Son of Mr. and Mrs. Gniotto - Herinansviile Born Apr. 15, 1889. Entered U. S. service June 27, 1918. To Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery. Bat. D, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Knotty Ash, Southampton. Proceeded to France. Stationed at Cherbourg, Pipriac, Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne, Le Mans. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11: discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. [89] * I 1 I* 4 4 4 4 * 4 4 }4 --. bM e nZ' "tv; 7^^b"T 'Uwisto$r^^W dew m 1!:pf ftWD^:t, BRD^ sa#WE4WsAt r/l^ ^ S~a n i c'neD5 * Girolano Pieropan Son of Mr. and Mrs. Pieropan - - - Hermansville Born Nov. 24, 1896. Entered U. S. service Sept. 22, 1917. To Camp Custer and assigned to 14th Engineers. Discharged May, 1919. Edward W. Lohf Son of Fred and Annie IJohf - - - Hermansville Born Apr. 17, 1900. Enlisted May 6, 1918, Escanaba, 16th Cavalry, Troop L. Ordered to San Benito, Tex. Kicked by horse July 10, 1918. Hospital four months. Returned to San Benito. Louis Cocco Son of Mr. and Mrs. Cocco - - - - Hernansville Born July 30, 1888. Entered U. S. service Sept., 1917. To Camp Custer. 330th Eng., 85th Div. Discharged Apr., 1919. Andrew J. Jerue Son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jerue - - Cedar River Entered U. S. service Feb., 1918. Assigned to Spruce Div.. 136th Squadron. Discharged Feb., 1919. Frank P. Legreve Son of Alex andl Ananda Legreve - - - Faithorn Born June 4. 1893. Enlisted Dec. 5, 1917, Escanaba. To Jefferson Barracks, Bat. C, 51st Coast Artillery. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 28, 1918. To France. In action St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne drives. Arrived U. S. Apr. 17; discharged May 3, 1919, Camp Grant. Samuel R. Menard Son of Joseph and Jennie Menard - - Herinansville Born Oct. 5, 1893. Enlisted June 1, 1917. To Fort Russell, Wyo., 1st Cavalry. Camp Lawrence, Palm City, Cal. Promoted to first class cook Mar. 13, 1918. Discharged Sept. 27, 1918, Camp Grant. George Elmer Good Son of James E. and Rebecca Good - - - Faithorn Born Jan. 14, 1892. Enlisted Jan., 1918, Chicago. Signal Corps, N. R. Co. D, 415th Railroad Tel. Bn. Arrived England Mar. 12, 1918. To France. Stationed near Paris. Discharged June, 1919. Carl E. Meyer Son of Erick and Pauline Meyer - - Hermansville Born Dec. 24, 1893. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917, Menominee. Camp Custer, bakers' and cooks' school. Promoted Sergt. Apr. 1, 1918. Instructor Fort Benjamin Harrison during July, Aug. and Sept., 1918. Discharged Mar. 19, 1919, Camp Custer. Albert Beauchamp Son of Albert and Sarah Beauchamp - - - Wilson Born Apr. 15, 1888. Entered service May 25, 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K, 85th Div. Camp Mills. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. Winchester, Southampton, La Havre, France, Pouilly. Transferred to 3rd Div., 7th Inf., H. Q. Co. Promoted to mechanic Sept. 4 and moved to front. In action St. Mihiel offensive, Meuse-Argonne offensive. With A. of O. Arrived J. S. Aug. 22; discharged Aug. 28, 1919, Camp Grant. Axel 0. Swanson Son of Otto and Louise Christine Swanson - - - Hermansville Born June 24, 1896. Enlisted Aug. 14, 1918, Menominee. To Valparaiso University. Assigned 29th Signal Corps. Specialized in telegraphy and telephony. Transferred to Co. 0, Training Detachment. Discharged Dec. 14, 1918, Iowa City. + ^s I 4 4! r%5 r1in nin w'~ I ~P.* ' ' [90]_ x + S....'.. wl - - - 0 Al 9 1 4 i i i I I I I I t~ I I I I I Axel Heighdale Son of Carl and Emma Heighdale - - - Wallace Born June 11, 1895. Entered service Sept. 7, 1918, Menominee. To Syracuse, N. Y., 7th Div. Arrived Oct. 30, Liverpool. To Winchester. La Havre, Belois, France. H. Q. Co., 7th Div. Soules. At St. Agnon. Arrived U. S. June 29; discharged July 7, 1919. Ernest P. Melchoir Son of Joseph and Amelia Melchoir - - - Wallace Born Feb. 8, 1895. Enlisted Oct. 21, 1918, Shawano, Wis. To Camp Nicholas, New Orleans, Bat. A, 9th Trench Motor Battalion. Promoted to Corp. Nov. 15, 1918. Discharged Dec. 18, 1918, Camp Dodge, Ia. Tom Bolen Son of Toni and Elizabeth Bolen - - Cedar River Born Feb. 2, 1891. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917, Co. B, 107th Eng., 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. To Alsace front. In action Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Verdun front, Argonne Forest. Vith A. of O. at Bridgehead, Coblenz. Arrived U. S. June 4, 1919: discharged May 27, 1919, Camp Custer. Bruce S. Goulder Son of Thomlas and Birdie Goulder - - -Ingalls Born Mar. 28, 1899. Enlisted Aug. 9, 1917, Kenosha. Wis., 4th Wis. Inf., Co. M. Transferred to Truck Co. B, 107th Supply Train, Waco, Tex. Overseas Jan. 23. 1918, on the Tuscania. Boat torpedoed Feb. 5, 1918. by submarine. Tuscania remained afloat four hours, then sunk. 261 drowned. 650 removed by H. M. S. Pidgeon, an English destroyer. Landed in Ireland. To Winchester, Southampton, La Havre. Assigned to 10th area. In action in Alsace sector defensive, Oise-Aisne, Meuse, Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. at Marinehouser. Arrived U. S. May 20; discharged May 28, 1919. John E. Bolen Son of Tom and Elizabeth Bolen (Nidifski) - - - Cedar River Born Dec. 14, 1894. Entered service Apr. 22, 1918. To Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. M. Arrived overseas July 30, 1918. Active on St. Mihiel drive, Belliveau Woods, Argonne Forest, losing one eye and hearing of left ear. Hospital three months. Arrived IT. S. Dec. 22. 191S; discharged Jan. 27, 1919, Camp Grant. James Lamack Son of Jamnes and Kate Lamack - - - - Wallace Born Sept. 26, 1894. Entered service June 27, 1918. Menominee. To Camp Custer. Overseas with 85th Div. Feb. 22, 1918. Arrived Liverpool. To Nazaire. France, with 337th Inf., 85th Div. In Meuse and Moselle River. Arrived U. S. July 5, 1919; discharged July 19, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph J. LaRoche Son of Sidney and Louise LaRoche - - - Faithorn Born Dec. 22, 1889. Entered U. S. Army June 20. 1918. Assigned to Air Service. Discharged Apr. 20, 1919. Wallace F. Melchoir Son of Joseph and Amelia Melchoir - - - Wallace Born Sept. 5, 1893. Enlisted Mar. 8, 1919, Shawano. Wis. Assigned to Kelly Field, San Antonio. Arrived Brest Nov. 2. Overseas six months. Arrived U. S. Mar. 30; discharged Mar. 31, 1919, Camp Custer. Stanley G. Wozniak Son of Joseph and Anna Wozniak - - - - - - Menomlinee (Bay Shore) Born June 20, 1893, Menominee. Entered service Mar. 29, 1918. To Camp Custer, 160th Depot Brigade. Transferred to Camp Gordon, Ga., 4th Co., 27th Div. Arrived Brest June 29. St. Agnes, Aisne-Marne offensive. Transferred to 163rd Inf., 42nd Div., Co. H. In action Aisne-Marne, St. Mihiel, Chateau-Thierry, Argonne Forest, Meuse-Argonne. A. of O. Arrived IT. S. Apr. 20, 1919; discharged May 7, 1919, Custer. Mose Beaudo Son of Anton and Clementine Beaudo - - Nadeau Born Feb. 26, 1890. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917, Menominee. To Camp Custer, Depot Brigade. Transferred to Waco, Tex. Assigned 125th Inf., Co. L, 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Mar. 4. To St. Nazaire. Transferred to 128th Inf., Co. L. Sassigny. White sector with Gen. Mangin's army. Oise-Aisne, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Verdun, Argonne Forest, Argonne-Meuse. Brought telegram announcing armistice to front line Nov. 11, 1918. With A. of O., Coblenz. Arrived U. S. May 5, 1919; discharged May 18, 1919, Camp Custer. [91] 4TWIN I I f 0 4 t~ 4 4 0. t 4 I4 4 2 I I MM07 AN,-^^d b gAll, lw~ ~ ~ a~)Yr~~d. — -~. 4 I' -- W - ^C _J - - - * 4.R * John Wiltzens Son of Barney and Margaret Wiltzens - - Faithorn @ Born June 23, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 330th Inf., 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Southampton, Cherbourg, a' ~ I.:.2 M B llB ^;1 - tP ipriac, Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne. 1919, Camp Custer. I 5 Son-..Joseph AoFrn. r Ma ttam Dord nne - S on of oMike and Alpha Mattardist - - - - Nadein To Camp Custer. Transferred to Camp, Colt, Pa., tank $ s ---... cornu,ps8. Arrived Liverpool Oct. 31, 1918. To Wincheser, Southampton, La Havre, Tank Center Bourg. ArSS-S^I^ Bellvile 111. Paynettle. T JeferstPointBr, 18hReriting Co.l I 1!1 1III B~cllpGng^^ Arri Feld, Arcda la omssione Sct2nd Liet. 2 I~ * a B- -Brakived U. S. Mar. 12,Fl 1919; discharged Mar. 29, 1919, 'At5, i2 swa:..........................Camp Cutr.n m u William A. Emery i t Son of Frank B.d Emery and Mary Emery Donnelly-i Cedar River Born May 16, 1892. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918, Menominee. Tor Camp Custer, Inf. Transferred to *i.amp Gordon, 106th Artillery, Bat. C, 27th Div. Arrived overseas June 18, St. Nazaire. At Gardenier, Transce.r To Camp De Souge. On Verdun front, MeuseArgonne offensive. After armistice at Fontaine La* alle. Arrived UT. S. Mar. 13, 1919; discharged Apr. 1, 1919, Camp Custer. [92] *George E. McGilligan on of Williani and Emma MeGilligan - - Ingalls... Born July 26, 1891. Enlisted Aug. 1, 1917, Marle tte. To Jefferson Barracks, 1.8th Recruiting Co. Transferred to Washington, D. C., Aug. 17, 191.7, Co. D,10th- Eng. Arrived Glasgow, Scotland, Oct. 2, 1917. ro Southampton, La Havre. Built first American har*racks in France. Arc Sous Montenant, Marteau. Arrived U. S. Feb. 10, 1919; discharged Feb. 26, 1919, Cam Grnt. Jesse E. Sword Son of Alex and Evelyn Sword --- —---— aithorn Born Febi. 27, 1898. Enlisted Apr. 19, 1917, Escanaba, Mich. Troop C, 13th Cavalry, Jefferson Barracks. To * R El Paso, Tex. To Fort Riley, Kan. Transferred to Troop C, 21st Cavalry, July 1, 1-917. To Camp Logan, Tex., Bat. B of 7i9th Field Artillery, Dec. 24, 1917. Arrived Brest Aug. 27, 1918. Transferred to Ploermel, France. Arrived U. 5. June 20, 1918; discharged June * 28, 1919, Camp Custer. Harry Blomquist 011 of Jolmin and Anna Blomquist -— Stephienson *Born Jan. 3, 1893. Enlisted Dec. 4, 1917, Chicago Ordnance Corps. To Camp Dodge, la. Arrived Brest Apr. 9, 1918. Camp Mehun. Active in St. Mihiel drive. Battle of Argonne Forest. To First Army Headquarters, Barnirauhe. Arrived U. S. May 24; discharged ' June 7, 1919, Camp Grant. * Edward Frank Son of Valentine and Lonise Frank — Menominee Born Nov. 24, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted July 14, 1918, Madison, Wis. Motor Truck Transportation Corps No. 307. Left for overseas Sept. 14, 1918. Arrived U-. 5. July 14; discharged July 28, 1919. Harry Lundgaard on of Fred and Ingeborg Lundgaard -Stephenson Born Nov. 4, 1895. Enlisted Jan. 8, 1918, Air Service. U. S. School of Military Aviation, Illinois University. * Transferred to Camp Dix, Dallas, Tex. Scott Field, Belleville, Ill. Payneville, West Point, Miss. CarlStrom Field, Arcadia, Fla. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. *Payne Field, Miss. Discharged Mar. 1. 1919, Carlstrom. leld.Harvey L. Damm Son of Fred aad Cora Damnm --- —---— Ingalls Born Jan. 10, 1896. Entered service June 24, 1918, Camp Dodge, Ia., 349th Inf., Co. L, 88th Div. Canmp Upton, N. Y. Arrived Southampton, England, Aug. 16, * 1918. To France, La Havre, Barge, Alsace Lorraine, Glidwiller. Moved to Metz drive ahout Nov. 10. Arrived IJ. S. May 30, 1919. * Richard Hammerberg Son of Erick and Charlotte Hammerberg -Carney Born Aug. 2, 1894. Entered service Mar. 29, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 337th Inf. Transferred to Camp Dix, N. J., assigned to Co. A, 54th Eng. Transferred to 53rd Eng. Arrived Brest June 19, 1918. Transferred Transportation Corps at Sevres. Arrived U. S. July 12, 1919; dischiarged July 19, 1919, Camp *,Sh-erman, 0. [92]... 4 0 1 4 4 I j I - 4. i I.&,,41 - k I 4 f 4 i) I) 4 0 6 6 0 1 1 I I I Daniel Dumas Son of Henry and Alice Dunas - - - Stephenson Born Jan. 14, 1894. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. t), 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac, Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, HauteMarne. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11; discharged Apr. 25, 1919. Mando L. Tunell Son of Andrew and Augusta Tunell - - Stephenson Born Feb. 25, 1892. Member of 326th Inf., Co. K. Served with 82nd Div. overseas. Returned U. S. Apr. 28, 1919; discharged May 15, 1919. Mose Beaudoin Son of Rene and Lea Beaudoin - - - Stephenson Born June 2, 1888. Entered service Apr. 29, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Inf., 85th Div., Co. M. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 8, 1918. Active on the Meuse and Moselle rivers. Dangermaine, France. Louis, France. Arrived U. S. Apr. 2, 1919; discharged Apr. 12, 1919, Camp Custer. Alfred St. Peter Son of Alfred and Mary St. Peter - - - Stephenson Born Apr. 10, 1892. Entered service May 25, 1918. Camp Custer, Co. K, 338th Inf., 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. To Winchester and La Havre. Pouilly, Cones, Toule, St. Agnon, Marseilles. Arrived U. S. June 27, 1919; discharged July 6, 1919, Custer. Joseph H. White Son of Joseph and Jennie White - - - Stephenson Born Mar. 28, 1898. Enlisted June 24, 1916, Lincoln, Neb., 5th Neb. National Guard, Co. H. To Fort Crook, Neb. To Machine Gun Co., 134th Inf., 34th Div., Camp Cody, New Mexico. Transferred to Camp Dix. Arrived Liverpool Oct. 23, 1918. To Southampton, La Havre, Bordeaux, Le Mans. Transferred to 49th Inf., Co. C, as mechanic. La Bouzeau, France. Arrived U. S. Jan. 16; discharged Jan. 25, 1919, Fort Leavenworth. Harry E. Tunell Son of Andrew and Augusta Tunell - - Stephenson Born Jan. 25, 1894. Entered service Apr. 28, 1918, Houghton, Mich. Camp Custer, 28th Regt., Co. I, 1st Div. Arrived Liverpool, England, Aug. 3, 1918. To France. In action St. Mihiel and Argonne Forest. Wounded Argonne Forest, Oct. 4, 1918. Base Hospital No. 56A, Alaray, France. Arrived U. S. Mar. 18; discharged Mar. 28, 1919, Camp Custer. Clifford B. Brown Son of Dewitt and Margareth Brown - Stephenson Born Feb. 10, 1896, Stephenson, Mich. Entered service Nov. 21, 1917, Menominee. Camp Custer, 337th Inf., Co. D. Promoted to mechanic June 15, 1918. Arrived Aug. 4, 1918, Liverpool. To Winchester, Southampton, La Havre, France, Cosnes. Moved to Toule sector. In action Meuse and Moselle rivers. At Charmes La Cote and Le Mans after Nov. 11. Arrived U. S. Apr. 4, 1919; discharged May 14, 1919, Camp Custer. Clarence W. Bruemmer Son of Herman and Caroline Bruenmmer - Stephenson Born May 2, 1899. Enlisted with Co. L, Menominee. Discharged for disability. To Windsor, Canada, enlisted with Canadian Inf. Arrived Liverpool Apr. 28, 1918. To West Sandling, Kent, England. To 20th Bn., Co. C. Active in Vimy Ridge sector. Battle of Paschendale, Belgium, Nov. 14, 1918, severely wounded. 47th General Hospital, Letroport, France. To hospital, England. Assigned casual company, England. Three months later rejoined battalion. In action at Amiens and Arras. Wounded. Over the top twelve times (Official Canadian Government Record). Arrived Canada July 24; discharged July 26, 1919. July 26, 1919. Walter D. Houle Son of David and Florence Houle - - Stephenson Born June 11, 1895. Entered service Mar. 25, 1918. Camp Custer, 55th Eng., Co. B. Arrived Brest July 13, 1918. Montierchaume, Le Mans, Portiers, Paris. Worked on Pershing's Stadium. Arrived U. S. July 15, 1919; discharged July 18, 1919, Camp Sherman, O. Peter W. Beaudoin Son of Rene and lea Beaudoin - - - Stephenson Born June 23, 1894. Entered service July 1, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 337th Inf., Co. I, 8,5th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 1. Winchester, Southampton, La Havre, Cosnes, France, on Toule sector, ArgonneMeuse. At Charmes La Cotes to Feb. 1, 1919. Arrived U. S. Apr. 4, 1919; discharged May 14, 1919., [933 -d ^ ^ Illl -~IIII —cl -, - -~I 1L-mx ~ ~B~llL ~ ~c ~ I,W 4, 4.owiv X 4I....,-..~. ~. i I I I 1! I - I 4 4 4 4 4 4 f 4 t 0 I I + L, S, S S " ~c ~ ~1, 4- 4 -A, M I I 0*- Ah ]i I I i Joseph L. Conard *[I — Son of Joseph and Melvina Conard (Neville) Stephenson Born Sept. 29, 1894. Enlisted June 4, 1917, Escanaba. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., 13th Heavy Field Artillery, Fort Bliss, El Paso, Tex., Bat. D. Transferred to Camp Green, S. C. Arrived Brest May 30. Assigned Pontenazan Barracks, Brest. To Bordeaux, Camp De Souge, artillery range. Chateau-Thierry July 22. Promoted to 'Crp. On offensive on Vesle [ sector as expert gunner. To Hospital No. 202, Orleans. At Meuse-Argonne. With A. of 0. Arrived 1U. S. July 29, 1919; discharged Sept. 5, 1919, Camp Grant. Charles Beaudoin Son of Frank and Georgianna Beandoin - Stephenson Bi -sBorn Dec. 6, 1899. Entered service Feb. 15, 1918, Milwaukee. Promoted to Corp. Left U. S. July 16, 1918. Returned U. S. Dec. 1, 1918; discharged Dec. 24, 1918, Camp Grant. A Fred C. Brown Son of Dewitt and Margareth Brown - Stephenson Born Feb. 14, 1891. Husband of Gertrude Peters. -Enlisted Dec. 15, 1917, Chicago, 107th Eng., 32nd Div. At Waco, Tex. Arrived Brest Feb. 2, 1918. Chateau Villian. In Alsace sector, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, Meuse-Argonne. Promoted mechanic Mar. 10 at Chateau Villian. Promoted to Regimental Sergt. Bugler Apr. 22, 1918. Entered Germany Dec. 12, 1918, at Ober-, bieber. Promoted to Asst. Band Leader. Decorated at Oberbieber by Gen. Mangia Apr. 12, 1919, with Croix de Guerre. Arrived U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 27, 1919, Camp Custer. Warren J. Hubbard Son of Hiram ind Annie Hubbard - - Stephenson Born July 9, 1894. Entered service May 15, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Bat. D, 300th Field Artillery, 85th Div. Landed Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. At 7 / Knotty Ash. Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac, Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne, Le Mans. ArT.T. S.Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Ernest Wery Son of Felix and Alexandra Wery - - Stephenson Born Feb. 5, 1892. Enlisted May 26, 1918, Wheeler, Ga. Arrived Brest Oct. 26. To Meuse-Argonne. Arrived U. S. Apr. 8, 1919; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Custer. John Lundgaard Son of Fred and Ingeborg Lundgaard - Stephenson Born June 8, 1891, Denmark. Entered service Mar. * 30, 1918. Camp Custer, 137th Inf., Co. F, 32nd Div. Transferred to Camp Humphrey to 116th Eng., Bat. D. Overseas June 15. St. Nazaire June 29. Trans[[ ferred to 307th Ammunition Train. Farringcourt. Arrived UT. S. June 5, 1919; discharged June 18, 1919, Camp Custer. * Axel Wicklander Son of Tedor and Olive Wieklander - - Stephenson Born Dec. 28, 1894, Sweden. Entered service Apr. *l 28, 1918, St. Cloud, Minn. Camp Dodge, Ia., Co. G, * 349th Inf., 88th Div. Left for overseas Aug. 8, 1918, I for England, Southampton. To France. At HauteAlsace, St. Amond and Travery. Arrived U. S. May 30, 4 1919; discharged June 11, 1919, Camp Dodge, Ia. Martin Rynish ][ Son of Joseph and Anna Rynish - - - Menominee Born Feb. 26, 1895, Bohemia. Left for France and enlisted in the French Army Apr. 1, 1916, 22nd French Inf. Active in the defense of Paris. To Italy. After [u [armistice to Prague, Bohemia. Transferred back to Paris. Discharged Sept. 4, 1919. Promoted to Corp., later to Sergt., 22nd French Inf. Earl Demille Son of John and Mary Demille - - - Foster, Wis. * Born Dec. 16, 1899, Stephenson, Mich. Enlisted Merrill, Wis., with U. S. Marines May, 1918. Still in rvice. David Lapoint 4 Son of Phillip and Annie Lnpoint - - - Stephenson Born July 10, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 85th Div., 329th Bn., Machine Gun Co. C. Arrived overseas Aug. 3. To La Han Lazee, France. Active at Meuse-Argonne. Hospital at Minauer. A. of O. Arrived U. S. July 29; discharged Aug. 6, 1919, Camp Sherman, Co. A, 11th Machine Gun Bn. 4 [94] I I I I i b_ -~I I ''I LLLL -~1Cu"l II11IIIIIIIIC b — h ---—. ---r" - - I Son of Mr. and Mrs. Eskild Sorensen - - - Carney Born Sept. 28, 1893. Entered service May 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, 338th Inf., 85th Div. Arrived France Aug. 3, 1918. To Gondre Court area. Promoted to y wagoner, 7th U. S. Inf. Supply Co. of 3rd Div., "Marne Division." In St. Mihiel offensive, Meuse-Argonne offensive. With A. of O. Arrived U. S. Aug. 24, 1919: discharged Aug. 27, 1919, Camp Sherman, O. ^ f Arnold Jacobson Son of John Eric and Helna Jacobson - - - Carney Born June 29, 1895. Entered service May 25, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. To Pouilly Sur Loire, I I* Cosnes, Toule and Meuse-Argonne. Arrived U. S. Apr. 3, 1918; discharged Apr. 5, 1918, Camp Custer. Robert R. Broberg Son of Gust and Esther Broberg - - - - Daggett Born Peb. 6, 1887. Enlisted Mar. 8, 1918, Menomi- " ' iH *l nee. To Columbus Barracks, 266th Co., Military Po- ~!4: - 1' lice Corps. Overseas Sept. 15, 1918. Stationed at St. Amand, Gievres, Nevers. Arrived U. S. Aug. 11, 1919; discharged Sept. 6, 1919, Camp Grant. Mienominee. Camp Custer, 337th Inf., Co. M, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. To La Havre, Cosnes. Active at Meuse and Moselle rivers. To Le Mans area. I Arrived U. S. July 15; discharged July 18, 1919, C|amp Sherman, 0. Habby Beaudo Son of Anton and Clenentine Beaudo - - Nadean Born July 3, 1886. Entered service Sept. 22, 1917. ToMen Camp Custer, 337th Inf., Co. E. Camp Green N. C. Arrived overseas St. Nazaire Apr. 13, 1918. To Jevres supply train camp. To Navares military police. Arrived U. S. July 13, 1919; discharged July 22, 1919, j Habby* Bea ~ [, Camp Grant. t S. John L. Kuich Son of Lawrence and Emily Knich - - - Wallae' Born Feb. 2, 1893, Milwaukee, 8is. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 85th Div. Overseas July 29, 1918. Returned U. S. Apr., 1919; discharged May 22, 1919., Cl Edward De Braalnt Son of John and Mary De ia - - - Bagley Born May 31, 1896, Shehoygan, Wis. Entered servA ice Mar. 31, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. To Fort Riley, Kan. Attached to hospital corps. Arrived Liverpool June 26. To Camp Hospital No. 22, Langres. [-~ * France. Arrived U. 5. June 12; discharged June 20, 1919, Camp Custer. Knute Hammerberg Son of Erick and Charlotte Ha.merberg - Carney Born Mar. 16, 1892. Entered service Mar. 10, 1917. Camp Custer, Co. G, 310th Ammunition Train. Promoted to Corp. Sept. 21, 1917. Promoted to Sergt. July 21, 1918. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 11, 1918. To Cherbourg. To Chaumont. Transferred to Ordnance Dept. * No. 4. St. Agnon casual camp. Arrived U. S. Mar. 25, 1919; discharged Apr. 9, 1919, Camp Custer. *B i::'i/Walter Imhof! Son of Gotfried and Annie Imhof - - - - Bagley Born Aug. 2, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. D. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. Camp Knotty Ash, Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac, Coetquidan in training, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne, Le Mans. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Charles E. LaCount Son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. LyConnt - - - - Carney Born Dec. 11, 1891. Entered service Apr. 29, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Co. A, 22nd Eng. Transferred to Camp Sheridan. Arrived Brest July 12, 1918. Active at Toule sector. After armistice, Meuse-Argonne sector. Hospital at Le Mans. Returned U. S' June r1, 1819. Camp Base Hospital, Camp Merritt, later General Hospital, Detroit. Discharged July 17! ec 1 1919. E ntered seric e A IV ens C. 4h 4 01 4 * 4S! 4 now W:~I A * 4 David E. J ohnson * BB 1 1 B B - Son of John and Clara Johnson - Menominee (Daggett) LJ HiMll - il -Born Mar. 12, 1894. Enlisted Mar. 15, 1918, Liberty9 1 ro1 B l - yville, Ill. To Jefferson Barracks, 71st Reg. C. A. C., Bat. E, 1st Army Corps, 34th Brigade. Arrived Liverpool, England, Aug. 12. At Angers, Le Plessis, Grammoire, France. U. -r. Feb. 22, 1919; discharged Mar. 10, 1919. * Aiphonsus Boyer Son of David and AMarie Boyer - - - - - Daggett |. |o of Anre Albnd W.bog Wens' - -l - Daggett * Born Sept. 9, 18988. Ent. service May 28, 19178, Detroit. |bl 1 |..To Camp Wheeler, oGa. Wagoner 118th F. A. Bat. B. |31st Div. Embarked S. S. American, scuttled by German spies. Sunk at wharf, 26 drowned. Trans. U. S. S. Sobla. Bre-st Nov. 4, 1918. At Reine Trans. Co. K, Casual. U.'. * S. May 14, 1919. Discharged May 24, 1919. Arthur A. Weng Son of Andrew and Valborg a erg - - - Daggett v Born Mar. 122, 1895. Ent. service Sept. 20, 1917. Custer, 106th, D. B. To Camp MacArthur, Co. D, 126th uf.. 32nd Tlv. Brest Mar. 4, 1918. In action Alsace Lorraine, Aisne-Marne, Chateau Thierry. Wounded Aug. 1*t. Hospital. Rejoined A. of 0. Jan. 10, 1919. U. S. July 27, 1919. Discharged Mlay 24, 1.919. Joseph J. Bauer Son of Louis and KAisnna Ba ver- s- - - - Daggett Born Apr. 19, 1891. Ent. servied servicJune 27, 1918. 191Custer, I l — 129th M. G. Bat.e, Co. B, 85th Div. At LAiverpool July 19. * E 0 - 18iMS ^BS^^g^ ^lHM o1st vArieoerseas Fb.I actio Asace front, OChteau 8, I98 1918. To La Havre and Luzee, France. Trans. to 47th M. G. Bat. 4th Div. Ae. of 0. Arrived U. o. July 27, 1919. [Ais. Aug. 5, Camp Sherman. t 19 am O. 1 Albin W. Dahlberg aSon o ef e P. 0. and oargareth ve Dnhlberg - - - Daggett I H l Ill^B Born Feb. 49, 1894. Ent. service Mayr 25, 1917. Custer. BlCo. -1), 337th canf., 851th Div. Bugler. Overseas Aug. 2,I | 3- l 1l 3n Dv Asged as cook. Arrived overseas Feb. 24. In acinAsc rnCaeu 1918. A. R. C. hospital, blooCd poisoning. To Knotty Ash. | IS - outhamp ton 3, Cherourg ChteruTieria, rsance, Marnp x -i AEng. Qon. M. Fin ance Dept. Arr. U. S. d Jan. 31, 1919. Disl charged Cster, Feb. 21, 1919. * John L. Woberg Son of Peter and Kristlne Woberg- - - - Daggett l I F - -Born July 19, 1895. Enlistered service May 25, 1917 w 8,C H *Iron Riv Ber, Mich. To Camp ArWheeler, La., 123rd Inf., * 31st Div. aArrived overseas at St. Nazaire Octe. 8, 1918. In action and gassed. Arrived U. 5. Oct. 7, 1919. Had * wound11 t Mhely VerdunArthur Swanse Aon se A. f Son of Gust and Johanna Swanson - - - Daggett Born Mar. 9, 1896. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917. Camp Custer, Co. H, 125th Reg., 32nd Div. Arrived,' Ok"overseas Feb. 24. Ia action Alsace front, ChateauThierry, Soissons, Meuse and Argonne Forests. Ar* rived U. S. May 9, 1919; discharged May 2, 1919, Custer. 4 i j jI 6, 1919. In battles 83 days of 113 days of servrice. 1 Emil E. Tagge* Son of Klaus and Bertha Tagge - - - - Daggett Born Feb. 3, 1896. Entered service June 27, 1918, Mvenominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. E. 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. To Southampton, Cherbourg, Pripriac, France, Camp Coetquidon, Rheimecourt. France. Arrived U'. 5. Apr. 13; discharged Apr. 25, 1-9191, Camp Mills. Levi W. Olive Son of Henry and Roseana Olive - - - - Daggett * IBorn Dec. 29, 1900. Enlisted Apr. 28. 1917, with Co. L, at Escanaba. To Camp MacArthur, Co. K. 125th Iaf., 32nd Div. Assigned as cook. Arrived overseas Feb. 21. * ~1918. cook 26th Co. In action at Chateau-Thierry and 4 wounded JIuly 31, 1918. Cha teau-Thierry, Alsace, Marne, Argonne. U. 5. Jan. 19, 1.919; discharged Jan. 28, 1919. * ~David Belongie Son of Louls Archie and Mary Ann Bielongle - - - Danggetti * B3ora May 8, 1894. Enlisted June 6. 1917, Green Bay, Wis. Battery F, 13th Field Artillery, 4th Div., Camp Stuart, El Paso, Tex. Camp Charlotte, N. C. Brest moted to cook May 15. Camp Green. Arrived Brest May 30. 1918. Camp Bordeau. At Chateau-Thierry. St. Mihiel, Verdun offensive, Argonne-Meuse. With A. of 0. Arrived U. 5. July 31, 1-919; discharged Aug. 6, 1919. In battles 83 days of 113 days of service. f96] Edmond Tanguay Son of Joseph and Marie Tanguay - - - Powers Born Jan. 24, 1892. Enlisted Mar. 10, 1917, Menasha, Wis. Co. I, 1st Reg. To Waco, Tex. Left for overseas from Camp Merritt. Axel Charboutet Son of Axel and Edmire Charboutet - - - Spalding Born Dec. 18, 1895. Ent. service May 29, 1918, Camp Grant. To Camps Taylor and Upton. Arrived Brest Sept. 3, 1918. To Meuse with 329th Service Bn., interpretor. Active service St. Mihiel drive. Arrived U. S. July 5, 1919. Dis. July 12, 1919, Grant. ' Frank Getzloff Son of Joseph and Monica Getzloff Harris * Born Apr. 17, 1895. Ent. service Sept. 25, 1917. Promoterl Senap t Nonv 7 Arr. Livernool Auz. 4. 1918. Sent I 1I I I 0 0 1 I to Russia with Co. M, 339th Inf. Active service Obozerskaya, Pinega, Pelegorskaya and Onega-Oberskaya. Awarded Croix de Guerre for bravery. Arr. U. S. June 30, 1919. Dis. Custer, July 7, 1919. Albert DeMars Son of Arthur and Josephine Veilleux DeMars - - Powers Born Jan. 8, 1889. Entered service Mar. 29, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. Transferred to Camp Green. Later transferred to Minda Flying Field, Long Island. Discharged Dec. 7, 1918. Albert Fredriksen Son of Mr. and Mrs. Fredriksen - - - - Carney Entered service Sept. 22, 1917. Camp Custer, 107th Engineers, 32nd Div. Overseas Jan., 1917. Did construction work in France until armistice. With A. of 0. at Coblenz. Arrived U. S. May 18, 1919; discharged May 20, 1919, Camp Custer. James A. Whiteshield Son of Dr. Chas. F. and Anna Whiteshield - - - Powers Born Aug. 17, 1893. Ent. service Camp Wadsworth. Aug. 28, 1918. Co. M, 57th Pioneer Inf. Promoted corporal. Arrived Brest Oct. 7, 1918. Trans. 83rd Div. gas school. Promoted Sergt. Oct. 15, 1918, Argonne-Meuse. Organized "A. E. F. Big Four" amusement feature, touring France and Belgium camps. Arrived U. S. July 8, 1919. Discahrged July 12, 1919, Camp Lee. Enos Bradner Son of Charles and Antonia Bradner - - - Powers Born Oct. 7, 1892. Enlisted June 5, 1917. To Douglas, Ariz. Bat. C, 6th F. A. Overesas July 10, 1918. Trans. Bat. E, 10th F. A. Chateau Thierry, Aisne-Marne offensive, St. Mihiel. Promoted corporal. Arrived U. S. Feb. 15. Discharged March 20, 1919, Custer base hospital. Melvin J. Bradner Son of Charles and Antonia Bradner - - - Powers Born Jan. 8, 1894. Enlisted June 5, 1917. To Douglas, Ariz. Bat. E, 10th F. A. Overseas May 8, 1918. Made sergeant. Wounded July 15, second battle Marne. Hospital bombed. Trans. base hospital Vichy. Arrived T. S. Feb. 15, 1919. Discharged Custer Hospital Mar. 20, 1919. Charles Edward Bradner Son of Charles and Antonia Bradner - - - Powers Born Mar. 1, 1897. Enlisted June 4, 1918, 23rd F. A. Made Sergeant Aug. 1, 1918. Overseas Sept. 12. To front with 1st A. C. At Meuse-Argonne. A. of O. Arrived IT. S. June 8, 1919. Discharged Custer June 24, 1919. William Carriveau Son of Mederei and Celina Carriveau - - - Powers Born Jan. 28, 1892. Ent. service Nov. 19, 1917. Custer. Trans. to Co. L, 1st army hdqrs., Camp Green, N. C. Overseas Apr. 4, 1918. St. Nazaire-Nantes. Arr. U. S. Mar. 22, 1919. Discharged Apr. 9, 1919, Custer. [97] 4 4 i 0 + I 4 I I I I II-I -I -Y-,-YIYIY ~ — L-r 4 4T ~III 4. 4.. 4111. -i____ - PMPNV% We — - I I $, "II....A Harry L. Johnson Son of Albert and Albina Johnson - - - Spalding Born July 5, 1899. Enlisted Feb. 21, 1918, aviation, Chicago, wireless operator. To San Antonio, Kelly Field. Arrived July 5. 1918, Liverpool. To La Havre. Returned 'to Liverpool. Arrived IT. S. Dec. 5. 1918; di4charged Dec. 24. 1918, Camp Grant. Francis X. Rousseau Son of Marcel and Octavia Rousseau - - - Nadeau Born Jan. 30. 1888. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. Transferred to Georgia. Assigned to headquarters Co., 3rd Inf., 104th Co. Served as interpreter. Arrived Brest June 18; discharged Apr. 5, 1919, Camp Grant. Peter E. Keshick | Son of Jamies and Maryan Keshicek - - - - Harris Born Sept. 12, 1892. Entered service June 28, 1918. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 12, 1918. Left Liverpool Aug. 25 for the North Russian Front, arriving Sept. 4, 1918, Co. A, 339th Inf., 85th Div. Wounded Oct. 8. In action in weather at 60 below zero. Jan. 19. 1919, when the company was almost annihilated, he was wounded again by shrapnel. Of six men left from his company, three were killed and the remainder wounded in the dug-out. They dragged themselves several miles to the first dressing station. Brought to British hospital boat Archangel Russia, 300 miles away. Many died on the way in the terrible cold and from their wounds. Left Archangel June 3 for Leith, Scotland. Hapshurg hospital in England. Arrived IT. S. July 7, 1919; discharged July 16, 1919. Camp Custer. Stephen W. Keshick Son of Jaoles and Maryan Keshik - - - arri * Born July 31, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. B, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Southampton, ACherbourg, 'ipriac, Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt. Haute-Marne and Le Mans. Arrived U. S. April 11; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. William J. Vachon Son of Philip and Malvina Vachon - - Spalding Born July 23, 1897. Entered service Sept., 1917. Assigned to 27th Engineers, Discharged May 10, 1919. William H. Bruner Son of Joseph and Carrie Bruner - - - - Spalding Born Aug. 6, 1894. Enlisted Jan. 29, 1918, Marinette, Wis. 20th Eng., Co. D. To Washington, D. C., American University. Arrived France Mar. 10, 1918, stationed at Milly. Arrived U. S. Apr. 2, 1919; discharged May 15, 1919, Camp Custer. Earl H. Fillion Son of Joseph and Mae Fillion - - - - Spalding Born May 30, 1900. Enlisted July 23, 1917, Green Bay, *Wis. Jefferson Barracks, Co. A, 6th Field Signal Bn., 6th Div. Overseas July 7, 1918. La Ravre, France. MeuseArgonne offensive. With A. of O. at Cochem and Bad Bertrich. Arrived U. S. June 10, 1919; discharged June 18, 1919, Camp Custer. Promoted to first class private Aug. 15, 1917, to Corp. July 1, 1918. Edward J. Le Boeuf Son of Joseph and Julia Le Boeuf Powers Born Oct. 25, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. 330th Field Artillery, Bat. E, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. Camp Knotty Ash, Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac, Coet(luidan. Le Mans. Arrived IT. S. Apr 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. William Lacrosse Son of Edward and Susie Lacrosse. Wilson Born Jan. 27, 1890. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. E, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Camp Knotty * R Ash, Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac, Coetquidan, Rimaucourt. Haute-Marne, Le Mans. Arrived UT. S. Apr. 11. 1919; discharged Apr. 25, 1919. Camp Custer. William Le Boeuf Son of Josepit and Julia Le Boeuf - - - Spalding Born Jan. 19, 1892, Menominee. Entered service May 25, 1918, Iron Mountain. Camp Wheeler, Macon, Ga., 117th Light Field Artillery, Bat. D. To Camp Jackson, S. C. Arrived Brest Oct. 26, 1918. To Coetquidan. Arrived U. S. Dec. 20, 1918; discharged Jan. 13, 1919, Co. D, Casual Detachment Co., to which transferred. [98] *_:_ s ff!>!-S1s ~! - iaj... — ' I 5 Arvid P. Swanson Son of Otto and Louise Christine Swanson - - - Herinansville Born Aug. 31, 1892. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. E. Arrived overseas Aug. 6, 1918. Southampton. Cherbourg, Coetquidan, Rimaucourt. Arrived 1. S. Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. * BDelore A. Bichel Son of John and Marian Blehel - - - Hermansville Born Jan. 14, 1897. Enlisted Dec. 12, 1917, Iron Mountain. Ordnance Corps. To Columbus, O. Camp Dodge. Ia.. Co. D. American Ordnance, Base Depot. Transferred to Camp Hancock, Ga. To Kenosha, Wis., truck school. Back to company. Hancock. Ga., Apr. Di30, 1918. Arrived Bristol, England, Aug. 26. 1918. Southampton, Le Havre, Bordeaux. Convoy duty Mont Falcon. Arrived U. S. Mar. 1, 1919; discharged Mar. 7, 1919. Bert St. Onge Son of Eli and Mandie St. Onge - Herinansville Born July 25, 1896. Enlisted Apr. 15, 1917, Rhine* ilander, Wis. Camp Douglas. 127th Inf., Co. L, 32nd Div., Waco, Tex. Arrived Brest Feb. 28. To Bordeaux. Alsace front line trenches. Wounded near Fismes, France Aug. 2, 1918. Base Hospital No. 20. Chateau Guyon Puy de Dame. Replacement Camp, St. Agnon. Arrived U. S. Mar. 18, 1919; discharged Ap. 2, 1919. Charles F. Radford Son of Edwin P. and Emma Radford Hermansville Born Dec. 29, 1890. Enlisted Dec. 5, 1917. Menominee. Forestry Engineers. To Columbus Barracks, Columbus. 0. Transferred to American University, Wasbington. D. C.. Co. A, 5th Battery, 20th Regt. Engr. Transferred to Co. Ar 41st Aug. Engr. Promoted to Corp. Jan. 24, 1918. Arrived Liverpool Mar. 4, 1918. Promoted to sergeant Dec. 1. 1918. Promoted Master Engineer, Jr. Grd.. Feb. 1, 1919. Arrived U. S. July 26. 1919; discharged July 9. 1919, Camp Custer. Samuel St. Onge Son of Eli and Mandie St. Ongoe -. - - Hernansville Born Nov. 4, 1894. Entered service Apr. 29, 1 -q8. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. M, 85th Div. Corp. June 5. 1918. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. l e Havre. 3'ouilly. With A. of 0. at Ellenz, Germany. Transferred to Coblenz Apr. 29, 1919. Arrived U. S. Aug. 1. 1919; discharged Aug. 8, 1919, Camp Sherman, 0. George H. Carney Son of Charles and Laura Carney - - Hermnansville Born Apr. 15, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 6, C 1917. Escanaba. Columbus Barracks. To Washington, D. C. Overseas Feb. 26, 1918. 20th Eng., 8th Bn.. Co. E. Arrived France Mar. 11, 1918. To Mimazon saw mill. Transferred to 10th Co., 20th Eng. at Pontex Les Forges Landes. Transferred back to 20th Eng., 8th Bn.. Co. E. Arrived p S. May 30, 1919; discharged June 11, 1919, Camp Custer. Eugenio Prospero Son of Mr. and Mrs. Prospero - - Hermansville Born May 1, 1892. Entered service, U. S. Army. 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Overseas Feb., 1918. Arrived Brest. In action at St. Mihiel and Argonne Woods. Wounded four times. Returned to U. S. May, 1919; discharged M, 1919. Archie W. St. Martin Son of Archie and Louise St. Martin - Menominee Born May 10, 1896. Enlisted May 27, 1918. Camp Custer. Overseas July 27. 1918. In service in France eight months as French interpreter. Recommended for promotion. Returned U. S. Mar. 2, 1919; discharged Mar. 15, 1919. Camp Custer. John Guitto Son of Mr. and Mrs. Guiotto - - - Herinansville Born Aug. 17, 1890, Italy. Entered service June 27. 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 55th Engineers. Left for overseas Aug., 1918, and remained eleven months. Returned to U. S. and discharged July, 1919. John J. Bauer Son of Louis and Anna Bauer - - - -- Daggett Born 1892. Entered service Camp Custer. To Camp Gordon. Ga. Transferred to Light Field Artillery, 110th Reg., 29th Div. Transferred to 329th Reg., 85th Div. Overseas July 24, 1918. Took part in offensives at Meuse-Argonne Toule sector. Returned to U. S. Apr. 14, 1919; discharged Apr. 23, 1919. [991 Ovl lAlA ri o 9 ~ ~*0PI Yr ~ - ~ II~ -4 ~ ~ ~ I - 0 q ^ > I M~ 0' Frank Taylor Son of John C. and Marie J. Taylor - Hermansville Born Aug. 9, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted June 15, 1918, Menominee. Michigan College of Mines. Camp Taylor, Camp Leach. Arrived Glasgow, Scotland, Sept. 13. 1918. To Le Havre. Active in the Meuse-Argonne sector. Assigned to 27th Eng., Co. E. Left MeuseArgonne front for Grandpree, building bridges. At Jevres. Arrived U. S. Mar. 20. 1919; discharged Apr. 12 1919. Raymond F. Carney Son of Charles and Laura Carney - - Hermansville Born Sept. 1, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted June 15, 1918, Menominee. Houghton College of Mines. Mining Engineers Second Training Detachment. Transferred to 27th Eng., Co. G. Landed at Glasgow, Scotland, Sept. 13. 1918. Southampton, Le Havre, France. Charmay. Active in Meuse-Argonne offensive. Stationed LeChatelier and AuChaine. Arrived U. S. Mar. 20, 1919; discharged Apr. 3. 1919, Camp Custer. Andrew Lora Son of Alvise and Angela Lora - - - Herlnansville Born May 1, 1887, Italy. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. To Fort Benjamin Harrison, 22nd Eng. Arrived Brest Sept. 26, 1918. Active on Meuse-Argonne offensive. Arrived IT. S. June 23, 1919; discharged July 3, 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph E. St. Aubin Son of Joseph and Julia Nadeau St. Aubin - Nadeau Born Aug. 20, 1890. Enlisted May 26, 1918, Tawas City, Mich. Camp Custer. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 4, 1918. At Aldershot Camps. Left Aug. 22nd for Archangel, Russia. Arrived Sept. 3. In action on Yamze River, Kodish and Verst. In action Dec. 30, 1918, when Kodish retaken by American troops. Relieved on Volodga River by the English, Polish and Russian troops. Returned to Brest. Arrived U. S. June 30 1919; discharged July 2. 1919. Norman Scholtz Son of Mr. and Mrs. Scholtz - - - - Hermansville Entered [T. S. Army. Sent overseas, where he remained fourteen months in active service. Returned to '. S. Aug. 15, 1919; discharged Aug., 1919. Arthur Taylor Son of John C. and Marie J. Taylor - Hernansville Born May 5, 1893. Enlisted June 15, 1918, Menominee. Houghton College of Mines. Camp Taylor, Camp Leach. Arrived Liverpool Nov. 19. To Winchester. Le Havre and transferred to Co. K, 40th Eng., Dec. 28. Transferred to Casual Co. Arrived IT. S. Jan. 24, 1919; discharged Feb. 11, 1919, Camp Custer. Orrin R. Meyer Son of Eriek and Pauline Meyer - - Hermansville Born Aug. 18, 1900. Enlisted Oct. 14, 1917, Iron Mountain. Signal Corps Aviation section. Jefferson Barracks, San Antonio. Assigned to 187th Aero Squadron. Arrived LiVerpool Mar. 18, 1918. Netheravon Training Station. Left for Ireland Aug. 1, 1918, Arrived U. S. Dec. 2, 1919; discharged Dec. 20, 1919. Archibald K. Tuinstra Son of Elga and Clara Tuinstra - - - - Daggett Born Nov. 2, 1890. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Co. H, 337th Inf., 85th Div. Transferred to Camp Mills. Arrived Aug. 3, 1918. at Liverpool. Southampton, Le Havre, Cosnes, France. T'ransferred to Co. H, 47th Inf., 4th Div. With A. of O. Arrived U. S. July 26, 1919; discharged Aug. 4, 1919, Camp Grant. Lawrence R. Berg Son of Erick and Iena Berg - - - - Hermansville Born Nov. 1, 1894. Entered service Jan. 12, 1918, Iron Mountain. Camp Custer, 160th Inf., Depot BIrigade. Transferred to Signal Corps. Camp Gordon, Ga. Camp McClellan, Hoboken. Arrived at Brest June 21, 1918. Transferred to 29th Div., 104 Signal Bn.. Co. C. To Alsace front July 6. 1918. Wireless telegrapher at Chateau-Thierry, St. Mihiel, ArgonneMeuse offensives. Bourbonne Les Baines. Arrived I'. S. June 20, 1919; discharged June 28, 1919. Edward C. Kellner Son of John and Katherine Kellner - - Menominee Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. D. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918. Southampton, Cherbourg, Pipriac, Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne, Le Mans. Arrived IT. S. Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 25, 1919. [100] 4 0 *II I — -- J%8 lkAONMMNMNNIF *. 1 4 * LAL k 4. - + r - - ML Godfrey Son of Isaatc alnd Amelia Born Dec. 22. 1896. E] Camp Custer. Died at I Oct. 10, 1918. Buried at 1918. - -- - - ~~;, 4. - 4.,lb"a 010 ww w~ ww % -4 1 ( Anderson Anderson - - Stephenson ntered service Aug. 28, 1918. Base Hospital. Camp Custer, t Stephenson, Mich., Oct. 13,,1 I ~ B N; m Albin F. Carlson Son of Andrew and Charlotte Carlson - Stephenson Born Nov. 17, 1895. Enlisted July 8. 1918, Chicago. Aviation section. To St. Louis. Transferred to Kelley Field San Antonio. Tex. Transferred to 54th Aero Squadron as draftsman. Overseas six months in England. Transferred to Romarantin. France, draughtsman, mechanical dept., 1106 Air Service Replacement Squadron. Returned to U7. S.; discharged Camp Grant. Stephen Lessnick Son of Frank and Anna Lessniek - - - Stephenson Born Aug. 25, 1887, Austria. Enlisted Oct. 18 1909. Columbus Barracks, O.. 15th Inf., Co. E. To Philippines Nov. 2. 1911. Discharged. Re-enlisted Aug. 1, 1912. 20th Inf., Co. C., Fort Douglas, Utah. Recruiting service one year. To Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands July 10. 1914. In 1918 to Camp Fremont, Calif., and Camp Dodge, Iowa, 19th Div.. 2nd Inf., Co. D. Made 1st sergeant and instructor. Transferred to Reserve Corps Mar. 30, 1920. Still in service. Paul E. Bergquist Son of Lars and Margareth Bergquist - Stephenson Born Jan. 15, 1891. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. 330th Field Artillery, Battery D. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. 1918. Camp Knotty Ash, Southampton. Cherbourg. Pipriac, Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute, Marne. Arrived U7. S. Apr. 11. 1919; discharged Apr. 25. 1919, Camp Custer. John H. Symonds Son of Henry and Catherine Synlonds - Steplhenson Born Apr. 8, 1894. Entered service in 1U. S. Army. Engineers. 4th Div. Discharged May, 1919. Lawrence Johnson Son of Jens and Anialia Johannesen - - Stephenson Born Apr. 3. 1898. Enlisted Mar. 30, 1917, Menominee. To Fort Bliss, Tex.. Bat. E 8th Field Artillery. Transferred to Fort Sill, Okla., July 20. 1917. 14th Field Artillery School of Fire. Furloughed to Regul-ar Army Reserve Mar. 30, 1920. Mexican border service. William Vancourt Son of Mr. and Mrs. Vancourt - - - - Stephenson Entered U. S. service, infantry, 27th Machine Gun Battalion. Discharged July. 1919. Anton L. Tunell Son of Andrewv and Auglsta Tunell - - Stephenson Born Jan. 30. 1888. Entered service Aug. 28, 1918. Menominee, Mich. Camp Custer, Cooks and Bakers' School. Transferred to Camp Mills for embarkation. Transferred to Camp Merritt July 8. Discharged at Camp Sherman July 16, 1919. John C. Johnson Son of Jels and Amelia Johnson - - - Stephenson Born May 28, 1887. Entered service. 17. S. Army, 337th Inf. Discharged July. 1919. Clarence F. Lienna Son of Frank and Mary lienna - - - Stephenson Born Sept. 20. 1900. Daggett, Mich. Enlisted Feb. 13. 1918. Escanaba. To Jefferson Barracks. Transferred to Camp Shelby, Bat. B. 4th Field Artillery. Transferred to Camp Stanley, Tex. Discharged June 19, 1919. Re-enlisted. Promoted to Corp. Mar. 17, 1920. Discharged June 8, 1920 Camp Stanley, San Antonio. Tex. [101] I + 4 0,.Z 4 * I 4 1I m 1OL.. 4. OMNI& 'Am, A& A I~ —~C I I 1 ~~ --- — I — C- II I - 1 ---. - - he I1-__ I" — AI"~ —l --- -- k A. Al-c A - &. 410..0 LLL 41.0 T - - - — F_ 4, Edward Miller Son of Albert and Catherine Miller - - Stephenson Born Dec. 21, 1893. Entered U. S. service, 41st Machine Gun Bn. Discharged July, 1919. Norbert T. Girondale Son of John and Annie Girondale - - - - Wallace Born Mar. 17, 1897. Enlisted Aug. 14, 1917, Red * Lodge, Mont., as auto mechanic. Sent to Fort Missoula, Mont. Assigned to auto mechanic department. Died Oct. 20, 1918, Fort Missoula, St. Patrick's Hospital. Arthur Holstrom Son of Erick and Gnsta Holstrom - - Stephenson 4 Born Feb. 28, 1885, Sweden. Entered service Sept. 5. 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. 2nd Bn., Field Artillery. Discharged Dec. 25, 1918, Camp Custer. * George W. Beaudoin Son of Frank and Georgina Beaudoin - Stephenson Enlisted in;. S. Army May 22, 1918. Served four* Steen months. Discharged when army was demobilized. 4 I Alex Rabitoy Son of Mr. and Mrs. Rabito ---. - ---- Talbot Entered I. S. Arimy Apr. 18, 1918. Served sixteen i months. Discharged Aug. 10, 1919. * Edward C. Schafer I Son of Frank and Mary A. Schafer - - Stephenson Born June 14, 1891. Enlisted Aug. 13. 1917, Flint, Mich. 333rd Ambulance Corps. Transferred Camp Taylor, Ky. Promoted to cook and transferred June 1 8, 1918. to Camp Mills. Arrived Sept. 21, Liverpool. La Havre. St. Leon. Chateau La Roche. Camp Hospital No. 54. To Van Clair. Arrived 1'. S. May 26; disBcharged June 5, 1919, Camp Sherman, O. Joseph C. Schmidt Son of'Ben and Madaline Schmidt -- - Wallace Born Sept. 22, 1896. Entered. S. service Oct. 1, l 1918. Assigned to S. A. T. C. Died of influenza Oct. 18, 1918. * Ray Bigger 'Born 1889. Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 10, 1917, with '. S. Constabulary and assigned to coast duty. +George Wagner 1[102 Son of Andrew and Theresa Wagner - - Carbondale Born Apr. 6, 1896. Entered service Aug. 20, 1918, + Menominee. Camp Custer. 40th Machine Gun Bn. Discharged Jan. 27, 1919, Camp Custer. John Osterberg Son of GUnstaf and Margaret Osterherg - - Daggett Born June 3, 1871, Finland. Enlisted Hlaileyburg, Ontario, Canadian E. F., Nov. 10, 1916. Assigned to 159th Bn. Arrived England Nov. 20. 1916. To France Feb. 10, 1917. Transferred from 158th Bn. to the 12th C. R. T. Active on Somme front around Paroon, St. Quentin. Aras. Albert and Chateau-Thierry. Arrived Canada Nov. 28, 1918. Discharged Jan. 10, 1919, Toronto. [102] lilllllll~lllllllllll~lllll'lll^ ll*'ll<^ --- " ~ --- —......... I^~^ - ~ ~ ^ - I == ~ ~ ~ 1~r~n~~`l:~ w L; ~_,j5 Arthur A. Larson Son of John and Josephine Larson - - - - Carney Born Sept. 27, 1886. Entered service June 27, 1918. Menominee. Camp Custer, 329th Machine Gun Bat., Co. C. Transferred to 21st Company, Depot Brigade. DI ischarged Nov. 25, 1918. g Tycko Hammerberg Son of Peter and Anna Haiianerberg - - Carney Born Aug. 23, 1893, Sweden. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917, Menominee. Camp Custer, Co. C, 337th Inf.. 85th Div. Arrived Brest Mar. 15. In action Alsace Lorraine and Champagne front. Gassed at Champagne July 14. 1918. Returned and in action St. Mihiel. F Wounded Argonne Forest, Base Hospital No. 15 and Base No. 81, CommPercy. France. Arrived l'. s. June 2; discharged June 13. 1919, Camp Custer. In France, transferred to 42nd Div. Earl A. LaCount Son of M1r. and Mrs. C. E. LaCo-unt - - - Carney Born Jan. 7. 1897. Entered service Aug. 28. 1918. Menominee. Camp Custer. Sent to hospital Sept. 24. Transferred to Headquarters Company, Co. A. 78th Inf., Oct. 31, 1918. Discharged Nov. 20, 1919, Camp Custer. Warner Eckman -Son of John and Theresa Eckinan- Daggett Born Aug. 13, 1896. Entered service Aug. 28, 19-18, Menominee. Camp Custer, Medical Corps. Died of in* fluenza Oct. 9. 1918. Buried Oct. 13, 1918. Daggett. Mich. Arthur Palm Son of Frank and Christina Paln - - - - Daggett Born July 25, 1891. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. Menominee. Camp Custer. Transferred to Camp McClellan. Discharged June 16, 1919. Frank S. Newbauer Son of Robert and Margareth Newbatnier Daggett Born Dec. 25, 1887. Entered service May 10, 1918, Menominee. Assigned to Co. C. 47th Eng. To Camp r Humphrey, Columbus Barracks, 0. Arrived overseas at St. Nazaire Aug. 10, 1918. Died Base Hospital No. 9. Chateauroux, France, from bronchial pneumonia. Buried American plot, French cemetery, Chateauroux, 'St. Denis Indre, France. George F. Swanson Son of Nels and Christina Swanson --- —------- Menomninee, R. F. D). Born Sept. 15, 1893. Entered service Mar. 29. 1918. Menominee. Camp Custer, 55th Eng.. Co. B. Arrived Brest July 12. Camp Monthierehane, France. On Argonne front and at Potiers. France. At Paris working on Pershing's Stadium. Arrived V. S. July 14. 1919: discharged July 21, 1919, Camp Sherman, 0..Philip Turnwall Son of Gustaf and Carolina Turnwnll - Daggel Born May 8, 1896. Entered service Sept. 5, 1918. 4 Menominee. To Syracuse Recruiting Camp. 91st Co.. 22nd B3n.. Sept. 28, 1918. Transferred to 305th G. & F. Co.. Quartermaster Corps. Discharged Feb. 25. 1919. Camp Custer. Knute Broberg Son of Gust anud Esther Broberg - - - - Daggett Born Jan. 13, 1889. Entered service July 25, 1918, Daggett, Mich. Camp Custer, Co. B, 40th Inf., 14th Div. Discharged Jan. 19. 1919, Camp Sherman. 0. V Albert J. Kronsnoble 'Son of Joseph and Wallie Kronsnoble Daggett Born May 2. 1897. Entered service Oct. 21. 1918. Sheboygan, Wis. To Camp Shelby, 1st Co., 101st Div. Tro Camp Grant Dec. 26, 1918. Discharged Dec. 26, 1.918. [103] 4. 491.... 4 4... 4 4.. 6 p I P-~-;; ~111111 w 4b1, ~ L~L 4 i i 40. 4w 4 r - - ~w * 1 i i I i I -- II I I - -- - I --- -- I ---1 — ---- = - -- C Adolph Sederquist Son of l,. J. and Elugene Sederqnist - - - Daggett Born Nov. 6, 1894. Entered service June 22, 1918. Rockford, Ill. Camp Grant. Ill.. Co. E. 343rd Inf.. 86th Div. Transferred to Spruce Div., Maine. Discharged Dec. 31, 1918, Camp Grant. Charles W. Turnwall Son of Gustaf and Carolina Turnwall - - Daggetl Born Mar. 24, 1889. Entered service June 24, 1918. Chicago, Ill. To Camp Jackson, S. C.. Ordnance Dept. Promoted to sergeant. Discharged Feb. 20, 1919, Camp Jackson. William Turnwall Son of Gustaf and Carolina Turnwall - - Daggett Born Aug. 31, 1893. Entered service May 1, 1918, St. Paul, Minn. To Columbus Barracks, Co. A. 53rd Inf., 6th Div. Arrived Liverpool July 17, 1918. Cherbourg. In action at Argonne Woods. Verdun and around Meuse. Arrived '. S. June 12, 1919; discharged June 22. 1919. Camp Dodge. Promoted to Corp. June, 1918. Sergeant Jan., 1919, while in France. Harold C. Johnson Son of Peter and Margareth Johnson - - Dagg'et Porn June 16. 1897. Enlisted Sept. 11, 1918. Menominee. Sent to E. Lansing, Motor Transportation Corps. Discharged Dec. 17, 1918, E. Lansing, Mich. William Swanson Son of Albert and Mary Swanson - - Stephenson Born May 30, 1896. Entered service Aug. 7. 1918. Headquarters Company. 78th Inf.. Camp Custer. Discharged Feb. 28, 1919, Camp Custer. Elmer E. Bergman Son of John and Thine Bergman - - - - Daggett Born Jan. 16. 1896. Husband of Margaret O'Donnel. Entered service June 27, 1918. Menominee. Camp Custer, cook's school. Promoted mess sergeant. Transferred to Officers' H. Q. Discharged Feb. 26. 1919, Camp Custer. Mathias Vicklund Son of Mathias and Christina Vicklund - Daggett Born Dec. 9, 1893 Sweden. Husband of Clara Baumler. Enlisted July 22, 1918, Menominee. To Vancouver. Wash., Spruce Div., 25th Squadron. Second ProvisionaI Regiment. Discharged Dec. 30. 1918, Camp Grant. Charles H. Swanson Son of Albert and 1Mary Swanson - - Stel)henson Born Feb. 20, 1891. Entered service May 25. 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. 338th Inf., Co. K. Arrived overseas Aug. 3. 1918. Southampton, La Havre. To Verdun, Argonne-Meuse. Sent to hospital. Allery, France. Arrived IT. S. Mar. 21, 1919; discharged Apr. 11. 1919, Camp Custer. August C. Eckman Son of Gust and Carrie Eckmnan - - - - Daggett Born Nov. 8, 1892. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917. To Camp Custer, 337th Inf.. Co. D, 85th Div. Arrived Brest May 23, 1918. In action at St. Mihiel. AisneMarne and Meuse-Argonne. Wounded Sept. 28, 1918. Base Hospital No. 115, Vichy, France. Arrived U. S. Apr. 2, 1919; discharged Apr. 11, 1919, Camp Custer. Martin C. Dahlberg Son of Rev. and ZMrs. P. 0. Dahllberg - - - Daggett Born Sept. 30, 1897. Enlisted Aug. 23. 1917, Springfield. Ill., 6th Ill. Inf.. later 123rd Heavy Field Artillery. 33rd Div. Rank of musician. Promoted to 1 st class musician in France. Arrived overseas June 8, 1918, In battles of St. Mihiel. and Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O. Arrived U. S. June 3, 1919; discharged June 8, 1919, Camp Grant. 4 ~r 4 I l i 11 f r [104] I -I I I -e - -rr Ir - ---------— - - - -- Ic- c-= —c — ---------— r --- —— I I - I I I 1 m '.I ~ c~: --- — 4CIICL ~ I I I- — 1 — A&L AL A -— ~kag Son of Dr. Chas. F. and Annna rhiteshield - Powgers Born July 11, 1887. Entered service Aug. 21, 191, Detroit, Mich. To Camp Custer, 163rd Depot Brigadei 5ith Bn.1 20th Co. Transferred to Co. I, 2nd Inf., Dec. 11, 1918. Transferred to Medical Dept. as pharmacist. 21 29th Eng., Dec. 24, 11918. Discharged Feb. 3, 1919: s~~m "B E Camp Custer. +| | Edward J. Carriveau Son of -ederic lld Celina ('arrivean Powversj Born May 24, 1893. Entered service Oct. 28, 1918, Menom pany, 168th Depot Brigade, Cam163rd Depot Brigade. *f 4 * Camp Cse Tansferred 1sti Aprm. Headquargter Dec 27 198 C~amp Doilpnedgtl40i enfme l lstd.l Ine25 Rudolph Krueger n4 Son of Rudolph and athildaPoupo Kreger Daggett TranFerrenad touCapoSemn.Dshrged Jan. Born July 1, 1899. Entered service Nov. 19, 1917. Promoted to Corp. Jan. 7, 1918, 1st Battalion, 2nd Company, 1(;Sth Depot Brigade, Camp Custer. Died Mar. 31. 1918, Camp CusterO. Buried Apr. 4, 1918, Dag1919 agett, Mich. elby, Miss. A t Alfred Carl Son of Joseph and Lydia Carl Spalding Born June 4, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted June 25, 1918. Assigned to 40th Inf. discharged Jane 18, 1919, Camp Sherman,. William, R. Poupore Son of _31r. and ~Mrs. Cyril Poupore -— Spalding Born June 6, 1892. Entered service June 5, 1-917. Camp Custer. Transferred 1st Army Hieadquarters Company, Camp Green, N. C. Discharged May 26, M 1919, Ferdinand Poupore Z P "t~ Son of Pierre and Rosana Po-upore N Iadeaua Born May 3, 1896, Canada. Entered service July 25, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 40th Inf., Co. G. Transf erred to Camp Sherman, 0. Discharged Jan. 20, 1919, Camp Sherman, 0. 'IIHarry J.Poupore ~ i Son of Cyril and Philomrene Poupore — Spalding 'II Born Oct. 15, 1899. Enlisted Apr. 12, 1918, Escanaba, Mich. To Jefferson Barracks. 33rd Reg., Co. E, 5th Div. Porto Rico, Panama Canal Zone. Stationed. at Culebra, Panama. Cristobol. Discharged Oct. 4, 1919, Camp Dix. N. J. Promoted first class private Feb. 10, 1 1919, Culebra. iiLeo. Mineau + ~ Son of Peter and Anna M~ineau Spalding Born Apr. 3, 1897. Entered service Oct. 23, 1918. Camp Shelby, Miss. Assigned to Military Police. Discharged Feb. 8, 1919, Cqmp Shelby, Miss. Helgar Nelson Son of James and Miargrete Nelson -— Spalding Born Mar. 5, 1898. Enntered service Aug. 28, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 0. R. Co. Tank Corps. Arrived Liverpool Nov. 3, 1918. Stationed at Tank center. 'ti Arrived U. S. June 11, 1919; discharged June 18, 1919, ~sas8s ~ a IB p~ Camp Custer. Charles J. Gunvile Son of James, and Arsielie Gunville -— Spalding Born Sept. 15, 1890. Entered service Sept. 21, 1917, Menominee. Camp Custer, Spruce Div. Promoted Corp. Oct. 19. 1917. To Vancouver, Wash. Transferred to Powers, Ore., lumber operations. Discharged Jan. 21, 1919, Camp Custer. [1051 I IN I 3IMIL AL A lkY ~ ~ LI ~ ~ 4) ~ W' T r wA-" ldk%- -II" on-,, 0 0 to.0- Q...?w dh 40, l lw lw 4 -I Fred Vincent Son of Joseph and Jennie Vincent - - - - Wilson lliBorn June 30, 1895. Enlisted Apr. 11, 1917, Neenah, r_~,__~, '^ VWis. To Camp Douglas Wis., Aug. 2, 1917, Co. I, 40th BB j~.... Wis. Reg. Transferred to 128th Inf.. Co. I, Waco, Tex. BArrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. To Chassigny Replacement Camp. Proceeded to Pronthay, Haute-Marne IHl ' u; -training area. To Toule. Active at Catigny, Major * 1 -IRoosevelt in command. Wounded. Active in battle of Soissons. Gassed. Hospital for two weeks. Rerived. S. Mar. 19, 1919; discharged Maty 3, 1919*, Camp I ra n t. Son of Albert and Malrie Bnzek - - - - Wilson | Born Oct. 9, 1898. Enlisted Jan. 16, 1917. To Jef-it, erson Barracks. To 133rd Corps. FoMember 318th Ambulance C orps. To | l|]-'I'ransferred to Bat. A. 56th Regiment. Arrived Brest. Assigned Apto First Aid5 1918. RemStationed inat Meuse and Argonne. Re-ea until Aug. Arrived U.. Jan. 19, 1919. Assigned Fort Schuyler, 1919. Nabert E. Burkiund ion of John and Elizabeth Bnrkl.nd Stephenson |l Menominee. Camp Custer, Medical Corps, Psycholog - c0al Dept. Transferred to Medical Corps of 77th Inf. * Reg. Transferred to UT. S. General Hospital No. 36 at Detroit. Transferred to Educational Dept., chief di*Joseph Christian Menominee. 191 Camp Custer. 330th Fied Artillery, Bat. D. Arrived Liverpool. Aug. 6. Southampton, Cher*Oct. 8'1 1918. Haute-Marne, oLe Mans. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11, 1919; discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Son of Augunest and Dlla Merrellan - - - - C- Nadeay Born Mar. 19, 1897. Enlisted July 27, 1917. Detroit, I Camp Lee, Ga. Arrived June 12, 1918, Brest. Assigned to First Aid. Stationed at Meuse and Argonne. Re- my turned to. S. 2May 31, 1919; discharged June 10, 1919. Son of Joseph. and Marie Thomas - - - - - --- -- Born Aug. 18. 1889, England. Husband of Sarah Mountain, Mich. Camp Custer, 23rd Co., 6th Bat., 160th Depot Brigade. Later transferred to 40th Inf., Co. G. Died Oct. 10, 1918, Camp Custer. BuriDischarged Oct. 14, 1918, Iron Mountain. Torrence Merrell Son of James and Ellen Merrell - - - Carney Born Apr. 20, 1890. Enlisted U. S. Navy Mar. 30,....Aug. -28, 1918, Menomin Ca Camp uster. 78th I1nf.. Co.ns an. 24, 1919. Arrived Brest May 21, 1918. To Decieze, France, building Marcy Engine Terminal. Promoted to Horseshoer July, 1918. Returned to Brest. Arrived U. S. June 1, 1919; discharged June 20, 1919, as mechanic. - John W. Kalchik Son of John and Annie Kalehlk - - - ' Faithorn C, Born Dec. 29, 1892. Entered service June 27, 1918. Camp Custer, 338th Reg., 85th Div. Overseas and active on the Meuse River. Returned to IT. S. April-, 1919. Discharged May 10, 1919. Charles E. La Roche Son of Sidney and Louise La Roehe - - - Faithorn Born June 3, 1897. Entered U: S. Army, 125th Inf. Stationed at Camp MacArthur. [106] inow I I '...- -:1~,,.-~ * o Herman W. St. Onge Sonl of Ely and Alnanda St. Onge - - Herlnansville Born Sept. 3, 1891. Husband of Mae Devoe. Enlisted Mar. 17, 1918. Menominee. To Columbus Barracks, O. 48th Artillery, C. A. C., Bat. F. Arrived Brest Oct. 18, 1918. At Rennes, Angers, Niot, Bordeaux and St. i Nazaire. Arrived U. S. Mar. 24, 1919. Discharged Apr. 16, 1919, Camp Custer. Promoted to private first class May 1, 1918. Sergeant May 4, 1918, Fort McKinley, Portland, Maine. Harry St. Onge Son of Ely and Amnanda St. Onge - - Heriansville E:ntered U. S. Army. Discharged after signing of armistice and when army was demobilized. Solomon La Maire * Son of Mr. andl Mrs. la Maire - H..ar.in IIl — rs Born July 10. 1890. Entered U. S. Army Feb. 10,! 1918. Remained in service eighteen months. Discharged July 27, 1919. *' l Joseph Tomasi Son, of Giovanli and Pierina Tomasi - HerlanLsville Born Nov. 11, 1893, Italy. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Quartermaster Corps. * -:! Injured at Camp Custer, Base Hospital, Camp Custer. Discharged Mar. 20, 1919. Ellsworth C. Marcoe So,, of Noah alnd Georgianla Mareoe - Herlllansville Born Mar. 1, 1893. Entered service May 29, 1918. Buffalo, N. Y.. 45th Inf., Depot Brigade. Transferred to Camp Dix June 3. Sept. 4, Cape May: Transferred to General Hospital No. 11. Discharged Aug. 6, 1919, Camp Grant. ii [ Oliver Poquette Son of Johnll and Zepherine Poquette - Herlnansville Born Apr., 1898. Entered service Aug. 28. 1918, MVe- l ' nominee. Camp Custer, Bakery Div. Co., 368-2 M. Co. Discharged Apr. 15, 1919. *) Raymond A. Poquette Son of John and Zepherine Poquette - Herlllansllle Born Apr. 20, 1897. Enlisted Mar. 31, 1917, Escanaba, with Inf. Cook 63rd Reg.., Co. I. To Jefferson Barracks. To Camp Douglas. Ariz. Transferred to Presidio, San Francisco. To Baltimore Dec. 4. New * York. Transferred to Plattsburg, N. Y. II! Christ Johnson Son of William tnfd Hannah Johnson Her-aitalnsville Born Apr. 9, 1894. Entered service June 5. 1917, + Menominee. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K. Arrived Brest Aug. 10. Died in France Sept. 24, 1918 exact cause not known. Buried Base Hospital Cemetery No. 42. American Plot 731, A. E. F.. Pouilly, France. Anton 0. Larson Son of Nels and Caroline Larson - - - Stephenson 9ra[ Born July 17, 1893. Entered IJ. S. service, Coast Artillery Corps, 75th Div., 1st Battalion. Discharged Mayr, 1919. David Swanson Son of Otto and Louise Christine Swanson -- - Hermnansville Born Apr. 20, 1894. Enlisted Dec. 10, 1917, Iron Mountain, with Forestry Div., Columbus Barracks. American University at Washington, D. C. Camp BelEng.. 24th Co. Discharged July 3, 1919, Camp Custer. [107] IL '9 l I - - --- — C-r-a- — i —;2 - * er mr e~lj- c e _-~t-L,, * rrr r * *a 4 I4 4 John J. Bellmore Son of Method and Georgina Bellnore - - - - - llerinansville Born Nov. 16, 1893. Enlisted June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6, 1918, * with 330th Field Artillery, Bat, D. Camp Knotty Ash, Southampton. Cherbourg, Pipriac. Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Maine, Le Mans. Arrived To. S. Apr. 11, 1919. Discharged Apr. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. H;erman Dusterhoft Son of William and Emily Dunsterhioft - Hermansville Born Aug. 4. 1895. Enlisted Mar, 12, 1918, Menomneet. Coast Artillery. Columbus Barracks, 0., Mar. 19, 1918. Transferred to Fort Worden, Wash. 21st Co., Coast Artillery. Transferred to UT. S. Guards, Co. A, * 43rd Bn. Presidio, San Francisco, Sept. 16, 1918. To bospital for disability Sept. 28. Discharged Dec. 24, 1918. David Gegear Son of Joseph and Sophie Gegear- ------ Stephenson (Ingalls) Born Apr. 5. 1893. Entered service July 25. 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 23rd Inf., Co. B, 14th Div..Discharged Nov. 29, 1918, Camp Custer. * I l -Arthur W. Maves Son of Albert and Mathilde Maves - Hermansville * Born Sept. 13, 1896. Husband of Marie Good Maves. Entered service 1918, 61st Coast Artillery. Stationed at Castillion. France, as musician. Returned to U. S. Still in service. Henry J. Younk Son of Michael and Mary Younk Hermansville B iBorn Nov. 2, 1897. Entered U. S. service, Co. K, 32nd Div. Discharged May. 1919. * Pietro Fin Son of Mr. and Mrs. Fin Hermansville Born Nov. 29, 1888. Entered service June, 1918. Camp Custer, Ammunition Train, 14th Div. Discharged May, 1919. Peter Pieropan Son of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Pieropan Hermansville * tBorn Aug. 30, 1891. Entered U. S. service June, 1918. Camp Custer, Infantry. Discharged May, 1919. Charles F. Kaichik Son of John and Annie Kaichik - - - - Faithorn 1.1 si~~ I I -E s E Born Nov. 28, 1895. Entered U. S. service. Camp Custer, 14th Div. Discharged Mar., 1919. *a 4 Warren E. Good Son of James E. and Rebecca Good Faithorn Born Aug. 31, 1897. Enlisted May 10, 1918, Detroit, Mich. Camp Courchene, Tex., Co. C, 9th Eng. Died at Fort Bliss. Antonio Kossewski * Son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kossewski - Wallace Born Nov. 26, 1893, Poland. Entered U. S. service, Co. C, 127th Inf., 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb., 1918. To front May 18. At Oise-Aisne and Aisne-Meuse. Killed Chateau-Thierry July 31, 1918. Buried American Battle Area Cemetery, Commune of Cierges, Aisne, France. * I Y ~ ~ e~r~, a ~ F~ 1 4, [1081 I ON 0-~~~ L I ICI - kALALAN..O T I II I I: 4 f 4 4 0 * 4 4 ( i * ~ + ~ *I I ~ 41. i^ V. IV, - -W I 4 [I i r( S i Leo J. Cota Son of Fred and Elizabeth Cota - - - Menominee Born Dec. 16, 1891. Enlisted Mar. 9, 1918. Signal Corps Aviation Station at Kelly Field. Transferred to Camp John Wise, Observation Balloon, 42nd Balloon Company. Transferred to Camp Lee, Va., June 7th. Discharged Mar. 12, 1919, Camp Custer. Harry M. Elkey Son of Albert and Lillie Elkey - Flint (Menolminee) Born Nov. 14, 1891. Entered service May 25, 1918. Camp Custer. Camp Mills. in Co. K, 338th Inf. Arrived overseas July 27. Brest. Transferred Co. G, 7th Inf., 32nd Div. Active at Argonne Forest. Killed Oct. 25, 1918, Cierges, France, and buried there. William Erdman Son of Julius and lIena Erdaltn - - - Menominee Born Feb. 8, 1893. Entered service Aug. 21, 1918. To Camp Custer, where he died Oct. 11, 1918. John T. Hannon Son of Michael and Sarah Hannon - - Menominee Born Jan. 14, 1892, Canada. Entered service June 27, 1918. Camp Custer, 339th Inf., 85th Div., Co. A. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 12. Left Aug. 23, North Russian front. Arrived Sept. 4. In action from Oct. 1 until Jan. 19, 1919, when company was almost completely annihilated. Only six men were left. John' T. Hannon not heard from since. Government believes he was killed Jan. 19, 1919. William B. Harrison Son of S. N. and Helen H. Hlarrison - - Menominee Born Mar. 12, 1892. Entered service July, 1917. 13th Eng. Promoted to first class Sergt. In O. T. C. when armistice was signed. Discharged Jan., 1919. Leo L. Kluba Son of Joseph and Marie Kluba - - Hermansville Born June 28, 1896. Entered service Aug. 13, 1918, Iron Mountain. To Houghton, Mich., College of Mines. Camp Jackson, S. C. To Camp Custer. Discharged Jan. 1, 1919. Edward Menard Son of Ferman and Louise Menard - - - Nadeau Born Aug. 22, 1896. Entered service Sept. 3, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 45th Co., 12th Bat., 160th Depot Brigade. Died Oct. 13, 1918, Camp Custer. Buried Nadeau, Mich. James Beiley Son of Frank and Anna Beiley - - - Menominee Enlisted in U. S. Navy as machinist mate. Died Oct. 28, 1918, Great Lakes Training Station. Harold Walter Hass Son of Albert and Carrie Hass - - - Menominee Born May 11, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Nov. 15. 1917. American University, Columbus, O. Transferred to Washington, D. C. Transferred to 30th Eng., Gas and Flame Div. Arrived Brest Jan. 9, 1918. Active at Kessmiel Hill and Vermellos. Killed Apr. 9, 1918. Buried temporarily at Sailly, La Bourse, Pas de Calais, in British Military Cemetery, Row G, Grave 1. Exhumed and re-interred Bony Aisne American Cemetery No. 636, Grave No. 199, Row No. 8, Plot No. 1, Feb., 1920. Leonard Anderson Son of John and Katherine Anderson - Menominee Born Dec. 8, 1894. Enlisted May 19, 1917, Milwaukee, Wis., 168th Inf., Co. L, Camp Custer. Arrived Brest Mar. 8, 1918. In action Oise-Aisne offensive, battle of the Marne, Aisne-Marne offensive, Vesle River, Soissons. Killed on the Ourque River July 28, 1918. Found by Chaplain Robb, 168th Inf., July 31, 1918, on the battlefield, who buried him where he fell at Pere en Jardenais in Grave No. 19C, Map 6/7..0 4. 40. IEM. I* -~ I 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I. T 4 Y ~ ~ ~r re r [109] Al- - - 4c -A - A - - i- -A ____ ^xpxpr- l c^ isg= -I^~ ^? ^ ^ ^ | qii * * Gustave A. Anderson Son of Anders G. and Kaysn Nelson - - Menominee l Born Feb. 14, 1895, Sweden. Entered service July 25, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Infantry. Transr ferred to Camp Sherman Dec. 5, 1918. Discharged Jan. 18, 1919. * Emil Larson Son of Fred and Anna Larson - Marinette (Menoininee) Born Mar. 21, 1896. Husband of Mabel Bell. En* Htered service Sept. 3, 1918. Camp Greenleaf, Ga., spe3 R^ 2 ^ 1 B Mcial service, Medical Dept. Transferred to Norfolk., K.l ne Mass., Hospital No. 34. Discharged June 24, 1919. Arthur Bigger Pi 44|3W qX B ^ X ~Son of David and Julia Bigger - - - - Menominee -* ^^B.,^^l|| ^ l|^HBorn Feb. 12, 1886, Menominee. Eternlisted J in U. S. Army, 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. In action Alsace front, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne. Wounded and sent to hospital. With A. of 0. Arrived U. S. SApr. 10, 1919; discharged May 27, 1919, Camp Custer. Promoted to Corp.: RPeter S. Madsen + 3} 1^^ ^ ^ ^ Son of Waldemar and Anne Maden - - Mendominee | o v eBorn Sept. 25, 1893, Menominee. Entnsered service |+H^ftC 'i^^B^^B^'I^ To Jefferson Barracks, Qu~atrter~aseter tCorpEs. anabsJun ferred to Fort Russell, Wyo. Promoted Cam p Custer, Infantry. 3, Discharged Nov. 20, 19ed June 6, 1919, Camp Grant.. I OlrHugo Ol Desotell * iK Son of Augusndrew and Pauline DeOlteln - - - Menominee Born Mar. 24, 1890. Entered service JunJune 24, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. M, 85th Div. Arrived 24, 918. Pierre Court. Lorraine. In Meuse-Argonne sction Aisne-n 1+ l= Marne offensive. Wounded Chateau-Thierry July 31, ^^^^BIJ^ i~l^^^1!^^^^! 1918. Camp Lange Hospital. Returned to company at ^^ | H^^^ H-P^^fl^^ Arg-onne Forest. Burned with mustard g-as. EHospital armistice was signed. Arrived U. S. Apr. 2, 1919; discharged Apr29. m12, 1919, Camp Custer. Raymond H. Nobes [110] Son of Harry G. and Esther No-es - - Menoninee Born Apr. 2, 1899. Enlisted July 6, 1918, Green Bay. To Jefferson Barracks, Medical Replacement Unit, Camp Crane, Allentown, Pa. Camp Merritt. Arrived overseas Sept. 20, 1918. St. Agnon. Transferred to * Casual Co., Les Isilefets Evacuation Hospital No. 4. To Verennes. With A. of 0. at Cohlenz. Arrived U. S. Sept. 2, 1919; discharged Sept. 5, 191.9, Camp Grant. William Chase Son of William and Julia Chase - - - Cedar River * Born May 27, 1895. Enlisted June 4, 1917, Escanaba. To Jeff erson Barracks, Quartermaster Corps. Transferred to Fort Russell, Wyo. Promoted Corp. Apr. 3, 1918. Discharged June 6, 1919, Camp Grant. Hugo Olson *Son of Andrew and Anna Olson - - - Menomninee Born Nov. 17, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted June 26, 1917, Escanaba, Co. L, 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 24, 1918. Pierre Court. Lorraine. In action AisneMaine offensive. Wounded Chateau-Thierry July 31, 1.918. Camp Lange Hospital. Returned to company at Argonne Forest. Burned with mustard gas. Hospital * No. 75. Arrived U. S. Feb. 8, 1-919; discharged Feb. 17. 1919, Camp Custer. * Pat Goodyear Son of Mr. and Mrs. Goodyear --- —--------— Wilson Enlisted U. S. Medical Corps July, 1.918. In service *18 months, attached to hospital units. Dischiarged Aug. 22, 1919. Irven M. Bucholtz *Son of Fred and Lucy Bueholtz - - - Menomnlnee Born Aug. 25, 1896. Entered service Sept. 5, 1919, Menominee. Cdmp Custer. Returned as soldier-clerk. tiraft board, Menominee County. Discharged Jan. 16. Leo Thomas Doran Son of John and Julia Doran - - - - Menomninee Born May 28, 1897, Menominee. Entered service Aug. 28, 1918. Camp Custer, Signal Corps. Discharged Feb., 1919, Camp Custer. [1101 *4 4 I^~^5-^~~~m.r'I A A i I. I 21 * 4 * 4 PUBLISHER'S NOTE The group panel on page 112 contains names and pictures of both soldiers and sailors, and was so prepared as ai matter of grouping necessity. The naval men on this page would otherwise have appeared in the navy section which immediately follows. [ 4 K * 4 1. 4 F 4 | ~[111], * - - - - -..C i I i i I i 1 4 - Roy Murphy Son of Janes da urphy and Abigail Murphy M- Gurn - fenlominee Entered service May 4, 1918. Soutlh Carolina as Quartermaster, Hdq. Co. Discharged Apr. 30, 1919, Camp Sherman, 0. George Forvilly * Son of Henry and lary Forvilly -n - - Me -oninee Born Oct. 1328, 1877. Menominee. Husband of Alice on rvill way to Enlisted Feb. 28, 118, Butte City, Mont., * Rflfi 1.i Bl Ie U;LT. S. Marines. Discharged May 15, 1919. Tony Revord Son of Edwarld Band Am elia Ievord - - - - - -- Powers (Hermnansvilie) Born Feb. 28, 1897. Entered service Aug. 21, 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, Base Hospital No. 99. Overseas Oct. 25, 1918. Killed accidentally at La Havre on his way to the front, Nov. 15, 1918. Buried Municipal Cemetery, St. rMarie, La Havre, France, Seine Infe rieure. Arthur G. Lueskow.son of Carl and Bertha Ineskow - - - Menomlinee Born Feb. 26, 1896. Enlisted Co. L, 125th Inf., 32nd Div.. +Waco. Tex. Arrived Brest Feb. 24. Isurtille and Pierre Court. To front May 15. In action Alsace sector, May 18. Oise-Aisne. Aisne-Marne. Killed near Cierges, Aisne-Marne offensive. July 31, 1918. Ralph E. Winnekins * ilMenomninee Born Apr. 15, 1897. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1917, Green Bay, Wis. To Jefferson Barracks, Air Service No. 492. Transferred to 496. Landed Liverpool May 5, 1918. To Southampton, La Havre and Prest. Later Paris and Tours. Arrived U. S. Feb. 14, 1919; discharged Feb. ^a d16. 1919. Frederick C. Peterson Son of Peter 31. and Elizabeth Peterson - Menominee Born May 9, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 3, 1918, for four years, U. S. Navy. Great Lakes, Radio School. Transferred to Harvard, Cambridge, Mass., Hadio School. To Bay Ridge, receiving ship, June 10, 1919. Released Great Lakes, June 17, 1919, from active duty. Emil Pada * U Son of Alb ert and Ottilia Padai - - - - — Menominnee Born May 17, 1894, Menominee. Husband of Delina - -erson. Entered service June 26, 1918. Camp Custer. * B - - - -ischarged July 10, 1919. II ames Prohuska Soi of James and Marie Prohuska Menominee Born July 29, 1892, Menominee. Entered service May 25, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Co. L, 7th * Inf., 3rd Div. Arrived Liverpool July 29, 1918. To France. In action St. Mihiel, Argonne. With A. of 0. at Andernach. Arrived U. S. July 22, 1919; discharged July 28, 1919, Camp Custer. Charles Linsmeier Son of Jacob and Mary Linsmneier Menominee Born Sept. 9, 1892, Menominee. Husband of Esther Philip. Enlisted with Merchant Marines on lake yessel Greenwood. Boston, convoy duty. To Great Lakes Aug. 29, 1918. Discharged Dec. 28, 1918. * Samuel C. King Son of Louis and Louise King - - - - Menominee Born Apr. 25, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 25, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. Great Lakes. Seaman U. S. S. Utah, Apr. 7, 1918. Overseas July 10, 1919. Irish coast guard duty. Returned U. S. Dec. 20, 1919; discharged Jan. 21. 1919, New York. [112] A. AL, t. *. *,. RM I , II. jj 4 momadb A — i= — - -- -mor mI li k I 4 4 J 4 I Orbin W. Fortier *Son of Jean and Lydia Fortier Blair - - - Iowvers Born Nov. 28, 1896. Enlisted July 30, 1918, Duluth, U S. Navy. To Great Lakes. oReleased Jan. 22, 1919., Arthur Harold Anderson Son of Martin and Carrie Anderson -:er:inasville Born Feb. 11, 1893. Enlisted Aug. 2, 1917, Chicago. To Grant Park, Ship Commodore, Chicago, Ill. Navy Relief Cafeteria. At Great Lakes. Passed as electrician Sept., 1918. Released Dec. 18, 1918, Camp Barry. y listed U. S. Navy for 4 years, Milwaukee. To Puget Sound, Wash., apprentice seaman. Promoted to seaman. Released Feb. 26, 1919, Bremerton, Wash. Harris M. Macauley * Son of Patrick and Minnie tMacauler - - r nVilsol Born Feb. 16, 1901. Enlisted July. 1918, Great Lakes. Charles F. Vassaw at ret| Son of Charles and Mary Vasslw Av -i Stephenson Born Apr. 8, 1897. Enlisted June 5, 1918.l Milwaukee, i U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, as fireman. To Philadelphia Navy Yard Receiving Ship Nov. 5, 1918. Transferred to a. S. S. Rainbow. Patrol duty on east coast carrying supplies for six sublnarines. To duration of war an. Discharged Dec. 12, 1918, Ham-ipton Roads. Va. Robert M. Sawbridge Son of Doctor Edward and Ada Sawlridge - - - Stephenson Born Feb. 9, 1896. Enlisted July 8, 1917, U. S. Navy,. Tacomra, Wash. Assigned as first class seaman and captain of gun crew on Sub. Chaser No. 304. Discharged Feb. 12, 1919. |I Oliver B. Nadeau Son of David and Olivre Nadean - - - - Nadean Thomas Henry Nelson Son of Snsan and George Nelson Wallace Born Mar. 6, 1897. Enlisted July 8, 1918, U. S. Navy. Assigned as ship's cook, Great Lakes. Discharged Feb. 2 7, 1919, Great Lakes. * Raymond N. Nadeau Son of David and Olive Naldean - - - - Nadeau * Born June 6, 1898. Enlisted July 25, 1918, for 4 years, U. S. Navy at Menominee. To Great Lakes. To hospital, operated for appendicitis. Assigned as ambulance driver, Hospital Corps. Released Sept. 9, 1919, Great Lakes. Harold K. Friday Son of Harry and Flora Friday - - Hermnansville Born Apr. 1, 1899. Enlisted May 4, 1917. To Great Lakes as seaman guard, Oct. 30, 1917. To receiving ship, Philadelphia. Overseas Nov. 6. Arrived at Brest Nov. 18. Assigned to Naval Aviation, Dunkirk, England. Arrived U. 5. Jan. 19, 1919. Released Jan. 24, [113],La 1. [1 n s. De J y 7 1 0 1 1 --- - 41..03 O. 1 m!RS q 4 I I Theodore Tanguay Son of Joseph and Marie Tanguay - - - - Powers Born Sept. 26, 1898. Enlisted July 27, 1917. Great. Lakes. Transferred to receiving ship at Charleston, S. Car., Dec. 1917. To U. S. S. Georgia, assigned convoy duty. Trans. U. S. S. Nebraska. Discharged Sept. 14, 1919. Clifford Tanguay Son of Joseph and Marie Tanguay - - - Powers Born Nov. 26, 1898. Enlisted Apr. 12, 1917, Great Lakes, apprentice seaman. Transferred to receiving ship, Philadelphia. To Sub. Chaser U. S. S. Ellen. Did convoy duty Queenstown, Ireland and France. To IU. S. S. Delphy, Boston. Still in service. Paul P. Tanguay Son of Joseph and Marie Tanguay - - - Powers Born May 29, 1895. Enlisted July 27, 1917, for 4 years, U. S. Navy. Great Lakes, Coxswain's School, apprentice seaman. Promoted to first class seaman Mar. 12, 1918. To Norfolk, Va., May 13, U. S. S. Philadelphia. Patrol duty on Pacific Coast. Bremerton, Wash. Left for Philippines, Japan, Australia. Still in service. Arthur Turnwall Son of John and Christina Turnwall - - - Daggett Born Apr. 4, 1897. Enlisted July 26, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, apprentice seaman. Transferred to U. S. S. Neptune, transport collier, as fireman. In service thirteen months. Transferred to duration of war man, promoted to fireman first class and released Aug. 12, 1919. Frances Earl O'Connor Son of Thonmas and Belle O'Connor - - Menoininee Born July 7, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted July 31, 1918, Chicago, Ill., U. S. Navy. To Training School, Pelham Bay, N. Y. To South America with training ship. Remained at Pelham Bay to June 14, 1919. Commissioned Ensign in U. S. N. R. F. Relieved June 30, 1919. Fred J. Marchaterre Son of Joe and Marie Marchaterre - - Herlmansville Born Jan. 13, 1896. Enlisted May 31, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy for duration of war. To Great Lakes, Camp Farragut, apprentice seaman. Transferred July 1, 1918, to Hampton Roads, Va. Naval Signal School. Promoted to seaman signal man, second class. Assigned to U. S. S. N. J. Scanlon, cargo transport, and promoted to first class signal man. On Sept. 20, 1918, the Scanlon damaged at sea and returned to N. Y. for repairs. Left Oct. 8 and landed St. Nazaire Nov. 1. Returned to U. S. Dec. 24, 1918. Released Jan. 27, 1919. Michael P. Ahearn Son of Cornelius and Clara Ahearn - - Menomiinee Born Dec. 16, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 2, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, 7th Regiment, Radio Div. Promoted to radio operator, third class, at Harvard. Overseas Oct. 3, 1918, to St. Nazaire, France, on British Transport Ulua. Transferred Base 29, Cardiff, Wales. Radio operator, second class. Trans. to Base 18, Inverness, Scotland, May 4, Mine Sweeper Auk. Promoted to radio operator, first class. Auk assisted in putting the English hospital ship Vedic off the rocks in the North Sea. Is in possession of German Naval Code books containing description of every British man-of-war. Arrived IT. S. Nov. 30, 1919. Released Dec. 1, 1919, Portsmouth, N. H. Herbert A. Hupy Son of Peter and Jennie Hupy - - - - Menolinee Born Feb. 10, 1899. Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 15, 1917, Menominee, U. S. Navy. To Naval Training Station, Newport. R. I. Boston, Mass. Hoboken, N. Y. Assigned to U. S. S. America. Nine trips overseas, from Nov. 1, 1917, to Oct. 20, 1918. Transferred to shore duty on U. S. S. Seattle. Discharged Mar. 24, 1919, Hoboken, N. Y. Promoted to first class yeoman. Milton M. Williams Son of Charles Williams and Mamie Curvall - - - Cedar Rliver Born Jan. 21, 1900. Enlisted Apr. 7, 1918, Green Bay, Wis. To Great Lakes and later transferred to Bremlerton, Wash. Enlisted for 4 years. Arthur Kleinke Son of Riehard and Rose Kleinke - - Menominee Born Apr. 6. 1898. Enlisted June 19, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Naval Training Station, Bremerton, Wash., 1st Co. Released Feb. 28, 1919, Bremerton. [114] 4! 4 I 4 4 -1 I o ~- 4. O. I~ 4 0 K- -- - e * 0. _ II .. Al. 4.1. 4/lSlI.. I [[[..-- -_ _ _ _ - _-Q_1 0 I ZCarl F. Nelson Son of Herbert and Inga Nelson - - - Menoninee Born Oct. 11, 1895, Menominee. Husband of Angeline Lauzon. Enlisted Oct. 29, 1895, U. S. Navy. Assigned - to UL. S. S. New York. After thirty months, transferred 'to U. S. S. WVisconsin. Transferred to U. S. S. Georgia. Transferred to interned transport U. S. S. Buitenzorg, carrying cargo between U. S. and France. * Discharged Nov. 1, 1918. Gustaf N. Larson [-[ Son of Nels and Carrie Nelsoin - - Menoininee Born Apr. 7, 1889, Sweden. Enlisted May 14., 1918, Marinette. U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Assignedv Public Works as painter. Released Apr. 21, 1919. A Hubert G. Grun Menominee Enlisted June 5, 1917, for 4 years, U. S. Navy at Menominee. Great Lakes. Left for France I)ec. 28, 1917. Transferred from Bordeaux to. Aviation Camp, St. Trojan. Returned Feb., 1919, to U. S. Assigned to Norfolk, Va., Charleston, S. C. Great Lakes and at l Washington, D. C., Aviation Fields. Discharged Aug. 14, 1919, Vashington, D. C. Stanley Rovinsky Son of lWillinlan and Valeria Rovinsky - Menomdinee Enlisted in U. S. Navy on call for volunteers. Was released after armistice. *Fred James Baldwin J Son of Rollin H. and Anna Baldwin - - Menoinliee Born June 5, 1899. Enlisted June 7, 1917, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Patrol and convoy duty between Halifax, Quebec and North of Ireland. p Discharged Aug. 14, 1919, Pittsburgh, Pa. Gunner's Mate, second class. Aide to Commander Wm. McMunn. Allen Milton BeDell Son of Benjamlin and Emnin BeDell - - Menomninee ' 1 Born July 30, 1900. Enlisted July 8. 1918., Milwau- 1 kee. U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To Norfolk, Va., signal training dept. of Naval Base. Dischllarged ac- I count disability May 21, 1919, Norfolk, Va. William A. Corbett *l 9 Son of Villianil and Mary Corbelt - - Menonilee Born Mar. 9, 1899. Enlisted Apr. 19, 1918, at Great Lakes. Transferred to Annapolis. Made Quartermaster. Sent to rifle range. On Submarine Chaser 326. Discharged June 20, 1919. Albert F. Gerber Son of Conrad and Rose Gerber - - - Menomlinee Born Apr. 3, 1894. Enlisted Dec. 17, 1912, apprentice seaman. Discharged Dec. 16, 1916, with the rating of coxswain. Re-enlisted Dec. 15, 1917, coxswain rated B. M., second class, July, 1918. Rated B. M.. first class, Jan., 1919. On Sub. Chaser 127 continuously here and overseas, stationed at Naval Base. Corfu. Greece. Returned to U. S. May 14, 1919. Transferred July 2, 1919, to Sub. Chaser 222. Discharged. Clarence G. Sturdy Son of Gustavus and Olive Sturdy - - Menominee Born Nov.. 1897. Enlisted May 8, 1917, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, 9th Reg., U. S. M. C. In Medical * Corps, stationed at Cuba during the winter 1917-1918. Promoted to Ph. M., first class, Quantico, Va., Marine Barracks. Discharged Aug. 13. 1919, Great Lakes, Ill. * +4 Harris G. Olander Son of John and Martha Olander - - - Menoniinee Born Oct. 11, 1891, Sweden. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1917, Great Lakes. as Landsman Electrician, Radio U. S. N. R. F. To Harvard. To U. S. S. Rhode Island, Oct. 18. 1918. Released Feb. 20, 1919. Great Lakes. Promoted to Radio Electrician, third class. [115) * l*,4, 4 I III 44 i i i w - ~ a 1'L ~ ~ r I ~ C~,;e;: I I1 L ~ 1IFILr"~r la Q Hayward Olson Sion of Aidlrewl. ttil Anna qtlello - Menoninee Born Nov. 1?. 1897, Menomiin( e. Enlisted July 5. 191-8, Marinette. U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, 13th Reg. To Boston, Mass. Released Feb. 27, 1919, at Lockwood. Hjalmer N. Nelson Sni ot August and Hilda Nelson M- - - enomninee Born May 2", 1899. Enlisted Aug. 2, 1918. Called Aug. 14, 1918, Milwaukee. To U. S. S. Kentucky, Hampton Roads, Va., Oct. 25, 1918, as fireman. To U. S. Transport Sierra. Left U. s. Jan. 30, 1919, on first t trip to Bord aux. Also at St. Nazaire and Brest. Made ix trips overseas. Released Oct. 1, 1919. Miles R. Stireman Son of Jolhl '1. aFnd Clarrissat Stirenian - Menominee Born Jec. 1.8, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted U. S. Navy Oct. 13. 1917. landsman radio electrician. From Great * - RsLakes to Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., Jan. 18, 1918. Graduated June 8, 1918, Chief Radio Elec-. trician. To France June 30, 1918, on the U. S. S. Hen* s derson, which burned at sea July 2. Crew transferred to U. S. S. Van Steuben. In England. Assigned to | | | X York; Tl a~~~In n Kl rKand Asas. oo e~d to cxwin|1 l~e~ |L% ~ -MU. S. Naval Aviation Night Bombing Squadron, St. leglevert, I unkirk and Calais, France, and Maria Aalte-r. Belgium, as observer. Detailed to exlerimental radio work. To England Feb. 8, 1919, and took over German ship, Cleveland, at Southampton. Transport *1 sservice Mar. 26 to Aug. 4, 1-919. Released Aug. 8, 1919, as radio electrician, first class. Frank B. Olson * Son of Andrew and Anna Olson - - - Menominee I Born Dec. 2, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted June 10, 1917, Milwaukee. U. S. Navy for 4 years. To Norfolk, * PaeVa.. fireman on U. S. S. A1men. Prolo ted to third cla machinist mate, second class machinist mate and to chief machinist mate. Still in service. l A 14 191 Harold G. Ogreen S-on of Jiih and Freda Ogreen - - - Menoninee Born Jan. 8, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 3, 1918, 7 R Milwaukee. U. S. Navy. Great Lakes, radio electrician. To Philadelphia receiving ship and Hampton Roads, Va., U. S. S. Pennsylvania, U. S. S. Arizona and U. S. S. Nevada. Promoted June 29, 1918, second class radio electrician. Overseas on U S. S. Nevada Aug. 2. 1918. Trapmsport guard duty Scotch, Irish and English coasts, until armistice. Present at taking over Germian fleet. E-Icorted President Wilson to France fromn North Sea. Discharged Aug. 9, 1919, Great Lakes. Fred Keller Son of Johlan and Theresa Keller -Menoninee Born May 22, 1897. Enlisted June 14, 1918, Menom-i-..~.. inee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Transferred to New York, Transport Kansas. Promoted to coxswain. Transport overseas service. Arthur J. Beland Soi of Prime and Ellen Beland Menominee * Born July 24, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 3. 1917, Marinette. U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, seconc, class seaman. Promoted first class seaman Sept. 15, 1-917. Ordered to Philadelphia Receiving Ship. To I U. S. S. D)ora To U. S. S. Standard and sent to Russia, Shetland Jslands, Scotland, Wales, France. To U. S. S. Finlay. Four trips to Mexico. Promoted to coxswain. Mose Lacoursiere Son of Mlose and Mary Lacoursiere Menominee Horn Feb. 6, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted June 4, 1918, U. S. Navy. In Navy four months and asked to be transferred to U. S. Army. To Camp Custer for six months. Discharged Mar. 1, 1919. Eugene J. Houte Son of Mr. stand Mrs. Engene Houte - - - Nathan Born Jan. 6, 1895. Enlisted Nov. 14, 1917, Marinette, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Released July 3, 1919. Arthur H. Johnson * Son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Johnson - - Daggett Born Apr. 6, 1897. Enlisted May 15, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Naval Reserves. Landsman machinist mate, Aviation Section, Great Lakes. To school of aviation mechanics June 16, 1918. Graduated as second class mlechanic Sept. 22. Transferred to Naval Air Station, Pensacola Squadron, Oct. 29, 1918. Promoted first class machinist mate Iec 1, 1918. On inactive duty * B ~ Apr. 14, 1919, Pensacola, Fla. [116] ILl * - --.-,,,, * Clyde Haines Son of Arthur and Marie Haines - - - Menomiinee Born Jan. 27, 1899. Enlisted Nov. 22, 1917, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, 3rd Reg., Marine Band. Released Aug. 14, 1919. e48 1 ~Joseph G. Blahnik > t o ''| Son of Joseph G. and Bozina Blahnik - Menolminee Born Mar. 1, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted May 15, 1917, Menominee, U. S. Navy. To U. S. S. Pennsylvania, at N. Y. in signal service. One trip overseas as convoy to President Wilson. Also to Cuba. Discharged * Aug. 18, 1919, New York. -ii John F. Borowski Son of Fred and Elizabeth Borowski - Menoinee Born Feb. 27, 1890. Husband of Pearl Freda Borowski. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1917, Milwaukee. To Great a Lakes. To U. S. S. Kearsage, Boston, Apr. 23, 1918. Transferred to Boston Section Base to put mine sweepers in commission. Ordered to U. S. S. Obis Aug. 22,;|. 1918, as machinist mate. Active in sweeping mines i from Boston to Provincetown, Mass. New Jersey i: J Coast. Sweeping German mine field. Transferred to U. S. S. Turkey Apr. 10, 1919, fireman, first class. Left * for North Seas to sweep mines. Ordered to U. S. July 6, 1919. Transferred Bay Ridge, Brooklyn Navy Yard. Transferred Sept. 12, 1919, E. Liberty, Pa. Discharged * Sept. 13, 1919. Lloyd Earl Horton Son of Henry F. and Alwilda E. Horton - Menominee I 1 Born Jan. 15, 1895. Enlisted May 24, 1917, Ishpem- A — X ' ing, Mich., U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, machinist mate. Promoted to first class machinist mate. Over* seas several times, Discharged Sept. 8, 1919. Jean W. Montpas * Son of Jean and Ida Montpas - - - - MIenominee Born Apr. 6, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 6, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes as wireless operator. Transferred to Harvard University and later assigned to U. S. S. Lake Memendo. Made three trips overseas. Stationed at Italy. William H. Hannon Son of Michael andl Sarah Hannon - - Menoninee Born Dec. 25, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 27, 1917, Detroit, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, Commissary Department, as ship's cook, fourth class. Promotea to first class cook, June 1, 1919. * Clarence A. Hlinka + Son of John and Anna Hlinka - - - - Menominee Born May 27, 1891, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 3, 1918, Chicago, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, radio elec- i trician for four years. Transferred to duration of war man and released to N. R. F. Mar. 10, 1919. Wilbur W. Martell Son of William and Lucy Martell - - - Menominee * Born Oct. 15, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted U. S. Navy. - Quartermaster listener on Submarine Chaser No. 335 and 202 Mississippi anti-submarine flotilla. This flotilla - 0 -a was to instruct the people of the U. S. as to the means the Navy took to combat the submarine. Released from duty June 5, 1919, a Nerville A. Martell Son of William and Lucy Martell - - Menominee Born Feb. 6, 1898. Enlisted U. S. Navy. Assigned as; listener on Submarine Chaser No. 335 and 202 in the Gulf of Mexico and on the Atlantic Coast. Was pro- - - a moted to Quartermaster Nov. 1, 1918. Released June 5, 1919, Great Lakes. David J. Suchorski Son of John and Kate Suchorski Menominee Enlisted Feb. 10, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Promoted to first class seaman. Released from service. [117] ., 4.-.x w zx 40 * 1 - I, - - - - 4 Eugene E. Gadbois Son of Eugene and Bertha Gadbols - - Menoininee Born Apr. 25, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 13, 1917, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes as radio electrician. Transferred to Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. To Philadelphia Navy Yard. Overseas on U. S. S. Henderson which caught fire at sea. Men were transferred to U. S. S. Van Steuben. Landed at Brest July 9, 1918. Sent to Greece overland. Stationed at Corfu, Naval Base No. 25. Assigned to Sub. Chaser No. 90, Coast of Sicily. To Otronto Barage on the Hills of Italy. Left for Brindizi with Sub. chasers sold to Italian Government. To Spulato, Austria. To American Food Commission. Returned to U. S. Junt 5, 1919; discharged July 31,- 1919, Great Lakes. Lloyd A. Sutliff Son of Frank and Clara Sutliff - - - Menomiinee Born Oct. 30, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 2, 1917, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes Radio School. To Harvard University Radio School. Passed examination Apr., 1918. To Miami, Fla., Naval Aviation, taking aerial flights training as observer. Promoted to first class electrician and assigned as observer to sea plane No. 9, doing patrol duty, Atlantic Coast. Released Key Wrest, Fla. Ralph F. Sutliff Son of Frank and Clara Sutliff - - - Menolninee Born May 2, 1893. Enlisted Dec. 2, 1917, Detroit, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes as seaman. Promoted to first class coxswain. To U. S. S. Commodore Receiving Ship, Chicago. To Patrol Ship No. 63. To duration of war man and released Sept., 1919. August Johnson Son of Samuel and Anna Johnson - - Menolninee Husband of Fannie Oreshaski. Enlisted July 16, 1918, Great Lakes, U. S. Navy. To Hampton Roads, Va., and to Key West. Promoted to fireman on U. S. S. Salem. Patrol duty on the Atlantic Coast, Gulf of Mexico and South America. Convoyed twelve submarine chasers and four destroyers. Panama Canal and Azores. Discharged Jan. 27, 1919, Boston. Joseph Stanley Brown Son of Emily and William Brown - - Menomlinee Born Oct. 28, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 8, 1918, Great Lakes, Radio Laboratory. Transferred to Norfolk. Va., Oct. 1, 1918. Transferred to New Londun, Conn., Submarine Base. Discharged Jan. 8, 1919. Llewellyn D. Wilson Son of David G. and Bertha R. Wilson - Menominee Born Aug. 19, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 3, 1918, for four years, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, rated as Lds. Electrician Radio. Discharged June 23, 191l, account temporary disability through illness. George F. Anderson Son of Peter and Anna Anderson - - Menominee Born Jan. 22, 1889, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 15, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes, Co. A, 4th Reg. Overseas Sept. 23, 1918, with cargo of coal. Lost one finger on Battleship Kentucky. Sent to Portsmouth, Va., hospital. Arrived U. S. from St. Nazaire, Jan. 2, 1919. Discharged Aug. 26, 1919, Pittsburgh, Pa. Second class fireman on Kentucky, and first class fireman on Robert M. Thompson. Alfred J. Dumochelle Son of Joseph and Elizabeth Dumochelle - - - - Menominee Born June 6, 1898. Enlisted July 24, 1918, U. S. Navy. Assigned as fireman, Great Lakes. Transferred to Hampton Roads. Discharged July 3, 1919. Leo L. Dumochelle Son of Joseph and Elizabeth Dumochelle - - - - Menominee Born Apr. 30, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted July 10, 1917, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Played full-back on team and received gold football medalAssigned to sea duty at Philadelphia Naval Station. Overseas Jan. 13, 1917. At Liverpool, England, Jan. 27. To Aviation Station, Pouillac, France, interpreter for Commissary Department. Returned to U. S. Dec. 13, 1918. Assigned Pelham Bay Station. Transferreu to Arm-guard Barracks. Discharged Apr. 2, 1919. Albert Philip Giese Son of Ferdinand and Carolina Giese - Menominee Born May 4, 1901, Menominee. Enlisted Nov. 10, 1917, U. S. Navy. Promoted to third Petty Officer July 3, 1918. Released June 10, 1919. [118] 4 4 0 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 i i I I i I I I I I: 9 I l * I Ask ~ -WtfT " - > *, I, Joseph L. Heraly Son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Heral - - M1enolaine Born Mar. 10, 1895, Menominee. Husband of Minnie Heraly. Enlisted Dec. 22, 1917, U. S. Navy. Served as seaman on board U. S. sbips. Discharged Aug. 1, 1919. Gustaf H. Jansen Son of Adolph 0. and Leontine Jansen - Meuomininee Born Aug. 3, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted May 6, 1918. Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes Hospital Corps. Transferred to Bremerton, Wasb. Heleased Oct. 6. 1919. John J. Flynn Son of -Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Flynn - - harris - Born July 3, 1895. Enlisted May 1, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Assigned as seaman to U. S. Naval * Training Station. Transferred to sbip's store as clerk. Transferred to U. S. Naval Air Station, Brooklyn, N. Y., as paymaster. * George A. Lueskow Son of Willianm and Autgunsta Lueskow -Menoininee Born Mar. 7, 1898. Enlisted July 20, 1918, U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Detroit and ordered on sub chaser No. 16 on Atlantic coast. Transferred to No. 35 sub chaser as fireman, also in same capacity on Nos. * 27 and 36. Released Oct. 8, 1919, Detroit'. Daniel Michaud * Son of Peter and Emma Mlchaud - - - Menoniinee Enlisted Dec. 22, 1917, U. S. Navy on call for volunteers. Served two years and transferred to Duration * ofWar Man. Released Apr. 10, 1919. Raleigh Stanley Deacon 4 Son of Samuel and Jennie Deacon- - ----- Channing (Ingalls) Born Feb. 8, 1892. Enlisted May 31, 1918, U. S. Navy l t for 4 years, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes as second class machinist mate. Left Philadelphia for overseas July 13, 1918. Arrived Brest July 23. Promoted first class machinist mate. Arrived U. S. Jan. 31. Stationed at Norfolk, Va. To inactive duty May 23. 1919. Made * previous attempts to enlist in U. S. Cavalry and later in aviation, but refused. Joseph Nick Furst Son of Frank and Anna liurst - -Menomlnee Born Apr. 27, 1897. Enlisted July 16, 1918, Milwauk kee. To Great Lakes, seaman second class. Transferred Oct. 5, 1918 to Norfolk, Va. Transferred to U. S. S. No. Dakota Oct. 30. 1918. Entered Naval Base. Va.. after armistice was signed.. To Cuba, West Indies. through the Panama Canal on guard duty. Discharged June 11, 1919, Great Lakes. I IClifford E. Hamilton Son of Samunel and Margarette HamIlton - Menomlinee 'Born Feb. 27, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted May 17. 1917, Navy, Training Station, Newport, H. I. Transferred to Boston, Mass, navy yard. July 1, 1918, left Boston on the U. S. S. Dyer for England, France, Gibraltar, and Mediterranean Sea. The destroyer Dyer traveled 51.000 miles the first year. Released Aug. 18, 1919, Great Lakes. Warren, G. Moreau Son of (4eorge amid Eiimnia More.n - -- Menominee Born June 26, 1890, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 2. 1918, Great Lakes, for duration of war. To mechanical aviation section. To England, Aviation Base, Aug. * 18, 1918. Returned to U. S. Dec. 23, 1918. To aviation camp near New York. Released Jan. 30, 1919. *) Joseph Neumeier, Jr. Son of Joseph and Mary Nenmeier - - Menomninee Born July 16, 1891. Enlisted 1910, U. S. Navy, Minneapolis. Stationed at San Francisco, Calif. Last stationed as Gen. Postmaster at New York City. Promoted to rank of chief water tender. Arrived home, Key West. Oct. 13, 1918, on furlough. Died five days later of disease. [119] 61 1 IIII I I I i I I I I- -I~-~ — ~~ -` -— ~-;t — T i:7-!:: -— 2- 9 e I -AAA mmm I A1: -- - Yvqws^-_~_ I,' -I ~ -- - - -- ~. I r^l- l --- —- "-r~ I -- 'Ahk - XI I Frank K. Furst Son of Frank and Anna Furst - - - - Menominee Born Aug. 21. 1894, Menominee. Enlisted May 30, 1916, U. S. Navy for 4 years, Menominee. To Great Lakes, first class seaman. Disabled Aug. 29, 1917. Sent to Base Hospital. Discharged Dec. 5, 1917. Kenneth Johnson Son of John and Sofie Johnson - - - - Menominee Born Apr. 21, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted June 8. 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To South Carolina training station, as machine gun operator. Promoted to seaman first class. Released Jan. 1, 1919. Lewis J. Kuber Son of George and Barbara Kuber - - Menominee Born Jan. 17, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted July 15, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Left Nov. 1 for Hampton Roads, Va., Beach rifle range. Transferred to U. S. S. De Kalb, transport for wounded and convalescent men. Commissioned yeoman. Eight trips overseas. Released Aug. 14, 1919, Pittsburgh. William Kaufman Son of Fred and Katherine Kaufman - Menominee Born July 9, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 1, 1918. U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. Assigned 6th Co. 15th Reg. aviation section. At Camp Decatur, Camp Dewey and Great Lakes. Transferred to Naval R. C. Jan. 19, 1919. Fred E. Glanz Son of Edward and Laura Glanz - - - Menominee Born July 12, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Nov., 1916, with Co. L, Menominee. With Co. L. to Mexican border. Discharged Apr. 28, 1917, account dependent relatives. Re-enlisted July 5, 1917, for 4 years U. S. Navy, Ishpeming. To Great Lakes as apprentice seaman. To receiving ship at Philadelphia. Overseas Mar. 12, 1918. Arrived Liverpool Mar. 31. Sent to Killingholm IU. S. aviation base Mar. 22 to Jan. 3, 1919, as bugler in charge of bugle squad. Camp was raided three times by Zeppelins. To Duration of War Man, May 8, and discharged, Boston, Mass. Nels P. Sorensen Son of Rasmus and Anna Sorensen - - Menominee Born Apr. 11, 1890, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 12, 1917, IU. S. N. Reserve Force. To Great Lakes as land machinist mate. Promoted to second land machinist mate Aug. 10, 1918. First class machinist mate Sept. 15, 1918, and chief machinist mate Mar. 1, 1919. Anthony Schick Son of Anton and Angeline Schick - - Menominee Born Oct. 5. 1892. Enlisted June 19, 1916, Co. L. With Co. L to Mexican border. Discharged Mar. 28, 1917, Fort Wayne, account dependent relatives. Reenlisted Jan. 5, 1918, Naval Aviation, Milwaukee. Called to service Mar. 2, 1918. Ordered to Charleston, South Carolina, where he was promoted to drill master. To Mount Pleasant, S. C. Promoted to machinist mate first class. Discharged Mar. 22, 1919. Otto Schulz Son of Otto and Anna Schulz - - - - Menominee Born Dec. 17, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted July 7, 1917, Menominee. To Great Lakes and transferred to Radio Service Sept. 18, 1917. Promoted to Instructor at Dumwoody Institute, Minneapolis. Transferred to U. S. Naval Radio school, Cambridge, Mass., Dec. 17, 1917. Wireless Telephone school. Promoted to electrician second class. Ordered to U. S. S. Broad Arrow oil tanker and sent overseas to Havre, France. Then to Naval Base, Portsmouth, and to U. S. Submarine Chaser No. 262, patrol duty, English Channel. Arrived U. S. from Brest, May 14, 1919. Discharged June 16, 1919. Harold Christophersen Son of Nels and Emma Christophersen - Menominee Born Mar. 24, 1900. Enlisted July 6, 1918, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes as wireless operator. Transferred to Minneapolis. To Harvard University. Assigned to U. S. S. Batgan, and U. S. S. Southard. Overseas twice with Merchant Marines. Still in service. Carl A. Lundin Nephew of Charles and Christine Martinsen - - - Menominee Born Apr. 2, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted July 5, 1916, U. S. Navy for 4 years, Menominee. To Great Lakes as seaman. Promoted to petty officer and later to assistant quartermaster on U. S. battleships, which were active in taking over the German fleets after armistice. [120] I I -I 4 1+ 0 4 4 4 U 4 f) Wilumm-P 1114 1 4 AIL AL. i ~nIT~r i ~k -&A *L _: C...,, ___, ___ _ _,,. — ^- —. ][2~~ 7U Francis Marcouiler. Son of Maxime and Azelia Mareouiller - Menominee Born Sept. 20,- 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 6, 1917, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To U. S. S. Imperator as first class seaman. Promoted to store keeper and petty officer. Overseas and stationed at Bor- [ ^^:'.. J.. deaux, France, for 18 months as-interpreter. Returned [/': Son of Herman and Augusta Bertholdt - Menomninee 9 | ' 1 l Born Dec. 27, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 5,! --- I.. 1918. IT. S. Navy, Menominee. To Great Lakes. Assigned to UC. S. S. South Haven as apprentice seaman. it.:' Transferred to Boston. Released Feb. 10, 1919. Martin G. Monson Son of Carl and Mary Monson - - - - Menominee Born AugS. 15, 1899. Enlisted May 16, 1918, U. S. Navy, Menominee. To Camp Decatur, Great Lakes. Transferred to l'hiladelphia. Six trips overseas, U. S. [...,~ ] S. Finland. Discharged Oct. 11, 1919, Camp Berry, as first class seaman. Harold Klar > Son of Olaf and Anna Klar - Menominee Born lar. 9, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted May 15, 1918, IT. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, machinist's mate, second class. To Philadelphia. June:a. * 18, 1918, to Ebbingham, England. Transferred to Sub Chaser 343. Left for U. S. Feb. 16, 1919, touching at I Brest. Lisbon, Portugal, Azores, and Bermuda, where:::: Sub Chaser was sunk in the harbor. Transferred to - S. C. 352. Arrived I. S. May 15, 1919. Released June 19, 1919, Great Lakes. Albert William Raymaker ISon of Henry and Anna Rayniaker - - Menonninee Born Sept. 18. 1892, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1917, U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, Co. 64, Camp Farrigut. Overseas July 18, 1918. Arrived Brest July 30. To shore repair unit. Left Weymouth, Eng* land, Oct. 26, 1919. Arrived IT. S. Nov. 11. Released. -arles Ourada --- 1917, for 4 years. S. Navy, Detroit. To Norfolk, Va. to first class machinist mate Jan. 4, 1918. To U. S. S. Active in the war zone 18 months. Returned u. S. 4 Planes Nos. NC3 and NC4. To Cuba, Azore Islands China and Japan in same capacity. To South America and trazil. Released July 22, 1919, Great Lakes. Born Mar. 18, 1897,.enominee. Enlisted in and ' canaba. Enlisted June 12, 1918, m. S. Navy, Menominee. To Puget Sound, Wash., rated chief petty officer. Released Mar. 5. 1919, Puoget Sound. Son of Joseph Hnilinka and Anna Hoilub - - - 1918, IT. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Camp Decatur. 3rd Reg. Co. F, 4th Div. Overseas June 14, 1918, at Brest. pedoed. To Base Hospital, Brest, and to Naval Hospital, Washington. B. C. To Torpedo Destroyer IT S. a S. Flusser. Arrived IT. S. from Brest Sept. 3. Discharged Oct. 13, 1918, Washington, B. C. Promoted to Frederick G. Buelow Born May 16, 1900. Enlisted Aug. 14, 1918, U. S. Promoted to seaman second class. Discharged Jan. 21, Released Apr., 1919. '-~ 4 ' 'i ** i. ~'~*'''~ d/ I I I I I I I ^ ^ I I I W" A,i:::&6:~::::t,:: -:.-::j. 0.. - stm~9 Orlw i I 0 0 George A. St. Germain Son of (;eorge and Delia St. Germain - Menominee Born July 10, 1894. Enlisted Feb. 8, 1918, '8. S. Navy. Promoted petty officer, Naval Aviation Dept. Released Aug., 1919. Lawrence Arthur Bouche Son of Charley andl Julia Bonche - - - Menonlinee Born Apr. 29, 1895. Enlisted Dec. 12. 1917, U. S. Navy, Marinette. To Great Lakes. Assigned to 2nd Reg. Camp Dewey. Crossed ocean eight times, convoy duty. Battleship Kansas. Released June 30, 1919, Philadelphia, Pa. Promoted to fireman, 3rd class, Dec. 12, 1917. Seaman 2nd class Apr. 1, 1918. Seaman 1st class Nov. 1, 1918. Gunner's mate 3rd class petty officer Feb. 1. 1919. Master at Arms Apr. 1. 1919. Alfred Schmidt Son of Carl and Augusta Schmnidt - - Menominee Born Jan. 4, 1897. Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 2, 1917, U. S. Navy. To Radio Electrician dept. To Cambridge, Mass.. as Radio Electrician. Transferred to Duration of War Man. Discharged Apr. 1, 1919. Homer L. Hebert Son of John Hebert and Dainia Hebert laduron - Menomninee Born Feb. 12, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 11, 1917, I'. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, landsman electrician, Naval Radio school. To insurance dept. on receiving ship, Great Lakes, as yeoman, third class. Promoted to yeoman, second class, on receiving ship N. Y. Ordered to U. S. Santa Paula. Crossed ocean ten times. T'o St. Nazaire, Bordeaux, Marseilles, and Brest. Promoted to first class yeoman, later chief yeoman, and chief petty officer. Discharged Aug. 23, 1919, New York. Robert A. Van Den Berg Son of Martin and Adele Van Den Berg - Menominee Born July 2, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 10. 1917, IT. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Instructor naval aviation dept. Remained two years. Promoted Chief Petty Officer. Released Jan. 1, 1919. James J. Bretl Son of l,onis and Katherine Bretl - - - Menoninee Born Dec. 28, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 14, 1919, U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. Second class seaman, Great Lakes. Promoted to first class seaman. Discharged July 25, 1919, to re-enter school. George A. Patrie Son of Godfrey and Josephine Patrie - - - Nadeau Born Feb. 14, 1893. Enlisted Jan. 5, 1918, Ul. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes. Transferred to Harvard Radio school June 22, 1918. Completed course as second class electrician. To Otter Cliffs Radio Station Nov. 12. Promoted first class electrician June 1, 1919. Discharged Sept. 21, 1919, Boston. Howard R. Morrison Son of Frank and Anna Morrison - - - Menoninee Born May 22, 1897. Enlisted July 19, 1918, Milwaukee. Aviation dept., Great Lakes, machinist mate. Transferred to Co. J. 2nd Reg., Camp Dewey. To C. M., 15th Reg., aviation camp. Discharged Dec. 23. 1919, Camp Berry. Anton Antochowski Menomninee Born Sept. 4, 1899. Enlisted Mar. 10, 1918. U. S. Navy for 4 years. To Great Lakes as seaman. To Norfolk, Va. Several trips overseas. Transferred to Duration of War Man. To inactive service Sept. 4, 1919. Edward J. Desjardin Son of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Desjardin - Menoninee Born Apr. 29, 1900. Enlisted June 9, 1918, U. S. Navy. Marinette. To Puget Sound, U. S. Explorer on Pacific waters. Transferred to Norfolk, Va., New York, and placed on J. S. De Kalb as gun pointer. Later to France, making two trips. Injured on last trip. To hospital, Hampton Roads, Apr. 20, 1919. Discharged June 28, 1919. Received honors as sharpshooter. [122] I Q 0 4 4 if *1 0 4!! I' -- ---- ------- ---- — -- ------ - - ---------- 40- I,.4. -- s L i - - or -RO N 4 Kermit Fre Son of Richard and Rose Born Jan. 15, 1891. I Navy, Milwaukee. To C Bremerton, Wash. Rele: R. F. _J Y U *s v - - I Y5 -:derick Kleinke Kleinke - - - Menominee Enlisted June 28, 1918, IU. S.?reat Lakes. Transferred to ased after assigned tU. S. N. 1 Ii 1 + Earl L. Dobeas Son of Louis and Dorothea Dobeas - - - Ingalls (Menoininee) Born Nov. 23, 1884. Husband of Maud C. Williams. Enlisted Dec. 4. 1904, as apprentice seaman. Chicago. U. S. training ship, Norfolk, Va. IT. S. Prairie, Mar. 6 to June 1, 1905. Promoted to seaman June 1, 1905. Transferred to U. S. Illinois, Atlantic fleet, Rear Admiral Evans' Atlantic cruise from Hampton Roads to Magellan Straits to San Francisco, Dec. 16. 1907. to May 6, 1908. Transferred to U. S. Maine in May, 1908. Trip around the world, 1909, to Dec., 1909. Transferr:ed to 1. S. S. Virginia, Louisiana. New Hampshire. Sept., 1915. transferred to U. S. S. Brooklyn. During the war, patrol duty. Pacific and Asiatic waters. Still in service. Arthur B. Siegel Son of August Siegel and Selma Siegel (Lundberg) Menominee Born July 21. 1892. Menominee. Enlisted July 19, 1918, Merchant Marine fireman, Boston. Machinist training school, Boston. Assigned U. S. S. Fredericksburg. T'ransferred to U. S. S. Jones. Stricken with influenza and pneumonia. Removed to St. Vincent hospital. Norfolk, Va., where he died Jan. 22, 1919. Re.mains sent to Menominee for burial. Felix W. Zielowski Son of Frank and Hattie Zielowski - - Menolninee Born Sept. 17. 1898, Menominee. Enlisted June 30. 1918, U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes. Fireman on transport Navassa. Roy E. Birmingham Son of James and Ida Birmingham - - Menominee Born July 13. 1896. Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 24, 1918 IU. S. Navy for 4 years. To Great Lakes, landsman machinist's mate. Transferred to U. S. N. R. F. Released, active duty, Jan. 10, 1919. Great Lakes. Norman A. Hansen Son of Hillna and Olaf Hansen - - - Menonminee Born Mar. 24, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted June 10. 1918, Milwaukee. To Puget Sound, Wash., 2nd Div. of firemen. On IT. S. S. Brutus, Gridley, Williams and Hale. In Baltic Sea, Mediterranean and Black Sea. In Spalto Dalmatia against Italians and in Southern Russia against Bolshevists. At Odessa and Tifli. Russia. Constantinople, Cairo, Egypt. Athens and Corfu. Greece. Venice, Toronto. Naples, Rome, Genoa, Monte Carlo-Algiers, Gibraltar. Arrived U. S. Mar. 30, 1920. Released Apr. 2. 1920. Philadelphia Navy Yard. Promoted to fireman, second class. Jan. 1, 1919, and fireman. first class, Nov. 25. 1919. Jens P. Wheaton Son of Peter and Sena Wheaton - - - Menominee Born Sept. 17, 1894. Menominee. Husband of Marion Hubbard. Enlisted Feb., 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes training station. Machinist, Naval Aviation dept. Discharged Feb. 10. 1919, Great Lakes. Walter Leopold Nohlechek Son of John and Anna Nohleehek - - - Menominee Born May 13, 1897. Enlisted IT. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Discharged Feb. 18, 1920, Great Lakes. Rated as chief musician. Clarence J. Vogels Son of Jean and Anna Vogels - - - - Menominee Born May 1, 1899. Enlisted May 14, 1918. To Great Lakes. To Harvard University as radio electrician. Overseas July 27, IT. S. S. Kroonland. Arrived Brest Aug. 6, 1918. To Poliac, France, aviation station, Aug. 10, to Jan. 12. Testing wireless apparatus on aviation planes and installing wireless. Arrived U. S. Jan. 26. Discharged Feb. 26, 1919, Pelham Bay Naval Station. Julius C. Larsen Son of John C. and Hannah Larsen - - Menominee Born July 9. 1890, Menominee. Enlisted May 4. 1918, IL. S. Navy. Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, machinist's mate, second class. Released June 4, 1919, Great Lakes. [123] 4 4 4 4 0 0 f 4 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 I $ e 0 I 0 0 * ( I t * 41~.-mm ".0 0- 1.0.0. 41.- *I.0. -41. lw - - >01W4lw*lwC I l -r —2 L - -- L~ Mr r.1 I *i William B. Bourgois Son of Michael and Melvina Bourgols - Menominee Born Nov. 29, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted July 7, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Assigned as seaman, Puget Sound Navy Yard. Released Jan. 8, 1919. George F. Cole Son of JohiL G. and Bertha Cole - - - Menominee 'I I k~~lSj -Born Jan. 16, 1894. Enlisted Jan. 18, 1918, Ishpeming. Machinist's mate, aviation. At Charleston, S. C. Transferred to Pensacola, Fla., Apr. 24, 1918. Second class machinist's mate rating Sept. 1, 1918. Qualified as flight mechanic Passed chief petty officers' examination Nov. 10, 1918, as engineer gunner. Discharged Jan. 10, 1919, Pensacola, Fla. n of l John A. Rabitoy Son of Michael and Emma Rabitoy Stephenson Born Mar. 13, 1900. Enlisted Feb., 1918, Munising, Rich. To Great Lakes and to Zion City, Ill. Frank J. Kubiak Son of Jos*4eph and, Josephine Kuhiak - Menominee |.. |Born Mar. 31, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 17, 1917, IT. S. Navy, Chicago. To Norfolk, Va., training station. U. S. Transport Ryndam, U. S. S. Kearsarge. Thirteen trips overseas, transport duty. Witnessed sinking of IT. S. S. President Lincoln, U. S. S. Covington and torpedoing of Ur. S. S. Mount Vernon. In three submarine battles. Released Oct. 28, 1919, Great * akes, as first class petty officer. Louis Larsen, Jr. Son of Louis and Henriette Lnarsen Menomninee Born Oct. 8, 1902. Enlisted IT. S. Navy. To San Francisco, Calif., assigned to Co. B., 7th Barracks. Still in service. Harold F. Hanson Son of Fred and Anna Hanson - - - - Menominee Born Dec. 31, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 3, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Assigned to rifle range, Glensborrow. Md. Caldwell, N. Y. Brooklyn, N. Y. Discharged May 3, 1919. Herbert Lester Hanson Son of Fred and Anna Hanson - - - - Menominee Born Nov. 26, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted May 17, 1917. U. S. Navy. Assigned as cook, naval kitcben, Great Lakes. Remained until discharged July 17, 1919. George R. Todish Son of George and Josephine Todish Menominee Born June 19, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 15, 1917, Milwaukee. To Naval Training Station. Newport, R. I. Transferred to Portsmouth, N. H. Ordered on U. S. S'. Des Moines. Overseas to Azores Island, Portugal, France, England and Russia. At Archangel Apr. 10. 1919, 'to relieve UT. S. troops. Returned to U. S. Nov., 1919. Promoted to petty officer in Russia. Released June, 1920. Frank E. Michaels Son of Frank and Marie Michaels - - - Menomninee Born Aug. 29, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 13, 1917, for 4 years, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes. apprentice seaman. Promoted, first class seaman Apr. 1, 1 1918. Transferred to Duration of War Man and discharged Great Lakes July 26, 1919. 1 ~Arthur P. Peterson Son of Nels and Bertha Peterson - Menominee Born Aug. 23, 1891, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1917. Menominee. To Norfolk, Va., training station. To Atlantic fleet. U. S. S. Illinois. Transferred to LT. S. S. Radnor. To Peru and Chili for nitrates. Attacked by submarine off Cape Hatteras. To Marseilles. Bordeaux. St. Nazaire, France. Transferred to hospital T,orient, France, and to Base No. 5 at Brest. To South Hampton and took over German ships. On captured Kaiserine Augusta Victoria to Brest. Transferred to Graf Waldersee, landing in UT. 5. Apr., 1919. To Brest, transport duty. In collision with English ship in a fog off Fire Island, N. Y. Transferred to UT. S. S. Imperator, making 4 trips to Brest. Discharged Sept. 10, 1919, Pittsburgh. [124] * AL * c: =o * * r -IIL~ II xIen ww) wr"" i i I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 I I 4 4 4 I 4 * K? - 6~ 1111 m0 w QII MO -— L — — ~i~_ --- —~IC __* ---_-~IL —_IILIIL --- Clarence E. Montpas Son of Jean and Ida Montpas - - - - Menominee Born Jan. 31, 1902. Menominee. Enlisted July 11. 1918. To Great Lakes as musician. Later transferred to Bremerton. William J. Payne Son of John and Mary Payne - - - - Menominee Born Feb. 1, 1898. Enlisted Jan. 1, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes as seaman. Three trips across the ocean on lU. S. S. Georgia. Promoted to first class seaman and discharged Apr. 14, 1919. Clifford W. Payne Son of William and Nellie Payne - - - Menominee Born Feb. 10, 1899. Enlisted Jan. 2, 1918, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. In service two years. Released May. 1920. George S. Hebert Son of John Hebert and Damiia Hebert Laduron - Menominee Born Jan. 7, 1889, Menominee. Enlisted Nov. 3, 1916, U. S. Navy. San Francisco. To Bremerton, Wash., Navy Yard, U. S. S. Colorado, later the U. S. S. Pueblo, Pacific Coast, Panama Canal, Argentine and Atlantic Coast Patrol Duty. Four convoy trips overseas. To receiving ship, N. Y. To Boston engineering school. To U. S. McDermott. Discharged Nov., 1920. Promoted from fireman, third, second, first class to petty officer. Ellis P. McCue Son of William and Mathilda McCue - - Menominee Born Feb. 21, 1890, Menominee. Enlisted, 191.6, U. S. Navy. Overseas eight times. Stationed Irish Coast. Transferred Submarine Chaser No. 52, which sunk two German submarines. To hospital, being disabled. Discharged Dec. 12, 1918, Portsmouth, Va. Edmond G. Gamache Son of Peter and Ora Gamache - - - Hermansville Born Sept. 1, 1887. Enlisted June 7, 1918, U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Puget Sound, Bremerton, Wash. Seaman U. S. S. West Omaha Sept. 26, 1918. Left New York for overseas Nov. 21, 1918. Returned to New York Jan. 12. To receiving ship, Bay Ridge. Discharged Feb. 15, 1919. Reynold J. Houte Son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Houte - - - Nathan Born May 20, 1897. Enlisted June 6, 1918, Marinette. To Great Lakes, seaman second class. Transferred to Hampton Roads, U. S. S. Minnesota. To Philadelphia receiving ship. Transferred to naval air station at Miami, Fla. Transferred U. S. N. R. F. Feb. 6, 1919. Lyle L. Williams Son of Henry and Rosa Williams - - Cedar River Born Jan. 30, 1891. Enlisted Nov. 24, 1917. U. S. Navy, Menominee. Third class fireman, Great Lakes. To Philadelphia Navy Yard. Overseas Jan. 27, 1918. IT. S. S. Philadelphia, to Liverpool. Holyhead, England, Kingstown Island, Queenstown, Ireland. To U. S. Barracks. Transferred to J. S. S. Melville. Returned to U. S. Jan. 5, 1919. Left N. Y. for Ponta Delgada, taking on oil for the seaplanes making first trans-Atlantic flight. Returned with damaged NC3 to N. Y. To Boston. Transferred to Norfolk training station. Discharged Aug. 2, 1919, Great Lakes, fireman, first class. Alvin Williams Son of Henry and Rosa Williams - - Cedar River Born Oct. 30, 1887. Husband of Ethel Barker. Enlisted Nov. 21, 1917, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To Newport News. To U. S. S. Maine as fireman. Transferred to Ellis Island, N. Y. To U. S. S. Mallory. Ten trips overseas to France, as fireman. Discharged Feb. 26, 1919. Albert Knudsen Son of Carl and Sophie Knudsen - - - Menominee Born July 13, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Nov. 9, 1917, U. S. Navy for 4 years, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, apprentice seaman, U. S. S. President Lincoln, torpedoed off French coast and sunk eighteen minutes after being struck at 8:00 o'clock in the morning. Knudsen was saved by hanging to raft for 18 hours. Rescued by two American destroyers. German submarine emerged one hour later, picking up one man and claiming that they did not have room for more. Arrived Brest June 2, 1918, and returned on U. S. S. Great Northern. Later assigned to Leviathan U. S. S. Martha Washington, U. S. S. Northern Pacific. Made sitxeen trips overseas. Transferred to Duration of War Man. Discharged Sept. 19, 1919, Pittsburgh, Pa. [125] I -- I- --- I I -- 9 | | - - I ". -... M.... - - i iilWS h I I I I I I) f 4 4 4 4 AM I -- - iwio m l,. -. l L TtT ^ ^ fAT — Carl Dewey Haglund Son of Otto and Ella Haglnd - - Menoinee Born June 24, 1898. Enlisted Jan. 2. 1918. To Great Lakes. Several trips overseas. Released Apr., 1919. |o Edward C. Dumochelle Son of Joseph and Elizabeth Dumnoehelle - Menominee B Bl or n Jan. 8, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted July 27; 1918,. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To rifle range, l Camp Logan. Transferred Hampton Roads, U. S. S. N. Dakota, first dreadnaught to pass through the Panama Canal Jan. 8. 1919. Transferred to U. S. S. Arcadia. Released U. S. N. R. C. Oct. 5, 1919. Levarn Pothie Son of leo and Flora Pothie - - - - Menominee HI:| Born Feb. 16, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 22, * I1917, U. S. Navy. In service eighteen months as seaman. Released Mar. 15, 1919. ][B* Harold W. Peterson Son of Charles and Carrie Peterson - - Menominee Born 'Oct. 22, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 2, 1 [ [ H 1918, IU. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes as seai man. Course in Arm Guard school. Discharged May 1.7, 1919. Edward F. Murray I I CSon of Edward WV. and Mary J. Murray - Menominee ' d I Born Apr. 1, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted July 1, 1918, for four years U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, t] [ 1,second class seaman. Promoted to first class seaman I Aug. 31, 1918. Released Jan. 28, 1919. | |George P. Nesbitt Sl on of Andrew and Annie Nesbitt - - Menomninee Born July 21, 1898. Enlisted Jan. 25. 1918, U. S. Navy, Ishpeming. T'o Great Lakes radio division. Overseas to Brest. Minesweeping Bay of Biscay. Released Oct. 4, 1919, Bay Ridge. N. Y. Harold Stecker Son of George and Marie Jane Stecker - Hernansville Born Jan. 16, 1898. Enlisted May 6, 1917, U. S. Navy, [*i[ Ishpeming. To Great Lakes, apprentice seaman. Pro- it moted to second class seaman Aug. 1, 1917. To Subschool Feb. 19. To Submarine A9. Overseas to the | Azores July 28, 1918, arriving Nov. 1, 1918. Discharged | Aug. 8, 1919, Great Lakes, Ill. While on Submarine A9, promoted gunner's mate, third class, Mar. 1, 1918. Clifford Beattie Son of William and Jessie Beattie - - Menominee [ [!:;; Born Feb. 27, 1896. Enlisted Dec. 27, 1917, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To Norfolk, Va., U. S. S. Maine until Nov. 21, 1918. To U. S. S. New Mexico at N. Y. Discharged Nov. 21, 1919. Elmer Larsen Son of Louis and Henriette Larsen - Menominee Born Jan. 13, 1900. Enlisted Mar. 6, 1919, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Petty Officer, U. S. S. North Carolina. One trip overseas. Injured and sent to Bremerton, Wash., Marine Hospital. Carl John Jones Son of John E. and Eleanor Jones - - Menominee Born Feb. 14, 1900. Enlisted Feb. 14, 1918, Menominee. To Great Lakes. To Hampton Roads, on sea duty. Transferred from seaman to fireman, U. S. S. Virginia. Convoy duty until armistice. Later transport service. Crossed the ocean fourteen times. Released July 16, 1919, as first class seaman, Great Lakes. [126] 4.- - - i Z 4 -L -L — L A - -. --- 1 w lw w % =.0* -; # John George Wizner Son of George and Francis Wizner - - ~ Menominee Born June 15, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted May 18, 1918, Marinette. To Great Lakes. On board U. S. S. Transport Orizaba, June 9, 1918, to May, 1919. Eleven overseas trips. Released May, 1919. William S. Ounsworth Son of AVilliani H. and Sarah Ounsworth - - - Menominee Born Nov. 6, 1899. Enlisted May 26, 1917. Great Lakes, Coast Guard and Inspection Service as apprentice seaman. Promoted first class seaman Apr.. 1918. Coxswain U. S. Ship Isla de Luzon in submarine zone off Nova Scotia. To torpedo station, Newport. R. I. Cited by Secretary Daniels. extraordinary bravery saving life of Engineer Wallendahl, May 8, 1918, at the risk of his own life. William Paul Son of Edward and Josephine Paul - - Menonminee Born March 23, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted U. S. Navy when call issued for volunteers. Made three overseas trips U. S S. Arkansas, carrying troops and supplies. Transf. to Duration of War Man and released April 4. 1919. Paul W. Donnell, Son of Mr. and Mrs. Bradley WV. Donnell - Menominee Born Feb. 6, 1900. Enlisted June 25, 1917, U. S. Navy for 4 years, at Menominee. To Newport, R. I., as apprentice seaman. Promoted to second class seaman July 15, 1917. Transferred to Boston receiving ship. Transferred to U. S. S. America, Charleston Navy Yard. Promoted to seaman first class Sept. 1. 1917. Transferred to receiving ship at New York, to U. S. S. Calamares, to U. S. S. Iowan, to U. S. S. Dakotan. On U. S. S. Dakotan, promoted to storekeeper third class Feb. 19, 1919. Storekeeper second class May 1, 1919. Made 17 trips overseas, transport duty. Attacked by submarines six times during the seventeen trips. Louis A. Menacher Son of Louis and Josephine Menacher - Menominee Born Nov. 30, 1893. Enlisted May 18, 1918, for 4 years, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes as band musician. Transferred to Detroit. Promoted to second class musician and on Dec. 22, 1918. to first class. Released active duty June 25. 1919, Detroit. Carl Albert Lindquist Son of John and Emnnla Lindquist - - Menominee Born Jan. 2, 1899. Menominee. Enlisted Apr.. 1917, IT. S. Navy. To Newport. R. 1. Overseas to France and Adriatic seaports. Left Spalato, Italy, for IU. S. June 30, 1919, stopping at French ports. Arrived IT. S. July 30. Discharged Sept. 1, 1920. Alex Pecote Son of David and Sofie Pecote - - - Menominee Born Mar. 16, 1892. Enlisted Feb. 4, 1917, I. S. Navy. Stationed on the S. S. Northern Pacific. William Burger Son of Fred and Saloma Burger - - - Menominee Born Jan. 21, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 29. 1918. U. S. Navy for duration of war, Marinette. To Camp Logan, Ill., rifle range. Transferred to Peekskill, N. Y. Released Apr. 23, 1919, Brooklyn Navy Yard. and assigned U. S. N. R. F. Harold E. De Gaynor Son of Napoleon and Belle De Gaynor - Menominee Born Mar. 27, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted June 18. 1918, U. S. Naval Aviation Mechanical Corps. Green Bay. To Aviation Unit, Great Lakes, mechanical dept., pilot mechanic. Promoted to machinist mate, second class. Discharged Jan. 9, 1919. Ralph C. Donnell Son of Mr. and Mrs. Bradley W. Donnell - - - Menomninee Born Feb. 6, 1900. Enlisted May 20, 1917, U. S. Navy, Menominee. To Newport, R. I. To U. S. S. America. Overseas Nov. 3, 1917. Three days out at sea when he lost his eyesight by shell concussion. To Brest hospital. Returned U. S. to Brooklyn Naval Hospital. Sight was restored Jan., 1918. Released from duty Feb. 18, 1918, Brooklyn. [127] ^TSXJJ^ — - - -^W 'A A-M " I l I loffii!.. E S:: 0P- XC,0iR.4 4 i 4 I t * 4 4 4 4 I I MW - - - - I I! "W - ----- -,.,, I F —Nmmwwe > -" r -*- g ^* - k - - " I Walter P. Elcheroth 4 Son of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Eleheroth - Menominee Born Mar. 31, 1897. Enlisted U. S. Navy on call for volunteers. Promoted to Quartermaster, second class. Released, 1919. Frank Schumacher Son of Henry and Mary Schnmacher - Menominee Born Jan. 29, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 14, 1917, l. S. iey. Milwaukee. To Great La ke To I. S. S. Montana, transport convoy. Overseas eleven times. Transferred to Bumkin Island, Mass. Transferred Dec. 6, 1918, to Hingham. Mass. Trans*ferred to U. S. S. Kentucky on cruise. To Portland, Me.. on Liberty Ship, in Liberty Loan drives. Released June 4, 1919, Great Lakes. Sidney M. Stewart Son of Charles and Cynthia Stewart - M- enominee Born Apr. 20, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Nov. 4, * 1917. 11.. Navy for 4 years, at Menominee. To Great I Lakes. As seaman second class to Norfolk Naval l^^^l *ft^^^ B Rase. Transferred to U. S. S. Nevada. On convoy duty between British Isles and France. At surrender S German fleet, Firstinforth. Scotland. Convoyed President Wilson to Brest. Arrived U. 5. Jan. 2, 1919. Attended Spring Maneuvers, Cuba, to Aug. 15. Transferred Duration of ar RO), an. Released Aug. 251 1919. Edward J. Wortner Son of Jos Aoptep and Mary ortner To nn - - enoinee Born, Menominee. Sailor by trade. Assigned to Naval service on Merchant Marine boats during war. * 1 Discharged from U. S. Naval service May 10, 1919. Alva Ahearn Son of Cornelius and Clara Ahearn - - MtenoinInee Born Aug. 2, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 2, 1918, U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes, 7th lM IReg. Transferred to Harvard Radio school. At Phil*i adelphia, U. 5. 5. Watonwan. U. S. Naval Radio Station, North Head, Wash. Discharged at Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, Wash.. Dec. 11, 1919. Promoted to electrician, third class (HO), Oct. 2, 1918. Electrician, second class (hO), May 4, 1919. Electrician, first class (HO), Aug. 12, 1919. Bernard J. McGinnis Adopted son of Margnreth and Tomr McGinnis Dg *Powers Born May 12, 1895, Milwaukee. Enlisted May 5. 1917, I. S. Navy for 4 years, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes as apprentice seaman. To Sub Chaser No. 175, Port Clinton, Ohio. To Brooklyn Navy Yard. To 324th sub chaser, Bermuda Islands. Returned to U. S. and.1 f tered diving and gunnery class Feb. 15, 1918. Transferred to naval aviation, Rockaway, Long Island. Made aerial trips as observer in gunnery. To Wash*ington, D. C., seaman's gunner's class. Aug. 28, to Duration of War Man. Discharged Sept. 4, 1919. Promoted to gunner's mate, second class, June, 1918. * Henry W. Woberg Son of Peter and Kristine Woberg Daggett Born Mar. 28, 1897. Enlisted July 18, 1918, U. S. Navy. Menominee. To Great Lakes, Ill. Cape May, N. Y. Promoted second class engineer. Released Aug. 7 9William Thoune 4 Son of Emnna-nnuel and Sarah Thoune - - - - - Stephenson (Daggett) Born Sept. 2, 1893. Enlisted Apr. 5, 1918, U. S. Navy, * Ishpeming. To Great Lakes, as apprentice seaman. Hampton Roads, Va. To U. S. S. Virginia, as fireman. Convoy duty from Sept. 15, till after Nov. 11. Trans* Gra La Henry W. Edgerly Son of David and Mary Edgerly Stephenson Born Oct. 5, 1888. Enlisted Feb. 16, 1.918, U. S. Navy [for 4 years, Milwaukee. Assigned to U. S. S. Francis Barton, John River. Still in service. Ulmont F. Walton Son of Cyrus and Mary Walton - - - - Daggett Born Sept. 23, 1892. Enlisted Feb. 17, 1918, IT. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes. Transferred to N. Y., U. S. S. Destroyer Stringham, Mar. 28, 1918. Sailed for France Apr. 11, 1918. Convoy duty on French, Irish, and English coast, Apr. 10, to Nov. 26. 1.918. [128] *IL ~rr~ L ~4t~ ~ c_ ~ -+- ~ ~L i ~ b ~ -~~~~r~~ ---S~ ----~T~ ---~~"~rr ~ ~ PII C~~~I=III'l( Robert Smith - * f Son of Sain and Mary Sinith - - - - Megnominee Born Apr. 4, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Nov. 28. 1917. Stationed Municipal Pier until May 4. Ordered - S. S. J P. Reiss as cadet. Finished course Pelham Bay Park. Ensign Dec. 5, 1918. Discharged Mar. 10, 1919. m 4 4 i 4 4 4 4 r, (r I l I I William Carpenter Cook Son of Charles 1. and Elizabeth Cook - Menoninee Born Dec. 10, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 12, 1917, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To Sault Ste. Marie as storekeeper. Relieved from duty Apr. 15, 1919. Curry S. Prescott Son of Fred M. and Luella M. Prescott - Menominee Born Apr. 6, 1888. Husband of Lyle L. Comstock. Member Michigan Naval Militia since Sept., 1914. Ordered active service Apr. 6, 1917. To Navy Yard, Philadelphia. Assigned U. S. S. Massachusetts and later U. S. S. Iowa. To Converted Yacht U. S. S. Harvard, Engineer Officer, June 4, 1917. Promoted to Senior Deck Officer. Sailed from N. Y. with fleet of six yachts for Brest, France, June 9, 1917. Fleet known as "The Suicide Fleet" of the French Coast Patrol. Arrived Brest, France, July 4, 1917. Until Aug. 13, 1918, patrol and convoy duty French coast and English Channel. Confirmed in rank of Lieut. in U. S. N. R. F., class 2. July 1, 1918. To St. Nazaire, France, as Ass't U. S. Naval Port Officer. Aug. 13, 1918. Ordered to Destroyer U. S. S. Whipple Dec. 6, 1918. Arrived Navy Yard Philadelphia Jan. 3, 1919. Relieved active duty Feb.14, 1919. Walter E. Henes Son of John and Rosa Henes - - - - Menoininee Born Nov. 16, 1888. Enlisted Dec. 11, 1917, U. S. Naval Reserve. Commissioned Ensign U. S. N. R. F. Sept. 9, 1918. Served as Division Officer U. S. S. Argonne, between Hampton Roads and Bordeaux, France. until Feb. 1, 1919. Released active service Feb. 14, 1919. Arthur Paul Madden Son of Jerry and Elizabeth Madden - Menomlinee Born June 13, 1890. Entered U. S. S. Naval service July 6, 1917, chief yeoman, Great Lakes. Transferred Nov. 28, 1917, to Naval Intelligence office, Washington, D. C. Assigned Confidential Files Feb. 15, 1918. Later operator Naval Intelligence. Oct. 5 commissioned Ensign. Nov. 1 in charge investigations in D. C. Jan. 1. 1919, in charge of plant protection section and naval contract investigations under Rear Admiral Roger Wellis. July 19, 1919, commissioned Lieut., junior grade. Aug. 15, 1919, released from active duty. Aug. 25, 1919, took position special agent, Intelligence unit, Internal Revenue, Treasury Dept., Washington, D. C. Fred H. Prescott Son of Fred M. and Luella M. Prescott - Menominee Born Oct. 15, 1891. Enlisted June 16. 1917, machinist's mate, second class, Newport, R. I. In August and September, 1917, detailed special gas engineering course, Columbia University, New York. Oct. 1, 1917, to Nantucket Section Base No. 3, acting chief machinist's mate SP. 614 Coast Patrol. June 21. 1918. U. S. S. Minnesota, junior engineer officer. Sept. 23, 1918, Washington. Promotions: Nov. 1917, machinist's mate, first class, June 5, 1918, Ensign. Inactive list Dec. 7, 1918. James C. Prescott Son of Fred M. and Luella M. Prescott - Menolninee Born July 13, 1893. Enlisted June 16, 1917, Newport, R. I. Nov. and Dec., 1917, special gas engineering course, Columbia University, N. Y. Promoted chief machinist's mate, assigned Submarine Chaser No. 266 in charge engine room. Detailed to Provincetown section. Promotions: Aug. 1917, machinist's mate, first class. Jan. 1, 1918, chief machinist's mate. Inactive list Feb. 15, 1919. 4 4 4 4 4 I 4 l Joseph Reiter Son of Joseph and Mary Margaret Reiter - Menominee Born Dec. 18, 1883, Menominee. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1905, U. S. Navy, Green Bay. Naval Training Station, Norfolk, Va. Overseas trips during the war and also around the world. In engagements, German submarines, wounded severial times, receiving four medals for sharpshooting and for sinking a German submarine. Still in service. [129]. xi. _mm- - w — -. — [ —[ /I -4.40 4 Ic ~r 7YYrYr le ~C II — -yIIC-PIIIC CII -_ I - '-U -- ---- - -------- Ilrrlrra 411 - fm N --- - -L 41 4 f I OE 0 AX 10 - w + 11 lw ml "W -M _______ So R. E; Cc R] GI Se D, I Don S. Prescott on of Loren L,. and Gertrude S. Prescott - Menominee Born Aug. 2, 1895. Enlisted June 1, 1917, Newport,. I. Received commission U. S. N. R. F. Dec. 26, 1917, nsign. To Annapolis Naval Academy Feb. 11, 1918. ommissioned regular service May 30, 1918. To U. S. S. hode Island June 8, 1918, Engineering Officer. Naval un Factory. Washington, D. C. Inspector of Ordnance ept. 16. 1918. Ordered to Colorado Springs. Colo., ec.. 1918. Robert E. Cleary in of Daniel and Emma Cleary - - - Menominee Born Oct. 13, 1888. Enlisted July 6, 1917, U. S. N. I F., first class yeoman, Newport R. I. Passed exnination engineer Apr. 22, 1918. Commissioned Engn June 5, 1918. Newport, R. I. To Super Dreadaught, Pa., June 21. 1918. To training ship engineerg duty until Sept., 1918. To Destroyer Maury. Overas to convoy duty at Gibraltar, Tangiers, Algiers. olice duty on Mediterranean. To English Yard H. M. Catania. T'o U. S. S. Charles at Southampton. ransport duty between Southampton and La Havre, om Dec.. 1918, to Apr., 1919. From Brest to Azores, rrived New York. June 15. Relieved July 25, 1919. tactive list Aug. 1, 1919. Edward J. Beaudoin on of Rene and Lea Beaudoin - - - Stephenson Born Mar. 5, 1897. Enlisted July 12, 1918, U. S. avy, Milwaukee. Apprentice seaman Grant's Park, hicago receiving ship U. S. S. Commodore. To reiving ship, Philadelphia, League Island Navy Yard. rdered to U. S. S. Destroyer No. 118 Oct. 2, 1918. onvoy duty, making four trips to France. Arrived rest Dec. 13. convoy escort to President Wilson. On ail duty between England and France. Cowsroads. ngland. put German ships out of commission. To ussia through Kiel Canal. Stationed at Danzig. Gerany. Arrived IT. S. July 28, 1919. Released Aug. S. 1919, Great Lakes. Clarence A. Carlson on of Erick and Selhna Carlson - - - - Daggett Born Dec. 22, 1892, Menominee. Enlisted July 1, )18, U. S. Navy, Menominee. To Great Lakes. Camp ogan rifle range as instructor Aug. 28, 1918. Hostal to Dec. 14, 1918. To Camp Logan Dec. 20. 1918. o Camp Lawrence as second class seaman. Released eb. 14, 1919, Great Lakes. Fred Hammerberg >n of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hammerberg - - Carney Born Nov. 23, 1900. Enlisted Nov. 30, 1917, U. S. avy, Menominee. To Great Lakes, signal man. To ampton Roads, signal school. Transferred to U. S. Ohio and later to U. S. S. Pittsburgh. Rated as uartermaster. Atlantic fleet, June, duty overseas. till in service. Otto Carl Beyersdorf on of William and Albertina Beyersdorf - Menominee Born Nov. 27, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Mar. 19, 418, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes. Promoted to petty fficer. To Philadelphia, U. S. S'. Henderson. Promoted * chief petty officer. U. S. S. Henderson was burned t sea. Otto Beyersdorf was rescued but pneumonia )llowed exposure. To British hospital at Corfu. reece, where he died May 14, 1918. Buried, Corfu ritish cemetery. Body exhumed Feb. 4, 1920, and rrived in New York Mar. 4. Buried at Menominee ar. 8, 1920. Walter R. Carlson on of Erick and Selma Carlson - - - - Daggett Born Nov. 23, 1900. Enlisted Feb. 1, 1919, U. S. Navy )r 4 years, Detroit, Mich. To San Francisco Navy ards. Assigned apprentice machinist mate. Trans~rred U. S. S. Destroyer MacKenzie. Promoted firean. Edward E. Larsen on of Nels and Karoline Larsen - - - Stephenson Born Mar. 18, 1898. Enlisted Apr. 25, 1917, U. S. avy, Racine. Wis. To Great Lakes. To Naval Aviaon station, Hampton Roads, Va. Promoted to second ass machinist's mate. Several overseas trips. Reased Aug. 11, 1919, Great Lakes. [130] * 4 0 4 4 ( 4 I 4 4 *! m So -l ci( I *w w1wi * | 11- - | |& A s - - ~~~~~~~4. -..,ML AML ML -M-1 rl Ifrlfnf w --- I -W q. I'll illllilll!r ll I 1,*, A IeN. -I - - A 1 -11 4 o 4 Rueben J. Marcoe Son of Noah and Anna Marcoe - - - Hermansville To Great Lakes. Ordered to Brunswick, Ga., aviation camp. To U. S. S. Ohio as ship fitter. Left for Azores. Discharged June 21, 1919, Great Lakes. Otto Tutas Son of Adolph and Caroline Tutas - - en- - - -I Coleman (Hermansville) Born Apr. 14, 1898. Enlisted Oct. 3, 1917, U. S. Navy, Ishpeming. To Great Lakes. Left on U. S. Sub Chaser No. 287 for Clinton, Ohio. T'o Cleveland; Fort Huron, Canada; Rochester, N. Y.; Brooklyn; Chicago; Philadelphia. To torpedo boat, U. S. S. Grier, July 15, 1918, and left for overseas. The Azores and Bermuda Islands, as ship's cook, second class. Discharged Apr. 7, 1919, Philadelphia. Walter A. Niemann Son of Villiamn and Anna Nienann (Wendt) - - - Herinansville Born Apr. 21, 1894. Enlisted Dec. 14, 1917. U. S. Naval Reserve Corps, aviation section, as landsman machinist mate, Detroit. To Great Lakes training station. To Packard plant, Detroit, instructions in Liberty motors. To Philadelphia Navy Yards. Left U. S. on U. S. S. Henderson Apr. 22, 1918. Arrived Brest May 5, 1918. At Pouillac Base Aviation Station, mechanic. Promoted to machinist-s mate, second class, July 21. Arrived U. S. Feb. 20, 1919. Relieved, active duty, Mar. 1, 1919. Ewald Malienemi Son of Henry and Mary Malienemi - - Menominee Enlisted Dec. 3, 1919, U. S. Navy for three years, Buffalo, N. Y. Will be discharged Dec. 3, 1922. Donald F. McGillis Son of Angas and Katherine MeGillis - Menoiinee Born Feb. 26, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Aug. 23, l 1918, Milwaukee. To Paris Island, S. C., 363rd Co. B. U. S. Marine Corps. Ordered to St. Thomas, V. I., Dec. 13, 1918. Stationed at St. Juan, Porto Rico, and St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Arrived in U. S. May 1, 1919. Discharged June 15, 1919, Brooklyn Navy Yard. Walter H. Breckheimer Son of Herman and Anna Breckheiler - Menominee. Born Aug. 18, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted July 29,197a - B 1918, U. S. Navy for 4 years, Menominee. To Great Lakes, as fireman. Transferred to Hampton Roads and to U. S. S. Kearsarge, Boston. Transferred to U. S. S. Housatonic. Two trips overseas, transport service. Returned to U.S. June 4, 1919. To Duration of War Man, inactive duty, June 16, 1919. Leo W. Erdlitz Son of Frank and Bertha Erdlitz Marinette (Menolninee) Born Oct. 7, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted Apr. 11, 1918, U. S. Navy, Chicago, Ill. To Municipal Pier, Chicago, seaman, second class. Attended Naval Ofricers' School until Dec. 29, 1918, when released. Thurman B. Doyle Son of Mchael and Maria Doyle - - - Menoinee Born Mar. 21, 1899. Enlisted June 25, 1917, as apprentice seaman, U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes. Assigned to U. S. Submarine "G" 2, Jan. 2. 1918, to Mar. 14, 1918. Promoted to seaman first class $ Mar., 1918. To U. S. Submarine "K" 8 (American and Mexican waters). Promoted to gunner's mate, third class, June, 1918, and chief quartermaster (A) U. S. Naval Flying Corps, Aug., 1918. To U. S. Naval Aviation Detachment, Mass. Institute of Technology, Cambridge. Discharged Dec. 24, 1918. [1311 ~Q ~~~ s -9 -~CL. 1~ I~EE~e PIY ~ e ~~1~,lobr I Otto V. Lishka Son of Frank and Rose Lishka - Menoninee Born Apr. 28, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted May 18, 1917, U. S. Navy for 4 years as electrician, Milwaukee. Assigned Naval Electrician School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Transferred to New London, Conn.. as instructor. Promoted to first class electrician Oct. 25, 1918. Promoted to chief electrician May 1, 1919. To Duration of War Man and released Aug. 24, 1919. Louis J. Lafrombois Son of Louis and Jennie Lafrotbois - M enomninee *g Born Feb. 25, 1897. Enlisted July 2, 1918, Menomil - g - 0n lee. To Great Lakes as apprentice seaman. Released Dec. 24, 1918. Bertram Scholtz Son of Mr. tand Mrs. Scholtz Hermansville Born Aug. 10, 1893. Enlisted Apr. 3, 1918, as wireless operator, UJ. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Discharged Son of Andrew and Ida Johnson - - - Stephenson * Born Aug. 29, 1899. Enlisted Feb. 4, 1918. as landsman radio electrician, U. S. Navy, Ishpeming. To Newport, R. I. Patrol duty on eastern coast, Florida to *Newfoundland. Entered radio school Aug. 2, 1918. Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., Sept. 9, 1918. Promoted, Jan. 8. 1919, to radio electrician, second class. Feb. 24, 1919, released to U. S. N. R. F. Arthur J. Erdlitz Son of Frank nnd Bertha Erdlitz - - Marinette (Menominee) Born Oct. 8. 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 13, 1917. U. S. Navy, Milwaukee. To Great Lakes as landsman electrician. To Harvard University. Promoted to wireless electrician Aug. 10, 1918. Transferred to New York. Ordered to U. S. S. Susquehanna as wireless operator. Overseas eight times. Released Feb. 13. 1919. Frank Mikolasek Son of James and Katherine Mikolasek - Menominee Born Apr. 11, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted U. S. Navy, *S Menominee. To Milwaukee and Bremerton, Wash.. Naval Signal Div. as seaman second class. Transferred U. S. S. Transport West Hosokie, for South America. From Chili through Panama Canal to Hampton Roads. Transport service to France. At Bordeaux promoted to quartermaster, third class. To Philadelphia. Promoted quartermaster, second class. Mar. * 2 26. 191 9. Wilfred Bertrand Son of Eiuclid and Minnie Bertrand - Menominee Born Jan. 8, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted June 9, 1918, for 4 years in U. S. Navy. To Puget Sound coast patrol duty. Promoted to second class seaman To Duration of War Man and released Mar. 3, 1919. Puget Sound Navy Yard. Orley J. DePlanche *on of Henry and Blanche DePlanche - Menominee * Born Mar. 28, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Dec. 12. 1917, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Assigned U. S. S. * Alabama, radio operator. Overseas and on return trip engaged in picking up mines, according to German maps, turned over by the Germans at the signing of the armistice. Discharged Jan. 31, 1919, Great Lakes. [132] * 4A. * U C~P 4. 4. 4. 4. 4.~9h 4. 4. ~ ` -^ 3W -.^e^^ U-^aL^ " >^ M L Walter Emmanuel Anderson Son of HAndrew and Anna Anderson - - alenioin ee Born Mar. 26, 1898, Menominee. Enlisted Jan. r4, 1918, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lake -,. Frantcisc,. Prmoe frTomas as pprentice se mano hirds ^:,^ l - 2 t0HI-P ^ B^ ^ a assig ned U. S. S. Virginia and U. S. S. Costine. To 4 " - Porto Rico, betweeln Florida and ^Panama on patr — eol | onduty. Discarged Aug. 25, 1919, Pittsburg.lit John Henry Hansen Son of Henry and Matlinda Hansen - er- - Spaldingve Born nMay 29, 1896. Enlisteed Dec. 4, 1917, U. S. Navy. | Apprentice seaman, Great Lakes. Promoted seaman, * second class, April 1, 1918. July 1, 1918, first class seaman and Apr. 1, 1919, to acting Petty Officer and gunner's mate. Qualified as expert Navy rifleman. oDischarged June 28, 1919.ro 1M^ lRobert Rulo Son of LSNey and Robert uo -G -ks - - a - - MSarinette (Menominee) l Born Aug. 26, 1897. Enlisted July 17, 1918, Co. G, 1st - IReg. Sent to Camp Decatur. Overseas at Brest Sept. 28, 1918. Crossed the ocean seven times. On U. S. S. Kentucky. Promoted from apprentice seaman to third class fireman, and later to second class. Discharged Sept. 24, 1919, Great Lakes. Lawrence Albers Son of August and Ernestine Albers - - Menoininee Born Apr. 15, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted June. 8, 1918. To New York. Assigned as ship's carpenter to U. S. S. Olympia, U. S. S. West Wyska and U. S. S. Caldwe ll. Sent to Puget Sound Navy Yard. Overseas five times on convoy and supply ships. Released Aug. 28, 1919. 4 Alfred Harold Dunham -Son of John ani Einnia Dunhan - - - - Daggett Born Oct. 30, 1900. Enlisted Jan. 29, 1919, Detroit, 4 U. S. Navy for 4 years. To Great Lakes. To San Francisco, U. S. S. Thomas, as apprentice machiinist m-ate. To Philippines on U. S. S. Honolulu. Transferred to U. S. S. Brooklyn on trip to Japan and Ron~,. Kong, China. 4 Willis S. Harrington Son of Fred and Adeline Harrington - Herniansville Born June 4, 1897. Entered U. S. service, assigned to * Medical Departm-ent. Overseas, stationed at Base Rospital No. 103. A. E. F. Discharged June, 1919. Prom-oted to Corp. Harry Durocher Son of Michaelcti ad Addle Esther Duroeher - - - 4 ~Menontinee Husband of Edithi Anderson. Enlisted July 25, 1918, U. S. Navy. Assigned Naval Tutilary Reserve Band as * musician. This hand ordered around the states for many mionthis. Concerts to assist in sale of Liherty Bonds and patriotic movements in connection with the war. Clarence R. Kell * Son of Joseph aiid Alice Kell - Peshtigo (Ilenomnineep Enlisted Feb., 1-918, U. S. Navy.- Served one year. Released from U. S. Navy. [133] 4 4 4 4 4- 4 4 4 4 I I 1"P NW4 ~ v'1j; I I I I I I f - * F - 1. la~ > O V 0..0 I I I Data of Service Men Where No Photo Could Be Obtained Alex Allery Roy Campbell Son of Li nd Elizabeth Allery - - - Son of James and Catherine Campbell - - Herlnansville Menomine Born Oct. 15, 1896. Entered service Nov. Born Nov. 13, 1889, Menominee. Entere 19, 1917, Camp Custer, 337th Inf., Co. E. service July 10, 1918. as machinist's mate Transferred Camp Green, 1st Army Head- 2nd class. Promoted to 2nd class machinis quarters Regt. Arrived overseas Apr. 12, May 15, 1918. Overseas in June, 1918, t 1918, St. Nazaire. Gevres fifteen months. Brest. Promoted Ensign May 28, 1919. Dis Transferred to 219th Military Police. Ar- charged July 15, 1919, at Hoboken. rived U. S. July 24; discharged July 29, 1919. John Anderson Wenzel J. Cherney Son of Mr. and Mrs. Anderson - - Daggett Son of Joseph and Marie Cherney-Menomine Born Dec. 16, 1891. Enlisted June 27, 1918, Born in 1869. Enlisted U. S. service befor Milwaukee. Fort Riley. To Medical Casu- the Spanish-American War. Overseas wit! alty Detachment, Camp Meade, Md. To 90th the A. E. F. Still in service. Sanitary Squad, Medical Dept. Acting Sergt. during flu epidemic. Discharged Jan. 17, 1919. Peter Collard Harold Anderson Son of Frank and Mary Collard - Menomine Son of Peter and Hannah Anderson - - Born Mar. 14, 1892. Enlisted Dec., 1917 Menominee U. S. Navy, Marinette. To Great Lakes. As Born Apr. 18, 1893, Sweden. Entered serv- signed as fireman. U. S. S. Maine. U. S. S ice July 15, 1918, St. Paul, Minn. Camp Wads- Galveston. To hospital ship Comfort. Late worth, S. C., 55th Pioneer Inf., 2nd Div., Co. to army transport U. S. S. Maui. To hospita C. Arrived Brst Sept. 29, 1918, Chllos, at Portsmouth, N. H. Discharged June 18 France. In action Oise-Aisne offensive, sec- 1919 Great Lakes ond battle of the Marne and Meuse-Argonne. With A. of O., Bridgehead, Coblenz. Arrived James Corbett U. S. Sept. 22, 1919; discharged Oct. 2, 1919, Son of William and Mary Corbett-Menomine Otto H An. Born June 15. 1898. Enlisted U. S. Navy Otto H. Anderson Apr. 15, 1917. To Great Lakes and assigne( Son of Swan and Josephine Anderson - - as seaman. Discharged June, 1919. Wallace Born June 22. 1888. Entered service June Bernard F. Corbett 28, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, Head- Mn in quarters Co., personal attachment. Transferred to Co. A, Waco, Tex. Discharged Feb. Enlisted May, 1917. Detroit, Mich. To For 21, 1919. Riley. Overseas Jan. 14, 1918. Attached tV WTilliam JT B naan Harpers Hospital Unit, Detroit. At Argonne J. resnanan Forest and later with A. of 0. Returned t< Son of Michael and Ellen Bresnahan - - U. S. Mar. 14, 1919: discharged June 22, 1919 Menominee Commission, Lieut. Born Apr. 3, 1889, Menominee. Entered service Sept. 5, 1917. Camp Custer, 14th Eng., William J. Cota Co. D. Bayonet instructor. Overseas Feb. 4, 1918. In action with U. S. and British armies. Son of Mose and Bridget Cota - - Power Wounded five times. Awarded seven service Born Dec. 4, 1892. Enlisted May 15, 1917 stars. Wounded Argonne-Meuse offensive. Escanaba, Mich. To Jefferson Barracks Nov. 8, 1918. Returned to U. S. Discharged Hdqtrs. Co.. 18th Field Artillery, 3rd Div May 27. 1919. Promoted to Sergt. while in Arrived Liverpool May 2, 1918. To France active service. In action Oise, Aisne, St. Mihiel, Champagne Marne, Aisne-Marne and Argonne-Meuse Harry H. Bink With A. of O., Coblenz. Arrived U. S. Aug Son of John and Mary Bink - - Wallace 24, 1919: discharged Aug. 28, 1919, Camp Sher Entered service July 24, 1918, Sturgeon Bay, Wis. Camp Taylor, Ky., Heavy Artil- William Delgoff lery. To Camp McClellan, 27th Reg., Bat. B. William Discharged Feb. 7, 1919, Camp Grant. Son of William and Mary Delgoff-Menominee Born Mar. 15, 1896. Enlisted Apr. 28, 1917 William A. Bolen Menominee. To Camp Humphrey, 'Va., 3r( Son of T as nd Elia Bolen - Cedar River Training Reg. Overseas May 14, 1918. Re Son of Thoans. and6 E nlia Bole ce e turnedr R. S. Sept. 28' discharged Oct. 2, 1919 Born Dec. 2, 1896. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 330th Clarenc Dionne Field Artillery, Bat. C. Arrived Liverpoolnne Aug. 5. Winchester, Southampton, La Havre, Husband of Marie Dionne - - Menominee Chamberg, France. Pipriac, Coetquidan, Ri- Entered U. S. service June 27, 1918. T( maucourt, Toule. Arrived U. S. Apr. 12, 1919 Camp Custer, 330th Fild Artillerv, Bat. D discharged Apr. 24, 1919, Camp Custer. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 6. Camp Knotty Ash Lo i F B tman Southampton, Cherbourg, France. Pipriac L oui F Buelteman Camp Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Haute-Marne Son of Iois^ and M3argaret Buelteman - - Le Mans. Arrived U. S. Apr. 11, 1919; dis Menoininee, R. F. D. charged Apr. 25, 1919. Camp Custer. Born Feb. 18, 1891, Menominee. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K, 85th Div. Arrived Roy F. Doran Brest Aug. 2, 1918. Transferred to 7th Inf.. Co. M. Killed in action Oct. 15, 1918. Buried Son of James and Marie Doran - MenomineE at American Cemetery, Madeline Farm, Corn- Born Sept. 19, 1890, Menominee. Enterec mune of Cumel, Meuse, France. Disinterred service Aug. 18, 1918, Green Bay, Wis. Fielh and reburied in Grave No. 25, Section No. 23, Artillery, Camp Hancock, Ga. Discharged Plot No. 1, Argonne American Cemetery, Ro- May 16, 1919, and reappointed Field Clerh magne Sous, Montfaucon, Meuse. with discharge company, Camp Grant, Ill. It e d e At 3~ e h e 7. 3 -r,1 Ll e y Y t o e e 3 IZ 1 i 4 1'11 4 * 4 f tii d,. ~x~ v * 't -T135 Ir- -OW I —'.I —,~~ 4 =D004K * * == 4 iR - Glenmore F. Dubrucq Son of Joseph and Agnes Dubrucq-Menominee Born Feb. 28. 1898. Enlisted Apr. 8, 1918, Chicago. U. S. Inf To Q. M. Corps, Jacksonville. Fla.. fir it class private. To 314th Butchery Co., meat inspector. Arrived Brest May 294. G< vreo. France Convoyed meat to camps. Blirdrd at Gevre' in one eye. Hospital No. 13. Savannah, France. Arrived U. S. Apr. 20, 1919 To Ford Hospital, Detroit. Discharged June 4, 1919. Camp Grant. Raymond C. Dubrucq Son of J')seph and Agnes DIuIrucq-Menominee Born June 16, 1899, Menominee. Enlisted July. 1918, Marine Corps. School of Marines, Paris Island, S C. Promoted to Corp. Oct. 15, 1918. Guard duty between Cuba and San Domingo, on the Atlantic Coast, and in San Domingo. Promoted to Sergt. Feb. 8, 1919. Disclharged Feb. 16, 1919, Quantico, Va. Chester Duffano Son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Duffano-Menominee Entered U. S. Army. Overseas with Motor Truck Corps. Served in France sixteen months. Sylvester Duffano Son of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Duffano-Menoninee Entered U. S. Army. Assigned to Motor Truck Transportation Co. for overseas service. Served in France during the war. Enrico Fletcher Son of Mar:ano and Madelana Fletcher - Hermansville Born June 20, 1895. Entered service June 27, 1918. Camp Custer, 330th Field Artillery, Bat. E. Arrived Aug. 6, 1918, Liverpool. Southampton, La Havre, Coetquidan, Rimaucourt, Calais, St. Gervais. Arrived U. S. Apr. 10, 1919; discharged Apr. 26, 1919, Camp Custer. Peter Floriano Son of Joseph and Anna Floriano - - - Hermansville Born at Sangiovani, Italy. Entered service May 25. 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 338th Inf., Co. K. Transferred to Nitra, W. Va., powder plant. Discharged Nov. 30, 1918. Joseph Forvilly Son of Henry and Mary Forvilly - Menominee Born Mar. 24, 1870. Enlisted U. S. Army Oct., 1917, when 47 years old, at Los Angeles, Cal. Assigned to U. S. transports carrying oil and war material. Discharged Apr. 10, 1919, Los Angeles. George Golueke Son of Frank and Caroline Golueke Menominee Born May 6. 1896, Menominee. Entered service Apr. 29. 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 3, 1918. To La Havre. Transferred 1st Div. at Pouilly. To hospital. New Chateau. Rejoined company Argonne Forest. In Sedan drive. Arrived U. S. Dec. 30, 1918; discharged Jan. 16, 1919, Camp Custer. Isaac Gretland Son of John and Ingeborg Gretland - Nadeau Born Aug. 11, 1894. Entered service July 16, 1918, Ishpeming, Mich. To Columbus Barracks, O., 6th Co., 3rd Machine Bn. Transferred to Camp Hancock, Ga. Discharged Mar. 1, 1919. I Arthur L. Gunderson Son of Gunder and Minnie Gunderson - - Menominee Born May 21, 1896. Enlisted Co. I, Marinette. Camp Douglas, Waco, Tex. Arrived Brest Mar. 4 with 127th Inf., Co. I, 32nd Div. Active at Alsace front, Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Meuse, Argonne Forest. Overcome by mustard gas. To hospital Aug. 4. Returned to company Sept. 6. Arrived U. S. Apr. 1, 1919; discharged Apr. 11, 1919, Camp Custer. Gerald Gorman Son of Gerald and Nellie Gorman (Anderson) - - - - Birch Creek (Stephenson) Born May 6, 1900. Enlisted Dec. 12, 1917, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy for four years. To Bremerton, Wash., Supply Div., as ship's clerk, first class. Transferred to Hampton Roads, Va., Destroyer No. 91, July 5. Transferred to U. S. S. Kansas and left U. S. July 15. Arrived Brest Aug. 1. Transferred to S. S. Imperator. Arrived U. S. Aug. 10. To U. S. S. Wisconsin. To "Duration of War Man" Aug. 12, 1919. Discharged Sept. 11, 1919, Great Lakes. Walter G. Grassl Son of Otto and Anna Grassl - Menominee Born May 14, 1897. Enlisted Medical Reserve Corps June 7, 1918, Milwaukee. Transferred to S. A. T. C., Marquette College, Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 11, 1918. Discharged Dec., 1918. Otto Grassl Son of Otto and Anna Grassl - Menominee Born June 27, 1893. Enlisted Valparaiso, Ind., as chemist. Left for Columbus, O., preparatory to be sent to Edgewood Arsenal, Md., July 6, 1917. Discharged Dec. 21, 1918. Albert Gulecznski Son of Felix Gulecznski and Veronica Gulecznski (Bukowski) - - - Menominee Born Feb. 24, 1895, Poland. Enlisted with First Regt., W. N. G., Milwaukee, Co. K, May 19, 1914. Left with company for Camp Douglas July 14, 1917. Transferred to Co. K, 127th Inf., 32nd Div. Promoted to Corp. and Sergt. Commissioned.2nd Lieut. Left for Waco, Tex. Arrived Liverpool Feb. 21, 1918. To Southampton, La Havre. In action at Alsace Lorraine front line trenches May 18, 1918. Soissons, Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne, ChateauThierry. Gassed at Fismes. To Hospital No. 13, Limoges, France, and Hospital No. 53, Pres sur les Fauge. Transferred to Motor Transport. Returned to hospital at Carroveaun, Brest. Arrived U. S. Dec. 24, 1918; discharged Mar. 17, 1919, Fort Sheridan Hospital. Ferdinand W. Gustafson Son of Matt and Ellen Gustafson - Carney Born Mar. 28, 1892. Enlisted July 28, 1917, Escanaba, with Co. L of Menominee. To. Waco, Tex. Transferred to Co. K, 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Promoted to mechanic Nov. 1, 1917. Arrived overseas Feb. 24. To front trenches with Co. K. Alsace sector. Oise-Aisne, Aisne-Marne. Wounded at Chateau-Thierry July 29, 1918. To Evacuation Hospital No. 7. T'o Base Hospital No. 34, Nantes. Remained there till Nov. 17. Transferred to Camp De Terre to Dec. 28, 1918. To Savigny Base Hospital No. 113, to Jan. 8 1919. To hospital at Brest. Arrived IT. S. Jan. 22, 1919. To Hospital No. 3, New York, and hospital, Camp Custer. Discharged Feb. 28, 1919, Camp Custer. I II 4 4 4 Bert Gretland Son of John and Ingeborg Gretland - Nadeau Born Aug. 8. 1888. Entered service June 1, 1918. Camp Custer, 310th Eng., Co. E, 85th Div. Arrived Liverpool Aug. 1. Winchester, Southampton, La Havre. In action at Argonne Forest. Arrived U. S. Mar. 16; discharged Apr. 1, 1919, Camp Custer. [136] 4- - -. - ^ -: -., i - a. q i I +i i i I -W 410. 4,- i db 0.....ww w \"~767iE Z\\"-e rct. 1 - 0 - -- - - F I 1- 4 4.* oel I 40 T- 11^19 I 4 -, -- N 'l il w - I 0 f i 4 Rurrick F. Hawley Son of Charles and Anna Hawle- -- Hernmans^ville Born Dec. 1 1901. Enlisted with Headquarters Company and assigned to M. S. T. Discharged Apr. 20, 1l!19. Walter L. Heftie Son of Gabriel andi Marie Heftie - Nadean Born July 24. 1894. Milwaukee. Wis. Enlisted Aug. 14. 1918. Racine, Wis., 73rd Eng., Co. B. To Valparaiso. Ind. Transferred to Yonkers, N. Y. Washington Barracks. T'o Camp Humphrey Dec. 5, 1918. Discharged Jan. 11. 1919, Camp Custer. Hugo A. Hendrickson Son of John and Hulda Hendrickson - - Stephenson Born Dec. 17. 1894. Entered service Sept. 21. 1917. Menominee. To Camp Custer, Co. E, 337th Inf.. 85th Div.. Oct. 25. 1917. Transferred to Waco. Tex., H. Q. Co., 125th Inf., 32nd Div. Arrived overseas Feb. 24. 1918. To Jevres. Champlitte, Alsace sector. AisneMarne offensive, Oise - Aisne offensive, Meuse-Argonne. to Nov. 11. With A.' of O. at Geillesheim. Arrived I. S. IMay 15, 1919; discharged May 29, 1919. Charles T. Hogan Son of Jamnes and Anna Hogan - Menonlinee Born June 15, 1895. Enlisted Mar. 8, 1918, Menominee. To Columbus Barracks, O.. 26th Recruiting Co. To 9th Co., Coast Defense, Chesapeake Bay. Instructor. Motor Transportation. To 48th Artillery Sept. 15. 1918. Arrived overseas St. Nazaire Oct. 2. 1918. To La Charite. 20th Eng. Arrived 1'. S. Mar. 24, 1919; discharged Apr. 16, 1919, Camp Custer. Fred Holub Son of Wenzel and Mary Holub - Menoinlnee Born Oct. 21, 1889. Enlisted May 2, 1917. To Great Lakes. Assigned to I. S. S. Finland. made nine trips overseas, carrying troops. Discharged Aug. 28, 1919. Joseph J. Horvath Son of John and Elizabeth Horvatl Surr, Hungary (Stephenson) Born Feb. 6. 1893, Hungary. Enlisted Mar. 30. 1914, Chicago, Regular Army. To Jefferson Barracks, Mo., 15th Recruiting Company. Active on Mexican raids. Douglas, Ariz., Nogales. Promoted to Corp. May 15. 1917. Camp Grant. Promoted to sergeant Sept. 5. To Fort Sheridan. Camp Custer and Camp Sherman. Discharged Aug. 25, 1919. Camp Sherman. Herman Jacobson Son of Herman and Anna Jacobson - - - Born Mar. 5. 1888. Entered service Nov. 19, 1918. To Camp Custer, First Air Service as mechanic. To Camp Hancock. Ga. Overseas on IT. S. S. Lincoln, later torpedoed and sunk. Arrived St. Nazaire, France, assigned to Chalons sur Marne repairing aeroplanes near Champ, back of Chateau-Thierry. Returned to IT. S. June 9, 1919; discharged July 2. 1919, Camp Custer. Joseph J. Jadin Son of Charles and lucy Jadin - - Talbot Born Apr. 14, 1893. Husband of Marie Lamare. Enlisted May 14, 1918. Milwaukee, IT. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. To Hampton Roads. Va.. training school. Promoted to Q. M. first class. Ordered to UI. S. S. Kentucky training ship. Rated chief Q. M. first class. To New York, IT. S. S. Hawaiian. Arrived overseas, Bordeaux, Sept. 29, 1918. Returned with casuals to IT. S. Oct. 14, 1918. To hospital with influenza. Discharged June 24, 1919 account total disability, Great Lakes. Arvid W. Jakela Son of John and Ida Jakela - - - Nathan Born July 30, 1896. Enlisted Dec. 15, 1917, Milwaukee, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Transferred to Hampton Roads. Va.. UT. S. S. New Hampshire. Promoted to seaman, first class. Made six trips overseas. After armistice to Hampton Roads and May Ridge, N. Y. To U. S. S. New Mexico. Discharged June, 1919, Great Lakes, after transferred to "Duration of War" man. Stephenson Jennings Son of Robert and Elmma Jennings - - - Menominee Born July 9, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 7, 1918. Ithica. N. Y., Navy Unit S. A. T. C. Placed in inactive duty Dec. 17, 1918. Floyd Herman Johnson Son of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Johnson - - Menominee Born Aug. 14, 1900. Enlisted in the U. S. Navy May 11, 1918, Milwaukee. Great Lakes ten days, to Bordeaux. Promoted to orderly. To Wexford, Ireland, assigned to Naval Air Station. To hospital at Liverpool. On patrol duty Liverpool. Back to Wexford until released, July 17, 1919. Fred M. Johnson Son of Henry and Augusta Johnson - Carbondale Born Oct. 3, 1888, Sweden. Enlisted Dec. 19, 1917, Ishpeming, U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes. Transferred to Camp Logan, Ill., Mar. 16. 1918. Promoted Mar. 1 to 2nd class seaman. Promoted to 3rd class carpenter's mate June 1, 1918, and 2nd class carpenter, Sept., 1918. Discharged June 27, 1919, Great Lakes, Ill. Victor C. Johnson Son of Gust and Tilly Johnson - - Wallace Born Mar. 13. 1896. Enlisted Feb. 26. 1918, Menominee. To Vancouver Barracks, Wash., 13th Casualty Company. Transferred to Spruce Div., 83rd Squadron, South Beach, Ore. Discharged Dec. 12, 1919, Camp Custer. Harry A. Johnson Son of John L. and Mathilde Johnson - - Daggett Born Apr. 6. 1897. Enlisted May 15, 1917, Milwaukee, T. S. Navy. To Great Lakes Aviation Ground School. Transferred to Naval Air Station. Pensacola Fla., as machinist mate. 2nd class, 2nd Air Squadron. Ambrose Jossart Son of Joseph and Elizabeth Jossart - Menominee Enlisted Co. I, Marinette. Left for overseas Jan.. 1918. In action at Champagne, Marne offensive. Active at Chateau-Thierry, second battle of the Marne, St. Mihiel and MeuseArgonne. Returned IT. S. Apr. 30, 1919; discharged May 13, 1919. George J. Kanyuh Son of George and Mary Kanyuh - - - Menominee, R. F. D. Born Feb. 26. 1896. Entered service Apr. 29. 1918, Menominee. To Camp Custer, 338th Inf.. Co. M. Arrived Liverpool Aug 1, 1918. Southampton Winchester, La Havre. Moved to Pouilly. Transferred to 339th Inf., Co. L. Returned to Southampton, Stoney Castle, Dundee, Scotland. To Russia via Dvina River to Archangel. In railroad defensive Oct. 10, 1918. Battle of Kadish Nov. 25. Baldasurska Apr. 16. Left Russia June 3, 1919. from Archangel. Arrived Scotland June 12. Arrived U. S. from Brest July 1, 1919; discharged July 7, 1919, Camp Custer. 4 I 4 4 I 4 4 1* I * I 4 I ni t [137] |L____ _J} r4 I I - iwqw l ~I -rr 1 = r ~1 I *P I '-1BI I- A A -..- 0 A ml. AA A~ o *a w. 'I A. A 41 A w. p, -W~ w V - F W W Iw - v- - WI% I MI I I I d Sylvester John Kelly Son of Mrs. Kelly Townsend - Menoininee Born Aug. 20 1886. Entered service May 26, 1918, Chicago, Ill. Assigned to Supply Company. Left for overseas Sept. 23, 1918. A. of O. Returned U. S. Apr. 25 1919; discharged May 10, 1919. Lewis E. Kessler Son of Samuel F. and Mathie Kessler - - Bloomington, 11l. (Swanslon) Born Aug. 18, 1891, Lanark, Ill. Entered service July 31, 1918, Bloomington, Ill., Camp Wheeler, Ga., Co. H, 121st Reg., 31st Div. Arrived Brest Oct. 15, 1918. Transferred to 28th Div., 111th Reg.. Co. C. At Uticourt. Attended University at Beaune. Discharged July 22, 1919. Louis F. Kickbush Son of Emil and Mrs. Kickbush - Menomlinee Eight years in regular army. After declaration of war, assigned as instructor, Camp L Spruce Brigade, Clatsop, Ore. Overseas and in action in several of the great battles. Returned to U. S. and discharged. Walter H. Kimpel Son of Williamn and Pauline Kimpel - Menominee Born Oct. 6 1896. Enlisted Sept. 1, 1918, Des Moines, Ia., 60th Field Arty., Bat. C. Arrived in France Dec. 25, 1918. Discharged Feb. 24, 1919. Frank Krasnicky Son of Jamnes and Agnes Krasnieky - Menominee Born Apr. 21. 1893, Menominee. Husband of Febiale Allaire. Entered service Nov. 19. 1917. with Infantry. To Camp Custer. Promoted Corp. Apr. 2, 1918. Promoted sergeant Aug. 22, 1918. Discharged Feb. 19, 1919 Camp Custer. Joseph Krasnicky Son of James and Mrs. Krasnicky - - - Menominee Enlisted Janesville. Wis. To Camp Alfred Vail, at Little Silver, N. J.. Signal School. Transferred to Signal Corps and sent overseas for thirteen months. Returned U. S. and discharged Aug. 7, 1919. Eugene La Belle Son of Jules and Mrs. La Belle - - - - Montreal (Menominee) Eugene La Belle resided in Canada in 1917, returned to Menominee to enlist with Co. L 125th Inf.. 32nd Div., Waco, Tex. Arrived France, Feb. 24, 1918. In action Alsace Lorraine, Oise-Aisne offensive, Soissons, AisneMarne offensive, second battle of the Marne, Chateau-T'hierry, Cierges, Juvigny. Killed in action. Argonne Forest, Aug. 30, 1918. Buried in France. Joseph La Combe Son of Charles and Lizzie Daley la Coimbe Daggeett Born Jan. 17. 1894. Entered service May 25. 1918 Menominee. Camp Custer. 338th Inf., Co. K, 85th Div., Camp Mills. To Winchester. La Havre, Pouilly. Transferred to Co. B, 7th Inf. On St.j Mihiel Reserve, Meuse-Argonne offensive. Relieved by 79th Inf. and returned to reserves with A. of O. at Andernach. June 25th crossed Rhine. Arrived J. S. Aug. 22 1919; discharged Aug. 24, 1919, Camp Grant. Oliver La Combe Son of Frank and Annie La Conibe - Nadeau Born Aug. 29, 1897. Entered service July 25, 1918, Green Bay. Wis. Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky., 20th Field Artillery, Bat. A, 5th Div. Overseas Nov. 18, 1918. At Bordeaux, later at Berclam, Luxemburg. Arrived U. S. July 31, 1919. Discharged Aug. 19, 1919. Louis F. Lawrence Son of Anton and Mary Lawrence Scholtz - Cedar River (Bagley) Born Sept. 10, 1892. Entered service July 18, 1919, Detroit, Mich. To Camp Custer, 160th Depot Brigade. Transferred to Camp Merritt. N. Y. Discharged Sept. 5. 1919, Camp Custer. George Leanna Scmn of George:and Olive ILeanna - Wallace Born Jan. 9, 18~2. Entered service Mar. 30, 1918. Co. E, 207th Reg.. 82nd Div. Overseas June 15, 1918. In action at Musbach sector St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensive. Arrived V'. S. May 6th. Discharged May 22, 1919. H. C. Larson Enlisted June 21 1918. Headquarter Detachment 160th Field Artillery, 85th Div. Overseas La Havre, France. Aug. 13. 1918. Served with Implacement Division in Toul sector. In action in woods near Pont-aMausson. Returned V. S. Apr. 2, 1919. Richard Walter Larson Menominee Son of John B. and Ida Larson - Aurora. Wis. Husband of Alma Swanson. Born June 22, 1894. Entered service May 1, 1918, Columbus Barracks, Ammunition Train. Overseas July 13, 1918. In Alsace Loraine, Vosges mountain sector and Argonne-Meuse offensives. At Echalot, France, eight months. Left for U. S. June 11, 1919. Discharged June 26, 1919, Camp Grant, Ill. Samuel N. Leaveck Son of John and Emma Leaveck - Daggett Born June 19. 1896. Enlisted U. S. Navy July 12, 1918. Great Lakes Training Station. Promoted fireman and ordered to Hampton Roads, Va., U. S. S. Alabama. Promoted to messenger, Naval Overseas Transportation Service. Released active duty Norfolk, April 7, 1919. Justus G. Little Son of George and Rose Little - Stephenson Born June 9. 1900. Enlisted May 15, 1918. Escanaba, U. S. Inf. To Jefferson Barracks. 16th Co., recruiting service. To 3rd Inf., Co. K. Eagle Pass Tex. Made non-commissioned officer. To Camp Shelby. Miss., 149th Engineers. Promoted to sergeant, first class. Signal Dept. at H. Q. Discharged Dec. 11, 1918, Camp Shelby, Miss. Walter J. Markivitz Son of Andrew and Kate Markivitz - - - Wallace, R. F. D. Born Dec. 12, 1895. Entered service Oct. 22, 1918, New Orleans Louisiana. 9th Trench Motor Corps, Camp Dodge, Ia. Discharged Dec. 18. 1918, Camp Dodge, Ia. Daniel McDonald Son of John and iMary McDonald - - - Menominee Porn Mar. 23. 1897, Menominee. Enlisted with Naval Coast Guard Mar. 4, 1918. Chicago. IJ. S. S. Pufparora. On patrol duty Atlantic Coast, between New York, Boston and Cuba. Discharged May 3, 1919. William P. McGrath Menominee Son of William and Mary MeGrath - - - Fond du Lac, Wis. Husband of Mary Vandehey. Enlisted U. S. Navy June 13, 1918. Sent to Puget Sound Navy Yard, 2nd class seaman, Flagship Philadelphia. Released March 25, 1919. I 4 0 0 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 i 4 1 1 4 4 4 1 1 4 4 4 t t 4 i Re M e.11 0. + I u *~ j-B ^. = -0 - It [138] rrr Yq~IIII_-Y-Y-.-.IY —~ly~ — -111 111111 _, — ~llll~~l)~C ---~l Clli --- -II~ ----,>G-, *. I,,- I, I ~ ' L ~ - . ^' ', -N.... r1 t" I _j I 1# 4 I I i j f i I 4 Abner W. McGuire Son of Patrick and Mary MeGuire - - - lMenominee Born Apr. 18, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted S. A. T. C., Marquette University. Sept. 15, Milwaukee. Discharged Apr. 3, 1919. Harold F. Myers Son of Fred andi Johanna Myers - - - - Menolninee, R. F. D. Born Aug. 19, 1892. Menominee. Enlisted Feb. 26, 1918 Menominee, Spruce Div., Vancouver Wash., 59th Co. Discharged Dec. 30, 1919, Camp Grant, Ill. James A. Meyer Son of John and Mary Jane Meyer - Ingalls Born July 4, 1897. Enlisted Roundup, Mont. Cavalry June 24. 1918, Monterey, Calif. To 301st Company, 47th Field Artillery. Discharged Feb. 25, 1919, Camp Lewis, Wash. Carl Nelson 5on of Andrew and Hannah Nelson --- - Arthur Bay Born May 6, 1893. Entered service Nov. 5. 1917, Douglas, NWash. To Camp Lewis, 7th Co.. Second Bn., 166 Depot Brigade. Transferred Feb. 1, 158th Inf.. Supply Co., Camp Kearny, Calif. Arrived London Aug. 25, 1918. Southampton. La Havre, France. To Verdun front. Transferred to Veterinary Co., Section 2. Entered Germany, stationed at Trier, Bitburg and Coblenz. Arrived U. S. Aug. 10; discharged Aug. 21, 1919. Camp Grant, Ill. Dr. Robert Nowack Son of Fred C. and Mary Nowaek - - - Menominee Born Apr. 10, 1888. Husband of Charlotte Brown. Commissioned first lieutenant, Dental Corps, Sept. 10 1917, Flint, Mich., but not called to active service. Erick G. Nylen Son of Andrew and Hilda Nylen Broberg - Marinette (Menominee) Born June 23. 1896, Menominee. Enlisted May 15, 1915, Co. I, Marinette. Camp Wilson. San Antonio, June 28, 1916. Transferred to regular army July 15, 1917. Camp Douglas. MacArthur, Waco, Tex. To 121st Machine Gun, 32nd Div. Arrived Brest Feb. 4. Active on Champagne, Marne offensive. Transferred to Headquarters Corps. Active as dispatch rider to fronts of Aisne-Marne, ChateauThierry, second battle of the Marne, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne. After armistice at Tonners, France. Arrived U. S. Apr. 30. 1919; discharged May 13, 1919, Camp Grant, ll. Otis E. Olson Son of Knute and Einina Olson - - Carney Born Nov. 27, 1891. Entered service July 25, 1918. Menominee. Camp Custer. Assigned to Camp Meigs, Wash., D. C., Q. M. Dept. To Camp Upton and overseas Nov. 10, 1918. Arrived Liverpool Nov. 22. To La Havre, Tours. With A. of 0. at Berncastel, Germany. Promoted to Corp. Mar. 1. 1919. Discharged June 14, 1919, Camp Custer. Charles A. Peterson Son of Thomas and Caroline Peterson - - Hermlansville Born June 17, 1892. Entered service March 28, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. Casual Co.. Fort Riley. Kans. Camp Merritt. Arrived Liverpool June 25, 1918. Southampton, Liverpool to May 1. 1919. Arrived U. S. May 18. 1919; discharged Mar. 25, 1919. Camp Grant. Albert Peterson Son of Peter and Annie Peterson - - - Marinette (Menominee) Born Apr. 11, 1889. Husband of Edna Olson. Enlisted Rochester, Minn., June 15, 1918. To Signal Corps. 10th Defot. To St. Paul University and later to Leavenworth, Kans. Overseas Sept. 7, 1918, near Bordeaux until May 1. Arrived IU. S. May 12, 1919; discharged May 19, 1919. Aldridge Poquette Son of Felix andtl R(se Poqtuette - Nadeau Born July 4 1894. Entered service June 28. 1918. Camp Custer. 78th Inf., Co. D. Overseas Aug. 3, 1918. Stationed in France. Returned U. S. Jan. 10. 1919; discharged Jan. 25, 1919, Camp Custer. Clarence E. Poquette Son of Frank and Emily Poquette - - - Menominee Born Jan. 4, 1898. Menominee. Enlisted Jan. 17. 1918. T'o Vancouver Barracks, 33rd Squadron, Spruce Div. Discharged Jan. 11, 1919. Camp Grant. Theodore Poquette Son of Felix and Rose Poquette - Nadeau Born Dec. 30, 1895. Entered service Apr. 15. 1918. Overseas with Inf. May 4 1918. In action Alsace front, Chateau-Thierry. Gassed and sent to hospital. Arrived U. S. May 10. 1919; discharged May 25, 1919. Charles Pothie Son of Leo and Flora Pothie - Menominee Born Jan. 10, 1897. Menominee. Entered service Aug. 29, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer. 78th Inf., Co. B. Discharged Jan. 16, 1919. Jerry Poupore Son of Cyril and Philomine Poupore - - Spalding Born Sept. 2, 1897. Enlisted June 2, 1918, Escanaba. Q. M. Dept. To Jefferson Barracks. Mo., Depot Brigade, 26th Recruiting Co. To Camp Johnston, Fla. To Camp Hill. Arrived Brest Sept. 21, 1918. Nevres, Marseilles, Monto Carlo. Promoted to Corp. Mar. 17, 1919. Arrived U. S. July 2, 1919; discharged July 11. 1919. William E. Reynolds Son of XWilliain and Doris Reynolds - - Menomninee Born May 15, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted at Camp Custer. Discharged three months later, account disability. Edward Rian Son of Peter and Martha Rian - Menoininee Born Jan. 2, 1894, Menominee. Enlisted U. S. Army. To Columbus Barracks. To Battery B. 47th Regiment Coast Artillery, Fort Washington, Md. Arrived Brest Oct. 26. At Angloume, France. Arrived U. S. Feb. 15. 1919: discharged Mar. 13, 1919, Camp Eustis, Va. Charles E. Saxe Son of Erick and Augusta Saxe - - - - Herniansville Born June 24, 1890. Enlisted July 17, 1917, Rhinelander. Wis., Medical Corps. To Camp Douglas. Promoted to sergeant Dec. 4. 1917. Arrived Brest Feb. 1, 1918. Promoted to first class sergeant in France. In action ChateauThierry. 107th Engineers, 32nd Div. OiseAisne. Aisne-Marne and Meuse-Argonne offensives. With A. of 0. Sent to Hospital No. 9. Coblenz, where he died Feb. 18, 1919. Buried American Cemetery on the banks of the Rhine. [139], I 1: 4 4 0 k 0 1 t p I I1 I I I I $ I t ~ 4 4 4 4 0 4.0. LL l I I ak =*OOC-= 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 41 - 'A WNW 4l-, -_ i Richard B. Saxe Son of Erick and Augusta Saxe - - - - Hermansville Born Feb., 1893. Entered service Sept. 17, 1917. Negaunee, Mich. To Camp Custer. Discharged Apr., 1919. Silas J. Saxton Son of Silas and Elizabeth Saxton - - - Marinette (Menominiee) Born May 19. 1895. Menominee. Entered service Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. 17, 1918. To Ordnance Dept., Camp Raritan, N. J. T'o Camp Someran, Talyhanna. Penn. Discharged Mar. 27, 1919, Camp Custer. George M. Savoy Son of Gilbert and Julia Savoy - - Nadeau Born Mar. 13, 1896. Entered service June 27, 1918, Menominee. Camp Custer, 41st Machine Gun, Co. B. Discharged Jan. 24, 191b, Camp Custer. Fred P. Schetter Son of Henry and Rosena Schetter - Carney Born Apr. 14, 1894. Entered service Menominee. To Camp Custer. Overseas June 27, 1918. At Napoleon Barracks, Camp De Souge. Capt. Bert L. Smith Son of James and Bertha Smith - Menoiinee Member of Company I. 1st Wisconsin Regiment, Neenah, Wis.. for seventeen years. Waco, Tex. Assigned to 32nd Div. Overseas Feb. 24. In action May 18 to Aug., 1918. Returned to U. S. account illness. To Camp Dodge, Ia. Military Hospital. Discharged Mar. 10, 1919. Clarence Sundberg Son of Axel and Mathilde Sundberg - - Daggett Born Aug. 23. 1897. Enlisted May 16, 1917, Ishpeming, Mich.. U. S. Navy for four years. To Rhode Island as apprentice seaman. U. S. S. Houston and U. S. S. Melville. Arrived Brest Aug. 26. Left Sept. 8 for Queenstown, Ire. Transferred to U. S. S. McDougal, and convoy to Aug. 19. torpedoed. Transferred to British cruiser, H. M. Ship Orano. Transferred back to McDougal, Liverpool for repairs. Sent to Brest. 1Did convoy duty and rescue work, torpedoed steamers, including U. S. S. Mt. Vernon, torpedoed and thirty-six Americans killed. Left Brest Dec. 15 for Azores and Bermuda Islands. Arrived New York Jan. 21, 1919. To "Duration of War" man. Discharged Feb. 24, 1919. -S4-' Jerome Steinbrecher + Son of Walter and Marie Steinbrecher - - Carney Born Mar. 8, 1897. Entered service Sept. 3, 1918 Menominee. To Camp Custer, 77th Inf., 14th Div., Co. H. Discharged Jan. 31, 1919. Chester Ernest Schultz Son of William Henry and Sarah Jane Schultz Stephenson Born Nov. 10, 1895. Enlisted Feb. 22. 1918, Spruce Brigade at Menominee. Died Mar. 22. 1918, Vancouver, Wash. Gerald A. Spies Son of Charles A. and Nellie Spies - - - Menonminee Born June 4. 1899, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 1, 1918, Madison, Wis. 17. S. Navy for four years. Released from active duty and transferred to U. S. N. R. F. Dec. 20, 1918. Howard Trodahl Son of Halvor H. and Jennie L. Trodahl - Daggett Born Oct. 13, 1898. Enlisted with U. S. Navy at Menominee for duration of war June 9. 1918. Sent to Milwaukee. Bremerton, Puget Sound as apprentice seaman. Assigned to IT. S. S. West Laquossuch. To San Francisco. Promoted to first class seaman doing patrol duty between Chili, Peru and Panama Canal. Ordered to Charleston. Overseas doing patrol duty at La Havre. To Boston. Transferred to receiving ship, New York. Later to transport U. S. S. Graf Waldersee. Discharged June 10, 1919, New York. Henry C. Vandervest Son of August and Lucenda Vandervest - Stephenson Born Oct. 10, 1893. Entered service July 25, 1917, Menominee. Camp Custer, 40th Inf.. Co. M. Transferred to Camp Sherman. Discharged June 27. 1919, Camp Sherman. Godfrey Valley Son of Godfrey and Rose Valley - Menominee Enlisted TJ. S. Motor Truck Div. Assigned to Newport News, Va. Overseas and was in action in many of the great battles. Severely wounded and gassed. Discharged July, 1919..i v 1 I * Frederick W. Schoener Son of George and Francis Schoener - - Menominee Born Oct. 23, 1893. Entered service Septemper 19, 1917. 310th Engineers, Camp Custer. Overseas July 11, 1918. To front line offensive on the St. Mihiel September, 1918. In Meuse-Argonne offensive, battle of Montfaucon and the battle of Asacourt. A. of O. at Neuerburg, Germany. Arrived U. S. from overseas June 27, 1919. Discharged July 9, 1919, Camp Grant. Clifford P. Servais Son of Joseph and Kate Servais - Nadea Born Feb. 9, 1901. Enlisted S. A. T. C. Sept. 15, 1918. Discharged Dec. 22, 1918. John Scholtz Son of Mike and Mary Scholtz - Wallace Born Sept. 11, 1897. Enlisted June 24, 1918, Escanaba. To Minneapolis. To Sault Ste. Marie, guarding locks. Transferred to Camp Funston. Discharged Mar. 24, 1919, Camp Funston, Kans [140] William Wagner Son of John and Rose Wagner - Stephenson Born May 15. 1893. Entered service Aug., 1918, Marinette. To Camp Grant. To Fort Riley. Discharged Dec. 11, 1918, Fort Riley, Kans. Stanley Wachowiak Son of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Wachowiak - - Menominee Born Sept. 24, 1894, Menominee. Entered service May 25, 1918. To Camp Custer, 85th Div. Overseas July 29, 1918. Transferred to 3rd Army on the Ourcq. Wounded and sent to hospital at Rimaucourt, France. Returned to U. S. and discharged July, 1919. Thad Wachowiak Son of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Wachowiak - - Menominee Born Oct. 15, 1896. Enlisted Dec. 10, 1917. To Aviation section, Fort Worth. In charge of sail making department. Promoted to sergeant. Discharged Apr. 1. 1919. I p 9 4 f 4. 0 o a l I II II — ' -------— - -- - 1 I — I - Dooo c=-IIII L --; X; it - W M7e ~ ~C -,- 0 k. DCL ~ - * ~r --- --- -- ~~ --- —-Y ---I iI Leslie Osgood Waite Son of Mr. and Mrs. Williaml F. Waite - - lMenominee Born Dec. 3, 18:1. Enlisted Apr. 3, 1917. Called May 12, 1917 into active service. Commissioned 2nd Lieut. June 23, 1917. Overseas Mar. 29, 1918, with 302nd Engineers. Arrived France Apr. 12, 1918. Commissioned 1st Lieut. July 30, 1918. Returned 1'. S. Aug. 15. 1918. Instructor Camp Humphrey. Va. Discharged Jan. 9. 1919, Camp Eustis, Va. -, j Earl C. White Son of Joseph and Jessie NIVWhite - Stephenson Born Mar. 10, 1892. Enlisted Feb. 22, 1912, St. Louis, Mo. Heavy Coast Artillery. Assigned to 38th Co., Presidio, San Francisco. Discharged on account of physical disability Oct. 19. 1313. Re-enlisted June 30, 1918. Denver, Colo. Assigned to Camp Lewis, WTash.. 44th Inf., Co. B, June 13 1918. To Vancouver Barracks. Discharged Jan. 12. 1919. t Menominee Service Men in Army, Navy and Marine Corps (In this List photographs or more complete data could not be obtained) I Fred Arsineau Son of Frederick and Flora Arsinea - - Menolinnee To Camp Custer, assigned to 23rd Co., 160th Depot Brigade. William F. Arnold Son of Anton and Frances Arnoll-Menoniniee To Camp Custer, assigned to 38th Co.. 160th Depot Brigade. Nels Anderson Menoliniee Assigned to 11th Co.. recruiting, Fort Mills. George Ackerman Son of Charles and Christine Ackerlan - Menoiinee Enlisted July, 1918. Spruce Div. To Garibaldi, Ore. Discharged April, 1919. George Bostrom Menonminee Co. B. 106th Inf. Transferred and assigned to overseas duty. Served in France. Frank J. Brown tMenominee Entered U. S. service and sent to Camp Eustis, Va. Assigned to Bat. F, 50th Regt. Frank J. Baudry Menonminee Enlisted and served with the British Army. James Benesh Son of Jamnes and Barbara Benlesh-Meniioiniee Enlisted in IT. S. Army, Troop A, 17th Cavalry, Douglas, Ariz. Served four years. Otto Benesh 3Menominee Enlisted in the U. S. Navy. Assigned to Norfolk, Va. Frank Chernoski Menoliniee Entered U. S. Army during the war. Assigned Co. L. 34th Eng., for overseas duty. In France 18 months. John Debeck Son of John and Theresa Debeck - Menolninee Entered U. S. Army during the war. Assigned to Troop G, Cavalry, Brownsville, Tex. James C. Daley Menoininee Entered U. S. Army in 1918. Assigned to 20th Eng., 2nd Bat., Co. F. Overseas with the engineers. Returned to U. S. May, 1919; discharged May 12, 1919. Raymond Davis Son of Mr. and Mrs. Jolin Davis - Melnoininee Enlisted with the U. S. Army. Died of disease at the age of 21 while in service. John Deschaine Menomiinee Entered U. S. Army, Co. K, 1st Army Regt. Headquarters. Overseas and remained in France during the war. Promoted to Sergt. Returned U. S. July, 1919. Walter J. Devoe Son of M r. andl Mrs. J. L. D)evoe - Menolninee Born Sept. 25, 1891. Enlisted with the IT. S. Army Sept. 21, 1917. Discharged Oct. 8, 1917. Edward Duhame Menominiee Entered U. S. service, 23rd Co., 160th Depot Brigade, Camp Custer, July 25. 1918. Military Police. Discharged June 22, 1919. Camp Custer. Herman Frederick Son of Arthur atnd Eintma Frederik - - Menominee Enlisted in U. S. Navy. Assigned to Co. G. Great Lakes, Ill. George Garbell Son of Georg'e and Rose Garbell - Menolninee Entered U. S. service, Camp Custer, 23rd Co.. 160th Depot Brigade, July, 1918. Discharged May 28, 1919. Edward Herlache Son of Fred and Helena Herlache - - - Green Bay (Menonlinee) Entered service July, 1918. Camp Custer, Co. C, 40th Inf. Discharged June 22, 1919. Alfred Hendrickson Menominee Entered U. S. Army, Camp Hancock, Ga., 42nd Co., M. F. Dept. James Hogan Son of Jalmes and Johanna Hogan-Menominee Born June 26, 1893, Menominee. Enlisted June 10, 1918, Seattle, 76th Inf.; Co. H. Camp Lewis, Wash. Discharged Apr. 25, 1919. Alfred N. Hanson Menonl inee Enliste( U. S. Navy during the war. Assigned to Puget Sound, Bremerton, as seaman. Nels J. Herrild Menonlinee Enlisted U. S. Navy during war. Assigned to Great Lakes Training Station. [141] 4 * 4 4 I 4 4 4 0 I `1 -II I- A ll r I -W.4. 41 -- 1 1 1 dbI~r r ~ ~ 7~ - c 77 dr Kpqm K olf- a^ - - 4 I I 4h.~ v1. 1 4 i ~___ L~ii~i6~~C I S S S S 1 4 1 f S 9 4 I I, 0 0 1 I [ Walter C. Janson Son of Janles and Mary Janson - Menominee Entered service Columbus Barracks, O. To Camp Sherman. Later Rockford, Ill. Discharged Dec. 24, 1918. Frank Janowicz Son of John and Anna Janowiez - Menominee Entered U. S. Army. Co. E, 54th Inf., July 28. 1918. Overseas and served in France during the war. Jacob Janowicz Wallace Lehmann Menominee Enlisted in the TJ. S. Navy, 1918. Assigned to U. S. S. Minneapolis, New York. ' Son of John and Anna Janowviez - Menominee Entered U. S. Army, Co. E, 54th Inf. Overseas and served in France during the war. Benjamin G. Jacklin Menoininee Entered U. S. military service. Assigned to Co. C, Metuchen, N. Y. Harvey Jensen Menominee Entered U. S. Army during the war. Assigned to Bat. D, 332nd Field Artillery, Camp Robinson, Sparta, Wis. W. A. Kimber Son of Mr. and Mrs. Kinlber - - Menominee Enlisted in U. S. Army July 29, 1918. Discharged Dec. 31, 1918. Albert King Menominee Entered UI. S. service and assigned to cavalry. Served in France until after signing of armistice. Returned to U. S. in spring, 1919. Edward Lafdol Humband of Mary Lafdol - - Menominee Enlisted in U. S. Army and assigned to Co. M, 338th Inf. Served in France. Returned to U. S. and honorably discharged. Re-enlisted and sent back to France, where he was assigned to construction work. William S. Lovell Son of Thonmax and Mary Lovell - Menominee Born at Menominee. Entered U. S. military service and assigned to Military Police at Jacksonville, Fla. Albert J. Lassack Menominee Entered U. S. service. Assigned Co. D, 7th Div., Motor Supply Train. Sent to France and assigned as cook. Floyd A. LaMont Son of Dr. and Mrs. F. G. LaMont, Menoniinee Born April 3, 1897. Enlisted with U. S. Army July 25, 1917, Co. H., 129th Inf., 33rd Div. Overseas May 24, 1918. Active on British front, Somme offensive, St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne. Discharged April 17, 1919. Oscar Larson Menolninee Enlisted in U. S. Army and assigned to recruiting department in the Quartermaster Corps. Oscar W. Lindberg Son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Lindberg - - - Menominee Born March 11, 1892. Enlisted U. S. Army June 27, 1918. Promoted corporal Sept. 18, 1918. Entered Officers' Training Camp at Camp Grant, Ill. Discharged Nov. 26, 1918. [142] Joseph J. Moore Menolninee Enlisted U. S. Navy during the war. Assigned J. S. S. Huntington, New York. Joseph D. Mathews Menominee Enlisted U. S. Navy, 1918. Assigned to U. S. S. K-3, New York. John Miller Menoninee Entered U. S. Army. Assigned to Co. C, 50th Inf. Served in France and promoted to Corp. John G. Meurer Menominee Entered U. S. service and served in France during the war. Frank P. Motley Menoninee Entered U. S. Army. Headquarters Co., 4th Brigade, 20th Eng. Served in France. Returned to U. S. and discharged May 7, 1919. James W. Mancl Son of Anton J. and Dora Mancl - Menominee Born Aug. 15, 1896, Menominee. Enlisted July 18, 1918. U. S. Navy. To Great Lakes as Aviation Quartermaster. Released Jan. 10, 1919. Harry Oliver Menomninee Entered U. S. service, Co. M, 28th Inf. Commissioned 1st Lieut. Served in France. Robert Olson Menominee Entered U. S. military service. Assigned to 121st Aero Squadron at Love Field, Tex. William Petitclair Son of Abraham and Louise Petitclair - - Menominee Entered U. S. Army. Assigned to Co. F, 5th Reg., Camp Humphrey, Va. Henry J. Paris Son of Evangelist and Nancy Paris - - Menominee Entered service Camp Custer and assigned to 23rd Co., 160th Depot Brigade. Lawrence Panzram Menominee Entered U. S. Army, Camp Custer, assigned to Co. D, 40th Inf. William Pothie Son of Leo and Flora Pothie - Menominee Enlisted in Spruce Div. Discharged Feb., 1919. Leo F. Plautz Son of Henry and Augusta Plautz-Menominee Entered U. S. service, assigned to Co. C, 107th Eng. Served in France and discharged May 5, 1919. I ': 4 4 I~~ 12 Menominee Entered U. S. service, assigned to Co. D, 7th Inf., 32nd Div. Served in France. 11111 1 ~ ICI r I I, - - I -. -1110~ - I. - - - - - --- - - - - -b p - 19 ---- - rr Fs 6r, - -M I i I, ( "oo 41 - - I * - m 4. - 41- & 4. 41. 1 1 - - - f i ( Thomas Prudhome Menominee Entered U. S. military service. Served in France during the war. Samuel Prudhome Menominee Entered U. S. Army. Served in France during the war. Gilbert Prudhome Menominee Entered U. S. military service. Served in France during the war. Fred L. Porter Son of louis and Marie Porter - Menominee Entered U. S. service, Medical Dept. Assigned to U. S. Military Hospital, Green Hanto, England. Joseph Petitclair Son of Abraham and Louise Petitelair - - Menominee Enlisted U. S. Navy during the war. Assigned to Radio Corps at Cambridge, Mass. Breeze A. Rivers Son of Willialn and Margaret Rivers Menominee Enlisted U. S. Navy, 1918. William Reiner Menominee Enlisted U. S. Navy. Assigned to A. S. S. C., Camp 8, Twin, Wash. Charles Smith Son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith - Menominee Enlisted with U. S. Army Aug. 29, 1918. First Class Private. Discharged June 26, 1919. William Smith Menominee Enlisted U. S. Navy, 1918.- Great Lakes Training Station. James Schleis Menolninee Enlisted U. S. Naval Aviation. Assigned to aero station, Pensacola, Fla. Edward F. Steberl Menominee Enlisted U. S. Army. Camp Custer. Assigned to Aerial Co., Hoquiam, Wash. Howard Sullivan Menomninee Entered U. S. Army during the war. Served in France. Harry G. Stiles Son of John WV. and Ellen Stiles - Menonminee Born Nov. 11. 1893, Menominee. Entered service July, 1918. Assigned to 10th Co., 15th Bat., Camp Greenleaf. Fort Ogelthorpe, Ga. Chickamauga Park. Discharged Nov. 25. 1918. John Stiles Son of John WV. and Ellen Stiles - Menominee Born Oct. 15, 1895, Menominee. Enlisted May 1. 1918. U. S. Army. Assigned to 13th Provisional Squadron, Camp I. Co. E, Clatsop, Ore. Discharged Feb. 14, 1919. Henry W. Steward Menominee Entered U. S. service and assigned as motor mechanic. To France. Assigned to Aviation Signal Corps, 12th Co. Promoted to Corp. Served until end of the war. Returned to U. S. and discharged. Thomas Todish Entered U. S. Army during the war. Lived in Menominee, but has moved to Milwaukee. No further particulars could be obtained. John Tomack Son of George and Ilosie Tomnack-Menomlinee Entered U. S. Army during the war. Camp Custer. Peter Tomack Son of George and Rosie Tounaek-Menomlinee Entered service in U. S. Army during the war. Camp Custer. Edward Tomack Son of George and Rosie Tomack-Menonilnee Entered U. S. Army, 1918. Camp Custer, DeIpot Brigade. Ernest Valliere Son of Benjamin and Mary Valliere - - Menominee Enlisted U. S. Army. Assigned to Motor Transport Corps for overseas service. Served in France. Promoted Sergt. Returned U. S. Feb., 1919; discharged. Henry Weiss Son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Weiss-Menomninee Entered U. S service July 28, 1918. Camp Custer, Co. A, Depot Brigade. James Howard Walton Son of James and Florida Walton-Menominee Enlisted 1917, U. S. Army. Overseas, assigned to disbursing office in France. Attached to the 107th Eng. Returned U. S. Apr. 25; discharged May 2, 1919. Otto Weber Son of Gustav and Minnie Weber-Menomninee Enfisted U S. Army. Assigned 2nd Detachment. 64th Squadron, Aberdeen, Wash. Walter Wosniak Menominee, R. F. D. Enlisted U. S Army. Assigned to Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Additional names not appearing elsewhere of men who served during the war in U. S. Army. No other information obtainable: James Bresnahan, Menominee City (Navy). 1st Lieut. Michael Bresnahan, Menominee City (Navy). Capt. Hugh Bresnahan, Menominee City (Army). Fred Kaieski, Menominee City. Wralter Kozsewski. Menominee City. William Kusch. Menominee City. Venceslaus Skucygnski, Menominee City. David Suchorski, Menominee City. George Vandenberg, Menominee City. Lt i *X l! I 0^ [143] f ___ "Z I MmIMIINSFAL AIL AML - 'II I I im' I b -20,411.I- -.41..0. 1 4 I 0; ----- Menominee County Service Men Outside City STEPHENSON TOWNSHIP Fred Sobotta Henry P. Hendrickson Lainous Johnson J ohn Sobotta Walter Winter Henry Edgerlly 4 4 0 f, I, r, 0 Rudolph Sobotta Fred Beaudoin Edward Beaudoin Edward Beaudoin MIose Beaudoin Albin Carlson George Beaudoin Charles Beaudoin James Laveck Walter D. Houle Fred Brown Clifford Brown Carmen S. Brown Anton L. Tunell Albin C. Tunell Mando L. Tunell Harry E. Tunell Charles Ie Melle Charles W. Brown Fred Sawall Albert Sawall John Sawall Charles Vassaw Fred St. Peter Robert Sawbridge Louis (Gobert Joseph Gobert Royal Bergvall Arthur Holstrom W\illiam Lipke Harold Johnson Leon Neuville Joseph Conar(l Lester Peterson Bruce Goulder Clement P. Damm George McGilligan Joe Berton Seth Ferdon Clifford Barker Leo Reitmeyer Albert Sanders George Colburn James Boucher Matt Doyle Thomas Doyle Raymond Brown Justin Boucher John Johnston Jolhn E. Johnson Pugo Hendrickson Clarence Sundberg Emil Gobert Ed. Halverson \Valter Norlin Effin Lipke Walter Pittman James Davis Clarence Brummer Harry Haasch Raymond Parrett Paul Smaglick Martin Carlson Wilfred Carlson Arthur Palm Arthur \Veng John Johnson Henry Hood Chester Schultz Chester Philipp August Swanson Harry Blomquist \Valter Lofgren Albin Dahlberog MELLEN TOWNSHIP Otto Schmidt Charles J. Paulson John Doffek fohn Simon A-lex Reitmieyer Earl L. Dobeas John WatryJacob Hoida Edw. Leanna Lloyd Buckmaster August Turnwall Eugene I)uprv Otto Regner Nabert Burklund Arthur Thoune George Leanna Robert Broberg Martin Dahlberg John 1-auer Joe EBauer Arthur Bruckhardt Edward Larson Arthur Larson Henrv Larson Jacob Simions AMlike Hannon \Villiam Hannon John Lundgaard Harold Lundgtaard Joe \VNite Fred Carrier \Villiam Swanson David Belongie Henry Scholtz Howard Goodman Henry Gooldman Louis IBrunelle Samtuel Laveck Paul Bergquist Justus J. Little Napoleon Shampo Edward Rose Harvey Damm Alvin Damm \Valter Brock Frank Niezgadski Robert Starrs 4 I FAITHORN, INGALLSTON AND HOLMES TOWNSHIPS Jamnes R. Mullen James Kelly Reuben Norman [* Wilfried Maheu Joseph Sobeski Frederick W\itrick Walter James Bruso Harrison Deacon MENOMINEE R. F. D. George Ritz Leopold Sinmmet [144] A * N ow a -- I ~ ~ ~~q —~-~ -t.l~S~c; - ~ ---, ~~~ I 1 1 p I - _.-l-r rlr'`It --- 1 _ 1_~_~ _ _ - --- --- — * ~ i. A I ~l a ml l w *C~i rrrr -, NADEAU TOWNSHIP 4 Victor iMellen John Verhagen Earl La Count Charles La Count Aldridg'e Poquette Theodore Poquette Andrew Senical Peter Carron Henry Cadieux Anton \Weber Louis Servais Hugh Ray Henry Fisk Walter Dishneau Clifford Servais Theodore Dirkman Frank Dirkman Edward Menard Louis B. Nadeau George W. Nadeau Oliver B. Nadeau Raymond Nadeau Mose Beaudo Habby Beaudo Joe Schetter Hilmer Jacobson Arnold Jacobson Dan Iegault Athur Anderson Alex Alore Ray Bardwell Otto B. Brumstad Delore Bichel George Carney Ray Carney Dave Craml Louis Cocco Isaac Caron Enoch Nelson Walter Niemann William Niemann Girolamo Pieropan A. A. Pretto Gust F. Ridderbush Bert St. Onge Harry St. Onge Herman St. Onge Sam St. Onge Eli St. Onge Arvid Swanson Axel Swanson David Swanson Henry Younk Otto Tutas Terrence Merrell Joe Charles Bert Gretland Arthur Olson Joe St. Aubin Lainous Johnson Joe Mattard Frank Rousseal \\Wilfred Richards Arthur Richards Fred Poupore \Villiam Milerrell Louis Charles Isaac Gretland Fred Depotie Joe Depotie Joe Forgette George Savoy Frank Birkman Oliver La Combe Joe Christian Peter Jean Edward Trombley W\alter Tromblev Harry C. Frederickson Ralph Nelson James G. Mlorrigan MEYER TOWNSHIP Fred Marchaterre F. Taylor Arthur Taylor Enrico Faccio Andrew Lora Iouis Cortiana Joe Tomasi B-ert Scholtz Abramo Graizzaro Pietro Fin Felix Heindenreich George Lildgren Julius Johnson Archie Barribeau \Villie Barribeau Charlie Barribeau Herman Dusterhoft Harold K. Friday Nick J. Fracul John Haglund G. Elmer Good Ernest Lindgren W'm. Lemay Arthur Maves Sam Menard Carl Meyer [145] Arthur C. Selstrom Walter Heftie Ralph Nelson Elmer Hanson Edward Hanson Herbert Hammerberg Knute Hammerberg Richard Hammerberg Fred Hammerberg John Hammerberg Tycho Hammerberg Donald Garrigan Stewart Garrig-an Arthur Desotelle Louis Holman Elof Nelson Emil A. Hammer Leinous Gustafson Otis Olson Milton Anderson Jerry Steinbrecher Arthur Larson I'red Sorenson Ferdlinand ( lustafson Lennie Krohn Albert Fre:lerickson John Guarl Fre:l Schetter 1 i 4 I I * 3 * Julius Slack Richard Saxe Chas. F. Saxe Harold Stecker \lm. Schultz Albert Schultz Norman Scholtz lames lMullen John Guiotto Urbani Angoelo Reuben MIarcoe Elsworth 'Marcoe L. Nidefski John Bellmore Ed. Gamache Edward Lohf Stockero Domenico Guiotto Eugenio \\illis Harrington A. Dugre Luigi Diquiotiovanni Peter Pieropan Joe Morreau Tony Revord Reuben Yale Christ Johnson 4 4 * I,! f v ft I rr -r -- ---- I _ lIIr - e 1111~-3 11 ~I-C- I.-. ~P EO N"~ 11n3m111 I * I. *.. * * *. r w w w MOM 40. hr -W 4k. M:M- - r - w - WA I - -- --- - - ME~ John Faccin Leo Floriano Ant. Bernardlini John Grondine Robert Lun-d (ER TOWNSHIP-Continued. Harvey Meyer Frank Cunard Orrin Meyer Ernest F. Lindgren Henry Norton George G. Lindgren Eugenio Prospero Joseph Bernard Nelson Chas. A. Peterson Joseph Dugree Chas. Radford >ALDING TOWNSHIP ST I Royal Harris Joseph Ravet Victor M1oll Alfred Carl Charles Gunville Edmond Tanguav Irving Shannon Mose Gagni Joseph Gagni Fred Gagni Wm. Pounore Jerry Poulpore Harry Poupore Walter Cory William Cota Edward Le Boeuf Michael Finnerty W. J. Wheeler Ed. Corriveau Sylvester Dorginski Edward Dorginski Joseph Morreau Edmond Grouleau Archie Philomon John Page Herman Kleikamp Maxim Juneau Emil Blazek Joseph Blazek Frel Vincent Albert Krabs Joe Krabs Eugene Lavi7ne Joe Pongalet Ervin Schoen Clifford Elliott Joe Duca l'at Goodyear Frank Jacobson Eligher De Pas Harris Macaulay Bert Fillis Geo. Keshick Sam Jean Arthur Gunville Jean A. Fortier Walter Fortier Ed. Poquette Enos Bradner Charles Bradner Melvin Bradner Ino Bellmore William Le Boeuf Albert De Mars Arthur Bryson Alex Charboutet Antone Giguere Ino Grondine Raymond Poquette Otto Leger John F. Cota Dalliba Lawrence Harry Lawrence Frank Dirkman Leo Mineau Stanley J. Fontana Charles J. Whiteshield HARRIS TOWNSHIP Frank Getzlaff Joseph Getzlaff Henry Duchaine Harry Deshambo Tony Miller Mose Duca Myron Good Jno Flynn Arthur Shorkey Ed. St. Antoine Henry St. Antoine Louis Hart Harry Berro Mose Fayas Tno Pirlot Peter Keshick Stephen Keshick Tacob McCullough Archie NlMegunulph Joe Pelka Rollo Pelke Wm. Pelka [146] James A. Whiteshield Albin Johnson Robert O. Hills Elmer Sruka Oscar Kell Clifford Tanguay Theodore Tanguay Paul Tanguay Frank Kleiman John Kleiman Fred Nault Alphonse Patrie Ino Cota B. J. McGinnis Wm. Corriveau Orbin W. Fortier Ralph Olson Henry Hanson Holger Nelson Joe Vachon Wilfred Vachon Matt Blahnik Jens John Jensen Ernest Anderson Chas. Namick Ray Daige Dan Lavigne Wayne Caswell Homer Beauchamp Walter Maves Anton Melewski Jno Zorgey Thos. De Loughery Ray De Loughery William Henderson Robert Morral Mike Miscovick Joe Martinick Joe Kanzel Richard Robinson Homer Beauchamp Loren D. Robinson William Bezdek Willie Pelletier * 4 f q 4 4 I ~I rr _ _ _ _ _ _,, II _ _ I __ _ - c_ II- - c -- - - --------— a L a a ~ ~ ~ r ~ a I I~~ --— 4 -. --- - --- ---- -- AAAP LI~ YIY I II --- 4 T- - - b r I t~ Menominee Boys Enlisted Student Army Training Corps (Usually Abbreviated S. A T. C.) This organization consisted of young men who, after graduating from High School, had entered accredited Universities and Colleges, who were either too young or not yet on the draft lists. These young men were enlisted in the U. S. Army to receive a thorough military training, while pursuing their regular studies at their respective Universities and Colleges, to be prepared to answer their country's call should she be in need of them at any time. They received the regular Army pay, were supplied with the regulation uniform, arms and equipment. The Government demobilized the S. A. T. C. in December, 1918, immediately following the armistice. 11471 (1 I, 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 0 1#1 I I a 0 4 4 MOMMONNOWAN.. 4 4 4 0 ii I I, - I I -1 -~-111 - IIIIC- r- I - -~ — I Al k - 4. 4. * * - I ,., A?-*A % -z 3 *M T 1 r ^ jE-^ ^ L' ^ g l x - -- u. ^ d^ > ~ * ~* Lester Herman Guensburg Son of Eminl and Adele Gnensburg - - Menominee Born Dec. 14, 1899, Menominee. Entered service Oct. 1, 1918, Ann Arbor Univ ersity, S. A. T. C. DisDicharged Dec. 22, 1918. Frank Joseph Kohibeck | @ TBorn Nov. 29, 1897, Menominee. Entlisted at Law-, College, Appleton, Wis., Sept. 15, 1918. Pro moted to Corp. Nov. 1, 1918. D)ischarged Dec. 15, 1918, Appleton, Wis. Francisco Penberthy | Son of Francii > ^^i*1**^ Joseph Baur Son of Ulrich and Martha Baur - - - Menoiline In service at Washington, D. C., as chief master of Iail department. Carl Winter Son of lMr. and l Mrs. W. B. Winter - - Stephenson Enlisted S. A. T. C. Oct. 1, 1918. To Marquette University, Milwaukee, is. Discharged Dec., 1918. R o Steven W. Kubiak Son of Andrew- and Agnes IKubiak - - Menolinee Born Aug. 7, 1897, Menominee. Enlisted -oughton College of Mines Oct. 1, 1918, S. A. T. C. Discharged Dec. 22, 1918. cl I. IB::-I- W - Raymond Kubiak * Son of 3Michael and Victoria Kubiak - - Menoliniee Born July 15, 1900, Menominee. Enlisted Oct. 1. 1918, Kalamazoo, Mich., S. A. T. C., Co. B. Western * Normal. Discharged Dec. 15, 1919. Frank Baur Son of Ulrich and Martha Baur - - - Menominee Born Dec. 30, 1899. Enlisted S. A. T. C. Stationed in Texas. Iischarged Dec., 1918. Harry F. Horton Son of Henry and Alwilda Horton - - Menoininee 4E | Born June 14, 1898. Sergt.-Major, Michigan State l | | Troops, Co., 552nd Inf., 2nd Bn. Fredrick Behm Son of 3Michael and Ainanda Behill - Menolminee Member Michigan State Troops, 2nd Bn., 552nd Inf., Co. E. John Baur 8 Son of Ulrich and Martha Baur - - - Menominee Member of Co. E, 2nd Bn., 552nd Inf., Michigan State Troops. 8 Joseph St. Peter lMember of Michigan State Troops, 21nd Bn.. 552nd | Inf., Co. E. [151]..-.!'1 >^f M - ^ ^ ^ ^A W ^ > *Wt A 4 4 4 4 4 t 4 4 4 4 4 II < 4 I )r I Wlle Miss Olive Beauchamp Daughter of Mlr. and 'Mrs. E. Reauchanip - Wilson Graduate nurse. Enlisted as U. S. Red Cross nurse. Served all during the war. At the time this was written she had not returned home yet and further particulars could not be obtained. Pearl Beechner.Daughter of Hernituai and Ella May~ Beechner 'Wallace t 0 I i I Enlisted June 10, 1918, U. S. Army nurse. To Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Assigned to Base Hospital. Discharged July 26, 1919. Gladys Campbell Dlaughter of James and Katherine Campbell - - - Menominee Graduate nurse. Enlisted with U. S. Government as nurse. Assigned to Naval Hospital, New London. Conn., as dietitian. Served all during the war. Irene M. Corbett Daughter of William and Mary Corbett - Menominee Entered U. S. service as nurse Jan. 8, 1918, Milwaukee. Assigned to Base Hospital, Camp Beauregard, Louisiana. Joined replacement Unit No. 1. Overseas Oct. 2. 1918, arriving Liverpool, England, Oct. 17. To France. Entered Camp Isurtille, hospital. There during the duration of the war. Arrived U. S. Apr. 1'i. Discharged June 22, 1919, Nurses' Demobilization Station, New York. Miss Isabelle Erdlitz Daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Erdlitz - - - Menominee Graduate nurse. Enlisted Red Cross at Chicago and offered her services to the government for overseas work. Awaiting a call when armistice was signed. Miss Lillian Hallgreen Ward of Charles C. Hansen and Anna Hansen - Menominee Graduate Washington Park Hospital, Chicago, Ill. Enlisted U. S. Army as nurse after declaration of war. Assigned to Debarkation Hospital, Richmond, Va. Discharged Apr. 1, 1919, Richmond. Miss Viola M. Lanthier Daughter of Louis N. and Mary Lanthier - - - Stephenson Enlisted Oct. 1, 1918. Camp Custer, as army nurse. Assigned to Base Hospital. Transferred to U. S. Army General Hospital No. 36, Detroit, Mich., Dec. 23, 1918. Discharged Apr. 7, 1919, Detroit. Miss Agnes Elizabeth O'Connor )Daughter of John and Catherine O'Connor - - - Menominee Enlisted Jan. 25, 1918, Chicago. Assigned as Red Cross nurse and volunteered for overseas service. Sent to Camp Kearny, Calif., Base Hospital. Transferred to Unit 62, Army Base Hospital. Overseas Sept. 15, 1918, arriving Brest Oct. 1, 1918. Assigned to Center Base Hospital, Mars Sur Allier. Remained until Apr. 1, 1919. Arrived U. S. Apr. 17, 1919. Discharged May 1, 1919, New York. Mary B. MacCosham (No photo) Niece of J. J. MeGillis - - - - - - Menominee Enlisted July 10, 1918, Spokane, U. S. Army, Base Hospital No. 50, Seattle unit. Arrived Brest Sept. 3. Assigned to Mesves Hospital center. No. 50 evacuated and transferred to Base Hospital No. 91, Commercy, France, Feb. 5, 1919. Remained to July 3, 1919. Left Brest Aug. 3, arriving U. S. Aug. 10, 1919; dischargee Sept., 1919. OF i s [152] II.4Iw.4..0 _,.I _ _1111-111 — _ ICI_ IIII-_ -----— ~1 L - U melov~~` a vI " r-IW- -~ C-~C i i i i I i II 4 4 I..W Ellen C. Peterson Daughter of Peter and Marie Peterson - Menominee Volunteered as overseas nurse. To Cam-ip Dodge. Iowa, and assigned to Base Hospital No. 11 Overseas * Aug. 8, 1918, arriving Aug. 20, 1918, Liverpool. To La Havre, France. Ordered to Nantes Base Hospital, where she remained on duty until July 7, 1919. Arrived U. S. July 13, 1919; discharged July 15, 1919, New York. Mrs. Myrtle Horton Pratt Daughter of Henry. and Aiwilda Horton - - - - )Ilenomitinee * Graduate nurse, St. Luke's Hospital, Racine, Wis. Enlisted as home defense nurse. She attended influenza cases in Menominee. She gave her services free to those in need of care, as did all lhoe defense no rses. Mrs. Albert Raiche Menominee Graduate nurse. One of the four homfe defense nurses, who offered her services free to the city and county. Busy during the influenza epidemic and also in other cases. Also active in Red Cross shops in C i ty. Dorothy Sawbridge Dauglhter of Edwvard and Ada Sawrlidge - - - - Steplienson Enlisted Oct. 1, 1918, Students' Nurse Reserve, U. S. * Army. Sent to Camp Sevier, S. C. Transferred to Camp Taylor, Ky., Mar. 1, 1919. Enlisted for three years. * t jean H. Simpson. Daughter of Willian and Maoy E. Simpso - -| MenoniiiaeeEnlisted Jan. 10, 1918, as Red Cross nurse. Assigneo1 * to U. S. Army Nurse Corps, Fort Riley, Kans. Bask Hospital. Promoted to head nurse in pneumonia and empyema section Aug. 15, 1919. Discharged Nov., 191a8. Miss Edith Solway Dacungter (of Alfred and Awelia Solway - - - - Menomninee G-raduate nurse. In 1917 employed as city nurse in the local schools. Active Red Cross worker and instructed the children in that work. She enlisted foi service at home or with the government. Mrs. J. W. Wells Menonminee Mrs. -Wells was a leader in all Red Cross work as well as in home activities from the heginning of the * wa r. She organized, with three other nurses, Ihe Home Defense Society of Nurses. She not only did the organizing, hut was one of the most active worke rs. Mrs. -Wells, a nurse hy training hefore hfe, ma rri ge. took many\ difficult. and contagious cases4 personally (luring the war. Mrs. Stephen C. Mason Menoininee Mrs. Mason was a trained nurse before her marriage. During the war she took a vigorous and active part in Red Cross work, in training others and in serving on women's committees on patriotic drives.4 Member Home Defense Nurses Society. Took an active part in fighting the flu epidemic, finally succumbing to it herself and with her family undergoing a long quarantine. [153] 1Xw L, 114 | f'.. - - * -w * ~ ' --- —'-:: —'''''l'''''''''''-i'' ii:iii ii:i — i ~~,::-:-, -_ ii-lic-i-_ii i __ii-i-Iil:,::::..::: *ia _:i: iiiii- lr-: i: i~ t:~:::~ iiiiiiiji-'ii:i::-:c:::::::::::-::: iiiiii-i-M -:::::::::i:_::-:::::::I-::::::.::: 4 4 4 4 1 0 Z e!. t ^ THE MICHIGAN STATE TROOPS Under authority of the AlichigIan state law, by direction of the GovernDr and the WVar Board, there was organize:l in Michigan in 1917 the "Second line of home defense" consisting of the Michigan State Troops, planned under regular ficers in charge of the larger units were lappointedl Iy the (overnor from the ranks of former Michigan National Guard officers. Iattalion encampments were held at state expense in the summer, and a very creditable showing made. I 4 4 4 army regulation and representel by comr- The membership in Company E of panies in nearly every town and city ill iMencminee, 2nl1 Battalion, 552 Infantry, the state. Michigan State Troops (Major Henry Membership was voluntary, eqlipment Schwellenbach, Commanding) was made was furnished free by the state an 1 of- up of men too young, too ol(l or not able [154] *. 1. ~c ~ ~ %~ ~Ag ~ -- IW ----- --F1 ~Cs )`~hllCIUTr*~l~l~DII*Wlrf-IY ~ ---* -r - ~~ - 4.-~ & - * to fully meet the re Regular Army. Thes Capt. F. J. DuBruc( worked hard and dil themselves for any ( Company E graduc qcuire o "rf ments of the to the regular service, as the records of CirAo <1 I n Il - rt thi.o vollenm cl;how-nr C 1. >3k1 V~., LtIkLIV1 q and his officers, ligently to prepare emergency. ated many men in t1113 V U.lL1l.% o11,. VV ~ Certainly members, volunteering in a spirit of national service, did with their might what their hands found to do. I I I COMPANY E. 2nd Battalion, 552nd Infantry, Michigan State Troops, Major Henry Schwel lenbach of Spalding, Battalion mander. Organized June 14, 1918. Comn I CAPTAIN F. J. DuBrucq ist. LIEUT. James Smith 2nid. LIEUT Frank O. Todish ist. SERGT. William J. Mikolasek SGT-MA.JOR Harry Horton SERGEAN TS William McDonald Herbert Doran Robert McFarland Samuel Tohnson L. A. \ells David WTilson Elmer LonGfellow Gould W\atson CORPORALS Roy Mackay Ray Bigger Alfred Leg-alilt Ed. Kell-wer Sigurd Knutson Ed. Erdlitz Ed. Tod!ish Harris MIoreau Joseph Madden l USICIA.NS Francis Benesh Arthur Schmidt iRTIFICER Slavic Posephny COOK John Beguin CLERK Donald McGillis PRI V TES Charles Albright Frank Mikolasek Richard Nines Lawrence Anderson Henning Nelson Lawrence Bowman Harry Scott Bart Korunkiewicz Harry Telot Don McGillis Frank 'McGillis Frank Parsek Bert Goodchild Sanmuel lMurray Peter Lacanne Ernest Lauzon Leo Doran Clarence MIurray Joseph La Point Frank Johnson Jermer Hlinka Percy Gadbois Frank Kveton Stephenson Jennings Archie Meissner Francis Clark Charles Sharkey Francisco Penberthy Leon Setunsky, Jr. Ray Mullins Ray Bruckhardt George Everard Meredith Doyle Peter Bartholomew Ed. Doran William Eckman Arthur Marcouiller John Gosling, Jr. Joseph Landre Milton BeDell Clarence LeBrun Halstead Worth James Emery Lawrence Desotel John Bero Arthur Demars Einar Gjelsteen Herbert Graminski \Valter Graminski Harold Hansen Michael Hornick Derrick Hubert Olof Johnson Leo Kreskv W\'illiam Longlais John Lynch Roland Olanlller Carl Olson Georoge Peatl Alex St. Laurent Ernest Bever Lyle Provanchei Severt Schulz Ben Swanson Fred J. Tupper Roman Tworek Elmer Wheeler Frederick Nyberg John Bauer Norman Jensen Harvev Falk tII, I I II 1 4 I ^. 41 [155] - --- I II Il rClrr I —C1 I — --- —~ ---c ---- -- i ~A A A ~ L *M &.l - mxpxix * Ii F iI I tf I I 4 4 * 4 4 4 + -"'^ ^" —"-C-^^ U ^ ^" E- - MtW — Zr H.. t4 /* I I I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Ten of the Leaders in All Home Activities in Menominee Edward Daniell William Webb John W. Wells Loren L. Prescott Fred M. Prescott Arthur A. Juttner Harmon Herbert A. Bow- A. XV. Blom F. J. Trudell Marshall B. Lloyd dish LIBERTY LOAN BONDS AND WAR SAVINGS STAMPS ACTIVITIES IN MENOMINEE CITY AND COUNTY M enominee's entry into this greatest of all home activities was marked by the appointment of G. A. Blesch of Mienominee, president of the IFirst National IBank, as one of the four members of the advisory board for the Upper Peninsula to aid the government in floating the Liberty Loans. In answer to the nation's appeal, the next step was an enthusiastic meeting in the American Club rooms, Saturday afternoon, May I9, I917, called by WVilliam Webb Harmon of the Lumberman's sula bankers for Menominee County. lie was later appointed chairman for M\enominee county of the Liberty Loan drives by the Federal Reserve Bank of MAinneapolis, and held that position for al' the succeeding loans, and WVar Saving Stamp activities. At this meeting on May I9, I917, plans were laid to obtain the co-operation of the clubs and lodges of the city, the American Club also being invited to assist in this splendid enterprise. Members of this committee appeared before the lnro(lpeq annl received ner1rikQirn fronm National Bank, to consider ways and the mannfactnrers to address the mill:neans for promoting the sale of LUnited(l adl factory employees during the (ldav in States Government Liberty Bonds. Mr. order to explain the bonds. 1 Harmon had been appointed as member The former Commercial Club of Meof the Executive board of Upper Penin- nominee had become "The American [157] * n - - ---— JlL^^^>-^< —Wt^^^"-^w — *,-:':4:: -': 44:: m 1 ----~11 --- —~1~-~ --- * * * 4 T ""i:::~ i '.4 0 t k 0 i I j I I I i I I 0 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 41 + + I p I 0 4 4 Meromiree Men who were Active on the First, Second, Third and Fourth Liberty Loan Drives, in raisirg funds for the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army, American Library Association, War Community Service, Jewish Welfare Board, Victory Loan and other Allied Activities. 1. Edward Nowack 2. Othmar H. Henes 3. Frank Wescher 4. A. M. Wilson 5. John E. Jones 6. John H. Riley 7. John E. Henes, Jr. 8. August Ludwig 9. Derrick Hubert 10. C. H. Crawford 11. John G. Reindl 12. George C. Prince 13. Hans P. Schmidt 14. Louis Kreuz 15. John Gosling 16. Fred J. Tufts [158].+'AL I 41 41. 4p. I F' A d....: - y. I — [ ol.0 2"I"MIM I*- -W I Iqulqw"WN Pe OF IV lw lw - | s + | i t e! i tj Club" by unanimous vote of its membership of 254. The Menominee meeting was the result of a conference of the representatives of banks and heals of several of the largest miningr and other business interests in the Upper Peninsula, hel-l at Marquette May 15, 1)I7, where a resolution was adopted under whic'l t: member of the executive board from each county was instructed to call a meeting of the business men, bankers, wva-e earners and everyone else in his distri:t. who might interest himself in this matter. The purpose of these meetings was to impress upon the people a prol)er sense of the responsibility resting iut:on them and devise ways and mean- by which everyone, rich or poor, might beable to assume his part. We reproduce here a few senteilces from Mr. Harmon's atddress at that meeting: "In the quality of their patriotism, the people of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, yield to none. But we are asleep. We have not yet had brought home to us the seriousness of the present worlMl conditions. It is time for us to wake up. Time for us to act. Not talk. NWe imay shout our patriotism to the housetops, we may adorn it with garlands of rhetoric to the end of time, but we must translate our words into deeds, for when the history of the great conflict shall have been written, we will be credited only with what we (lid. We have sai:l, 'We are behind the President.' Now let us prove it. The time of opportunity is now. The place is here. Let us fall In." And thus opened the great Liberty Loan activities in Menominee city and county. All of Menominee county went "Over the Top" in each and every loan. Many hundreds of thousands of dollars were subscribed over each quota alloted to Menominee county by the government. The grand total subscribed in the First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Victory Loans, and the money subscribed through the War Savings Stamp campaign in Menominee city and county, amounted in all to TWO MILLION SEVEN HUNDRED SIXTY-SEVEN THOUSAND AND THREE HUND)RED DOLLARS ($2,767,300). The Charity Fund netted the gross total of ONE HUNDRE: AND) FIVE THOUSAND, SEVEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY-NINE I) OLLI. ARS, ($105,769). The following committee was appointe(d to take charge of the work in Meleominee City and County: William \Webb Harmon. Chairman. M. B. Lloyd Fred MI. lPrescott H. A.. [lowdish E. P. S'llitl Rof-er l. A\ Ire\ws Peter \NVh'f ton I. E. Gibout Freld. r) tllrucq A. C. Wls Edx war 1 'a::iell T. Ml. Tlb'::npson kol'ert Cra' e lohri I. Silvernale i. J. Trll'lell Mrs. E. Guensburg Mrs. C. H. Law Mlrs. G. W\. McCormick COUNTY G(len Sanford, Stephenson Andlrew Weng, Daggett Howardl Nadeau, Nadeau Later the following township men were appointed to take charge of their respective districts: MENOM INEE TOWNSTlIP Hlenry Walter George Stephenson M ELLEN TOWNSHIP Albert Larsen L. Dobeas H. G. Schuette CEDARVILLE TOWNSHIP John Barstow Samuel Crawford INGALLSTON TOWNSHIP Charles Bailey Julius Grabowsky HOLMES TOWNSHIP Charles Ross Clarence Harter C. W. Wilkins 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 11 ^ < * 4 ^ ^ ' 11 - "I o AN I7 - I. Nvivrvib", 14 -. a. 1. x, [159] AML A& 11 - 1 4 _4 -0- 01 *. -.0. 410. — "- - -no W - - - - WN Q W, ___ - ____ - -- -- - II 11 I Aw - - - - ""O-1 nIoqk-kkf a CA 4 1 4 I 6. I -W I O NM — 1 -- I m Irs ii II 4 I 4 I4 0 B 4 4 4 4 4 I Meromiree Men who were active on the many drives for funds in the city, either on all the following or on as many as possible: Raising Funds for the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army, American Library Association, War Community Service, Jewish Welfare Boards, Victory Loan, and other Allied Activities. 1. C. C. Hansen 5. F. S. Norcross 9. John M. Thompson 13. F. X. St. Peter 2. P. C. Munroe 6. rWalter E. Henes 10. Ralph W. Wells 14. Victor De Morainville 3. G. L. Hastings 7. Frank W. Seidl 11. Robert R. Crane 15. Richard A. Lemieux 4. J. N. LaBillois 8. Michael G. Seidl 12. Thomas Murray 16. Wolfgang Reindl,[160] I ---- --- r31 — I --- - ~ - _, iIII Y III I f 29r N Mf &O ^ -- ---— Wf — = = = ~ A A * 'I 0 1 ] } *- xI-x.- * STEPHEN SON T Adolph Durow Dr. Edward Sav W\. B. Winter Joseph Marson Andrew Weng ). R. Iantlsborr LAKE TOWN Wendle Dolsky Fred Crane NADE\U Toy Henry Lucke Louis Nadeau Joseph De Rosie OWNSHIP SPP. I DIDING TOWNSHIP George Prince vbridge Rev. P. N. Fillion AIaj. Henry Schwellenbach Jacob Fontana Charles Symonds oDUth AMEYER TOWNSHIP ISHIP E. P. Radford G. H. Earle T. A. Peets VNSHIP HARRIS TOWNSIIIP T toI\ C 1 A r J onn A. >cnloen M. B. Harris M. H. Harris HONOR WHERE HONOR IS DUE The war is over, the work which every one so willingly did has been modestly forgotten. When one approaches those who so patriotically gave up their time at their country's appeal for funds, the same answer greets one, "Oh, we only did our duty." Nevertheless generations to come should at least be able to look upon the names of those who were active on the many drives for funds and charity, those drives which forced economy into thousands of homes and luxury out of sight for the duration of the war. It ha's been impossible to secure all the names of city and county workers. We give below a copy of the committees appointed for the third drive, which practically remained the same all through the succeeding drives. Many of these were active on every drive from start to finish. A sincere and pains-taking effort has been made to make this list as complete as possible. IIENOMINEE CITY-FOUR MINUTE MEN These men were the public speakers other appeals to the public for financial who, during the Liberty Loan drives and assistance, addressed the public at the while the different drives were being theatres on patriotic subjects. conducted for the Red Cross, and all Those who spoke in the theaters were: A. L. Sawyer, Chairman William F. Waite W. H. Ounsworth John L. Silvernale M. J. Doyle M. D. Cox Rev. F. A. Kuder Roger M. Andrews Rev. R. D. Hopkins G. W. McCormick M. P. Sawyer W. C. Giese Wm. Webb Harmon R. L. Nve Also Michael D. O'Hara, H. E. Nadeau E. 1. Hill the seven year old son of John J. O'Hara F. A. Roper Mr. and Mrs. John J. 0'Fred H. Haggerson Rev. H. F. Duttweiler Hara. C. R. Elwood f fI f f f > i I ^ I Besi(les the above four minute men, patriotic the following ministers did effective Rev. Geo. M. O. Laforest Rev. Fr. J. Neumair Rev. A. C. Skovgaard Rev. Fr. D. Cleary Rev. C. H. Auerswald work in their pulpits: Rev. A. Edwards Rev. Victor A. Karch Rev. N.M. M.inne e FIRST LIBERTY LOAN DRIVE \William \Vebb Harmon, City and County Chairman. Herbert A. Bowdish, Secretary [-. I [161] o -wimI~~I I -~~IL C -— 1.~ — ~ 4* *.' '40. *- - 1.10- - mm e I - -rofq — - Aii,pam *~It 474 -M eM -G 4 Slo Lb t Bns y hiPbc drssn hae ad artc a ei si t *a o F2 Orr AW4 9vr Patriotic Mrenoine ubicSpakers oiLrMiuedMens whNsite h oernmentinth 93 Rev. Fater George 10 Rev.H Fate Johnier 11. Rev. Fatheric Carl 16Re Fic athe J.O'Heph [162] MNN, -%.M,,AL-A c~il 1I I PC I L WXilliam Webb Harmon, County Chair- (4. A~. Blesceb, City Chairman THIRD LIBERTY LOAN I)RIVE Williami Webb Harmon, County Chair- W'ith the exception of the First ani man S~econd Liberty Loan drives, the last * Fred M. Prescott, City Chairman inamed offiicers headed all other Liberty Loren L. Prescott, Vice Chairma Lo(.an and chart drvs ihteflov * Herbert A.. Blowdsh, Secretary iing commi-ittee orgyanizationls: I PUBLICITY C()O\lI\11TTEE Ft. A. Blowdish, Chairman- Jv.. C. M ason Rev. G. M. 0. Laforest Dr. D. M. Wilcox A. L. Sawyer W. H. Ounswvorth B. W. Donnell L. E. Gibout Rog~er M. Audrews 1). F- L)aley Hon. J.W. Stiles Louis Setnusky R. D. West Mayor M. T. Doyle D. G. Wilson J. J. O'Hlara, M~ANUFTI{A TtURER{'S (X)M AMITITEE E. P-. Smith, Chairnian R. M\. Weidemann. 4. 1.Grani C. 1-.o Cook J. R. R ope r J. H. Race F. J. -Barrett 1.. Fisher R. WV. S. Hoskin 1-1. Fernstrnum A. Zickler F. Erdlitz A. C. \Wells E. A. MfcCtie Roy White Ger.- [ ost er ' A. Shor.Jdev I I. C i ll I A STes C. f I. Craw f ord M. B. L'lovl1 A. WV. Srnithi ii1. Worth WV. S. Patch J olin [enes 1 -'lenes, Jr. Elxxar I \Towack A. V\/' Rai,-hle J11ihn Ri~c R. W. \XVells Wa' ts~on,fa'I Ir Tl l e1 an ANM1\. Tileman iM. Ei. Hastings H. N. Breckheim-er Cbas. Ileim-erdingger NXV. F. IKerwin V.IB le M orainville I I I I 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 f 4 4 4 f 0 I M ER.CIIIANT'S COMMITTEE F. X. St. Peter, Chairman II1. Sienian A. 1I. Jtirgens Chai 'es Flan son jP. \Vheaton A. i\1. Wilson tI. P. Schmidt J. J. 0'Fara L. E. Gibout LI. A. Roper WV. Reindl D. I. Dixon J. G. Blahnik FAred Tufts C. L. Stocklin I1. 1-1. Hlinker Frank \V'escber F', 1. EIFllenlwood \V. 1A. Shockley SCHOOL AND TEACIHERS' COM-I-MITTEE John L. Silvernale, Chair-H. E. Nadeau man E. K. Converse WV. C. Giese iAtiss Frances Ralford R. L. Nye FRATERNAL SOCIETIES F. J. Duflrucq, Chairman Andrew Penl MI. G. Blahnik Charles F. Zache Mfichael Sporrer A. W. B-lom. L. E. Gihout M. G. Seidl R. R. Crane R. A. Lemieux Peter Kreuz William Allard. [163] Group of Menominee Men and Women who were active in Menominee City and County on Liberty Loan and other drives for Funds. 1. D. G. Wilson 5. Jessie Hubbard 9. Louis Menacher 13. C. Louis Hansen 2. A. M. Conant 6. Elmer Longfellow 10. Paul Moreau 14. Miss Elizabeth Winkel 3. E. K. Converse 7. R. A. Moran 11. Peter Dion 15. Miss Barbara Hornick 4. Glen P. Sanford 8. Edward P. Buckley 12. Joseph Blahnik 16. Mrs. Arthur Laduron [164] fr Jolhn Tauscher Charles Whitton Charles Herbst Edward Buckley l-. &l *l- ll ^, ^ MM M i I m - - - I FRATERNAL SOCIETIES-Continued W. A. Pengilly Fran C. L. Hansen Carl James Lamack Josei Geo. W. Wheeler E. J. Aumy. Ludwig 4. 4b, 4k. *P -0 - ml lw lw - -, 0. Todish A. Anderson,li Steber Parent 0 lk P SPECIAL SOLICITING COMMITTEE A. WV. Blom, Chairman Dr. NV. R. Hicks A. L. Sawyer D. G. Bothwell G. A. Blesch A. A. Juttner W. S. Carpenter J. W. Wells F. S. Norcross J. J. Martinek Dr. H. R. Bell John Gosling Carl A. Anderson Peder Jensen H. E. Nadeau W\m. Webb Harmon J. N. LaBillois Chas. Hansen V-. J. St. Onge Dr. H. A. Vennema Dr. F. R. Solmes S. B. Sanderson V. B. de Morainville Derrick Hubert WOMEN'S COMMITTEE Mrs. John E. Henes, Chair- Mrs. man Miss Mrs. Fred Bruce Mrs. Mrs. F. L. Brown Mrs. Miss Floria Buelow lrs. Mrs. William Brown XIMrs. Miss Bernice Blom Mrs. Mrs. Ben BeDell Mrs. Mrs. A. W. Blom Mrs. Mrs. D. G. Bothwell Mrs. Miss Amy Brown Mrs. fMrs. H. A. Bowdish M rs. Mrs. T. C. Christensen M\rs. \ rs. Chas. Corbin I Mrs. Mrs. William Corbett I\ rs. Mrs. C. H. Crawford Mrs. M\Irs. Nels Christopherson MIrs. Miss Irene Daley Mrs. Mrs. Victor B. (le Morain —Mrs. ville Mrs. Mrs. Edward Daniel IMiss AMrs. C. R. Elwood MI rs. Mrs. \Vm. Frost M rs. Mrs. Oscar Falk Mrs. fMiss E. Guensburg, Lillian Gleason H. Greger J. \\. (Gleason George Hastings C- A. Hassel Flora S. Hill D. Hobbins Albert Hass W. NW. Harmon Chas. Hutchinson Derrick Hubert W. F. Kerwin C. H. Law F. C. Lloyd Aug. Ludwig' Joseph NW. Leisen R. A. Law Jerry Maadden Geo. WV. McCormick Zana MIiller A. B. Meyers F. S. Nicholas J. J. O'Hara Gladys Pelletier AMrs. L. L. Prescott M\rs. C. S. Prescott Mrs. Geo. Power Mrs. John Riley Mrs. Fred M. Prescott Mrs. W. J. Ryan Mrs. Harry Roper Mrs. Fred A. Roper M rs. John Silvernale Mrs. T. E. Sellen Mrs. Jos. Simansky Mrs. Wm. St. Onge Mrs. F. X. St. Peter \ rs. Frank Seidil Miss AMargaret Trudell Mrs. T. AI. Thompson. Mrs. Harold Tideman Mrs. H. A. Vennema Mrs. J. W. W\ells Mrs. R. D. W\est A rs. Ralph W\ells lMrs. Gould NVatson M1rs. D. ML. Wilcox A rs. Ed. Stephenson I I I I I I I 1 4 1 4 1 1 1 4 1 1 4 1 4 4 e e e 4 COU1NTY LIBERTY LOAN WORKERS 4 \NNT.,,.- \ H. G. Schuette W\illiam Phillips C. \N. Volk Carl E. Anderson Odin Quam Joseph Schuette Anton Kanels Gust Krantz Arvid Peterson Emil Peterson Arthur Larson Henry G. Schuette INCGALLS Frank Larsen Herman Classen Albert Larsen Mrs. Dobeas Mrs. Albert Larsen STEI' HENS(N Dr. Edward Sawbridge Glen P. Sanford NVilliam B. NVinter Joseph Marson Dewitt Brown Robert Tetro Arvid Johnson Mrs. Frank Schafer IMrs. Carrie Humphrey mmmlmmmmm 4 4 [165] L..x mx-0 -4 41.6 m4. .ii + who assisted the Government in many different ways, being active on the Women's Committees on the Liberty Loan Drives, on the Membership Drive for the Red Cross, on the Food Conservatior, Urivic, the American Library Soliciting Committees and All Patriotic Work at Home. 1. Miss Bernice Blom 2. Miss Ina Nylund M. Miss Hazel Crane 4. Miss Olive Trudell 5 Mrs. Fred Tufts 6. Mrs. Harry A. Roper 7. Mrs. John E. Henes, Jr. S. Mrs. A. M. Contnt 9: Mrs. John Gosling 10. Mrs. Derrick Hubert 11. Mrs. Clinton W. Grcam 12. Mrs. Joseph Devo()e13. Miss Agnes King 14. Mrs. Louisa King 15. Mr,-. Selmt Siegel 16. Ml s. Elizbeth [166].-, * 4_ 4 -T^IWM ^ ^ ^ ^ -^^ ~IF -— I4 4 ~ ~sfail El:::4 4t ~~4 4r MenoineeCit Womn wo wee aciveworkrs urin theWarTheywer Patiotic Wom who ssitedthe ovenmet i man difernt wysbeig ativeon he omens Cmmitee onI th ibryLaDresothMebrhpDiefrteRdCosonteFoCnevtoL a h mrcnLbaySlctn Cmite n l aroi oka oe 16f6] 4 4 -l _ I l l, ~C - t X"mM~= —; —, ----=- ---- ----------- --------- -----— ~ — -— ~ —~ — -- -!i?..y l: <> 1 _^^^W^^ _ _^^ ^ ^^ q w I 4 4 a 4 4 < Menominee County Men who took an active part in all Patriotic Work assigned to them, or who offered to do it out of their own initiative, in the Liberty Loan Drives, Raising Funds for the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., American Library Fund, Salvation Army, Knights of Columbus, Jewish Welfare Board, and all other drives, which Menominee County people, like the city, over-subscribed at every drive. 1. Edward Schuette 2. Herman W. Clawson 3. Henry G. Schuette 4. Louis Dobeas 5. William J. Oberdorfer 6. Robert G. Tetro 7. William B. Winter 8. Arvid Johnson 9. Dewitt Brown 10. Arthur Du Chateau 11. Andrew Weng 12. Edward Perrizo 13. Louis Nadeau, Sr. 14. Paul Perrizo 15. Charles Peterson 16. Oscar Ahola [167] A ___ 4* I I. l II I - ~ WN = No M^ _ I *K I I% ii Menominee County Men who were active in All Patriotic Doings During the War, and who ably assisted the Government in all calls for funds. They opened their homes when no other place was available for Patriotic Meetings. 1. Charles Salawsky 2. Charles Bailey 3. Anton Kuse 4. Peter Nohlechek 5. Clarence Harter 6. George Hanna 7. E. Houte 8. Richard Kleinke 9. Robert Peters 10. J. Roth 11. Carl J. Johnson 12. C. W. Wilkins 13..Anton Mulzer 14. James B. Rickinson 15. Peter Garrigan 16. Mose Tanguay [168] i Ii t,,I ii COUNTY LIBERTY LOAN WORKERS-Continued Mrs. Nellie Sanford Oscar Samuelson POWERS-SPALDING Mrs. P. Peterson Pat Leveck Dr. Charles F. Whiteshield Miss Irene Sawbridge John Moberg Nicholas Peterson Julius Haglund Jacob Fontana CEDAR RIVER Anton Mulzer.. -r 'r. ''1 - ''Dr A -AXrTO.TT.r t, Earl Crawford Anton Kuse Tom Bolen John Bolen, Fox, Mich. Rudolph Blanchette Albert La Rock George Nesbitt L. Bonville John Williams Lyle Williams Milton Williams Andrew Jerue Patty Bonville William Emery Harvey Anderson DAGGETT Dr. D. R. Landsborough John Menzie Herman Jacobson Jacob Liebsteckel Alec Matson Charles Durrow Koss I oxworthy Albert Voight NADEAU Louis Nadeau, Chairman August Johnson Joseph Derosier M. 0. Depatie Hubert Perras Erick Hammerberg Charles Peterson Henry Schetter Anton Maurus A. G. Lucke John Anderson Mrs. H. R. Andrews Walter Anderson Herman Zimmerman Richard Lahey A. J. La Roche Geo. Pavlat Eskild Sorensen TALBOT AND VICINITY IL,K 1MAIN V ILLE Harold Earle M. R. Bradley Thomas A. Peets Joseph H. Marchaterre, Jr. Henry Jensen William Radque, Jr. Fred Gamache Elmer Johnson Martin Hanson Hans Hanson Charles Swanson William J. Anderson HARRIS Michael Harris, Jr. Chairman, Wilson, Mich. E. P. Reynolds, Harris, Mich. 0. H. Laviolette, Perronville, Mich. W Turner, Whitney, Mich. I 1 4 4 4 t ^ j i ^ Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Andrews took charge of all the drives, Red Cross, Food Conservation, Red Cross MTember ship, Y. M. C. A., and all the Liberty Loans. [169 -1 + - a - -. m -w +X -- -- -i* - I ' w wwI I - - -==% a -10, 40 - lw I 9 C 40. 4. PI MQ!T. igg III14'0`1 —"""- I I11, III. I.,A I,: Adik A& 5 =- --- 1) -10, 41 ll i in -:-D o l ;<. --- - --- 41 f 4 f 4 4 4 4 4 i I 0 i 4 i 4 4 Pt X 4 fl 4 r X X X 4 Menominee County Men who took the lead in All Patriotic Home Activities in the Northern part of Menominee County, were active leaders in the First, Second, Third and Fourth Liberty Loan Drives, Y. M. C. A., Red Cross, Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army and all other drives assigned to their share in Menominee County's war work at home. Also active on the Victory Loan. 1. David Downey 2. Harold Earl 3. Henry Jensen 4. E. P. Radford 5. Martin Hanson 6. Thomas Peets 7. M. B. Bradley 8. Hans Hanson 9. Bartolo Vescolani 10. C. J. Quade 11. Jacob Fontana 12. Fred Gamache 13. Charles D. Symonds 14. Nicholas Peterson 15. Michael Harris, Sr. 16. Michael Harris, 4 I Jr. Ifl 0 41- A& C.= Al- 410 40. [170] - - - >- - * - W 4, -- L --, - -s-s — aae~llll~ ~~ a~ -'' 7777 - Ll — -I 21L4.I IIr I — I ~ Ir1~1~li ~ I Ir 0 -I - A 4 & -s 40 4b 61% I'll Q — — ~ ~ — I - - - - - ~ - ~ - - a p - IIII, O#~W~~~1ft iF% ^-~ — l f Workers in Many Fields of Activity Roger M. Andrews Mllenomninee Rejected, physical disability, first call 0. ''. C., AMr. Andrews went to Washington in May, 1917, with a conditional certificate from IDr. W. IR. Hicks, examining surgeon, and applied unsuccessfully for admission in Regular Army. While in Washington was appointed a member oat the Labor Committee, National Council of Defense. Appointed June 27, 1917, member of (Governor Sleeper's personal staff, "during time of war, with rank of colonel." Four minute man. Spoke throughout Ninth Federal District, Liberty Loan drives. Represented Governor Sleeper at New York to welcome returning nmembers of Company L, and on same service at Newport News and Norfolk, Va., for returning casuals. Home newspapers were sent by Mr. Andrews during the war to every man in every branch of service from Menominee and Marinette counties, so far as possible to reach them. G. A. Blesch MIenoilinee Presided at the organization of the Menominee Red Cross Chapter, elected its first president, which office he held until he was appointed by the Federal Reserve Bank as one of the four members of the Advisory Board for the Ninth Federal District of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Formulated a plan to assist the floating of a loan to the government, which was later carried out in the district. His efficient work was highly commended and he as president, as well as his assistants in the bank, hold very fine letters of appreciation from the governor of the Federal Reserve Bank. Mr. Blesch, as vice-chairman of the Menominee County Chapter of the Red Cross, devoted much of his time to this work. Was city chairman of the second Liberty Loan drive. A. W. Blom M1enomlinee Mr. Blom was County Fuel Administrator and took part in Liberty Loan, Red Cross, Young M en's Christian Association, Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army, American Library Association, Young Women's Christian Association, *WTar Camp Community Service and Jewish Welfare Board drives for funds. Herbert A. Bowdish Menollmlinee Secretary Menominee County Branch Military Training Camp Association of America, fromn date of organization, Apr. 21, 1917, to Sept. 7, 1917. Chairman of sname to Nov. 15, 1918. County Publicity Chairlman, 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and Victory Loans, and 1918 War Savings Campaicn. Solicitor, city Y. M. C. A. War Fund, 1917. Solicitor, city A. R. C. 1st Wtar Fund, 1917. Secretary, Publicity Chairman and Campaign Manager, A. R. C. Membership Campaign, 1917. County Publicity Chairman and Campaign Manager for A. R. C., 1918, also membership campaign. Secretary Menominee County War Preparedness Board, Feb. 26 to Nov. 26, 1918. Volunteer secretary for same organization for 3rd, 4th and Victory Loan and War Savings, 1918; A. R. C. Wetar Funds; A. R. C. 1918 Membership Fund; Michigan Patriotic Fund, 1918. for seven War Activities and War Camp Community Fund. Chairman and Secretary for Menominee County A. R. C. Civilian Relief and Home Service, Sept. 1917, to Jan., 1919. The first war organization in Menominee County was the Menominee County Branch of the Military Training Camp Association. This branch was instrumental in sending a total of fourteen men to the officers' training camp at Fort Sheridan, of which nine received commissions and two were promoted later. It was also instrumental in promoting the enlistment of twelve men for special branches in the army. No officer or member of the branch received any remuneration. Rev. Father Dennis Cleary Menolininee Rev. Father Cleary did great patriotic work through his church. He helped organize and took great interest in all Red Cross work, as well as all patriotic efforts in the city. Edward Daniell Menoininee Chairman of the Menominee County Committee War Preparedness Board, in charge of all Nwar activities in the county. Member of Executive Committee of the Menominee County Branch Military Training Camp Organization. Lefore the organization of the War Board, was member of War Industries Board. Took an active part in 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and Victory Loan drives, Y. M. C. A., Red Cross, Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army, American Library Association, Y. WV. C. A., War Camp Commiunity Service, and Jewish Welfare Board. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Daniell had two sons in the servic(e during the war. Peter Dion Menoliniee Peter Dion, with Paul Moreau, has the thanks 0o all the Red Cross workers at both of the Menominee shops, for the services rendered by moving all the outside work except the actual Red Cross sewing and cutting and folding in the Surgical Departments, enabled the workers to turn out so much more material. Both of these men donated their services as their share of Red Cross work. Michael J. Doyle Menominee Michael J. Doyle, Mayor of Menominee since April, 1918. entered this office at the height of the world's conflict. Many duties were added to his other patriotic interests. His addresses at public meetings stirred his audience and aroused their enthusiasm and patriotism. He vwas one of Menominee's Four Minute Speakers. Member of Legal Advisory Board and member of Publicity Committee for City of Menominee. Headed the city committee sent to New York to greet returning members of Company L. Frederick J. Du Brucq Me sl tilli flne e Chairutanu Fraternal and Secret Organization Commlittee Meimber of City War Board organization. Member of Executive Board of Menominee County Branch Military Training Camp Associiation. Active on all drives for money and charity. First, Second, Third, Fourth and Victory Loan drives, Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army, Y. M. C. A., and all other drives. He holds a certificate of appreciation from the government for services rendered during the war. Rev. R. P. Ernst Menollinee Speaker at county patriotic meetings. Chairman Civilian Relief and Home Service, Menominee County Chapter American Red Cross, from Jan. 1, 1919. John Gosling Menominee Active in all patriotic and war efforts in the City of Menominee. Took part in all the drives, Red Cross Membership, Y. M. C. A., and Liberty Loan Drives, as well as all the drives for charity. 1 1 I 4 4 0 11 * 4 4 AlRk 1 4 I " [171] () * - - I,r~ -UP- - ~M, l *I — -~ -. --- I 4 4 4 4 Charles C. Hansen Arthur A. juttner ~jCharles C. Hansen Arthur A. Juttner E. Menominee Mr. Hansen was a member of the Special Soliciting Committee and was an active member of the American Club. Active on all drives for funds and charity. Red Cross Membership, Y. M. C. A., K. of C., Salvation Army, Jewish V Welfare Board, and all the Liberty Loan drives. I C. Louis Hansen Menominee President of the Eagle Lodge during the war activities. One of the promoters of the purchase of $1,000 worth of Liberty Bonds by the Eagles. Member of Special Soliciting Committee of the Fraternal Societies of the city. In Y. M. C. A., Salvation Army, First, Second, Third, Fourth and Victory Loan drives. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hansen's four sons wore the U. S. uniform during the war. Two of them served in the army, one in the S. A. T. C., and the fourth joined the state troops in Menominee. Fred H. Haggerson Menomninee Son of George H. and Minnie C. Haggerson. Husband of Ethel Stephenson. Born Apr. 19, 1884. Entered the United States Department of Justice as a Special Agent, Jan. 5, 1918. Assigned to Cleveland, Ohio, and engaged in the apprehension and conviction of draft evaders, members of the I. W. W. and other radical organizations. Mar. 8, 1918, ordered to New York office, Department of Justice, as Assistant Division Superintendent in charge of the internment of enemy aliens. Dec. 1, 1918, appointed Division Superintendent, New York office. Department of Justice. Resigned Jan. 5, 1919, and relieved about Feb. 15, 1919. Now living in New York. William Webb Harmon Menominee Member of Menominee County Committee of Michigan War Preparedness Board. Chairman by Federal appointment) for Menominee County Liberty Loan and War Savings Stamp activities. Member of Menominee Branch Military Training Camp Association, Chairman of the First Liberty Loan drive. One of the Four Minute Theater Speakers. He made trips with members of the American Club and addressed public meetings in the county in the interest of Liberty Loan and War Savings Stamp drives. Charles R. Hlavach Menom inee Son of John and Barbara Hlavach. Born June 7, 1892, Menominee. Entered Government employ July 19, 1917, at Washington, D. C. Remained in service as auditor of government contracts for war materials. Continued in service after armistice. Richard W. S. Hoskin Menominee Chairman of the Menominee Chapter of the American Red Cross. Mr. Hoskin was connected from the start with all activities of the Red Cross and drives for it. He was also active on other drives. Andrew H. Jergens Menominee Took part in the first Membership drive of the Red Cross. War Garden Inspector. Member of the Merchants' Committee and active on three Liberty Loan drives, Salvation Army and Red Cross drive for funds. He was Chairman for Mernominee and Marinette of the American Central Committee for the Relief of the War Sufferers of Schleswig. The northern part of Schleswig, by general vote, was rejoined to the kingdom of Denmark July 9, 1920, while the lower part voted to remain with Germany. Chairman Danish Lutheran Church Commission for Soldiers' and Sailors' Welfare. Menominee Postmaster. Commissioned as Enrollment Agent, U. S. Public Service Reserve for Menominee County. U. S. Employment service under the direction of the Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C. Chairman Special Solicitlng Committee in all drives for funds during the war. Chairman Local Community Labor Board for Menominee County. UT. S. Dept. of Labor. Other members of Board, Howard E. Nadeau, Charles Steward, Mrs. John E. Henes, anct Miss Cora Porterfield. Mr. Juttner had charge of placement work, finding employment for all discharged soldiers and sailors of Menominee County. Active in recruiting men for the Army and Navy. Recruited more men for the Navy than any other person in Upper Peninsula and Northern Wisconsin. Rev. F. A. Kuder Menominee Mr. Kuder did very effective work through his church in assisting the government. Interested in all Red Cross work and activities. Also in the Y. M. C. A. and the Salvation Army drives. Rev. George M. O. La Forest Menominee Member of War Board as pastor of St. Ann's Church, Menominee, of which congregation 130 boys were in the service. Five of the boys gave their lives for their country. Active in all Red Cross activities. Organized two Red Cross Auxiliaries. Active in K. of C. work. Charles H. Law Menominee Second Chairman of the Menominee Chapter of the American Red Cross. Mr. Law succeeded Mr. Hoskin as Chairman of the Menominee Chapter A. R. C. after Mr. Hoskin's resignation, due to important business matters outside of the city. Member of Manufacturers' Committee and connected with Liberty Bond drives, Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., Salvation Army, Knights of Columbus, American Library Association, War Camp Community Service, Y. W. C. A., Jewish Welfare Board and other patriotic work. Frank Lishka Menomninee Mr. Lishka was the first man in Menominee to evolve the idea of an independent organization for the Czecho-Slovak Relief. This society was later named the White Cross. It was followed up by every city in the U. S., where there were any large number of families living who had relatives or friends in C'zecho-Slovakia. Before becoming a member of this independent relief society, every member had to join the American Red Cross, this being one of the requirements. Elmer Longfellow Menomninee Artist, designer and decorator for all public buildings and interior decorations for patriotic banquets and farewell dinners or receptions for going and returning service men. He assisted D. G. Wilson. Special credit is due Mr. Longfellow for the artistic street decorations with flags and emblems and the decoration of the Liberty Arch on Main street under which our returning soldiers passed Decoration Day, May 29, 1919. Marshall B. Lloyd Menominee Marshall B. Lloyd was Mayor of Menominee when war was declared. He was a director of the American Red Cross. Shortly after war was declared, Mr. Lloyd offered his services to his country, unreservedly and without pay. His prominence as an inventor made it possible for him to offer such references as: President Farrell of the United 1721 ) I I I I I 4 4 4 0 4 t 4 I,] mm.I N *11 40. Si"~S ^ ^ ^ ^W "%Akdem ilII. l.+. dh- 4. -0 -lr r e di I mmo do 1% q, - *11% -W States Steel Corporation; Christian Girl, Chief can Club were unceasing. Four Minute Man. o the Motor Truck Dept. of the Government; Mr. O'Hara spoke in every school house in the Z. G. Simmons, President of the Simmons Mant- county. He took part in all four Liberty Loan ufacturing Co.; and Col. Fred Green, President and Victory Loan drives and all drives for of the Ypsilanti Reed Furniture Co. Mr. Lloyd charity. He was Chairman of the Knights was active in all war drives. of Columbus drive for Menominee county. At the end of the war when the American Club —, i -A A1- PA 4 - a:- u el: i 4 A 4 August Ludwig Menomilnee Member of Manufacturers' and Fraternal Organizations' Committee. Active in the First, Second, Third, Fourth and Victory Loan drives, Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., K. of C., Salvation Army and all other drives. George W. McCormick Menominee Appointed Assistant Food Administrator for the State of Michigan by Governor Sleeper. Mr. McCormick was a member of the War Preparedness Board for the State of Michigan and spent three days of every week at Lansing for over a year. One of the most important duties assigned by the Government to Mr. McCormick was the collection of fines from those disobeying the food laws of the United States as-administered by Herbert Hoover at Washington, 1). C. Over $8,000 were collected by him in different places through the Upper Peninsula, and turned into the Red Cross Fund of that particular locality. Over $6,000 of Liberty Bonds were sold as part of the penalty imposed on those who disregarded the U. S. Food Administrator's orders. Active in all patriotic drives. Paul N. Moreau Menoninee Paul Moreau and Peter Dion assisted the Red Cross workers in the shops with all the heavy work, without any remuneration, as their share of patriotic assistance. They not only handled nearly two hundred cases of Red Cross finished work, which all had to be done strictly according to Red Cross orders, but kept the shops swept, cleaned up, and warm. Special request has been made by Red Cross workers for ment:on of this assistance. Paris C. Munroe Menominee Mr. Munroe was a member of the Publicity Committee. He was active on the Liberty Loan drives, the drives for the Y. M. C. A., Red Cross and other drives. Howard E. Nadeau Menolinee As cashier of the Commercial Bank, was a member of the Liberty Loan Advisory Committee. Member of city organization of War Board. Four Minute Speaker. Took part in all important and public war activities. Rev. Father Joseph Neumair Menomnnee Although born in Germany, Father Neumair was most on behalf of the country of his adoption. His speeches and influence hastened many of his parishioners to the colors before they were called. The two largest Red Cross Auxiliaries in Menominee city and county were the two from his church. Father Neumair's whole remaining family in the German war zone were killed during the war. But he encouraged our boys to stand by the government and help with all their might to win the war against the enemy. He kept his own family bereavements a strict secret until peace was declared. 0 certificates of appreciation from the U. S. Government for services rendered Liberty Loan and patriotic activities. Michael D. O'Hara Menominee The little seven-year-old son of John and Mrs. Helen O'Hara was one of the Four Minute Speakers. He spoke in a clear voice which could be heard all over the theatre. The Washington, D. C., Four Minute Paper gave him a complimentary notice, remarking that little Michael was the youngest public speaker in the U. S. Government's interest. Wm. H. Ounsworth Menonlinee Member of Publicity Committee. Director of all community singing in Menominee during the different war activities-also lending his voice as soloist at many patriotic entertainments, lectures, banquets and dinners given during the war. Active on the Red Cross membership drive, Y. M. C. A., Salvation Army, Jewish Welfare, Knights of Columbus, Red Cross drive for money. First, Second, Third, Fourth Liberty Loan and the Victory Loan drives. Four Minute Man. Henry A. Perry Menominee Member of Publicity Committee and Managing Editor of the Herald-Leader. His patriotic editorials did much to promote and arouse Americanism in the city and county of Merominee. Fred M. Prescott Menominee Chairman of Menominee City Committee, War Preparedness Board, appointed by the Governor. He directed all war work campaigns and drives for Liberty Bonds, the Red Cross, Young Men's Christian Association, Knights oi Columbus, Salvation Army, American Library Association, Young Women's Christian Association, War Camp Community Service, Jewish Welfare Board and other allied activities. He was City Chairman of the Third and Fourth Liberty Loan and Victory Loan drives. The three sons of Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Prescott were among the first Menominee young men to enlist. Loren L. Prescott Menominee Representative for the Ninth District of the U. S'. War Industries Board, comprising the states of Montana, North and South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Upper Peninsula of Michigan, with offices at Minneapolis and branch office at Ishpeming. Mr. Prescott took active part in First and Second Liberty Loan rriia.q VTirot, /Chairman nf Thirt andrl 'linlrth r'esumed its activities as tne Commercial Club, he was presented with a silver embossed gavel with the inscription. "To the War President, from the Citizens of Menominee" He holld 4 * 1i 1 Liberts Loan and Vc1rUtory VL s A. --- >M T ^ ^ > ^^ ^..~ 1. Mrs. Henry Jensen 5. Mrs. C. M. Vickery 9. Miss Ida Menard i3. Mrs. Otto Bruckhart lominee County Red Cross 2. Mrs. Fred Lohf 6. Miss Clara Kritch 10. Miss Sarah Downey 14. Mrs. John Williams Workers, Sewers and Knitter 3. Miss Jennie Dahlum 7. Mrs. Walter Slack 11. Mrs. Robert Kirby 15. Mrs. E. Houte 4. Mrs. Anna Dahlum S. Mrs. Erick Meyer 12. Mrs. John Liegeois 16. Mrs. Anton Kuse [190] AML A& 'AL -*Ik A& AM L CEDAR RIVER RED CROSS BRANCH LEADER, MIRS. JOHN WILLIAMS \I IMrs. Anton Kuse MIrs. F. Olson Miss Mlae Nesbitt 1 Irs. \Valter Wriglht Mrs. A. Nesbitt Miss Mae Williams IMfrs. P. Chamberlain Irs. M. Parrett Miss Eva Nesbitt Mrs. M\1. Flood Miss A. Jerue -Miss Hilda An(lerson Miss Kate Jerue INGALLS RED CROSS BRANCH A F r-1, \ A Ar T. T), 0,\T ArCT^\ T.1^ JT A A rN TT- ' LC. TA T l VT rI i^.- ry -AI 1(. A..\1. I AKlSON, -nrlld1illdil. MLISS IILOSSIE SUTHERLAND, Vice-Chairman. i\s. 13 N E i V1 K. -I-,I 1 D, JC l d.LI Ty. MAiss EMMAmA DOBE.\S, Treasurer. Mrs. Frank Larson AMrs. John White AIrs. Joe Fillion Mrs. Thomas Goulder AMrs. Charles Damm Mirs. N. Virch Mrs. Deacon Mrs. T. Everard Mrs. A. Reitmeyer Ars. Win. Carley Mrs. L. Dobeas Al rs. AMrs. M rs. MArs. Alrs. AMrs. AMrs. Mrs. AMrs. Mrs. H. Clawson Max Obert E. AMcGilligan Joe Brock Bert Brock George Lord Earl Baril Ed. Hanson Wm. Damm S. Swaningson Mrs. Wim. Coakley Mrs. L. D. Eastman Ars. Thomas Collins MIiss Hazel Sutherland Miss Bertha Schultz 'Miss Exior Baril Miss Lucy Corcoran Miss Agnes Corcoran Miss Geneva Lord Miss Sarah Collins Miss Esther Rose STEPHENSON RED CROSS BRANCH AIRS. A. A. ELLSWORTH, First President, succeeded MArs. Mrs. Mrs. \Mrs. Mrs. AiMrs. Mrs. IMrs. Charles DeMille Albert Winter Frank Fraid Peter Peterson Fred Woessner H. L. AIeade D. Houle Lillian House St. Peter M\rs. Philomine Decaine Mrs. Peter Derry Irs V. B. B Winter Mrs. AMcMonigle IMrs. Andrew Hansen Mrs. B. M. Bodle Mrs. L. N. Lanthier Mrs. W. G. Oberdorffer AMrs. A. T. Sanford Mrs. W. Landre Mrs. Fred Lundgaard llrs. Oscar Nordquist AMrs. James Garrigan AMrs. L. Laycock Mrs. Carl Bergvall Mrs. Harold Johnson AMrs. Walter Jervais Mrs. Wr. Hall AIrs. Robert Tetro Mrs. A. Rickaby Mrs. Napoleon LaCombe MIrs. Joseph E. AMarson Mrs. Hayes Rouse Mrs. Arthur Sanford Mrs. Louis Ames Mrs. John Ewald Mrs. Rev. Shugg MIrs. August Neville Mrs. A. N. Loth MIrs. Jennie Duby Mirs. Al. Humphrey Miss Loleta Sanford Miiss Jessie Oberdorffer MIiss Ellen Tunnell by AIRS. J. A. MAIuMA. Miss Celia O'Donnell Miss Florence O'Donnell AMiss Mary Kinney Aiss Emma Colburn AMiss AMable Neuville Aiiss Laura Colburn Miss AIable Lillgroot Miss Phoebe Bodle AMiss Bessie Schafer Miss Edna Boucher Miss Esther Boucher Miss Aurella Colburn Miss Lena St. Peter Miss Ruth Woessner Miss Martha Estabrook Miss Emaline Sandberg Miss Leonora Winter Miss Helen Martin AMiss Celia Bushonville Miss Phoebe Benjamin Miss Dorothy Winter I 4._ * 3 I 4 Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. AMrs. Mrs. George Alfred Albert Ed. V James STEPHENSON AUXILIARY OF THE RED CROSS Pittman Mrs. Melvin Parrott Mrs. Howard I Parrott Mrs. Gust Nelson Mrs. Adolph P Safstrom Mrs. Sam Bebo Mrs. Louis Pe Varner Mrs. Andy Coldie Mrs. James Pa Kennedy Mrs. John Parrott Mrs. John Olso [191] 'arrott luchak:terson Irrott }n [! 1' I + i 6 - -I A lk -I"-. -I -. I I. ' _ 4.0. T 4,...w -- - I- - WE * - - 0 C.0 - --- 7I I. I* -- - L - q r% - -,- -wl 'I -- ~~y =,. Ig-, LC _ ~< 'STEPHENSON AUXILIARY OF THE RED CROSS-Continued Mrs. John Jacobson Mrs. Robert Sturdy Miss Hilda Johnson Mrs. Chas. Olson Miss Minnie Fosberg Mrs. Nels Johnson Mrs. Ole Olson Mrs. Richard Holstein t DAGGETT RED CROSS BRANCH Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Joseph E. Palm Regnar Palm D. R. Landsborough Paul Perrizo Edward Perrizo P. L. Raiche James McGraw John Dunham, Sr. T. Keener Frank Palm James Kesler John Dunham, Jr. Mrs. P. R. Johnson Mrs. William Goodfellow Mrs. Ross Foxworthy Miss Marion C. Kesler Miss Florence Weng Mrs. J. Ewald Mrs. G. Beaudovin Mrs. Axel Swanson Mrs. Andrew Weng Mrs. Axel J. Lavigne Mrs. Archie Belongy Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. MIrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Miss Miss Miss Miss Philip Belongy George Thompson Thomas Lynch Clarence Larson, Sr. Clarence Larson, Jr. Antone Ellingson Max A. Kuntze Wilbert Nelson Irene C. Johnson Callie Walton Myrtle Weng Mable Weng DAGGETT JUNIOR RED CROSS CLUB Miss Beatrice Johnson Miss Maureen Perrizo Miss Margaret Kesler Miiss Emma Dunham Miss Marguerite Johnson Miss Myrtle Weng CARNEY RED CROSS BRANCH 0 Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Eskild Sorensei Peter Garrigan R. F. Estabroo John Bagley Gust Carlson Bent Peterson MRS. ARTHUR HART, Chairman i Mrs. Rev. Chilstrom Mrs. Sena Larson ks Mrs. Andrew Sorensen Mrs. Eli Erickson Mrs. Chas. Lindstrom Mrs. Anton Anderson Mrs. E. Akron Mrs. MIrs. MIIrs. Mrs. Miss Miss And. Hanson G. Westerberg Manacek Sam Goldberg Hulda Hammerberg Sophie Erickson 4 4 4 I NADEAU RED CROSS BRANCH MRS. Louis NADEAU, Chairman. MRS. JOSEPH PODORE, Secretary. Miss STELLA NADEAU, Treasurer. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. MI. A. Rouse G. Heftie E. Fish Dick Menard Williams James Merrell George Chudacoff Joe Larsh F. Pouquette F. LeGoise V7A 1N/rTi4-A i 1 Mrs. M. Forgette Mrs. A. Webber MIrs. August Jean Mrs. Clem Larson Mrs. Barney Dreeze Mrs. Alec Dantin Mrs. Clara Hart Mrs. W. Pope Mrs. Otto Rouse Mrs. Delore Poquette \/r.,o iAT f 7; T 11;n Mrs. Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss AT/ri Tom Piche Alice Nadeau Lottie Brunette Delina Jean Emma Benson Mary Piche Mae St. Aubin Emertine;Forgette Julia Dreeze Elizabeth Laurin i\/r[^r+ r- -- -- -0 4o- 41 *, 4 M h M C T 4b w *' '3 on July 2, i9i8 for the "Cold Pack school houses and many large farm * method" of canning authorized by the kitchens for the women and girls of the government. The city was divided into neighborhood. five districts, with a leader and several The following leaders were appointed assistants for each district. The leaders in Menominee city: Miss Marion Rasheld group meetings for the residents of mussen, Henes Park district; Miss Ann each listrict onre a week. where racrti- Sullivann Tunior -Hiph rSchnl di'strict cal canning demonstrations were conducted. In turn, every woman who had mastered the above art, again held private classes in her own home. The above method was generally followed throughout the county, where self-conducted classes were held in the Miss Ruth Kellogg, Mrs. A. H. Jurgens, Mrs. C. Mathiasen, Danish Hall district; Mrs. K. Nielsen, Mrs. Sievert Hansen, Miss Nellie Laperriere, Presbyterian Church district; Miss Gladys Pelletier and Miss Gertrude Spies, West Menominee district. 4 4 4 4 4 I I I I 1 4 1 4 I I + I i $ + 41 4 + 4 i < < * [202] i, 1 -4 l- l --- **m1& V ^ -- - --- Id^ ^? I - w w - -w 4 - --- 4 C 1 0 3 7 ---— " 4: k%li 2 - - ^-. — L- L.___ - - --------— ~ 4 If I; f 4 i War Garden Committee Miss May Goite Miss Jessie Hall Miss Carolyn Miss Mary Barrett Mr. J. L. Silvernale VanDenBerg WAR GARDEN ACTIVITIES An imporant part in home activities was the war Garden and Food Procluction organizations, called into life at the Commercial Club luncheon Monday, April 23, 1917, by A. L. Sawyer of Menominee. Mr. Sawyer directed attention to the fact that if proper interest were given to city gardens, many dollars worth of food could be added to the local supply. A garden committee was then appoint2d which consisted of A. L. Sawyer, Chairman; R. M. Weideman, C. I. Cook, R. L. Nye, H. J. Deters, D. G. Wilson, R. W. Wells, C. I. Cook, Jr., F. A. Ropr, Peter Wheaton, and Leo Pecard. A great amount of work was accomp-:lshed. Anyone having unoccupied lots or owning plots of land, which could be planted and utilized for gardens instead of ornamental purposes, was asked to so employ it, and, if not possible to do his own planting, to offer the lot to others rwho could. This campaign not only produced a large increase in garden truck, but it changed many an ugly and unsightly lot into a pleasing spot. The teachers in the public schools took great interest in this movement and spent much of their time after school in teaching and encouraging the boys and girls. Prizes were offered by the committee to boys and girls who were able to produce the most of the vegetables from their gardens. War Garden inspectors were appointed in the different wards in the city to inspect the school children's war gardens. The teachers did much of that work in connection with Superintendent J. L. Silvernale, Peter Sibenaler, Miss May E. Goite, Miss Jessie Hall, Miss Carolyn \VanDenBerg, MIiss Mary Barrett, Andrew H. Jurgens, North Menominee, and Miss Margueritte Gibout, West Menominee. MISs I.\AY GOITE Teacher, 6th grade, Washington School, Menominee. Was an untiring and conscientious Garden Inspector of all sections alloted to her supervision. WVas also an active Red Cross knitter. MISS MARION JESSIE HALL Teacher, 6th grade, Roosevelt School, Menominee. Spent many hours each dlay, after her school work was completed, in the task of War Garden Inspector in the large area which had been assigned to her. A very productive crop was the result of the Children's War Garden under Miss Hall's supervision. I I 1 4 * * * 4 4 A. f 4 4 * t I i I t WI MIIss CAROLYN VANDENBERG Teacher, 6th grade, Boswell School, Menominee. Was active Garden In- 3 spector, spent many hours each day after 0 school inspecting and instructing the children of her district in the War Garden work. She was an active worker at [203] - "1 -i ' ^ ^ d -- ~ `~+ ~b~Y~rc~ ----ll --- —-- 3~1I I i 9 4 4-2-. i h r;-0- 4- 4. ICSO Wm,^ -WI- - - - -- I 0 tp 0 0 0 the Boswell School Red Cross Auxiliary and also in the St. John's Auxiliary Menominee Chapter Red Cross, besides being a busy knitter at home. MIss MARY BARRETT. Teacher 2nd grade, Washington School, Menominee. Utilized the hours left her for recreation from school duties for the inspection and instructing of children, who were planting War Gardens in the down-town district. She also was a very busy knitter and an active worker in St. John's Auxiliary, Menominee Chapter of the Red Cross. JOHN L. SILVERNALE | Superintendent of the Menominee Public Schools since 1914. Took part in the Red Cross Membership Drive, in the five Liberty Loan Drives and was ntte.f thi FnAir t k/lltk. IU t'lUn1trtf c.nl/Ol1rc J1tCV Mr -L 1'VLL -VlIllULr LVll iV-lc O L~dC.. He led the War Garden Activities in the Public Schools and gave the teachers every opportunity to use their influence to foster patriotism among the children. He was one of the most active Garden Inspectors and spent every minute he could out of school at that work. I f I f 4 9 e ^ I 1 4 *4 9 + [204] - ~ MW6A ___- ^ ^ "T - --- ^ ^ S — A -rf^ ^ ^ " r w - t_^^K^. i3 i0:: --.6 4- 4 m 9m ~ 40. Three D. A. R. Leaders Mrs. C. W. Hutchinson Mrs. G. A. Blesch Mrs. H. A. Vennema THE MENOMINEE CHAPTER OF THE DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION (MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL SOCIETY AMERICAN REVOLUTION) One of the'most patriotic clubs of women was the Menominee Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Unaided by outside assistance, they organized an auxiliary of Red Cross activities among their members, following an appeal by the surgeons of France for bandages and war relief necessities long before Menominee had a Red Cross Chapter. The D. A. R. women all over the United States took up that appeal. There are 43 chapters in Michigan, but the Menominee Chapter, under the Regentship of Mrs. G. W. McCormick in I917-I918 and Mrs. C. W. Hutchinson in I918-I919, was not out-done by any. Twelve million bandages were sent out by the D. A. R. women of the United States. The Menominee chapter sent out many thousands of them to French hospitals and battlefields. These bandages and surgical dressings were made according to the specifications of French surgeons, samples of which had been sent to the United States. They varied slightly from the ones made under the American Red Cross rule. Each and everyone was stamped, "MENOMINEE CHAPTER, Daughters of the American Revolution." The Chapter raised money by the sale of American flags, $226 being obtained from this source at one time. They met at each others homes and later in their club rooms to sew for the Belgian War Relief, made bandages and sterilized surgical dressings for the Allies before the United States entered the war. These were later turned over to our army. When Company L left Menominee each boy was supplied with a comfort kit. All day meetings were a feature of the Chapter. They made and sent property bags to our boys at Camp Custer. They bought Liberty Bonds and took the lead in Memorial and 4th of July patriotic celebrations. They contributed 150 books to the Y. M. C. A. libraries. They made scrap books and contributed generously to the Christmas dinners for soldiers' and sailors' families. They donated $10.00o to the Belgian Relief and contributed to the Armenian and Syrian Relief. Sent oranges and homemade jellies to the hospitals in New York for the wounded soldiers. They sent baby outfits, refugee garments, linen and cotton for reconstruction work overseas; contributed to the Egg fund in France and adopted several French orphans, besides other contributions for Army and Navy Relief. The Club of Little Helpers, under the leadership of Mrs. Hutchinson, made 5000 gun wipes for Camp Custer. The D. A. R. Boys Club gathered tin foil for [205] 4 4 f 0 4 4 4 i 4 1 4 4 4 4 I I I I I I 0 I, + - - - - - A A& A& - 4 ~1 c _** r -~L~ mmmmmm% f 7::,'L:40. t 9p m i - -.,. RINOW'W IW - - I 5 - 11 m 4..01 "I" I - Vdolmem - I 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 6 i 4 4 4 I II I I I France. The Chapter organized and carried on the D. A. R. Boys' Club with nearly two hundred members at that time, which has since grown to about 500 members. These boys sang at the banquets given for departing soldiers and were taught patriotism by the Daughters of the American Revolution, especially the meaning and honor due the flag of our country. The great work carried on by the Chapter for the D. A. R. Boys' Club is assuming the proportions of a great institution. It begins to show a wonderful improvement in the young boys of the city. No doubt it will carry the movement to other parts of the city with its beneficial influence upon other boys, who are not fortunate enough to be members of this splendid club, or who for some reason or other are not able to meet the D. A. R. Boys' Club members at their own Club Rooms. All the patriotic work during the war, in which the D. A. R. Boys' Club took part, was clone under the leadership of the Daughters of the American Revolution, especially Mrs. H. A. Vennema and Mrs. G. A. Blesch. It was a wonderful lesson for the boys in love with their country and their flag. They will carry the memory of those sad, but patriotic meetings, where they sang their parting songs for the service men who were leaving, with them through life. The Chapter dedicated a flag with appropriate ceremonies and organized the Margaret Harmon Flag Fund in honor of the founder and very efficient promoter. The members of the Menominee Chapter took part in the national work of the D. A. R., including the reconstruction of the town of Tilloloy in France. The hundred thousand Daughters of the American Revolution of the United States each gave one dollar or more to this purpose. After it had been partially rebuilt, the war not being over yet, it again was destroyed by the Germans. The D. A. R. women again rebuilt it more thoroughly than before. And now it stands and will forever remain a monument built in the French Republic by American women. The Menominee D. A. R. members each paid one dollar or more toward the one hundred thousand dollar fund of the National Daughters of the American Revolution, with which they bought one hundred thousand dollars worth of Liberty Bonds. This money is to remain with the government as long as needed, and when returned to the National D. A. R. it is planned to use that money for the assistance of disabled soldiers. THE MENOMINEE CHAPTER OF THE D. A. R. WOMEN also dedicated a service flag to their sons who served in the Army and Navy. Robert Hutchinson Edgar Brown Henry Campbell William Irving Daniell William M. Sawyer Curry S. Prescott Fred H. Prescott James C. Prescott Harold G. Sawyer Leslie 0. Waite Benjamin Holmes Guy Holmes Ray Holmes Lawrence Frost Daniel Robert Dyer I: I# 4 I I I I D. A. R. Boys' Club I 4 r-. ru m. - 4 sw I ,k 1- 114I.' A.1 LIST OF ACTIVE MEMBERS DURING TIlE WAR FEB. 1917 TO FEB. 1918. AMrs. G. W. McCormick, Regent Mrs. George Power, Treasurer. NMrs. Herbert Bowdish, Vice Regent. Mrs. Fabian Trudell, Registrar. M lrs. Wm. Webb Harmon, Secretary. Mrs. A. L. Sawyer, Historian. 'FEB. 1918 TO FEB. 1919. Mrs. Mrs. AMrs. Mrs. AMrs. AlMrs. Airs. Miss Mrs. Airs. Mrs. Miss Mrs. Mrs. C. W. Hutchinson, Regent. G. W. McCormick, Vice Regent. Wm. Webb Harmon, Secretary. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. G. A. Blesch H. A. Bowdish C. W. Campbell Myra Crawford Virginia Daniell W. J. Frost Webb Harmon William Holmes C. W. Hutchinson Abigail Lyon G. W. McCormick R. G. Marriner Mrs. Michael Har Wilson Miss Amy Brown Mrs. Charles Law Mlrs. Charles T. Gr( Mrs. R. D. West Mrs. John F. Hicks Mrs. Gertrude Mu Mrs. Sarah Patric] Mrs. G. H. Morris Mrs. F. M. Prescc Mrs. George Powe Mrs. A. L. Sawyer George Power, Treasurer. A. L. Sawyer, Historian. Fabian Trudell, Registrar. rris, Jr.,Miss Ruth Sawyer Miss Wilda Sawyer Mrs. J. M. Thompson Mrs. F. J. Trudell 3en Miss Olive Trudell Mrs. H. A. Vennema s Mrs. Ralph Wells nger - Aliss Margaret Goodman k Miss Evelyn Sutliff Mrs. T. O. Winther )tt Mrs. William Holmes.r Mrs. W. F. Waite THE JOHN PAUL JONES CLUB Mrs. Charles W. Hutchinson, regent of the Menominee chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, organized a club of little girls to make gun wipes for Camp Custer. The club was named after the ship of John Paul Jones, the boat the Michigan daughters supplied Marion Wilcox, Pres. Jean Hoskins Dorothy Worth, Vice Pres. Marjorie An Amy Morris, Sec. Dorothy Gan Doris Crawford, Treas. Olive Roper Lou Jean Hutchinson Margaret St. with knit articles. The girls met at the homes every week and made over 5000 gun wipes. The dues were sent to the Egg Fund for the children of France to establish poultry farms overseas. The members were: Ruth Silvernale drews Winefred West der Dorothy Hastings Juanita Edson Peter Velma Converse 4 1 1 4 I 1 4 1 1 4 4 i 9 $ I *1 [2071. _____ * *W ^ dyy^ ^ ^ ^ "No.O ^ yAr 40. M~~r I*. 4..0 'Mww - - lw 5.. - 1 -MN WOMEN'S CLU - NOMINEE WOMEN'S CLUB MEI MRS. ADELE GUEN' ~BUJRG, I PRESIDENT. Mrs. Adele Guensburg was appointed with Mrs. Charles H. Law and Mrs. G. W. McCormick on the first worman's committee in charge of the Liberty Loan activities in the city, May 19, 1917. She remained one of the leaders in every paMrGu ensbee triotic home moveGueerg ment during the war. She was active on every drive, a tireless Red Cross worker and surgical dressing department attendant and one of the most ardent knitters. She gave up almost her entire time. V ICE PRESIDENT -MRS. HARRY A. ROPER. SECRETARY-nMRS. G. S. POWER, succeeded by MRS. FRED ROPER. TREASURER-MRS. ALBERT RAICHE, succeeded by MRS. G. H. HAGGERSON. The Mlenominee Women's Club at its first regular meeting after the declaration of war, voted unanimously to discontinue all the regular club work. It was decided that all club work for the duration of the war, should consist of patriotic and Red Cross -activities. The six standing departments of the club were, transformed into so many patriotic departments. Every member willingly offered her services as far as possible to assist the government in the local war 'activities. The very first step was to appoint a committee to organize a permanent Women's Club War Relief Fund. This committee appointed sub committees, which agreed to provide means of raising funds. Concerts, card parties and other entertainments were given during the war period and approximately $i,ooo was raised and turned into the Women's Club War Relief Fund. With the money the club purchased Liberty Bonds of every issue, donated to the Menominee Chapter of the Red Cross, gave liberally to the Camp Library Fund, to the Funds of the Y.M. C. A. and Knights of Columbus, to the Salvation Army, the Jewish Welfare League, to the American Women's Hospital Fund and to all the allied charitable organizations. Committees of the Menominee club women were active on all the drives. They acted as leaders in every movement, especially in the Red Cross membership drive and Food Conservation drive. They secured patriotic speakers for public gatherings. They gave up their regular club rooms and the usual amount for yearly rent for club rooms, as well as the money appropriated for refreshments at the club's meetings, was turned into the Red Cross Fund. The regular club meetings were held in the Red Cross shops in the city, and the time was devoted to the sewing of hospital garments, cutting and folding compresses and other Red Cross necessities. Many thousands of surgical dressings and hundreds of hospital garments were turned out. List of Menominee women who were regular members of the Women's Club at the time it was transformed into a War Relief organization for the duration of the war: I 6 IX I 4 4! Mrs. T. P. Adams Mrs. B. BeDell Mrs. H. C. Bertholdt Mrs. ( A Pler1ch Miss Leilah Chandler Mrs. N. Christophersen Mrs. J. J. Cole Mr.e T C- (rllin; Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. C. H. Crawford J. D. Crawford C. Dalrymple F Dn i;11 a Mrs. A. W. Blom Mrs. Henry Coman Mrs. J. Dillon Mrs. H. A. Bowdish Mrs. A. M. Conant Miss Grace Eaton Mrs. H. N. Breckheimer Mrs. E. K. Converse Mrs. 0. L. Edson Mrs. F. L. Brown Mrs. Wm. Corbett Mrs. M. L. Faulkner Mrs. F. A. Bruce Mrs. Chas. Corbin Mrs. Geo. Foster [208] - -- -MM - - - rr -- - ----- - 1 I1 s MArs. lMrs. Mrs. i Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. NMrs. Mrs. M, rs. Mrs. Mrs. IMrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. J. W. Gleason John Gosling C. W. Gram Jas. Gram Chas. Greene W. B. Gregory A. D. Grignon E. Guensburg G. H. Haggerson W. W. Harmon Albert Hass Johnt Henes, Jr. W. R. Hicks Wm. Holmes J. Hubbard D. Hubert C. W. Hutchinson W. P. Istas R. E. Jennings A. A. Juttner W. F. Kerwin J. G. Kopf F. A. Kuder John LaSalle C. H. Law R. A. Law A. Ludwig AI\rs.. J. adden.Ars. S. C. Mason.lrs. G. W. McCormick Alrs. A. J. Alonahan lrs. J. M. Montpas MArs. Ray Mullins lArs. A. B. AMyers Airs. H. Nadeau Airs. F. S. Norcross A\rs. J. J. O'Hara Airs. B. T. Phillips Airs. G. S. Power Mlrs. C. S. Prescott AMrs. F. H. Prescott lirs. F. M. Prescott Mlrs. L. L. Prescott Mrs. Geo. Quimby Aliss Frances Radford MIrs. A. WV. Raiche M rs. John Riley AMrs. A. H. Roper Airs. F. A. Roper Mrs. Virginia Roper AMrs. S. B. Sanderson Airs. M. Sawyer Alrs. Frank Seidl Mliss Frank Shaver AIrs. W. A. Shockley Mrs. J. L. Silvernale Mrs. J. Simansky Mrs. Wm. Simpson Mrs. A. W. Smith Mrs. E. P. Smith Mrs. A. E. Stadlbauer Mrs. C. L. Stocklin Mrs. W. J. St. Onge Mrs. Frank St. Peter Airs. J. MA. Thompson Alrs. Wim. Tideman Mrs. F. J. Trudell Aliss Olive Trudell Mrs. F. J. Tufts IMrs. Hi. A. Vennema Mrs. W. F. Waite Mrs. R. A. Walker AIrs. R. M. Weideman AMrs. C. J. Weidling Mrs. A. C. Wells Mrs. J. W. Wells Mrs. R. W. Wells Mrs. R. D. West Mrs. A. B. Whittemore Mrs. D. M. Wilcox Mrs. G. A. Woodford I 1 4 4 4 1 I 4 4 d M l i t 4 * 0 * * ~ t I 3 0 'i 1 [209]!'>-i 6 4 x ft" Billy". m 'k Lis-'-~~W * Boy Scouts Who Qualified for Honors Paris N. Munroe Morrison R. Loren Miller Richard A. Hoskin Robert L. McCormick Weideman THE BOY SCOUTS IN THE WORLD WAR 0 The history of the Menominee Boy Scout Troop would not fit into this book or would not have been inserted, were it not for the many patriotic and unselfish deeds these young boys, the future men of the world, performed and which were all the more noteworthy considering their age. In the first place they pledged themselves to the Red Cross in Menominee and agreed to give their services to the chapter as well as any one else who would need them to run errands for anything connected with the Red Cross or other war activities, and to carry baggage to and from the depots for the service men, going and coming. Whenever and wherever the war workers at home needed their services, the Boy Scouts would be called upon to help. None of them were ever allowed a recompense an(l did not expect it. and displayed their patriotism by hurrying to comply with the calls received. The Boy Scouts sang at the different farewell banquets for the departing soldiers who were called to the colors. They accompanied them to the depot an,: bid them their hearty farewell. Dr. S. C. Mason directed all the work of the Boy Scouts, including the posting of all signs for Liberty Loan drives and war work and distribution of war literature. The boys sold War Savings Stamps and Liberty Bonds. Special credit should be given the boys, as they only sold bonds after the regular city committees had finished and turned in their work. Five of the boys qualified for honors in selling Liberty Bonds and War Savings Stamps. In order to do this each one had to sell ten $50.00 bonds or $250 of War Stamps to ten different people, outside his own family. Each boy received a bronze medal. For each additional ten bonds sold, he received a bronze bar. The five boys who qualified were: ROBERT L. WEIDEMAN-Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Loan. PARIS N. MuNROE-Second and Third Liberty Loan. MORRISON R. MCCoRMICK-Fifth or V ictory Loan. RICHARD A. HOSKIN-Fifth or Victory Loan. LOREN A. MILLER-Fifth or Victory Loan. The Boy Scouts of America are 462,781 strong; some army of red-blooded, real American boys. There are 101,oQI men enrolled in the movementThere are i6,176 troops in the United States. The number of merit badges given last year totaled 41,432. It is the greatest boys' club in the world. C. B. Hedgcock acted as the Scout Executive during the summer of 1919.and conducted a camp on the bay shore which proved to be the most successful outing ever offeredl the boys of Mennominee County. Mr. Hedgcock has fostered the movement during recent years in a commendable manner and much credit is due his efforts. He is now a Deputy Scout Commissioner and Scout Master of Troop 2. I I I I I 4 4 1 1 1 4 I I I I 0 0 4 4 1 Ir [210].... -ii a -, %^ - a limmo - 040 MLOWO 9 0 40 W^ %-^. 14 * 4 TROOP NO. 1 ROSTER FOLLOWS: RO)I C(O) MMITTEE: AMEMBERS Clarence Kopf XW. W. Harmon Robert Weideman Loren Miller F-i. A. Bowdish Carl Seidll Harry Belongy R. M. Weideman AMforrison McCormick Theo. DuBrucq..... Richard Hoskin Arthur Paquette C()OUT A1.\STER Dr. S. C. Mason John Wells Wellesly McCormick ASSISTANT SCOUT MASTERWilliam Harmon Bart Korunkiewicz Harvey Hanson SENIOR PATROL LEADER Fred Gosling Leonard Ulmnus James Pelnar Robert Murray Alfred Bates Norman Anderson Bernard Tjaden Clarence Haglund Paris N. Munroe TROOP NO. 2 ROSTER FOLLOWS: r TROOP CoMMITTEE Frank Beck John Silvernale Milton Brown Frank St. Peter Clarence Christianson W. P. Istas James Converse SCOUT MA\STER Lando Fehrenbach C. B. Hedocock Harry Gjelsteen C.. HedgcockJohn Hanson ASSISTA.NT SCOUT MASTEREmil Johnson Sydney Simpson Merle Kuder MEMBERS Lvle Fehrenbach William Belongy Patrick McGuire Alvin Loewecke Cyrus Lloyd Jack Lloyd Ademore McGuire 'Irvin Mayer Carlyle Putrow Paul Silvernale Francis St. Peter Carl Woessner Jean Worth Leonard McKesson TROOP NO. 3 ROSTER FOLLOWS: TROOP COMMITTEE Howard Nadeau W. A. Shockley SCOUT MASTER M. P. Sawyer ASSISTANT SCOUT M:A\S Carl Peterson MEMI BERS Walter Johnson Roland Johnson William DeMarsh Francis Kleinke Gordon Larson Clarence Young Edward Lewitz TERLewis Magnusen Nels Christiansen Ralph Beekler Clayton Bero Viggo Wheaton Henry Hupy Anthony Kadletz Darwin Baldwin Gordon Smith George Cairns Lawrence Landre Arthur Anderson Charles Desormeau Robert Walker 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ii 4 Boy Scouts Ready for Trip to Camp [211] I - I I - I Ir r-_- I-_ II ill - I I I - -- - --- -- - --- - 4, 4 4 4 - - 4 4 4 " m pqa II lie Ill i. - 40 0. 41 0. 4. A m w V lw w t 6I TERNAL AD m FRED J. Du B FRA' I: MD SECRET SOCIETIES RUCQ, Chairman. GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC Lyon Post No. 266. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Menominee Council No- 464. KNIGHTS OF MODERN MAC $ The members of fraternal and secret societies in the city of Menominee performed their different duties in the war activities with the greatest of patriotism. They formed / one great combined organization of all Fred J. DuBrucq societies in the city.4 The purpose was the buying of Liberty Bonds as well as raising money for Red Cross and other charitable drives. The following societies were bound together into one great general body: MASONIC Menominee Chapter No. Io7, R. A. MiI. Menominee Commandery No. 35, K. T. Menominee Lodge No. 269, F. & A. M. INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS Menominee Lodge No. 133. Washington Encampment No. 128. CATHOLIC ORDER OF FORESTERS St. Ann's Court No. 303 -St. Anthony's Court No. 278. St. Mary's Court No. 281. FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES Mienominee Aerie No. 517. DANISH BROTHERHOOD Thor Lodge No. 59. CABEES Good Town Tent No. 2. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Menominee Lodge No. I07. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE Menominee Lodge No. 660. MODERN BROTHERHOOD OI AMERICA lMenominee Lodge No. 1037. MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA Menominee Camp No. 1794. TURNER SOCIETY Order of Herman's Sons. Barbarossa Lodge No. 14. ROYAL ARCANUM Menominee Council No. 1280. BROTHERHOOD OF AMERICAN YOEMEN Menominee Homestead No. 1234. MYSTIC WORKERS OF THE WORLD Menominee Lodge No. 768. 4 I *I i *( 14 1 1 1 *, I a1~ 12121 - -- - -- --- -- I I - - - I -~.. - I.. 1- w r ~ llr' --- —-- - -- o p% -- AMERICAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCES DISTINCTIVE CLOTH INSIGNIA ARMIES R 2, Q *CORPS DIVISIONS e Um+.* 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 26 7 28 29 30 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 40 41 4Z 77 o - 78 79 o0 61 862 3 85 86 67 9 9 9 93 G.H.Q. QfCOatS OFFICE REGULArING AND IqAILH:D STATIONS 2 c oCHOMOCAL WARFARE S.AMBUL ANCE ~ 2t! COOPS SCHOOL 3F CORDS SCHOOL BASE SECTION SOS. I IRVICE SERVICE TANK CODPS ADVANCE SCCTIONSO.S WHERE COMBAT DIVISIONS GOT THEIR TROOPS. The first eight divisions of the United States Army were composed chiefly of regulars with a large number of troops of both National Guard and selective draft origin completing the full complement. The other combat divisions were constituted as follows: 26. "Yankee"-New England National Guard. 27. "New York"-New York National Guard. 28. "Keystone"-Pennsylvania National Guard. 29. "Blue and Gray"-National Guard from New Jersey, Dist. of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia and Delaware. 30. National Guard of the Carolinas, Tennessee and District of Columbia. 31. "Dixie"-Naticnal Guard of Georgia, Alabama and Florida. 32. National Guard troops of Michigan and Wisconsin. 33. "Prairie" —Illinois National Guard. 34. National Guard of Iowa, Nebraska, Soilih Dakota and Minnesota. 35. National Guard of Kansas and Missouri. 36. "Panther" —National Guard of Texas and Oklahoma. 37. "Buckeye"-National Guard of Ohio. 38. National Guard of Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia. 40. "Rattlesnake"-National Guard of California, Colorado, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico. 42. "Rainbow"-National Guard from all sections of the United States. 77. "Metropolitan"-Selective Draft men from New York City, Long Island and Hudson River counties. 78. "Lightning"-Selective Draft men from New York, New Jersey and Delaware. 79. Selective Draft men from northeast Pennsylvania, Maryland and Dist. of Columbia. 80. "Blue Ridge"-Selective Draft men from western Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. 81. "Wildcat"-Selective Draft men from North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Porto Rico. 82. Selective Draft men from Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee. 85. "Custer"-Selective Draft men from Michigan and eastern Wisconsin. 86. "Blackhawk"-Selective Draft men from Chicago and other parts of northern Illinois. 87. Selective Draft men from Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and southern Alabama. 88. Selective Draft men from North Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa and western Illinois. 89. Selective Draft men from Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, South Dakota, Colorado and New Mexico. 90. Selective Draft men from Texas and Oklahoma. 91. "Wild West"-Selective Draft men from far western and Pacific Coast states. 92. Selective Draft Colored troops from all parts of the country. 93. Colored Troops who served chiefly with the French whose blue helmet was used as insignia. History JJ.-1 ^ J 1<^^^^^ ~-F~~~ C~~r7- / C ~\C ~~~Y~~~2_ -.-.W p - - )ivisions of Four Great Army I < X I Space will not permit the insertion of complete histories of the many different divisions Menominee County men served in, or to which they were transferred, after their entry into active fighting overseas- Many of them were attached to different organizations. But in many cases, before returning to the United States, they were, wherever it was possible, transferred back to the first organizations they had been assigned to, and in most cases were discharged from the original camps from which they were first sent. We have, therefore, selected the four divisions in which a considerable number of Menominee County boys served, and here produce officially corrected brief histories of these four divisions, giving an accurate idea of the work in which many MIenominee County men were engaged. The following brief histories of the Fourth, the Thirty Second, the Forty Second, and the Eighty Second Divisions are of compelling interest. FOURTH DIVISION Major General Mark L. Hersey, Commanding General Colonel Christian A. Bach, Cav. Chief of Staff. REGULAR ARMY: Headquarters arrived in France May 17th, 1918. Activities: In battle of the Marne counter offensive, July i8th to 2Ist, I918; capturing Buisson de Cresnes, Chevillon and Noroy. July 29th to August 2nd, 19I8, participated in the battle on the Ourcq, capturing and holding the city of Sergy. August 4th to I2th, I918, the division operating as a unit succeeded in crossing (after several (lays battle) the river Vesle, advancing 17 kilometers, suffering casualties of 6154 men. Operating as a unit, the division later succeeded in driving the enemy from the Forest de Nesles to the heights beyond the Vesle. September 12, 13, 14, I918, in battle of St. Mihiel offensive, capturing the towns of Fresnesen-Woevre and Manheulles, advanc ing several kilometers. September 26 to October 19, 1918, in battle of the MeuseArgonne offensive. Twenty four days of continuous fighting, suffering casualities of 6000 men, advancing 13 kilometers in one of the most bitterly contested battles of the four years of war. November 20 to December 17, 1918, marched into Germany as a division of the "Army of Occupation." Prisoners captured: 72 officers, 2856 enlisted men. Guns captured: 6I field guns, io Minenwerfer, 2 tanks and 239 machine guns. (No record kept of prisoners or material captured in battle August 4 to I2th.) Total advance on front line against resistance, 32 kilometers (20 miles.) Many Menominee County men served in this Division. DIVISIONAL CASUALTIES Killed, wounded and missing, in action Enlisted men I2,456. Officers 492. Total losses I2,948. THE OFFICIALLY CORRECT BRIEF HISTORY OF THE 32nd DIVISION The Thirty Second Division American Expeditionary Forces I917-I919. A TRIBUTE TO THE 32nd Sept. 13, 1918. My dear General Haan: I most heartily congratulate you, my dear sir, on the great work of your division. By George, your men have hit hard! Will you thank the division for me? Fraternally yours, THEODORE ROOSEVELT. I 4 FOREWORD. Extract from a letter from the Chief of Staff, 3rd Army to Commanding General, 32nd Division: "i. The recent inspection by the Commander-in-Chief developed the fact that an astonishing large number of [215] =ir i i ii -.11 ii ii i TI i ~r `T>TT >w e r ~-r l - - * soldiers of the command are uninformed of the history of their organization and even of the battles and circumstances concerning the localities where they have been wounded in action. "2. The Army Commander desires that individuals, in addition to instruc-. tion and explanation, receive a written or printed brief of the main facts in their histories as soldiers of the A. E. F." This brief chronological history of the 2nd Division has been prepared to comply with the desire of the Army Comnmander. I-_h- - — nw - ^ I-I —, 'l BRIEF HISTORY OF 32nd DIVISION. f 4 6 0 0 0 I HIGH LIGHTS IN CAREER OF THIRTY-SECOND DIVISION Six months under fire-May to Nov., 1918-with but 10 days in rest area. Fought on five fronts, in three major offensives- AISNE-MARNE, OISEAISNE, and MEUSE-ARGONNE. Losses-1I4,000 men killed, wounded and missing in action. Met and vanquished 23 German Divisions from which 2,153 prisoners were captured. Captured 2,000 rifles, 200 machine guns, I00 pieces of artillery, and thousands of rounds of ammunition of all kinds. Gained 38 kilometers in four attacks and repulsed, without loss of ground, every counter attack by the enemy. First American troops to set foot on German soil-in ALSACE; Captured FISMES in AISNE-MARNE offensive; fought as only American unit in GENERAL MANGIN'S famous ioth French Army in OISE-AISNE offensive; twice in the line in ARGONNE-MELTSE offensive, fighting continuously for 20 days and penetrating the KRIEMHILDE STELLUNG. In action when Armistice was signed. Marched with Third Army to the RHINE, and occupied a sector in the COBLENZ bridgehead. Composed of Wisconsin and Michigan National Guardsmen; insignia a red arrow, signifying that the Division shot through every line the Boche put before it; given the name of "Les Terribles" by the French; commanded by Major General Wm. G. Haan, and Major General Wm. Lassiter. JULY 3, I917. Proclamation of President called into the Federal Service the National Guard troops of Wisconsin and Michigan. JULY I8, I9I7. Camp MacArthur, Waco, Texas, designated in General Orders No. 95, War Dept., 1917, as Training Camp for Wisconsin and Michigan National Guardsmen. AUGUST 3, 1917. 32nd Division (old 2th) organized from the following troops of Wisconsin and Michigan National Guard by G. 0. No. 101, War Dept., 1917: Infantry: 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th Wisconsin; 3 st, 32nd and 33rd Michigan. Artillery: Ist W\isconsin F. A., and Ist Michigan F. A. Cavalry: ist Wisconsin Cavalry, Ist Michigan Cavalry. Engineers: Ist Bn. Wisconsin Engineers, ist Bn. Michigan Engineers. Signal Corps: Ist Michigan F. S. Bn., ist Wisconsin F. S. Bn. Sanitary troops: Wisconsin Field Hospitals Nos. I and 2, Wisconsin Ambulance Companies Nos. I and 2, Michigan Field Hospital No. i, and Michigan Ambulance Company No. 2. AUGUST 4, 1917. Company A, Ist MIichigan Engineers, the first unit of 32nd Division to arrive at Camp MacArthur, Waco, Texas. SEPTEMBER 22, I917, 63rd Inf. Brigade organized from Michigan National Guard Inf. 64th Inf. Brigade organized from Wisconsin National Guard Inf. 57th F.A. Brigade organized from Wisconsin and Michigan Artillery and Cavalry and surplus Infantry from 57th Depot Brigade (formerly the 2nd Wisconsin Brigade.) The o07th Engineers organized from Wisconsin and Michigan Engineers. The Io7th Trains and Military Police organized from surplus infantry of 4th, 5th and 6th Wisconsin regiments. The o17th Sanitary Train organized from Wisconsin and Michigan Field Hospitals and Ambulance companies. The I i9th Machine Gun Bn. organized from surplus infantry of 4th, 5th and 6th Wisconsin regiments. JANUARY 2, I918. First troops of the Division left Camp MacArthur, Waco, Texas, en route for France via Camp Merritt, N. J. 1 4 4 4 0 0 t i 0 I 4 0 f 4 4 i if i j i 0 1 i i i C 1-1 I I %.ffl 4 It 4 */ X i k'I 4 ~ ~1 I [216] 1 H_- - - - MAl I Im 1=131r - -,,,.I:,,,s^ 7 < __ _ <. ~ > WK - — s" i li I i I i I u _ I r ~ ~ ~1C ~ - I -rrI II CL t f t -- - O 9S e _ — NPYMZ~- -- - a. mmAl * =-=x 1~ 0 JANUARY 24, I918. Advance party of 32nd Division landed at Brest, France. FEBRUARY 5, I918. 32nd Division suffered its first war casualties when 13 men were lost in the sinking of the Tuscania. FEBRUARY 24, 1918. Division Headquarters established at Prauthoy, Haute-Marne, the 32nd being the sixth Division to join the A. E. F. IMARCH-APRIL, I918. The 32nd Division made a replacement organization. While functioning in this capacity all the privates and captains in the 128th infantry Regiment were transferred to the ist Division. During this period the 32nd Division was assembled and training completed in the Ioth Training area. MAY 15, I918. M:ovement of troops to Alsace Sector started. The 32nd Division was designated as a combat Division "temporarily." MAY I8, I918. First elements of 32 -nd Division took over the front line trenches in Alsace. JULY 21, I918. Last elements of the 32nd Division withdrawn from the Alsace sector. During the occupancy of this sector we captured 8 prisoners and lost 8 to the enemy. Our losses were: Killed I officer and 39 men; severely wounded, 3 officers and Io5 men; slightly wounded, 9 officers and 175 men; gassed, 7 officers and 67 men; I officer and 17 men died of wounds. Total losses from all causes, 419. The losses inflicted on the enemy were equal to our own according to the reports of our raiding parties. In the Alsace sector 3 German Divisions-the 30thl Bavarian Reserve Division, the 44th Landwehr, and the 25th Landwehr were in the trenches opposite the 32nd Division. JULY 30, I918. Relieved the 3rd Division on the Ourcq in the AisneMarne offensive. AUGUST 7, 19I8. Relieved on the Vesle River after capturing Fismes and advancing a total of 19 kilometers. In tie Aisne-Marne offensive we captured 97 prisoners and lost 8. Our casualties were: killed 27 officers and 645 men; severely wounded, 58 officers and 1079 men; slightly wounded, 82 officers and 9IO men; gassed, 21 officers and 597 men; missing, 46 men; died of wvounds, 12 officers and 83 men. Total losses from all causes, 3,547. The material captured included 4 pieces of heavy artillery, 5 pieces of light artillery, io trench mortars, 28 machine guns, and 400 rifles. Our burial squads buried more German dead than the total 32n1l killed and missing. During the action we were opposed by 3 German Divisions, the 200th, the 2i6th, and the 4th Prussian Guards. In the Aisne-Marne sector the 32nd Division broke the German line of resistance on the Ourcq River and drove the enemy back to the heights north of the Vesle. The Division's victory completed what Marshal Foch had planned when his offensive of July I8th was launched. AUGUST 28, I918. Entered front line northeast of Soissons as part of General Mangin's Ioth Army. SEPTEMBER 2, I918. Relieved by the 2nd Moroccan Division after capturing Juvigny and advancing to a depth of 51/2 kilometers. During the OiseAisne offensive we captured 937 prisoners and lost 5. Our casualties were: killed, i5 officers and 335 men; severely wounded, 20 officers and 6I6 men; slightly wounded, 52 officers and 1246 men; gassed, 9 officers and 565 men; missing, 34 men; died of wounds, 6 officers and io6 men. Total losses from all causes, 2848. The material captured included 2 pieces of heavy artillery, 2 of light artillery, I6 trench mortars, 112 mlachine guns, and 700 rifles. In this action the 32nd Division was opposed by 5 German Divisions, the 7th, the 7th Reserve, the 223rd, the 238th, and the 237th. The 32nd Division was the only American unit operating with the Ioth French Army. In capturing the strong German positions on the Juvigny plateau, the 32n1d Division contributed to an important extent to the success of the French in outflanking the German line on the Chemin des Dames. SEPTEMBER 10, I918. Arrived at Joinville, France, for brief period of rest. SEPTEMBER 20, I918. Left Joinville, France, by bus for Argonne-Meuse front. SEPTEMBER 30, I918. Entered front line before the Kriemhilde Stellung near Romange-sous-Montfaucon. In a series of attacks during next three weeks 4 4 4 4 f 4 k I) 4 f 4 1 f I ^ > ~ [217] 1 4;-* m - 4 g —w Ii 40. -- 1M 4. MEWl l - m -- rZP-s - ~ I " rl 40 r 41. 0 p - - --- — ~ — ~ - w I — -- ' - - -W1 1.kl 4 4 4 4 4 f 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 I i the Division succeeded in completely breaking the German line and penetrating the enemy position to a depth of 81/2 kilometers. OCTOBER 20, I918. Relieved in front line. Continued pursuit of Germans in reserve of 3rd Army Corps. In the Argonne-Meuse offensive we captured I095 prisoners. Our casualties were: killed, 39 officers, 860 men; severely wounded, 32 officers and 1176 men; slightly wounded, 83 officers and 2784 men; gassed, 17 officers and 537 men; missing, 9 officers and 140 men; died of wounds, io officers and 200 men. Total losses from all causes 5,950. The material captured included 2 pieces of heavy artillery, 6 pieces of light artillery, 6I trench mortars, 50 machine guns, and 800 rifles. In the Argonne-Meuse offensive the 32nd Division vanquished II German Divisions, including the 5th Prussian Guards, the 3rd Prussian Guards, and the 28th Division known as the "Kaiser's Own." The others were: the 37th Division, the 52nd Division, the I 5th Division, the 39th Division, the I23rd Division, the 236th Division, the 4Ist Division, and the I3th Division. During our long tour of duty in the front line the 79th, 3rd, and 5th U. S. Divisions occupied the sector on our right, and the 9ISt, Ist, and 42nd U. S. Divisions the sector on our left. NOVEMBER 17, I918. Division started march from Vilosnes-sur-Meuse to the Rhine as front line element of the 3rd Army Corps. DECEMBER I, I918. Division crossed the Sauer River into German territory. DECEMBER I3, I918. Division crosed the Rhine after marching 300 kilometers, and proceeded to occupy a front line sector in the Coblenz bridgehead, with the ist Division on the right and the 2nd Division on the left. The 32nd Division sector had a front line of 30 kilometers and a depth of 20 kilometers. The Division occupied 400 square kilometers and troops were billeted in 63 towns. DIVISION COMMANDERS AUGUST 26th, 1917. Major General James Parker assumed command of the 32nd Division per G. 0. No. I Hq. 32nd Division, I9I7. SEPTEMBER I9, I917. Major General Parker left for France on temporary duty per telegraphic instructions, War Dept. Brigadier General W. G. Haan of the 57th F. A. Brigade assumed command of the Division "during the absence of the Division Commander," per G. O. No. 22, Hq. Division, I917. DECEMBER 8, I9I7. Major General Parker, returning from France, was transferred to Camp Custer, Michigan, and Brigadier General Haan assumed command of the Division permanently in compliance with telegraphic instructions from the War Dept., which relieved him from command of the 57th F. A. Brigade and assigned him to the command of the 32nd Division. FEBRUARY 7, I918. General Haan appointed Major General, National Army. NOVEMBER 20, 1918. Major General Haan was relieved of command of the 32nd Division, and assigned to the command of the 7th Army Corps. Major General Wm. Lassiter, formerly Chief of Artillery, Second Army, assumed command of the 32nd Division. BRIGADE COMMANDERS 63RD INF. BRIGADE. SEPTEMBER 22, 1917. Brigadier General Louis C. Covell, formerly com 6 4 I 4 4 4 NOVEMBER 6, I918. First elements of Division entered front line in Dun-sur-Meuse bridgehead. On November Ioth the Division attacked east of the Meuse and was in line when the armistice was signed. The I28th Infantry entered the front line November 6th and was attached to the 5th U. S. Division. The entire 32nd Division took over the sector on November ioth. I6 prisoners were captured from the enemy. Our casualties were: killed, 6 officers and 137 men; severely wounded, 6 officers and 198 men; slightly wounded, I officers and 236 men; gassed, 44 men; missing, 2 officers and 44 men; died of wounds, 2 officers and 7 men. Total losses from all causes, 687. The material captured included I trench mortar, io machine guns and Ioo rifles. East of the Meuse we opposed the I92nd German division. 4 4 Ir 4 90 iD [218] --- — , -, I II, '~~c~+,~I ffi~~~e ~ - p *. AL,.7. 4. I j.56 - -1* I I manding General of the ist Brigade, Michigan National Guard, was placed in command of the 63rd Inf. Brigade upon its organization, Sept. 22, I917, per G. O. No. 23, Hq. 32nd Div., I9I7. JULY 22, I9I7. Brigadier General Covell was relieved and Brigadier General W. D. Connor assigned to command. AUGUST 4, I918. Brigadier General Connor was relieved and Brigadier General Robert Alexander assigned to the command. AUGUST 26, I918. Brigadier General Alexander relieved and Brigadier General Covell again was assigned to the command. SEPTEMBER I, I918. Brigadier General Covell relieved and Brigadier General Frank R. McCoy assigned to the command. NOVEMBER 25, I918. Brigadier General Frank R. MicCoy relieved and Brigadier General W. R. Smedberg assigned to command. 64TH INF. BRIGADE SEPTEMBER 22, 1917. Brigadier General Charles R. Boardman, formerly Commanding General of the Ist Brigade, Wisconsin National Guard, was placed in command of the 64th Infantry Brigade upon its organization on September 22, 1917, per G. O. No. 23, Hq. 32nd Division, 1917. JULY 9, I918. Brigadier General Lejeune, U. S. M. C., assumed command, relieving General Charles R. Boardman. JULY 26, I918. General Lejeune was relieved and Brigadier General Edwin B. Winas was assigned to the command. 57TH F. A. BRIGADE SEPTEMBER 22, 1917. Brigadier General W. G. Haan assigned to command the Brigade upon its organization. DECEMBER 7, 1917. Upon General Haan's assignment to command the 32nd Division, Brigadier General McGlachlin was assigned to command of the 57th F. A. Brigade. MARCH 25, 1918. On this date the Brigade, having reached Camp Coetquidan in France, was transferred to the 41st Division and General McGlachlin was detached and promoted to rank of Major General. JUNE I, 1918. The 57th F. A. Brigade, under Brigadier General G. LeRoy Irwin, joined the 32nd Division in the sector of Haute-Alsace. NOVEMBER 4, I9I8. The 57th F. A. Brigade was detached from the 32nd Division and designated as Army Artillery. The 57th F. A. Brigade supported the 32nd Division in all its engagements except in the operation east of the Meuse on Nov. IO-Ii. In addition, the 57th F. A. Brigade supported the 28th Division on the Vesle from August 7 to August 25; the 2nd Moroccan Division in the Oise-Aisne offensive from Sept. 2 to 6: the 79th Division and 3rd Division in the Argonne from Sept. 24 to October 7, and the 89th Division from October 20 to Nov. 2. HEADQUARTERS THIRTY-SECOND DIVISION AMIERICAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCES Rengsdorf, Germany. March 28, 1919. General orders No. 23. I. It is with sincere pleasure that the Division Commander publishes to the command the following letter from the Commander-in-Chief: AMERICAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCES Office of the Commander-in-Chief France, March, 24, I919. "Major General William Lassiter, Commanding 32nd Division, American E. F. "My dear General Lassiter: "Please extend to the officers and men of the 32nd Division my sincere compliments upon their appearance and upon the splendid condition of the artillery and transportation at the review and inspection of March I5th. In fact, the condition of your command was what would be expected of a division with such a splendid fighting record. "After training for several months following its arrival in February, I918, it entered the line in Alsace and held this sector until the time of the AisneMarne offensive, when it moved to that active front. On July 30th, it entered the line on the Ourcq, and in the course I.I 0 f 4 4 4 f 0 k I 0 4 &. I I v 11 [219] i - A A 4 4 1 A 4 A. (I I -- C- -— r- -- L- - I-_r _ -Ua -- -~-~ —r — ~ ---- - -- I.~ ---- - --— ~- I ---------- 4 4 4 4 of its action captured Cierges, Bellevue Farm, and the Bois de la Planchette. The attack was resumed on August ist; the division captured Fismes and pushed ahead until it crossed the Vesle. On August 28th it again entered the line and launched attacks which resulted in the capture of Juvigny at the cost of severe casualties. During the M1euseArgonne offensive the 32nd Division entered the line on September 30th and by its persistence in that sector it penetrated the Kriemhilde Stellung, taking Romagne and following the enemy to the northeastern edge of the Bois de Bantheville. On November 8th, the Division took up the pursuit of the enemy east of the Meuse until the time when hostilities were suspended. "Since the signing of the Armistice the 32nd Division has had the honor to act as a part of the Army of Occupation. For the way in which all ranks have performed their duties in this capacity, I have only the warmest praise and approval. The pride of your officers and men, justified by such a record, will insure the same high moral which has been present in the division during its stay in France. I want each man to know my appreciation of the work he has done and of the admiration in which he is held by the rest of his comrades in the American Expeditionary Forces. Sincerely yours, THE 42ND (RAINBOW) DIVISION This memorandum was written by one of the enlisted men of Menominee County who served with the 42nd Division. This division was concentrated at Camp Mills, Long Island, New York, during the early days of September, I917, for intensive training preparatory to embarking for France. Our Division consisted of 27,000 men and sailed in a strictly American convoy, at IO:OO P. M. on October i8th. The division landed at Brest, St. Nazaire, Bordeaux and LeHavre, France. The Rainbow spent the first six weeks in intensive training in the immediate vicinity of Rolomport. The -latter part of February, 1918, saw us in the trenches of Lorraine. We repelled raids; were showered with high-explosives while shrapnel and gas simply rained upon us. After five weeks service in this sector, we were relieved for recreation and more training. We had barely began to retrace our steps when the expected German offensive broke suddenly on the chill March horizon. We halted, meditated and took the backward trail once more-toward the battle front. In response to General Pershing's chivalrous and gentlemanly offer, placing the whole of the armed forces at the disposal of Mlarshal Foch, we were chosen to reenter a quiet sector of the battle line until such time as we should be more urgently needed on the scene of the rreat battle. The sector chosen was the Baccarat sector of the Lorraine district. Baccarat and its environs, located in the hills of the Vosges Mountains, the home of the the Famous French Marines (Blue Devils) of France-was destined to be the home of the Rainbow Division for more than three months-the longest length of time the division has spent in one place. The front rapidly assumed the importance of an active sector in the great battle. We put over barrages and received them in return. We made trench raids and repulsed them, we sent the Boche much gas and received his reciprocal reply. The most difficult problem in the administration of the sector was the espionage problem. During the latter part of June, when it became more and more apparent that the fifth and (as it proved) the last and nost colossal German effort must be lodged soon, and at one of the three objectives-the channel ports, west of Soissons on the British front or east of Rhemis on the French front-we were sent to the Champagne sector, where -on July I5th, I918, we were given our first real taste of modern warfare. The division had the honor to participate in the main battle as part of the French Fourth Army under the command of General Gourard, to defeat the much heralded Prussian Guard. t 4 i ' 4 [220] 11 i 4 '. A& ',, Z w X 0 W z a -- AL"AL ALL. .A I 9.0 4 41- - 41. -W 4 I f a I lfl The battle started at I2:00 midnight, July 14,-15th and by noon of the i8th, the German's offensive was definitely at all end. Marshal Foch, with accurate knowledge of the German intentions, was able to start his barrage a half hour before the German schedule time of the attack, thus catching the front lines and all back areas crowded with men, and working fearful havoc with the German Army. At the same time, he withdrew his own men from the front lines when the German barrage started, their shells and bombs fell upon unoccupied ground, and was, therefore, of no considerable value to the Kaiser hoste. As the German infantry left their trenches, they were met by the accurate and deadly fire of the allied gunners. After repeated attempts-seven to be exact-the Germans gave up their futile and costly frontal attacks and retired, completely and thoroughly defeated, to their own trenches. Immediately following this episode in the division's history, we were sent posthaste to relieve the hard pressed American troops operating to the northwest of Chateau Thierry. The shells from the big guns miraculously spared the town from the state of destruction which most villages in the war zone suffered. The Rainbow division entered the battle line near a small village of Epieds. The fighting all through was hard. Our infantry advancing wide-spread across rolling plains, through woods, came continually against redoubtable machine gun nests cunningly hidden. The first that would be known of them was the deadly tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat while bullets by the thousands whistled past, and the boys saw their "Buddies" to the right or left suddenly pitch foreward. A long fight would follow to reduce these machine gun nests. At this work, calling hard upon individual qualities of initiative maneuvering, tenacity, and cool direct courage, our boys proved themselves wonderful soldiers. Many times they performed the unheard of feat of taking machine guns by frontal attack. For, day upon day, they pressed on thus, fighting and marching, fighting and marching. Under the hot sun across a desolate land-sleeping at night in little "foxholes" dug by themselves, suffering hunger and thirst and sore feet and weariness, but always going on in their elastic, half-nonchalant manner. Then, they saw the Vesle and their fleet-those boys, from city and across the sea, transformed so suddenly to marvelous soldiers in the greatest epic of all times. Behind they left the ruined villages of Epieds, Beauvordes, Seringes, Tere-en-Tardenois, Sergy, the Ourcq and hill 212 and some 350 square miles of land, recovered from the invader, and also bodies-of themselves and of the foe-all the hot and terrible things that remain on the battlefield. The only regretable feature of this grand accomplishment was a pronounced absence of support from the air. The Boche avions roamed at will over the entire field of our operations, bombarding and machine-gunning hospitals, transports, caravans, our fleets. We were relieved while in full pursuit of the fleeing enemy and went into reserve, thus completing one of the greatest tasks asked of any American division during the entire war. In short time we were entirely relieved and sent back to the areas for rest, training replacements and new equipment. Eventually the division arrived before Toul and then began the most secret operations ever attempted by the American army. Every night at late dusk the troops were assembled and as darkness came over the skies, they started to march and marched in a circle until daybreak. With everything completed and the maximum of secrecy observed, the American effort came to full fruition on the morning of September r2th, I918, when the First American army suddenly attacked the Germans in St. MIihiel and in twenty-seven hours the salient had been cleared of the foe; excepting 5,00ooo who remained behind as prisoners-mute testimony to thoroughness of American execution. At daybreak the infantry "went over" and the long caravan of transport and supply, artillery caissons, ammunition trains, ambulance trains and officers' cars made its initial move, only to be rudely interrupted as the first truck reached what had been "No Man's Land" for four years. French and German trench systems had 4 4 4 4 4 0 f 4 4 4 4 4 I I I 1411 I ti [221]1 - - ___ -- Li!-'~M. ^- W ------ - A ~ " 4 0 'AA A 40 O MEI w W 4 -- I 4~ — — v ~,`I=I ~U~C~I I YI 4 r, I, () 4 4 4 4 0 0 0 I I I been cut through the road at intervals and shell holes and mine craters abounded in large numbers. It took the engineers and pioneers an incredibly short time to build a makeshift passageway through the maze of trench systems, barbed wire entanglements and shell holes so that very limited supplies could be taken forward. It was so difficult to move traffic through this section that the men who were in the advance positions would have gone days and perhaps weeks without supplies had it not been for the thoughtful consideration of the departed Germans, who were in such a hurry to leave the salient ahead of the Americans that they left the major portion of their supplies, flour, jam, fruits, ammunition, wagons and telephone equipment-in fact, everything that an army should have was left behind by the fleeing German-Austrian troops. On October 1st we were transferred suddenly to the Argonne Forest to relieve the sorely pressed units who had made the first attack in this formidable battle ground, smashing the outer defense of the famous Hindenburg lines. The rain, which had been pouring down for a few days without respite, had made the forest a veritable swamp. There was not a dry spot in the entire woods large enough for a man to lie on, so that the boys cheerfully made their bunks in the mud and rain-soaked shell holes and prayed that their chance to enter the fight come soon, so that they might win better quarters. The most miserable feature of the entire battle was the total absence of fires (luring night hours. The men were forced to enter foxholes, often full of water, at dusk and remain there until morning without the customary cheer of the ever helpful cigarette. With the formation of the First American army, arrangements were made for an appropriate number of airplanes to assure supremacy in the air. It was an inspiring sight for the boys in the front lines to see 150 to 200 airplanes swoop suddenly down from the clouds and dart over the German lines, bombarding centres of resistance, retreating troops and transport columns on the two main roads leading from the salient. Not a single German airplane was seen behind the American lines during the battle. It was soon discovered that the previous scarcity of airplanes in this sector had been merely a ruse to entice the Boche into making wild forays far behind our lines, for suddenly, one morning, there appeared in the sky this large fleet of allied planes and from that time until the end of the war there was never a German plane behind the American lines. One morning in November, at 3:30 o'clock the Americans started a barrage with the largest number of guns ever concentrated for one operation and smashed the last stronghold that menaced the famous march to Sedan. Though it seemed our men must drop from the exhaustion and hunger and exposure attendant on such an exploit, they never wavered but stepped forth with new strength when they received the order "take Sedan though every officer and man drops in his tracks from exhaustion." The order was later modified at the request of the French government, who desired to clear their military record of the stigma attached thereto by the unfortunate catastrophe of 187I. The city of Sedan was entered simultaneously by the Rainbow division and First American and by certain French troops. The Armistice overtook us here. 82ND DIVISION IAJOR GENERAL EREN SWIFT. IAJOR GENERAL GEORGE B. DUNCANLIEUTENANT COLONEL PRESTON BROWN. The Division consisted of 25,797 men, 934 officers and 5646 animals. It was organized at Camp Gordon, Ga., and was composed of natives from all states and nationalities. MIany came from the Southern states, but there were several thousands of Northern boys. Many Menominee county boys were among them, who either had been employed in the South or were sent to Camp Gordon to complete the division. The division sailed for overseas April 25, 1918, arriving at Liverpool. Some three thousand of this division passed in review before the sovereign ruler of the British empire. Many Menominee county boys happened to be among these. This is of historical significance as it of 4 4 4 4, 4 * I: 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 k i k I I 9u I [222]. mm- [ -, - I ' * - -S - - <.W W X s 1 -W v AILA& - -_ --- — - ---- _ - i Al, 4^ * * —. - ---. - -GP Zm-~ m fered the British their first glimpse of the American new army. The cheering and warmth of the greeting these American soldier boys received from the English will never be forgotten by them, and was carried by many of this division;1 4-,-, L+1a;- v-, n —To IL FTr Ir IL 1 1 .0. ---— i -— W! I IJK I! 4 4 f f 4 I I i o Officers —I8; 'Men-827. CASUALTIES Killed and died of wounds-9o7. Wounded-435. Gassed-245. I WILno 1e11 ver Inetre, toU nlle giaves. ACTIVITIES Marbache and St. Mihiel offensives, Norray, Moselle River and Argonne Meuse, with casualties of 907 killed at St. Mihiel and 73 at Marbache and several hundred wounded and gassed. September 25, I918, ordered to retreat and be kept in reserve. Called out September 3oth and fought continually until October ioth. Cleared Argonne Forest and was relieved by the 77th and 78th Divisions. Entered the ArgonneMeuse offensive Oct. 14th and kept in action until November Ist, when relieved. PRISONERS CAPTURED Auto Tank Guns-3. Aeroplanes-2. After November Ist, 1918, the 82nd Division moved back to Argonne Forest with the division headquarters at Champ Mahaut, while the greater part of the division kept on moving to Florent Les Islettes, Claremont, St. Dizier, making the march in three days. The division was stationed in and about these localities until late in December. Housing facilities were poor and many were obliged to sleep and eat outof-doors. Many cases of pneumonia developed and often proved fatal to the men of the 82nd division. It was shortly after this that the intimation was received that the division would return home. On February 26th they moved to Bordeaux and on March 22nd headquarters were opened at Castres near Bordeaux on the Garrone river. There were but two trains per day and as this area near Bordeaux had never been used for a complete combat division. many accommodations were missing, especially inconvenient was the inadequate telephone service. But as the men were only obliged to drill here two hours a clay and had nothing to occupy their spare time, Major Cunningham was appointed Athletic and Welfare officer. A baseball league was organized, and shows and movies were booked through the area. Any one could obtain leave of absence. Eleven hundred men were sent on a special train to Italy in charge of Major Danforth of the 328th Inf. 82nd Div. While under general supervision of Chaplain Tyler, the schools at Prauthoy were reopened and 800 men attended these regularly every day. Finally in April the order for shipment home arrived: All units sailed from Bordeaux April 20th and landed in New York. Several organizations of the division were retained on account of quarantine until late in May, but by June ist, the entire 82nd Division, as a military organization, had passed into history and every man at Camp Upton, Camp Mills and Camp Dix had received his honorable discharge. 4 l 4 1 1 1 1 i 41 I i DECORATIONS No. of Officers and Men. Congressional Medal of Honor Distinguished Service Medal Distinguished Service Cross Citations for conspicuous efficiency in position of great responsibility 1 - 2 - 3 - 75 - 436 CAPTURED FROM THE ENEMY ST. MIIHIEL Heavy guns-2. Field Piece-I. Minenwefefers-3 MEUSE-ARGONNE + Heavy Machine Guns-I21. Light Machine Guns-I56. Field Piece-I. Field Pieces-77. MIinenwerfers-29. I 0 [223] mo - StfWM^ lw w lw I --- —-^T- *t rl, T I kr IT- 4k. 1 v..,- -, v 1k5 4b. * > Wb t D I \& I Division The 32nc IN TRENCHES too rotten to describe-in shell holes and hell holes, in places where, 'twould seem, no living being could possibly survive, lived OUR DIVISION. The brave, the bold, the fighting American Soldier throughout the A. E. F., who willingly fought until his last breath was drawn, will forever be, an eternal memory to the cause of Justice and Humanity. Our Division, now that the War is won, can proudly claim forever more, the Bar-Red-Arrow, as an emblem to a real man's jobwell done. Our Division had these men-from general down to him who wore no bars nor chevron: They fought in Alsace, on the Marne, at Soissons and in the Forest of Argonne-they fought on the Meuse, did our division, and there staged the last exhibition of love for home and liberty. The work they did is an open book, to every one who cares to look, and when they do, they. will say "fine." The Thirty-second was in line as Germany was forced to sign. The world today is full of joy. The monster beast and human demon, is safely somewhere out of sight. So here's the windup to the former toast: We will not brag, we will not boast, we will not say that we did most; but pity the nation, country or clan, that dares to lay hands on Old Uncle Sam. For Our Division will live forever and you bet we'll be loyal forever and ever. They hailed from all corners of the U. S. A., From New York City to 'Frisco BayFrom the Northern woods to DixielandAnd like brothers all, worked hand in hand. The backbone of this mighty division so hard Was made up of men from the old national guard; With co-operation of the men who were called They soon showed the enemy they were not to be stalled. They trained "Our Division" at Camp MacArthur And then in Southern France-somewhat farther; Away from loved ones and home-but the spirit was there And stayed with "Our Division" everywhere. Now "Our Division" was trained near fire and foe, The way they learned fighting was sure nothing slow: They "Got on to" a few tricks of the game that's called "War" It sure made old "Wilhelm" red headed and sore. 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 1 A I I I I 1 4 4 I I I f e III ' 1 A - A -- - - " - - - do Wr -M do * * The traininlgr was finished, they were harder than steel, Their minitds owere "All set"-their objects were clear. * Their duities they knew, and only too well For "Our Division" sure raised somle hell. Carefrec and happy, zwithout doubt or grunt "Our Division" one day left for the "Big Froint"; The side-shows were over-the "Main one' was near Bult the boys were all "raring," they kne-w naught of fear. After riding in box-cars thirty holurs and mlore * They foitnd themselves near the battle's front door; They could see bright flares out in "No Man's Land," Oh, how anxious they were to take their stand. On e da v in ilidsuZ11Z i er-'twas nineteen eiglhteenOur brazve boys wzere ready to go on the scelte.They waited awhile, then camle the decisionIt ]meant-Go! And they went-"Olur Division." Then soilleuwhere in France "Our Division" began To give "Fritz" a taste of old Uncle Sam. Our doughlboys went forth like warriors of old* Hats off to thent! They were fearless and bold. * Machine guwnlners, artillery and engineers, too, Showed the baffled enenmy what "Our Division" could do; The signal corps, also, in 1muck and mire, Delivered the goods with plier and wire. The ntedicos and those in the Q. M. corps, * Also showed "Heine" what they were for; Were on the job, both day and night, * And helped the good cause with all their iiiight. All other utnits in "Our Division" so strong, * Helped limake a showing that will live long. They all worked like beavers and never did zwhine, * For our doughboys were driving the "swzcne" toward the Rhine. Forward and onward "Our Division" did goDriving the enemy and letting him know That his days were numbered, his power goneHis canoltlflaged armzy not worth a song. Throulgh hamllets and villages, historic anld shattered, Our boys drove the Boche, and vou bet they scattered. * They showed "Fritz" no imercy-our boys held the line, Shot straight and often, hit every timiie. * Through acres of forests, o'er miles of green fields Dashed "Our Division." The Boche kneels * On the ground and cries "Kainerad"Spare him.? No! Not a foe like that. I 4$ [225] Oh 0 OWm^ — -W^ - X * B For many a hard day and night "OIur Division" fought and did. just what was right. They fooled and beat the enemly at his own gamele That's how "Our Division" won its famze. Day after day "Our Division'" gained, Until the timle was finally namted For them to rest. Brave defenders of democracy, Chanmptious of loved ones and liberty. Their bodies were tired-but not their hearts* They stood the test, they played their parts, They showed the enenmy that "Our Division" could fight, That we were right and right was might. Int spite of the fact that the Kaiser got imad, * Threw the best troops against Ius he ever hadThe best that he sent against "Our Division" TWere "Beat to a Frafzle" under any condition. The m11others, zives and sweethearts so fair, The fathers, sisters and brothers o'er there, Relations and friends; They all see a vision Of their boy who is in "Our Division." * After all has been said, let tus ever remiember That mlany a brave and fearless defender Of "Our Division"-Gave up his life, InI this-The -world's greatest strife. In years to co me history will tell * Of how olur lads have follght and fellOf "Our Divisioin" -American stAleForever spoiled Old Ludendorf's sm1ile. The struggle is over, we hope foreverc Our world to live in again is free. f Our heroic and brave division * Has returned front over the sea. + So here is a toast to "Our Division"With lots of courage and stubborn decision, r7With efforts combined and guns in position, We knocked the old Kaiser out of commission. * 4! [226] B '* "^"h^ ^ ^ 'l^ c**^ f" ^^ ^^d '^^" .0, 4. 411 4. a b g:a,- ql' 10014%11W -0 -1- - I - -- V% - us CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 4 I I 1 e * 4 1 q 4 4 1917 April 6-United States declares war on Germany. April 8-Austria-Hungary severs diplomatic relations with the United States. April 20-Turkey severs relations with United States. May 4-American destroyers begin co-operation with British navy in war zone. May 18-President Wilson signs Selective Service Act. May 25.-German superdreadnaught U-boat attacking United States transport, sunk by United States destroyers. June 8-By attacks on the Marne, FrancoAmerican troops put Germans on defensive; United States forces, under Gen. Pershing, capture and hold Bouresches; French recapture Locre Hospice. June 15-Subscriptions close for First Liberty Loan-$2,000,000,000 offered; $3,035,226,850 subscribed. June 26-First American troops reach France. July 20-Drawing at Washington of names for first army under selective draft. Aug. 10-Food and fuel control bill passed. Oct. 27-Second Liberty Loan closed; $3,000,000,000 offered; $4,617,532,300 subscribed. Nov. 3-First clash of American with German soldiers. Dec. 5-President Wilson, in message to Congress, advises war on Austria. Dec. 6-United States destroyer Jacob Jones sunk by submarine, with loss of over 60 men. Dec. 7-United States declares war on AustriaHungary. Jan. 30-Since launching of unrestricted submarine warfare, on Feb. 1, 1917, 69 United States ships (171,061 gross tons) have been sunk by submarines, mines and raiders; 300 persons drowned; 107 German and Austrian ships (686,494 gross tons) in United States ports have been seized; 426 vessels (2,000,000 tons) requisitioned by Shipping Board. Jan. 31-It is for the first time announced that United States troops are occupying first line trenches. Germans raid American line, kill 2, wound 4, 1 missing. Jan. 31-Maj. Peyton C. March made chief of general staff. Feb. 5-United States steamer Alaman torpedoed; six of crew lost. Feb. 13-On western front United States batteries aid in raid in Champagne district. Feb. 21-United States steamship Philadelphia, with a cargo of foodstuffs, sunk by German submarine. Feb. 22-United States troops are in the Chemin des Dames sector, the Aisne, France. Mar. 1-United States war cost for February, $1,002,878,608. Loans to allies, $325,000,000. Mar. 5-In Lorraine sector United States troops of the Rainbow Division (New York City) repel German raid and take prisoners, Mar. 6-United States troops hold four and a half miles of battlefront "somewhere in France." Mar. 9-On Lorraine front United States forces bombard and obliterate over a mile of German trenches. United States casualty list shows: Killed in action, 19; from gas, 2; in aero accidents, 2; auto accidents, 1; of disease, 13; severely wounded, 26; slightly wounded, 36. Mar. 10-United States war department announces presence of Americans on Lorraine front, in Champagne, in Alsace, near Luneville, and in Aisne sector. Mar. 11-United States troops go over the top at Toul and return without loss. Mar. 12-In Toul sector United States artiller; discover and blow to pieces German gas projectors, upsetting plans for gas attack. Mar. 14-Gen. Pershing's men make first permanent advance, occupy evacuated trenches northeast of Bandonvillers. Mar. 19-United States expeditionary force casualties to date: Killed in action, 154; killed or prisoner, 1; by accident, 145; disease, 683; lost at sea, 237; suicide, 11; unknown causes, 14; of wounds, 37; executed, 1; civilians, 7; gassed, 6; total deaths, 1,296; wounded, 544; captured, 21; missing, 14. Mar. 20-United States guns shell village of Lahayville, causing explosions. Mar. 21-On Luneville sector United States artillery fire destroys first and second line positions. Mar. 22-Secretary of War Baker calls on King Albert of Belgium at the front. Mar. 25-United States artillery shell Baussant and billets north of Boquetan, opposite Toul sector, with gas. London announces United States steamship Chattachoochie (5,088 tons) sunk off English coast, crew of 74 saved. Mar. 26-In Toul sector United States troops drive Germans out of Richecourt. United States casualty list to date: Dead, 1,383; wounded, 706; captured, 22; missing, 37. Mar. 27-Gen. Pershing offers all United States forces for service wherever needed. Lloyd George appeals for American reinforcements. Mar. 29-The President orders temporary suspension of food shipment, except for military supplies, and concentration on sending of troops. Apr. 4-United States troops now occupy Meuse heights, south of Verdun. Apr. 5-United States army at end of the first year of the war totals more than 1,500,000 men. Apr. 7-United States troops in Toul sector repel two German raids. Turks take Ardahan from Armenians; Constantinople reports Turkish troops advancing over wide area in the Caucasus. Apr. 10-Secretary Daniels says 1,275 vessels (1,055,116 tons) were added to the navy in the first year of the year. Apr. 11-United States steamship Lake Moore (4,500 tons) is sunk by German submarine; 5 officers, 40 men missing. Apr. 19-United States and French troops raid German line on the Meuse, but find the German trenches deserted. Apr. 20-Germany, through the Swiss minister, demands release of Lieut. von Rintelen in exchange for Siegfried Paul London under sentence in Warsaw as a spy, threatening reprisals on the Americans in Germany if demand is not complied with. United States threatens counter reprisals. Apr. 21-The Germans claim to have taken 183 men, including five officers and 25 machine guns. Gen. Pershing estimates German losses at 300 to 500. Apr. 23-Maj. Raoul Lufbery destroys his eighteenth German plane and Lieut. P. F. Baer, of Mobile, Ala., his fifth., United States casualties in France to date: Killed in action, 513; died of wounds, 104; of disease. 924; from accident, 192; other causes, 93; severely wounded, 419; slightly, 1,592; missing, 86. May 11-lUnited States artillery fire causes fires in the villages of Cantigny and St. Georges, held by the Germans. May 18-United States steamship William Rockefeller sunk by torpedo. May 19-Maj. Raoul Lufbery, American aviator, shot down an enemy airplane over Toul. May 19-German raids in Picardy and Lorraine are repelled by United States troops. May 20-United States cargo steamship J. G. McCullough is sunk by mine or torpedo in foreign waters. May 22-United States steamship Wakiva sunk, with loss of two, in collision in European waters. May 23-British transport Moldavia, on way to channel port, torpedoed and sunk off English coast; 56 United States sailors killed by explosion. May 25 to June 14-German submarines sink 19 ships off coast of New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. May 31-United States transport President Lincoln, returning, sunk by torpedo off the French coast; loss, 28 out of 175. 4 ~ ~1! * t *I 4 4 * tj ~ *.9 4 4 [227] [ ~ i1t1.. 1-.~ -- - -- -I - --.0. -0.40 4b,.q. I -0 - p I 60 40 % —=- 4-n ^ I W Nv'%Mmimmmmwi F . -.l. 4 1 9 4 4 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 I 4 4 > June 4-United States secretary of state, in reply to demand for release of Von Rintelen, says this government does not recognize principle of retaliation, refuses compliance and reminds Germany that there are many Germans in the United States subject to counter reprisals. June 4-Now reported that ships sunk on June 2 off New Jersey coast were Edna, 375 tons; Carolina, 5,092 tons; Herbert L. Pratt, 5,372 tons; Winne Connie, 1,869 tons; Edward H. Cole, 1,791 tons; Jacob H. Haskell, 1,778 tons; Isabella H. Wiley, 779 tons; Hattie Dunn, 436 tons; Samuel W. Hathaway, 1,083 tons; Hauppauge, 1,330 tons. June 5-United States troops penetrate enemy positions in Picardy and Lorraine. French counter attack regains ground near Vingre; take 150 prisoners, drive Germans from around Chavigny Farm and take 50 prisoners. June 5-United States troops drive Germans from Neuilly wood by bayonet charge. June 6-West of Chateau Thierry IUnited States troops drive Germans a mile on 2-mile front, take 270 prisoners; United States and French troops advance in region of Neuvilly la Poterie and Bouresches; German attacks at Champlat, heights of Bligny, southwest of Ste. Euphraise and between the Meuse and Rhemis, are repulsed. Gen. Pershing reports that on western front, between April 14 and May 31, Lieut. Douglas Campbell brought down six enemy airplanes, Capt. Peterson and Lieut. Rickenbacher each brought down three. June 6 —United States Marines drive Germans two and a half miles, destroy nest of machine guns, capture village of Torcy and force way into Bouresches. June 7-United States and French troops take villages of Neuilly-la-Poterie and Bouresches and Bligny, between the Marne and Rheims, and 200 prisoners. Northwest of Thierry United States troops advance two and a half miles on a six-mile front. United States government announces about 5,000 Germans interned as enemy aliens; 349 United States prisoners in Germany. June 10-United States Marines, northwest of Chateau Thierry, in Belleau Wood, pierce German line two-thirds of a mile on 600-yard front. David Putnam, descendent of Israel Putnam, brings down his fifth German plane. June 5-Dispatch from United States army in France says United States forces have been occupying sectors of battlefront in Alsace since May 21. Gen. March, chief of staff, announces more than 800,000 United States troops in France. June 16-United States casualties since entering the war total 8,085. Gen. March announces United States forces now hold 39 miles on battlefront in France. June 24-Maj. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., cited for conspicuous gallantry in action. United States Marines clear Belleau Wood; capture 300 Germans. June 26-Washington gives out summary of United States Marines casualties in the fighting at Belleau Wodd and Cantigny; 341 deaths, (13 officers); 759 wounded (29 officers); 2 missing. United States transport Covington (16,330 tons) torpedoed on home trip with loss of six of crew. June 29-Gen. March announces that the Metropolitan Division of the National Army, "New York's Own," under Maj. Gen. Johnson, is holding a sector on the French front. United States troops of sanitary corps arrive in Italy. July 1-United States Marines land at Kola; co-operate with British and French in protecting railroad and war supplies from Finnish White Guards. July 2-Americans capture village of Vaux; Germans lose heavily in counter attacks. July 4-Australian and United States troops capture Hamel, south of the Somme, and repulse three counter attacks. July 5-Thirteen United States airmen in fights with 23 German planes, down three without loss on western front. July 9-Naval airplanes drop bombs on Ostend, Zeebrugge and Bruges. July 10-United States aviators penetrate 50 miles into German territory west of Chateau Thierry. July 11-United States steamship Westover sunk by torpedo in European waters; 10 of crew missing. July 13-Gen. March announces 750,000 United States troops in France, organized into three army corps; Gen. Hunter Liggett is commander of the First Corps. New York troops form part of Second Corps. Army and Marine casualties since United States entered the war total 11,733. July 14-First Lieut. Quentin Roosevelt, 95th Aero Squadron, First Allied Pursuit Troop, is killed in aerial flight and buried with military honors by the Germans. July 15-Americans withdraw four miles to Conde-en-Brie; the counter attack, driving Germans back to the Marne; take 1,500 prisoners, including a complete brigade staff. Washington announces that if United States troops are in Russia they have been sent from England by Foch. July 17-Gen. Pershing reports 500 German prisoners captured in United States counter attacks. July 18-Mr. Hoover said United States sent during last year $1,400,000,000 worth of food to the allies. French and Americans advance on 25-mile front to depth of three to six miles, United States troops taking a dozen villages, 4,000 prisoners and 30 guns. July 19-United States cruiser San Diego sunk by mine with loss of six. Party of United States congressmen arrive in Paris, France. July 20 —United States troops have taken 17,000 prisoners, 560 guns on the Aisne-Marne front. July 22-UTnited States schooners Robert and Richard sunk by German submarine off Cape Ann; none lost. United States and French forces advance, occupy area on south between Soissons-Chateau Thierry road and the Ourcq. On the Marne United States and French pursue fleeing Germans, who destroy villages and supplies. July 23-On the west Americans capture Buzancy and Jaulgonne on the Marne. French in centre take Oulchy. On the east British capture Petitchamp wood, near Marfaux. July 24-French and United States troops, in Marne salient, converge from west and south on Fere-en-Tardenois. Americans regain Epieds, north of Marne; advance to Courpoil. July 25-Steamship Tippecanoe, outward bound, torpedoed and sunk; crew lost. July 26-United States and French troops advance 10 miles on river sector of Marne salient, shutting off Germans from the Marne. Americans clear the woods on north bank and French push eastward. July 30-American and French lose and regain Cierges and Beugneux and push ahead two miles. United States and British draft treaty goes into effect; British and Canadians have 60 days in which to enlist; treaty does not affect Irish or Australians. July 31-For Menominee City and County, July 31st is a day of greatest sacrifice as well as greatest glory. The records of this book are mute testimony of the bravery and gallantry of those who lie buried near Chateau Thierry and northwest of Cierges, as well as those who have returned decorated with the Croix de Guerre from the French Government and the Distinguished Service Cross from the United States, for deeds of heroism accomplished on that day. It was this daring achievement of the 32nd Division at Chateau Thierry, which gained for them, by the French the name of Les Terribles. It was a day of immense sacrifice of human life, but a day of overwhelming victory for Company L of Menominee, which was leading one battalion on the great battle front, and thousands of others of the 32rnd Division, who with equal bravery laid down their lives in the service of their country. Aug. 3-Americans reach outskirts of Fismes. Allied patrols west of Rheims hold Vesle fords. 0 4 I 1 if 4 4 I 4 4 228] -- I Im - - N A~ I-rk ^ I - 0~e41 w m II. -- I -- qw 40. 41 I I I Gen. March says it was the Rainbow Division of New York that last week defeated the Prussian Guard. Aug. 4-German retreat in Aisne district continues. United States and French troops occupy Fismes and cross Vesle at four points. Submarine chaser No. 187 collides with another vessel near Hog Island, off Virginia coast, and sinks; no lives lost. United States schooner Stanley M. Seamen stopped by a German submarine 100 miles east of Cape Hatters, which takes off stores. The President put into effect law to prevent use of United States ships or yards by foreign interests. A second United States transport carrying Americans from Manila lands at Vladivostok. Americans in the Vosges, east of St. Doe, capture village of Frapelle. United States bombing airplanes drop 38 bombs on Conflans, a town on Verdun-Metz railroad. Aug. 5 —Schooner Gladys J. Holland torpedoed and sunk 15 miles off Ironbound Island. United States troops land at Archangel. Aug. 6 —United States steamship Morak sunk by submarine off Cape Hatters. Aug. 7-United States and French troops cross the Vesle. Aug. 10-United States schooners Katy Palmer, Reliance and Alida May sunk by German submarines, also the Sybil and Mary Sennett of Gloucester. Mass. Aug. 11-Nine United States fishing boats off Georgia's banks sunk by U-boat. Aug. 15-First of United States contingents to operate in Siberia, 27th U. S. Infantry, from Philippines, lands at Vladivostok. United States steamer Cubore (7,300 tons) sunk by submarine; no lives lost. Aug. 16-United States cargo ship Montana (5,659 gross tons) torpedoed and sunk in foreign waters; five men missing. United States steamer Westbridge (8,800 tons) sunk by torpedo with loss of three. Aug. 17-United States cargo ship Joseph Cudahy torpedoed about 700 miles from English coast; 13 of crew rescued; 62 missing. Gen. March says there are 1,450,000 United States soldiers in expeditionary forces in all parts of the world. Aug. 18-Americans in village of Frapelle, on western front, repulse enemy patrol raids and make advances in spite of Germans throwing 2,500 shells. Aug. 19-Aviation statistics for four American squadrons up to Aug. 1 show 59 German planes downed, exclusive of Lufbery's. Aug. 21-Gen. March announces 32 United States army divisions on French soil. Aug. 24-United States troops east of Bazoches; repel German raid in the Vosges. United States troops advance on half mile front to Soissons-Rheims road. Aug. 28-Gen. March says the United States troops and allies in eight weeks since July 1 have taken 102,000 prisoners, 1,300 guns. War department estimates on basis of prisoners captured that Germany in same period must have lost nearly 350,000 killed and wounded. Aug. 30-JUnited States steamer Omega (3,636 tons) torpedoed and sunk; 29 missing. Sept. 5-United States troops advance over plateau between the Vesle and the Aisne. United States steamer Mount Vernon struck ry torpedo 200 miles off French coast; 35 men killed by explosion; reaches port by its own steam. S'ept. 13-British advance near Cabrai and around LaBassee, Gen. Pershing's forces practically wiped out St. Mihiel salient; take 12,000 prisoners, 60 big guns. Sept. 18-United States rejects Austro-Hungarian peace proposal. United States steamer Buena Ventura torpedoed on voyage, Bordeaux to Philadelphia; three boats with 64 men missing. Sept. 18-United States tanks attack on St. Mihiel salient; enter villages of Nousard, Pommes, LaMarche and Binney. United States government directs its ambassadors and ministers in neutral and allied countries to ascertain whether governments which tley are accredited will join in immediate action to protest against Russian terrorism. Sept. -20-An enemy submarine captures United States steam trawler Kingfisher after torpedoing it, 95 miles off English coast, the crew escapes. United States steamer Ticonderoga (5,130 tons) sunk by submarines in midocean without warning; 10 officers, 102 enlisted men lost, 2 officers, 5 men taken prisoners. Sept. 21- Gen. March, United States Chief of Staff, says 1,750,000 soldiers have been sent abroad. Sept. 22-United States troops make two iaids on Germans northwest of St. Mihiel, take,4 prisoners, 2 machine guns. Secretary of State Lansing, in reply to Germanv's threat to execute United States prisoners of war found with shotguns, gave notice that in such event reprisals will be taken on German prisoners in the United States. Sept. 26-United States troops, on 20-mile front advance seven miles between Argonne Forest and Verdun; take 12 towns, 5,000 prisoners. Sept. 27-United States forces take Charpentry, Very, Epinonville and Ivoyry. French and United States forces advance two miles on 20 -mile front; capture 20 towns; take 18,000 prisoners. Sept. 28-U-nited States troops advance two miles to outskirts of Brieulles and Exermont. United States batteries hit two trains loaded with German troops entering Brieulles. Slept. 30-On Verdun front 18 United States pursuit planes battle with 25 German Fokkers and bring down seven, losing one. Oct. 1-Gen. Pershing reports United States airmen since Sept. 26 have brought down on the western front more than 100 hostile planes and 21 balloons. Oct. 2-New York troops force back Germans in Argonne Forest. Armies of Gens. Gouraud and Berthelot continue to advance on front east and west of Rheims; reach Aisne Canal, pass beyond St. Ouentin. Oct. 3.-Latest summary of war material taken by United States troops in Argonne section shows 120 guns, 2,750 trench mortars. 300 machine guns, 100 anti-tank guns, thousands of shells, hundreds of thousands of small arms ammunition. Oct. 4-Northwest of Verdun five United States airmen fight seven Germans, bring one down. Seven German planes brought down by anti-aircraft guns. Elight United States pursuit planes run into squadron of 25 German planes, five Germans brought down, Americans losing one. Oct. 6-United States troops capture St. Etienne, 1,700 prisoners, including 48 officers. Americans cross Scheldt Canal. German Chancellor Prince Maximillian, tnrough Swiss government sends note to President Wilson requesting him to take in hand restoration of peace. acquaint belligerents of request and invite them to send plenipotentiaries; says German government accepts Wilson program of Jan. 8 and later addresses, and requests immediate armistice. Oct. 7-United States troops strike on left wing east of the Argonne. United States troops drive enemy out of Chalet-Chehery and seize heights west of the Aire. British and United States troops attack between St. Quentin and Cambrai; advance about two miles on entire front; capture Beaugard and Premont. United States troops take Cornay. Oct. 8-Italian fleet, aided by United States submarine chasers, French and British destroyers, attack and destroy Austrian fleet and naval base of Durazzo. The President through Secretary of State Lansing, asks Imperial German Government if it accepts terms laid down by him on Jan. 8., 1918. Says he could not propose armistice to allies so long as German or Austrian armies are on their soil, and asks whether the Imperial Chancellor is speaking merely for the constituted authorities of the Empire who have thus far conducted the war. Oct. 9-United States troops break through Kriemhilde line on both sides of the Meuse, and with French, clear Argonne Wood. ITnited States aero bombing expedition of 200 4 ~ l 4 4!! I If [229] _II I I I - I _ -- - - 40..do. 4 -W 0. I I 41. 1 1 ( 10 a-.6 ICU w w 0 - ~ A I - -.I* 0 3 L - M I I II 111 - I *; * bombing planes, 100 pursuit machines, 50 triplanes, drop 32 tons of explosives on German cantonment in area between Wavrille and Danvillers, about 12 miles north of Verdun; during fight destroy 12 enemy planes. In addition, same day, United States airplanes brought down five German machines and balloons. Oct. 10-United States troops capture VauxAndingy and St. Souplet, also Busigny, six miles southwest of LeChateau. Since beginning of St. Mihiel offensive United States anti-aircraft cannon and machine guns have brought down 32 enemy planes; 20 by machine guns, 12 by heavier guns. Oct. 12-At Metropolitan Opera House, New York, the President receives from Associated Press unofficial text of Germany's reply to his questions of Oct. 8; accepting terms of Mr. Wilson's address of Jan. 28, 1918; suggests a mixed commission to make arrangements; agrees to evacuation and claims to be supported by great majority of the Reichstag and to speak in the name of the German people. Oct. 12-United States troops take Consenvoye Wood and Mollevile Farm, and are before St. Juvin and Cumel, which are in flames. United States troops gain five miles on 40 -mile front, defeat seven German divisions, capture 10,000 prisoners; take St. Mihiel, Thioncourt and other towns. United States transport Amphian (7,409 tons) homeward *bound, has two hours' running fight with U-boat 800 miles off Atlantic coast; eight men wounded, two fatally. Oct. 14-United States troops pass beyond Cumel and Ronagny, pierce positions of St. Georges and Lundres-et-St. Georges; take about 750 prisoners. United States patrol crosses Selle River near St. Souplet; takes 30 prisoners. The President replies to Germany's peace offer in effect that military supremacy of armies of United States and allies must be safeguarded, processes and methods left to military advisors; illegal and inhuman practices must cease and German people must alter their government so that no one power can of its single choice destroy the peace of the world. Oct. 15-United States troops widen breach in Kriemhilde line. United States troops occupy town of Grand Pre; captured La Musari Farm. Allied forces, including United States troops, repulse Bolshevik attacks on banks of Dvina; Americans and Russians advance toward Welsk, 125 miles northeast of Vologda. Oct. 17-Germans bombard Dunkirk with long range guns, two Americans killed, one man wounded. Oct. 18-United States infantry advance north of Romagne and take Bantheville; northwest of Grand Pre; take Talma Farm. Oct. 19-President says to Austria, in effect: 'United States, having recognized CzechoSlovaks, the terms of Jan. 8 address no longer applies," and refuses an armistice. Oct. 20-German note, unofficial, is received by wireless. On its face accepts President Wilson's conditions; claims Kaiser's personal arbitary powers have been taken from him; denies barbarity, claims retreat destructions permissible under international law. Submarines all called to their bases. Oct. 23-President Wilson replies to the German note. Says he will take up question of armistice with his co-belligerents; refers details to field commanders, and says: "If we must deal with the present imperial government of Germany we cannot trust it and must demand surrender." Oct. 24-United States troops take Bois Belleau. Oct. 25-Germans in Argonne region are damming rivers and flooding the country to stop United States advance. Oct. 27-On the Verdun front, east of the Meuse, United States troops attack and take Bois Belleau. East of Rethel United States troops advance two-thirds of a mile. Germans counter-attack British at Famars and are repulsed. Oct. 30-United States troops occupy Aincreville, north of Verdun. Nov. 1-Gen. Pershing's forces advance to rortheast of Grand Pre, capture a dozen or more fortified villages and 3,000 prisoners; take Andevanne and clear the Bois des Loges. Nov. 2-Above Verdun United States troops advance on an average of two and a half miles on a 14-mile front; in last two days take 3,000 prisoners, 60 heavy cannon, hundreds of machine guns, capture Fosse, eight miles southwest from Stenay; railroad junctions in regions of Montmedy and Longuyon under fire of United States big guns. United States troops take and pass beyond St. Georges, Imecourt, Landreville, Chernnery, Romonville, Estanne and Cleryle-Grand. Nov. 3-United States troops advance to within four miles of Stenay, take many towns, prisoners and much booty. Gen. Pershing's men. with Gen. Haig's and the French reach outskirts of Ghent, enter Audenarde. Nov. 3-United States bombing air machines attack Martincourt, Mouzay, Beauclair and Beaufort. French and Americans clear enemy cut of Bourgogne Woods and whole of Argonne region; take Chatillon-sure-Barre and Bois du Chesne, Toges, Belleville, Quatre-Champs, Noirvale and Les Alleux. Jugo Slavs seize Austro-Hungarian fleet, except Viribus Unitis, recently sunk by Italians, and send wireless to President Wilson offering to hand vessels over to United States government or representatives of allied navies. Nov. 4-All towns on west bank of Meuse south of Halles now in American hands. United,States troops penetrate village of Beaumont and occupy Lauenville, opposite Stenay; take Les Grandes Armoises, and advance over three miles. Austria accepts truce terms, immediate ending of hostilities by land, on sea and in air; demobilization of Austro-Hungarian army, immediate withdrawal from North Sea to Switzerland, half of equipment to be surrendered; evacuation of all territory invaded since war began; military and railway equipment and coal to be given up; no new destruction, pillage or requisitions; right of free government over territory and means of communication; evacuation in 15 days of all German troops, any remaining to be interned; local authorities of evacuated territory to administer under allied control; reparation without reciprocity of all allied prisoners of war and interned subjects of civil populations; naval conditions; definite information of location and movements of Austro-Hungarian ships to be given; surrender of 15 submarines and all German submarines now in or hereafter entering Austro-Hungarian waters; other surface warships to be disarmed; 34 warships to be surrendered; freedom of the Adriatic and up the Danube; allies and United States to occupy or dismantle fortifications; blockade conditions unchanged, naval aircraft to be concentrated at designated bases; evacuation of Italian coasts; occupation by allies and United States of land and sea fortifications; merchant vessels to be returned; no destruction of ships or material; naval and marine prisoners to be returned without reciprocity. President Wilson cables felicitations to King of Italy. Secretary Lansing sends message to Baron Sonnino, Italian minister of foreign affairs, now in Versailles. Nov. 5-Marshal Foch has the allies' armistice terms ready for the Germans. Southward from Ghent the Americans went further over the Scheldt, above Audenarde, while south of there British forces occupied a wide stretch of the eastern river bank. Pershing's First Army continued its advance on both banks of the Meuse. Crossings were made north and south of Dun, and large forces made good their hold on the hill of the eastern bank and pressed on toward Stenay, from which they were distant six miles, and Montmedy. By an advance of more than four miles on the centre (where the Metropolitan Division from New York has been operating) they passed beyond Raucourt Wood to within five miles of the point where the great trunk line to Metz crosses the river and within eight miles of Sedan. The American forces later captured Linydevant-Dun, six miles south of Stenay, east of the Meuse. They were also occupying the hills on the east bank of the river, despite a stiff machine gun resistance by the Germans. 4 I# i 4 4 t} } I n 1 [230] I K -. [ it. 1 i, i I 4 or.Z.?qpwqK I 0 * - ~ ~ ~r~Z — A I I L7 Nov. 6-Reports from the centre of the American line are to the effect that the town of Mouzon is on fire and that part of Sedan is burning. Its footing established east of the Meuse, the American army has forced its way along both banks of the river to within six miles of Sedan. American and French troops continue their advance. Murvaux, north of the Freya line and east of Dun, was reached this afternoon, and operations about the heights to the east of Sedan are under way. Nov. 7-The Americans have not only captured Sedan in their advance on both sides of the Meuse, but have made a jump towards the Briey iron mines, which the Longuyon line protects. Longuyon for several days has been under fire of American guns. With that part of Sedan resting on the western bank of the river occupied, the American army is consolidating its positions and preparing for a further advance. It was contingents of the noted Rainbow Division and of the First Division that made the final whirlwind dash into Sedan. A premature publication in afternoon newspapers that peace terms had been agreed to by Germany made New York City delirious with joy; whistles and sirens blew, bells rang, business was practically abandoned and the streets filled up with merrymakers very similar to an old night before New Year celebration. The excitement continued to a late hour in spite of publication of denials of authenticity of report. Nov. 8-Germany's armistice delegates were received by Marshal Foch at 9 A. M. in a railroad car in which the commander-in-chief has his headquarters. Matthias Erzberger, leader of the enemy delegation, speaking in French, announced that the German government had appointed them plenipotentaries to take cognizance of the terms and eventually to sign an armistice. Marshal Foch read the terms to them, dwelling upon each word. They made a few observations, pointing out difficulties in the way of carrying out some secondary clauses. Then Erzberger asked for a suspension of hostilities. This request Marshal Foch refused. The delegates, having obtained permission to send a courier to Spa, German Great Headquarters, and communicate with that place by wireless, withdrew. The armistice terms called for an answer in 72 hours, expiring at 11 A. M. Monday. The Americans have improved their positions beyond Sedan on both sides of the river, consolidating their tremendous gains of the last four days. Emperor William has refused a demand of the Socialists that he and the Crown Prince abdicate. Chancellor Maximilian, unable to control the Socialists, who are the most powerful block in the Reichstag majority, has resigned. Nov. 9-"The Kaiser and King has decided to renounce the throne," officially announces the retiring chancellor, Prince Maximilian of Baden. Prince Max acted a few hours as regent. The Americans advanced everywhere along their line. The enemy artillery fire was from large calibre guns, indicating positions a great distance away. One American division reached Mouzay in its forward march, despite machine gun resistence and a fire from minethrowers. Five American ambulances drive by mistake into the German lines northeast of Lion-devantDun and were captured. Comrades organized a rescue party and returned with the ambulances, four prisoners and three guns. The Americans are in control of both sides of the Meuse and occupied Remoiville Wood. They crossed the river at Mouzon, thus making their line on both sides complete from Villers-devantMouzon southward. Nov. 10-The German courier from the meeting place of the armistice negotiations arrived at German great headquarters at 10 A. M. He had been delayed by an explosion of an ammunition depot, which he mistook for firing. The ex-Kaiser and suite fled to Holland, arriving at Eysden, on the frontier, at 7:30 A. M.; thence he went to the Chateau Middachten, owned by Count William F. C. H. von Bentinck, at De Steeg, a town on the Guelders Yessel, an arm of the Rhine, 12 miles from the German border. Count zu Reventlow flees to Denmark. Among the incidents of the revolution is the renunciation by the Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar and his family of the right of exemption from taxation. William II, the reigning King of Wurttemburg, abdicated on Friday night, according to Havas Agency dispatches from Basel. The First and Second American armies in their attacks extending along the Moselle and the Meuse advanced on a front of 71 miles. French troops operating under the American command also advanced at various points. The captured territory includes the German stronghold of Stenay, Grimaucourt, east of Verdun, and numerous villages and fortified positions in Lorraine. The entire district in the region of Stenay was flooded by the Germans, who dammed the canals and rivers. The Americans crossing the River Meuse from below, took Stenay in a great northward push. The Germans shelled the Verdun road in the regions of Cesse, Reaumont, Mouzon and Bellan. The Mouzon bridge was broken in two places. Along the Meuse from the region of Sedan to Stenay the enemy machine gunners. clinging to the hills overlooking the river, kept flares burning all during Saturday night, preventing the Americans from crossing. Nov. 11-German envoys signed the allied armistice terms at Senlis at 5 A. M. Paris time which took-effect at 11 A. M. Paris time (6 A. M. New York time.) Delay for evacuation prolonged by 24 hours for the left bank of the Rhine besides the five days, therefore, 31 days in all. A supplementary declaration to the armistice terms was signed to the effect that in the event of the six German battle cruisers, ten battleships, eight light cruisers and fifty destroyers not being handed over owing to a mutinous state, the allies reserve the right to occupy Helgoland as an advance base to enable them to enforce the terms. President Wilson reads the terms of the German armistice to congress in joint session, and announces the end of the war. Similar declarations were made to the British parliament, the French National Assembly, and at other allied capitals: In New York and other great cities the event was hailed by celebrations. When fighting ended the German front line opposite the First American army running south and north, was approximately as follows: From north on the Chateaux d'Hannoncelles, through the Bois de Lavale, the Bois de Manheullos. the Bois Masseneue, thence northwest, passing east to Blanzee, east of Grimaucourt, east and north of Nobras Woods, thence through tne Grand Chenns east of Bezonvaux, through the Herbeboise Woods, east and north of Hill 319, north of Chaumont-devant-Damvillers and Hill 324, to the east side of the Thiente Brook and the Damvillers-Metz road, north of Remoiville to the north of the Forest of Woevre and Paalon, to east and north of Stenay, and thence north and slightly west to the end of the sector north of Mouzon, along the Meuse. The front of the Second Army from south io north was: Nonemy to Eply, through the Bois Voirrotte, through the Bois Frehaut, to the Moselle River and up the river to a point about two-thirds of a mile south of Pagny-and thence west to a point one-third of a mile south of Prency. Thence through Remberecourt to the north of the Bois Dommartin and the Mainbois Farm, skirting the northern end of Lake Lachaussee, through the Bois les Hautes Epines, through the Bois de Warville, St. Hilaire, Marcheville, Riaville to one-third of a mile south of Ville-en-Woevre. On the front of the First and Second Armies. between the Meuse and the Moselle, allied troops hold the. former German front line villages of Ronvaux, Watronville, Blanzee, Moranville. Abaucourt, Dieppe and Bezonvaux. Thousands of American heavy guns fired the parting shot at the Germans at exactly 11 A. M. At many batteries the artillerists joined hands, forming a long line, as the lanyard of the final shot. There were a few seconds of silence as the shells shot through the heavy mist. Then the gunners cheered. American flags were raised by the soldiers over their dugouts and guns and at the various head[231] I 4 4 4 4 4 l 4 4 N i 4 4 4 0 k I 0 k k f 4 I 4 " -L -— _-L _- --- — I L_._ __ _ _ -u --- --- —— ~- — 1-L1 l -Or 0 > < o Z? pmll A 0 1 e 10, 4. I 0. VI. - -W M a 'IN 01% quarters. Individual groups unfurled the Stars and Stripes, shook hands and cheered. June 28-German envoys signed the Peace Terms. August 12-Final casualty reports from the Central Records office of the American Expeditionary Forces in France, made public by the War Department today, gave the total battle deaths as 49,498, total wounded 205,690 and i | i prisoners 4,480. [ ] July 1-The army had reported 149,433 cases of disabled soldiers to the War Risk Insur- [ ) ance bureau. It was estimated that the final ' total would be close to 200,000. 1 A' 1+ * It 1 0 4 This Bard Played During the War for All Patriotic Gatherings throughout the County Free of Charge. They played at all the Banquets given for the Boys Entering Service, at the station when the Boys left, and at All the Patriotic Meetings. + [ [2321 ENNO womm-A Mernominee City and County Young People who were in the United States Government Service During the War at Washington, D. C., and other places. 1. Miss Elizabeth Schafer 2. Miss Elsie Holub 3. Miss Jessie B. Holub 4. Miss Mayme Holub 5. Miss Gladys Elizabeth 6. Miss Rose Lishka 7. Miss Agnes Ahearn 8. Miss Goldie Beechner Perrizo 10. Miss Ethel B. Carr 11. Miss Zelma Roberts 12. Miss Gretchen Moreau 9. Miss Martha Baur 14. Richard Erdlitz 15. Mrs. B. J. King 16. William J. VanDen13. Charles Hlavach Downey Berg [233] Menominee County Draft Board F. J. TRUDELL, Chairman DR. S. C. MASON* CARL A. ANDERSON OLIVE TRUDELL, Chief Clerk *Dr. H. T. Sethney was at first the examining physician member of this board. When Dr. Sethney enlisted for active service he was succeeded on the draft board by Dr. S. C. Mason. Mrs. A. D. Grignon Personnel Statistical Compiler of this Honor Roll. [234] Table gf Contents Page D edicatory - 1 --- —--------------------------------- Poemr-"Semper Fidelis" -9 Page Photo of Capt. Oscar Falk -------------------------------- - -- 11 * The Story of the World War ---------------------------------— 12 Mllenominee's Stars of Gold --- —-------------------------------- 21 * Our Heroes Who Gave Their Lives --- —------------------------ 22 The Achievement --------------------- ---------------------------- 24 * And the Price ------------------------------------------------- 25 Poem-"The Soldier's Creed --- —------------------------------- 26 Original Co. L, 33rd Regt., Michigan National Guard --—. --- —---------- 27 MVenominee County Boys in 330th Field Artillery — -------------------— 28 * Army Data and Soldiers' Pictures --- —--------------------------— 29 Navy Data and Sailors' Pictures --- —-------------------------— 113 Data of Service Men-No Photo --- —---------------------------— 135 Data of Service Men-Incomplete --- —-----------------------— 141 Menominee County Service Men-Outside City --- —------------— 144 Student Army Training Corps (S. A. T. C.) --- —----------------- ------— 147 Nurses -------------------------------- ---------------- -------— 152 Michigan State Troops-Co. E of Menominee --- ----------------- 154 Liberty Loan and War Savings --- —---------------------------— 157 Workers in Many Fields of Activity ----------------- -----------— 171 Seven Menominee County Mothers --- —---------------------------— 176 Menominee City and County Doctors ---------------------------- 177 4 American Red Cross --- —-------------------------- ------— 179 American White Cross --- —-----------------------------------— 199 * Food Conservation — -----------------------------------------— 200 War Gardens --- — ------------------------------- ----------— 203 * Daughters of the American Revolution, (D. A. R.) --- —---------------------------— 205 Menominee Woman's Club --- —-----------------------------— 208 * Boy Scouts --- —--------------------------------------------- 210 Secret and Fraternal Societies --- —-------------------------— 212 A. E. F. Insignia --- —----------- - ---------------- --------------— 213 Combat Divisions --- —---------------------------------------— 214 Division Histories4th Division- ----------------- -------------------— 215 32nd Division -------------------------------------------— 215 42nd Division ----------------------------- ---------------- 220 82nd Division --------------------------------------- -------— 222 * 32nd Division Poem --- —---------------------------------------- -------------— 224 Chronology of the War -------------------------- -------— 227 * Menominee County Draft Board --- —-------------------------— 234 Name Index ---------------------------------- --------— 236 [235] 4. 0 Index Naes | Index ~f Names B I A Page Abel, Miss Alma............183 Ackerman, Carl J........... 29 Ackerman, George......... 141 Ackerman, Robert........ 27-31 Adams, Howard............ 149 Adams, Mrs. T. P..........208 Ahearn, Miss Agnes.........233 Ahearn, Alva...............128 Ahearn, Michael P...........114 Ahola, Oscar............ 167-174 Aichner, Mrs. Peter...........189 Akron, Mrs. E...............192 Albers, Miss Alice...........187 Albers, Miss Cecilia.........187 Albers, George...............175 Albers, Lawrence............ 133 Albert, Hubert............... 62 Albright, Charles........... 155 Albright, Mrs. Ed..........184 Alexanderson, Miss Ellen....189 Alexanderson, Miss Elsie....189 Alexanderson, Miss Ruth.... 189 Alexanderson, Mrs. Victor...189 Alfredson, Agnar........... 42 Allard, Adolph.............. 40 Allard, Arbey J.............. 77 Allard, Mrs. Gertrude........189 Allard, Harry A...........27-55 Allard, Oliver Fred.........27-35 Allard, William..............163 Allen, Mrs. E. E............194 Allen, Miss Naomi...........194 Allery, Alex.................. 135 Alore, Alex................... 145 Ames, Mrs. Louis........... 191 Anderson, Mrs. Adolph......189 Anderson, Albert A......... 50 Anderson, Miss Alma........189 Anderson, Miss Anna........192 Anderson, Mrs. Anton.......192 Anderson, Mrs. A. C.........184 Anderson, Mrs. A. P......... 184 Anderson, Arthur...........211 Anderson, Arthur........... 69 Anderson, Arthur L........28-49 Anderson, Arthur Harold 113-145 Anderson, Mrs. Aug.........189 Anderson, Miss Bertha......189 Anderson, Carl J............. 47 Anderson, Mrs. Carl.....184-189 Anderson, Carl E.............165 Anderson, Carl A........165-234 Anderson, Carl, William..... 64 Andersen, Christian......... 81 Anderson, Mrs. Dan..........189 Anderson, Miss Edith........ 19 Anderson, Edward........... 27 Anderson Ernest............146 Anderson, George F..........118 Anderson, Godfrey.....21-22-101 Anderson Gustave A.........110 Anderson Gust A............ 29 Anderson, Harold............ 135 Anderson, Harry C.......... 56 Anderson, Harvey.......... 169 Anderson Miss Hilda........191 Anderson Miss Ina..........187 Anderson, Mrs. Isaac.........188 Anderson, Mrs. John F.......189 Anderson, John............. 63 Anderson John..........135-169 Anderson Lawrence.........155 Anderson, Leonard..... 21-23-109 Anderson, Martin............ 35 Anderson, Milton.............145 Anderson Miss Nan.......... 189 Anderson Mrs. N. E.........189 Anderson, Nels.............. 141 Anderson, Norman...........211 Anderson, O. Hjalmar........ 48 Anderson Mrs. Otto......... 189 Anderson Otto H............135 Anderson, Mrs. Pete.........189 Anderson, Mrs. Victor........189 Anderson, Walter........... 169 Anderson, Walter Emmanuel 133 Anderson, Mrs. Will..........194 Page Anderson, William H.......28-56 Anderson, William J.........169 Anderson, William........... 27 Andrle, Mary................199 Andrews, Mrs. H. R.. 169-193-198 Andrews, H. R............. 169 Andrews, Marjorie...........207 Andrews, Roger M.......................... 159-161-163-171 Angelo, Urbani...............145 Antochowski, Anton.........122 Archambault, Miss Alma.183-186 Armstrong, Andrew S.......47 Arnold, William F........... 141 Arnost, Anna................199 Arsineau, Fred..............141 Arsineau, George............ 76 Auerswald, Edgar H........ 50 Auerswald, Mrs. C............187 Auerswald, Rev. C. H.........161 B Bacon, Henry E........1-23-53 Bagley, Harry............... 4 Bagley, Mrs. John...........192 Bailey, Charles..........159-168 Bailey, Slavick............... 27 Baker, Henry............... 27 Baker, Nicholas J............ 33 Baker, W~illiam..........21-22-74 Baldwin, Darwin............211 Baldwin, Fred James........115 Baldwin, Leonard R.......... 80 Baldwin, Roy................ 27 Baldwin, Walter............. 44 Ballou, Mrs. William L...183-189 Bardwell, Ray................ 145 Barker, Clifford R.........68-144 Barribeau, Archie............145 Barribeau, Charlie...........145 Barribeau, Willie........... 145 Baril, Mrs. Earl............. 191 Baril, Miss Exior............191 Barrett, F. J................. 163 Barrett, Miss Mary......203-204 Barry, Miss May.............185 Barstow, John..............159 Barthels, Charles F........... 74 Barthels, Walter G........... 40 Bartholomew, Peter..........155 Bates, Alfred.................211 Baudry, Frank J..............141 Bauer, Anton................. 27 Bauer, John J........... 99-144 Bauer, John................ 155 Bauer, Joseph J...........96-144 Baur, Frank................151 Baur, John.................. 151 Baur, Joseph................ 151 Baur, Miss Martha...........233 Baverfeldt, Fred...........27-61 Beatson, Miss Elizabeth.....194 Beatson, Miss Ethel......... 194 Beatson, Mrs. Frank.........193 Beatson, Miss Irene.........194 Beattie, Clifford............. 126 Beauchamp, Albert.......... 90 Beauchamp, Homer......... 146 Beauchamp, Miss Olive......152 Beaudo, Mrs. Anton..........192 Beaudo, Habby............ 95-145 Beaudo, Mose............ 91-145 Beaudoin, Charles.........94-144 Beaudoin, Edward J......130-144 Beaudoin, Fred J.........83-144 Beaudoin, George C.........150 Beaudoin, George W.....102-144 Beaudoin, Mrs. John........ 192 Beaudoin, Mose..........93-144 Beaudoin, Peter W........93-144 Beaudovin, Mrs. G.......192-194 Beauvais, Mrs. G............186 Bebo, Miss May..............186 Bebo, Mrs. S'am............ 191 Beck, Frank................211 Beck, Mrs. Joseph...........168 Beck, Miss Katherine........187 Page Beck, Miss Mary.............187 BeDell, Mrs. A. B........... 185 BeDell, Allen Milton.....115-155 BeDell, Mrs. Ben.........165-208 Beechner, Mrs. Ella.........189 Beechner, Miss Goldie...189-233 Beechner, Miss Pearl......... 152 Beekler, Ralph...............211 Beguin, John............. 27-155 Behm, Mrs. Fred............187 Behm, Miss Freda.......... 187 Behm, Frederick............151 Behm, Otto C................. 51 Behrendt, Miss Irene......... 194 Beiley, James..........21-22-109 Beiley, Slavick............... 48 Bekova, Anna...............199 Beland, Arthur J.............116 Beland, Mrs. Eliza.......... 186 Belanger, Mrs. M........... 183 Bell, Dr. H. R............ 40-165 Bell, William H............... 50 Bellmore, Miss Ethel.........194 Bellmore, John J..28-108-145-146 Belongie, David...........96-144 Belongy, Mrs. Archie.........192 Belongy, Harry.............. 211 Belongy, Mrs. Philip......... 192 Belongy, William........... 211 Bemus, Franklin A........... 36 Bemus, Mrs. Mary...........183 Benesh, Francis............. 155 Benesh, James.............141 Benesh, Katherine...........199 Benesh, Otto................. 141 Benjamin, Miss Phoebe......191 Bennett, Clarence............ 76 Benson, Emil................. 27 Benson, Emma...............197 Benson, Mrs. Gus............. 186 Benthouse, Miss Hannal.....186 Berg, Frank WX.............. 66 Berg, Frank F.............. 74 Berg, Lawrence R............100 Bergman, Elmer E..........104 Bergquist, Paul E.....28-101-144 Bergstrom, Arthur........... 86 Bergstrom, George H........ 81 Bergvall, Mrs. Carl...........191 Bergvall, Royal C.........84-144 Bernardini, Ant.............146 Bero, Clayton................211 Bero, John................... 155 Berro, Harry................146 Bertholdt, Mrs. Chris........ 184 Bertholdt, Clarence.........121 Bertholdt, Mrs. H. C........................ 182-183-189-208 Berton, Joseph C.........82-144 Bertrand, Charles........... 66 Bertrand, Wilfred...........132 Bescolani, Bartolo...........170 Beyer, Charles............... 71 Beyer, Ernest Fred.......47-155 Beyersdorf, Mrs. Edw.......187 Beyersdorf, Harry........... 65 Beyersdorf, Leopold......... 70 Beyersdorf, Otto Carl..21-22-130 Bezdek, William............ 146 Bichel, Delore A..........99-145 Bigger, Arthur............1..10 Bigger, Ray............. 102-155 Bill, Mrs. A. W.............. 183 Bilodeau, Emil A........28-44 Bily, Anna................... 199 Bink, Harry H............... 135 Bink, Mrs. HIenry........... 187 Birkman, Frank............. 14 Birmingham, Edward C....28-32 Birmingham, Roy E..........123 Blahnik, John..............27-31 Blahnik, J. G............ 163-164 Blahnik, Joseph G........... 117 Blahnik, Josephine.......... 199 Blahnik, Mary............... 199 Blahnik, Matt................ 146 Blahnik, M. G............... 163 Ifi 4 i 4 i c 4 I. k_ _ [236] I i I I~~. - -d 4 s'kp"V"' Alk 4- - I*.. j t - 4 41 I 6swir MIZ 9 i40 ON FV. 0 +l 4 C C Page Blair, Mrs. W........ 193 Blanchette, Rudolph, Sr......169 Blanchette, Rudolph, Jr...... 82 Blazejewski, Stephen........ 75 Blazek, Emil............ 106-146 Blazek, Joseph............87-146 Blesch, Mrs. G. A...............181-184-195-205-206-207-20S Blesch, G. A......................... 163-165-171-179-181 Blimke, Miss Anna.......... 187 Blom, Mrs. Axel............189 Blom, Mrs. A. WV..165-184-195-208 Blom, A. W...... 157-163-165-171 Blom, Miss Bernice..................165-166-183-184-185-195 Blom, Miss Elizabeth........ 183 Blom, Miss Margaret........ 184 Blom, Victor E............... 28 Blomquist, Harry......... 92-144 Blomquist, Mrs. Oscar.......183 Bodle, Mrs. B. M............. 191 Bodle, Miss Phoebe.......... 191 Boettcher, Herman D........ 44 Bohan, Mrs. Emma.......... 189 Boivin, Hector J.............. 36 Boivin, Peter Joseph.21-22-27-52 Bolen, John E................ 91 Bolen, John.................. 169 Bolen, Tom, Sr............... 91 Bolen, Tom, Jr.............. 169 Bolen, W illiam A............. 135 Bonk, Joseph F.............. 53 Bono, Mrs. Joe.............. 193 Bonville, Emery J........... 53 Bonville, L................... 169 Bonville, Patty.............. 169 Borowski, John F............ 117 Bostrom, George............. 141 Boswell, Mrs. J. W.......... 183 Bothwell, Mrs. D. G...... 165-185 Bothwell, D. G............... 165 Bothwell, Miss Mildred... 184-185 Bouche, Lawrence Arthur...122 Boucher, Mrs. Arthur.......193 Boucher, Miss Edna......... 191 Boucher, Mrs. Ellen..... 186-189 Boucher, Miss Esther.......191 Boucher, James F........ 36-144 Boucher, Col. John B......... 27 Boucher, Justin.............. 144 Boucher, Mrs. Louis......... 193 Boucher, Mrs. Minnie....... 189 Boucher, Walter E........... 65 Boucher, Mrs. V............. 183 Bouford, Louis A............. 32 Boulet, Miss Emily..........189 Boulet, M rs. J. C.............189 Bourgois, William B......... 124 Bouty, M rs. A................ 193 Bowdish, Mrs. H. A.......... 165-179-181-183-184-195-207-20S Bowdish, H. A...................157-159-161-163-171-211 Bowing, S. A................. 179 Bowman, Carl Leslie....21-22-66 Bowman, Lawrence O.....66-155 Boyd, Mrs. Geo..............194 Boyer, Alphonsus............ 96 Boyer, M rs. S................ 187 Boyer, Thomas J............. 95 Brabant, Edward............. 86 Brabenetz, Mary............. 199 Bradley, Mrs. Martin........194 Bradley, M. B............169-170 Bradner, Chas. Edw....... 97-146 Bradner, Enos............ 97-146 Bradner, Melvin J........97-146 Breckheimer, Mrs. H. N......................... 183-186-208 Breckheimer, H. N........... 163 Breckheimer. Walter H........131 Bresnahan, Mrs. Helen..... 176 Bresnahan, Capt. Hugh...... 143 Bresnahan, James...........143 Bresnahan, Michael..........143 Bresnahan, William J.......135 Bretl, Jam es J................ 122 Bretl, Mrs. Louis.............186 Bretl, Miss Mary.....186-187-193 Brickner, Joseph F......21-22-74 Brin, Mrs. Dan.............. 194 Brisbane, Elmer G........... 59 Brissette, Gideon............. 60 Broberg, Knute...'......T. \..103 Page Broberg, Robert R.........95-144 Brock, Mrs. Bert............191 Brock, Mrs. Joe............. 191 Brock, Walter..............144 Brooks, Josiah R............ 68 Brown, Mrs. Albert..........187 Brown, Miss Amy...165-184-207 Brown, Carmen S......... 84-144 Brown, Charles W...........144 Brown, Clifford B.........93-144 Brown, Dewitt...........165-167 Brown, Edgar A.......... 80-206 Brown, Mrs. Emma..........189 Brown, Mrs. F. L.165-183-184-208 Brown, Frank J......'....... 141 Brown, Fred C........... 94-144 Brown, Gust G.............27-78 Brown, Joseph Stanley..... 118 Brown, Mrs. K........... 183-186 Brown, Milton................. 211 Brown, Ralph Tr.............. 79 Brown, Raymond............ 144 Brown, Mrs. William.... 165-183 Bruce, Mrs. F. A.....165-183-208 Bruckhardt, Arthur......... 144 Bruckhardt, Ray............. 155 Bruckharcdt, Mrs. Otto..... 190 Brukardt, Mrs. Gertrude.... 189 Brummer, Clarence WV.... 93-144 Brummer, Henry............ 27 Brumstad, Otto B............145 Bruner, Harry F............. 87 Bruner, William H........... 98 Brunelle, Louis............. 144 Brunette, Miss Lottie....... 192 Bruso, Walter James........144 Bryson, Arthur E......... 87-146 Bucholtz, Irven M............ 110 Bucholtz, Mrs. Lucy...... 182-184 Buckley, Edward P...... 164-165 Buckley, James.............. 67 Buckley, Robert M........... 59 Buckmaster, Lloyd..........144 Buelow, Miss Floria.....165-184 Buelow, Frederick G.........121 Buelow, William E........... 31 Buelteman, Louis F.....21-23-135 Bultman, Mrs. Fred.........194 Burch, Edward E............ 81 Burch, Miss Esther.......... 189 Burch, Mrs. Martha.........189 Bureson, John............ 21-23 Burger, Mrs. August.........187 Burger, Miss C..............187 Burger, Christian............ 58 Burger, Miss E..............187 Burger, George............... 83 Burger, William............. 127 Burklund, Nabert E...... 106-144 Burns, Harry................ 76 Burns, Raymond J........... 64 Burt, Mrs. Chas............. 189 Bushek, Wilfred E.......... 40 Bushonville, Miss Celia...... 191 Butzin, Edgar W............ 45 C Cadieux, Fred J.............. 80 Cadieux, Henry.............. 14 Caffrey, Miss Helen......... 185 Cain, M rs. A................. 189 Cairns, George................ 11 Callari, Andrew B........... 33 Campbell, Mrs. C. W........ 207 Campbell, Mrs. Frances.....186 Campbell, Gladys............ 152 Campbell, Henry............. 206 Campbell, Roy.............. 135 Carl, Alfred............. 105-146 Carlander, Fred.............. 75 Carley, Agnes............ 191-201 Carley, Ira................... 181 Carley, Mrs. Wrm............ 191 Carlson, Albin F......... 101-144 Carlson, Carl 0.............. 175 Carlson, Charles 0O........... 42 Carlson, Clarence A..........130 Carlson, Miss Gertrude...... 187 Carlson, Mrs. Gust..........192 Carlson, Miss Lillian...... 187 Carlson, Martin.............. 144 Carlson, Miss Mary..........194 Carlson, Walter R............ 130 Carlson, Wilfred............. 144 Carney, Mrs. Charles.........194 Page Carney, George H......... 99-145 Carney, Raymond F.....100-145 Caron, Isaac.................. 145 Carpenter, W. S............ 165 Carpenter, William S......... 56 Carpenter, Mrs. W. S........ 184 Carr, Miss Ethel B.......... 233 Carr, John A................. 51 Carrier, Fred................144 Carriveau, Miss Corrine..... 194 Carriveau, Edward J......... 105 Carriveau, Miss Elsie........194 Carriveau, Miss Eva.........194 Carriveau, William.......... 9 7 Carron, Peter................ 145 Caswell, W ayne.............146 Cervenka, Anna.............199 Chaltry, Henry............... 82 Chamberlain, Mrs. P......... 191 Champe, William............ 42 Chandler, Miss Helen...... 185 Chandler, Isaac............ 27-43 Chandler, Miss Leilah...185-208 Charooutet, Axel.......... 97-146 Charles, Joe................. 14.5 Charles, Louis............... 145 Charrie, Mrs. Victor.........192 Chase, W illiam..............110 - Cherney, Albert G............ 78 Cherney, Emil............... 7-59 Cherney, Mrs. F............. 183 Cherney, Mary............... 199 Cherney, Rudolph............ 75 Cherney, Wenzel J........... 135 Chernohorsky, Mrs. E........ 18i Chernoski, Frank............ 141 Chernshorsky, Anna......... 199 Chernsoovi, Mary........... 199 Chevalier, Mrs. J........ 183-186 Chilstrom, Mrs. Rev......... 192 Choitz, Arthur Otto......... 72 Choitz, Charles August....... 39 Christensen, Arthur M....... 67 Christensen, Christ.......... 69 Christensen, Elmer G........ 58 Christensen, Mrs. Paul...... 185 Christensen, Paul G.......... 45 Christensen, Mrs. T. C...165-186 Christian, Joseph.....28-106-145 Christian, Mrs. Mose........ 192 Christianson, Clarence....... 211 Christianson, Miss Mabel....185 Christianson, Nels........... 211 Christiansen, Mrs. Peter..... 184 Christopherson, Elmer....... 79 Christopherson, Harold......120 Christopherson, Mrs. Nels.......................... 165-208 Chudacoff, Mrs. George...... 192 Chvalovsky, Anna...........199 Clark, Francis............81-155 Classen, Herman............. 165 Clausen, Lawrence E........ 40 Clawson, Mrs. H............. 191 Clawson, Herman W......... 167 Cleary, Rev. Fr. Dennis..161-171 Cleary, Robert E............. 130 Cleary, Walter D............ 43 Club of Little Helpers.......205 Coakley, George E........... 73 Coakley, Mrs. Wni........... 191 Cocco, Louis..............90-145 Colburn, Miss Aurella....... 191 Colburn, Miss Emma........ 191 Colburn, George W....... 52-144 Colburn, Miss Laura.........191 Coldie, Mrs. Andy............191 Cole, George F............... 124 Cole, Mrs. J. J........... 183-208 Collard, Alfred F............ 59 Collard, Miss E............... 186 Collard, Mrs. Felix.......... 186 Collard, Peter................ 135 Collard, W illiam............. 69 Collins, Mrs. L. C........183-208 Collins, Miss Sarah..........191 Collins, Mrs. Thomas........ 191 Coman, Mrs. Henry..........208 Coman, Henry L............. 61 Coman, Mrs. John........... 185 Coman, Lawrence J......... 61 Compney, Roland C.......... 47 Conant, Mrs. A. M...................... 166-184-185-195-208 Conant, A. M.............. 164 4 4 4 4 1 > }: 4 2 I, [237] L~ l rqwwN fqw-% - m=4 4 i - m, a 4i -s - 4. - -- - 4.I Ml'-r m ~ lk III i Page Conard, Joseph L.........94-144 Connors, Miss Inez........... 186 Conrad, Charles C............ 72 Conrad, John E.............. 72 Converse, Mrs. E. K..183-184-208 Converse, E. K........163-164 Converse, James............211 Converse, Velma............ 207 Coogan, Sgt. J. Paul......... 27 Cook, C. I., ST...........163-203 Cook, Charles I., Jr......67-203 Cook, William Carpenter.....129 Corbett, Bernard F.......... 135 Corbett, Irene M............152 Corbett, James..............135 Corbett, Mrs. William................... 165-183-186-208 Corbett, William A...........115 Corbin, Mrs. Charles........................165-184-185-208 Corcoran, Miss Agnes....... 191 Corcoran, Miss Lucy.........191 Cormier, Joseph............. 27 Corrigan, Mrs. T............ 194 Corriveau, Ed............... 146 Corriveau, William..........146 Cortiana, Louis............145 Cory, Mrs. Bill............... 193 Cory, Mrs. John............ 193 Cory, Walter J.........87-146 Cosson, Emil L............28-39 Cota, Miss Florence.........186 Cota, Mrs. George........... 185 Cota, Ino................... 146 Cota, John F..............87-146 Cota, Leo J.................. 109 Cota, WVilliam J.........135-146 Cottrill, Miss Alice..........194 Cottrill, Miss Bernice........194 Cottrill, Miss Florence.......194 Cox, M. D................... 161 Cram, Dave............... 145 Crane, Fred.................. 161 Crane, Miss Hazel............166 Crane, Mrs. Robt.............183 Crane, R. R.........159-160-163 Crawford, Mrs. C. H.................... 165-183-184-195-208 Crawford, C. H........158-163 Crawford, Doris............207 Crawford, Earl.............169 Crawford, Miss Ellen.......181 Crawford, Mrs. J. D.........208 Crawford, Miss Marguerite..184 Crawford, Mrs. Myra S..................181-183-184-196-207 Crawford, Samuel........... 159 Cumbrey, Will................ 27 Cunard, Frank..............146 D Daggett Band................ 232 Dahl, Oscar F................ 84 Dahlberg, Albin W.......96-144 Dahlberg, Martin C.......104-144 Dahlberg, Oscar............ 85 Dahlum, Mrs. Anna..190-194-198 Dahlum, Miss Jennie....190-194 Daige, Ray................. 146 Daley, D. F.................. 163 Daley, Miss Irene........165-185 Daley, James C.............141 Daley, John S............... 54 Daley, Mrs. May.180-183-185-186 Dalrymple, Mrs. C. M.183-189-208 Dalrymple, C. M............ 163 Dalrymple, Miss Joyce......183 Damm, Alvin H...........82-144 Damm, Mrs. Charles.........191 Damm, Clement P........81-144 Damm, Harvey L.........92-144 Damm, Mrs. Wm............191 Daniell, Mrs. Edward.165-184-208 Daniell, Edward...... 157-159-171 Daniell, Francis J..........150 Daniell, William Irving... 68-206 Daniell, Virginia.............207 Daniels, Miss Helen..........194 Daniels, Mrs. Will............194 Dantin, Mrs. Alec...........192 D. A. R. Boys' Club.........206 Davidova, Jinobus.........199 Davis, Mrs. J. B..............192 Davis, James...............144 Davis, Hon. John W.........179 Page Davis, Raymond........21-23-141 Dax, Miss Rose............... 187 Deacon, Mrs..................191 Deacon, Harrison G.......81-144 Deacon, Raleigh Stanley....119 Debeck, John.................141 DeBraal, Edward............ 95 Decaine, Louis J............ 84 Decaine, Mrs. Philomine.... 191 Dedamos, Alberico........... 33 DeForest, Robert W.........179 DeGaynor, Harold.......... 127 DeGaynor, Mrs. Napoleon....186 Ielfonse, Mrs. James........189 Delfonse, Miss Rose..........189 Delgoff, W illiam............135 DeLoughery, Ray............146 DeLoughery, Thos............146 DeMarce, Paul............... 71 Demars, Alphonse.........27-36 DeMars, Albert...........97-146 Demars, Arthur............ 155 IDeMarsh, Williaml...........211 DeMelle, Charles G....... 83-144 Demers, Leo............. 72 I)eMille, Mrs. Charles.... 188-191 Deemille, Earl................. 94 De Morainville, Mrs. V. B....................163-165-184-196 De Morainville, V. B..160-165-181 Dennis, Howard........... 28-55 De Pas, Eligher.............146 Depatie, Ferdinand......... 28 Depatie, M. 0..............169 DePlanche, Orley J..........132 Depotie, Fred............... 145 Depotie, Joe.................145 Derosier, Joseph.........161-169 Derrick, Frank............... 41 Derry, Mrs. Peter...........191 Deschaine, John............. 141 Deschaine, WVilbert.......... 27 Deshambo, Harry........... 146 Desjardin, Edward J.........122 Desormeau, Charles.........211 Desotell, Arthur..........47-145 Desotell, Oliver J............110 Desotel, Lawrence...........155 Desplanche, Edward......... 73 Dessart, Mrs. Louis.........192 Deters, H. J................ 203 Deton, Mrs. Charlotte A.....183 DeVilice, John (Bacon).21-23-27 Devoe, Chester.............. 34 Devoe, Mrs. Joseph.......166-186 Devoe, Walter J............141 Dexter, Mrs. Z..............194 Dickman, Mrs. Albert........187 Dickman, Mrs. August.......187 Diguiaiovanni, Luigi......28-145 Dillon, James E.........21-22-54 Dillon, Mrs. James..185-186-208 Dillon, Mrs. F. J..............183 Dion, Arthur Louis.......... 66 Dion, Peter.........164-171-195 Dion, Theodore F........... 36 Dion, William Franklin...... 66 Dionne, Clarence.........28-135 Dirkman, Frank.........145-146 Dirkman, Theodore.......... 145 Disch, Mrs. Theodore........186 Dishneau, Mrs. C...........192 Dishneau, Walter........145-149 Dittmore, George H......... 51 Dixon, D. I................. 163 Dixon, Mrs. Mary........... 184 Dobeas, Earl L..........23-144 Dobeas, Miss Emma.188-191-201 Dobeas, Mrs. L..........165-191 Dobeas, Louis...........159-167 Doffek, John.................144 Dolsky, Wendle..............151 Domenico, Stockero.......... 145 Domer, Mrs. J...............187 Donnell, B. W................163 Donnell, Paul W............ 127 Donnell, Ralph C............127 Donovan, Mrs. Frances.......184 Dooley, James M............ 50 Dooley, John J............. 51 Doran, Ed.................. 155 Doran, Herbert............. 155 Doran, Mrs. Herbert.........186 Doran, Leo Thomas......110-155 Doran, Roy F...............135 Page Dorginski, Edward...........146 Dorozienski, Silvester L........................... 28-43-146 Doubek, Joseph.............. 38 Doubek, Mary............... 199 Doubek, Theresa............199 Downey, Mrs. B. J. King.....233 Downey, Mrs. David.........194 Downey, David.............170 Downey, Miss Sarah....190-194 Doyle, Kennth 0............ 43 Doyle, Matthew..........83-144 Doyle, Mayor M. J................... 161-162-163-171 Doyle, Meredith.............155 Doyle, Thomas.............. 144 Doyle, Thurman B...........131 Dreeze, Mrs. Barney.......... 192 Dreeze, Miss Julia........... 192 Drmla, Anna................ 1.99 DuBrucq, Fred J........................155-159-163-171-212 DuBrucq, Glenmore F....... 13; DuBrtucq, Raymond C.........136 t)uBrucq, I heo.............. 211 Duby, Mrs. Jennie...........191 Duca, Joe................... 146 Duca, Mose................. 146 Duch ine, Henry.............146 DuChateau, Mrs. Arthur.... 188 DuChatetu, Arthur...... 167-174 Duffano, Chester............. 136 Duffano, Sylvester...........136 Duford, Clarence............. 27 Dufrisne, Henry G........... 50 Dugre, A....................145 Dugree, Joseph............. 146 I)uhame, Edward............141 Dumas, Daniel.............28-93 Dumochelle, Alfred J.........118 Dumochelle, Mrs. Elizabeth........................ 166-176 Dumochelle Edward C.......126 Dumochelle, Joseph.......... 58 Dumochelle, Leo L.......... 118 Dunham, Alfred Harold.....133 Dunham, Miss Emma.......192 Dunham, Mrs. John, Jr......192 Dunham, Mrs. John, Sr.....192 Dunning, Mrs. F. L., Sr......185 Dupre, Eugene F.........70-144 Durocher, Harry............133 Durow, Adolph..............161 Durrow, Charles............169 Dusterhoft, Herman.....108-145 Dusterhoff, Miss Louise......194 Dutweiler, Rev. H. F.....161-162 Dyer, Daniel Robert......... 206 E Eagen, Ervin J............... 58 Earle, Mrs. G. H...........194 Earle G. H.................161 Earle, Mrs. G. W...........194 Earle, Harold............169-170 Earle, Mrs. Stewart-.........194 Earle, Mrs. W. B............184 Earling, Miss Emma.........185 Earling, Miss Florence......185 Eastberg, Arthur L.....21-23-74 Eastman, Mrs. L. D.........191 Eaton, Miss Grace...........208 Eckert, Mrs. Anton..........186 Ecklund, Mrs................189 Eckman, August C...........104 Eckman, Warner.......21-22-103 Eckman, William............155 Eckstein, Miss Belle.........185 Edebeck, Barbara............199 Edelbeck, Mrs. George.......186 Edgerly Henry W........128-144 Edson, Juanita...............207 Edson, Mrs. 0. L...183-184-208 Edwards, Rev. A.............161 Ehlers, Mrs. Ed.............194 Eickmeyer, Mrs. O. W.......185 Eisenzoph, William.......... 78 Elcheroth, Walter P..........128 Elkey, Harry M........21-23-109 Ellenwood, Mrs. E. J........183 Ellenwood, E. J.............163 Ellingson, Mrs. Antone...... 192 Elliott. Clifford...............146 Ellsworth, Mrs. Arthur A.................... 188-191-198 I 4 4 4 I I ( a I I, ' > ^ VM~f --- —------------— ^ -- -A A -- -- [238] __] I -3=== r aad ~raa;a IA rAl, A 40. 4 -,-~ -Nc l %I w~h6 ~ - T a.0 1 All I ~Z-w, I I I -'NV-/ I q v - - C I #1 U (I Page Elwood, Dr. C. R........................ 46-161-177-179-181 Elwood, Mrs. C. R...........165 Elwood, Miss Lois...........184 Emerson, Mrs. Harry T...................... 181-184-195-196 Emery, James................155 Emery, William A........92-169 Enfield, Miss Freda..........194 Enfield, Mrs. G............... 194 Erdlitz, Arthur J............132 Erdlitz, Miss Claire.......... 187 Erdlitz, Ed.................. 155 Erdlitz, Miss Elizabeth......183 Erdlitz, Dr. Frank J.......... 60 Erdlitz, F.................... 163 Erdlitz, Miss Isabelle.........152 Erdlitz, Leo W............... 131 Erdlitz, Miss Mae............187 Erdlitz, Richard.............. 2.33 Erdman, Paul H.............. 38 Erdman, William....... 21-22-109 Erickson, Edward............ 75 Erickson, Mrs. Eli...........192 Erickson, Elmer............. 83 Erickson, Finn............... 51 Erickson, Mrs. Fredon.......189 Erickson, George Carl...21-22-67 Erickson, Haakon............ 64 Erickson, Melvin............. 62 Erickson, Mrs. Selma........189 Erickson, Miss Sophie.......192 Ernst, Rev. R. P............171 Estabrook, Miss Martha......191 E.stabrooks, Mrs. R. F.......192 Estlund, Mrs...............189 Evans, Frank L.............. 41 Evans, James R............. 65 Everard, Charles J.......... 61 Everard, Edward F......... 61 Everard, George G........61-155 Everard, Mrs. T.............191 Everhart, Mrs. Geo..........189 Everson, Walter M.........28-42 Ewald, Mrs. J.........191-192 F Faber, Arthur F............. 57 Faccin, John.................146 Faccio, Enrico.............. 145 Falk, Harvey................. 155 Falk, Mrs. Oscar........... 165 Falk, Capt. Oscar G.......................... 11-21-22-27-48 Fallier, Miss Margaret......194 Farnlof, Ben................. 58 Fath, Mrs. Thomas J........184 Faulkner, Mrs. M. L........208 Fayas, Mose................ 146 Fehrenbach, Lando..........211 Fehrenbach, Lyle............211 Fellner, Joseph S.........28-86 Ferdon, Seth..............82-144 Fergusson, Donald........... 27 Fernstrom, Mrs. Benj........185 Fernstrum, Mrs. Dagmar.... 183 Fernstrum, H..................163 Fernstrum, Miss Mabel........................ 180 —1 -187 Ferry, Martin J.............. 35 Feyfarek, Josephine.........199 Ficht, Mrs. A............... 187 Filip, Margaret............. 199 Fillion, Earl H............... 98 Fillion, Mrs. J...........191-193 Fillion, Rev. P. N...........161 Fillis, Bert.....................146 Fin, Pietro............. 108-145 Finnerty, Miss Esther.......194 Finnerty, Michael J....28-87-146 Fish, Mrs. E................ 192 Fisher. D. G................ 163 Fischer, James............... 68 Fisk, Henry................. 145 Fleischman, Miss Barbara...187 Fleischman, Miss Katherine.187 Fletcher, Enrico..............136 Flom, Henry E.............. 48 Flood, Mrs. M................. 191 Floodstrand, Alvin W....... 57 Floodstrand, Miss Hildur....187 Floodstrand, Miss Lillian....187 Floodstrand, William......... 64 Floras, Will.................. 27 Page Floriano, Emilio.... 21-23-89-146 Floriano, Peter...............136 Flynn, John J........... 119-146 Flynn, Mrs. Maurice........ 194 Flynn, Raymond J......21-23-53 Foley, Miss May E...........201 Fontana, George............ 88 Fontana, Mrs. Jacob.... 193-201 Fontana, Jacob...... 161-169-170 Fontana, Mrs. Lester........194 Fontana, Stanley J.........146 Forgette, Miss Emertine.....192 Forgette, Joseph 0........85-145 Forgette, Mrs. M...........192 Fortier, Jean A.........88-14*i Fortier, Orbin W........113-146 Fortier, Walter N........89-146 Forvilly, George.............112 Forvilly, Henry M........... 71 Forvilly, Joseph............136 Fosberg, Miss Minnie......192 Foster, Miss................ 194 Foster, Mrs. Geo.............208 Foster, George..............163 Foster, Mrs. R.............194 Fournier, John Howard......149 Foxworthy, Mrs. Ross.......192 Foxworthy, Ross........... 169 Fracul, Nick J.............145 Fraid, Mrs. F..............188-191 Frankard, Miss Clara.......187 Frank, Edward............. 92 Frankard, Joseph F.......... 54 Frankard, Miss Mary........187 Fredrich, Miss Augusta......187 Frederick, Herman......... 141 Frederickson, Harry C...85-145 Frederickson, Louis......... 83 Fredriksen, Albert........ 97-145 Freeman, Mrs. Chas.........189 Freiss, Edward E........... 29 Freiss, Joseph............... 29 Freiss, Raymond...........27-29 Friday, Miss Gladys.........194 Friday, Harold K........113-145 Friday, Mrs. H. P...........194 Frost, Lawrence............206 Frost, Mrs. W. J.165-183-195-207 Fuerst, Louis............... 74 Furst, Frank K..............120 Furst, Joseph Nick..........119 Furst, Miss Theresa.........187 G. Gadbois, Eugene E..........118 Gadbois, Lewis F........... 37 Gadbois, Percy.............155 Gadbois, Robert A........... 54 Gagne, Joe............... 28-146 Gagni, Fred................. 146 Gagni, Mose.................. 146 Gamache, Edmund G....125-145 Gamache, Fred............. 169-170 Gander, Dorothy............207 Garbell, George.............141 Garbell, James F........... 36 Garrigan, Donald L......86-145 Garrigan, Mrs. James.......191 Garrigan, Mrs. Peter........192 Garrigan, Peter..............168 Garrigan, Stewart........79-145 Gauthier, Clarence........ 28-40 Gegear, David................108 Gemuenden, Miss Ella.......183 Gemuenden, Nicholas........ 31 Genious, Kenneth Milton.... 69 George, Mrs. Howard........183 George, Howard S........... 56 Gerber, Albert F.............115 Gerl, Mrs. Louis........... 186 Gerondale, Mrs. John.......189 Getzloff, Frank..........97-146 Getzloff, Joseph.............146 Gibout, Harris J.............150 Gibout, Mrs. L. E...........186 Gibout, L. E............. 159-163 Gibout, Miss Margueritte.... 203 Giese, Albert Philip.........118 Giese, Mrs. Ferdinand......185 Giese, Wr. C.............161-163 Giguere, Antone............ 146 Giguerre, Miss Emma........194 Gilbert, Alexander........... 71 Gilbert, George T............ 36 Giles, Mrs. Will............. 193 [239] Page Girard, Mrs. C. L.............193 Girard, Miss Josephine......194 Girondale, Elmond J......... 80 Girondale, Nobert T.........102 Gjelsteen, Einar............155 Gjelsteen, Harry............211 Glanz, Fred E........... 27-120 Glanz, Mrs. Laura......... 187 Gleason, Mrs. J. WV................. 165-179-180-183-184-209 Gleason, Miss Lillian.... 165-180 Gobert, Emil.................144 Gobert, Joseph...............144 Gobert, Louis............83-144 Godfriedson, Mrs............183 Goite, Miss May.............203 Goldammer, Fred C......... 37 Goldammer, Paul A......... 37 Goldammer, Mrs. Sophia.... 187 Goldberg, Mrs. Sam.........192 Goldstone, John A........... 68 Golueke, George..............136 Good, Arthur John..........150 Good, George Elmer......90-145 Good, Myron................ 146 Good, Warren E.............108 Goodchild, Bert.............155 Goodfellow, Mrs. Wm.......192 Goodman, Henry.............144 Goodman, Howard.......... 144 Goodman, Miss Margaret....207 Goodrich, Mrs. Emma.......186 Goodyear, Pat........... 110-146 German, Gerald.............136 Gosling, Fred................211 Gosling, Mrs. John..166-196-209 Gosling, John, Sr. 158-165-171-195 Gosling, John, Jr........150-155 Gough, Charles M........... 64 Gough, Edward............. 64 Gough, Mrs. W..............186 Goulder, Bruce S.........91-144 Goulder, Mrs. Thomas.......191 Grabowsky, Julius...........159 Graizzaro, Abramo........... 145 Gram, Mrs. Clinton W...................... 166-184-196-209 Gram, H. J............... 163 Gram, Mrs. James.......184-209 Gram, Miss Marion..........184 Graminski, Herbert..........155 Graminski, Walter........... 155 Grant, Mrs. J. R............194 Grantz, Emil.............. 21-22 Grapel, Joseph............... 88 Grassl, Otto.................. 136 Grassl, Walter G............136 Grassl, Mrs. W............. 186 Green, Mrs. Chas........207-209 Greenman, Sterling W...... 59 Greenwood, Walter C....... 72 Greger, Mrs. H.............165 Gregory, Miss Bernice.......183 Gregory, John Milton........ 45 Gregory, Mrs. W. B..183-184-209 Grenier, George.............. 27 Grenier, Mrs. George........186 Gretland, Bert........... 136-145 Gretland, Isac...............136-145 Gries, Mrs. John............ 184 Grignon, Mrs. A. D......209-234 Grondine, Ino............... 146 Grondine, John............. 146 Grouleau, Edmond...........146 Grun, Hurbert G............115 Grun. Leonard............... 65 Guard, John F.......... 79-145 Guensburg, Mrs. E.............159-165-183-184-201-208-209 Guensburg, Lester Herman..148 Guimond, Albert G.......... 73 Guimond, Mrs. Arthur......186 Guiotto, Eugenio....... 28-89-145 Guitto, John.............. 99-145 Gulecznski, Albert...........136 Gunderson, Arthur L.......136 Gunville, Arthur.............146 Gunville, Mrs. A............ 193 Gunville, Charles J......105-146 Gunville, Miss Marie........ 194 Gustafson, Mrs. Chas....... 189 Gustafson, Ferdinand W............................ 136-145 Gustafson, Lenous.......... 145 Gustafson, Miss Maidie.... 183 4I 4 4 i 4 I I I, - - -- 1 I 1- I I II-I 1- -- I I I I - - A&A ~ I1 I I a^ — >~ StfWMW~ ~- - ^ - >^ M ^ t -- - -- I 4 4 4 4 ii 4 4 J, -- -I I-;-c,'lEC no"- AL a AL I-"- -1-~11` — * 1 # I Jl I f D f f I 6 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 Page Guth, Miss Agnes...........187 Guth, Miss Veronica........187 Guyon, Miss Anna...........186 H Haasch, Mrs. Gust...........187 Haasch, Harry..............144 Hackeman, August........27-76 Haggerson, Charles Neil.......................... 21-23-49 Haggerson, Mrs. C. H........................ 183-184-208-209 Haggerson, Fred H..161-162-172 Haggerson, Miss Harriet.....183 Haglund, Carl Dewey.......126 Haglund, Clarence........... 211 Haglund, John...............145 Haglund, Julius.............169 Haglund, Mrs. 0.............183 Haines, Clyde................117 Hall, Miss Jessie........... 203 Hall, Mrs. W................191 Hallgreen, Miss Lillian......152 Haltug, Arne M............ 63 Haltug, Karl H............. 63 Halverson, Ed.............. 144 Hamernik, Harold J......... 51 Hamernik, Mary.............199 Hamilton, Clifford E.........119 Hamilton, Miss Ida.........186 Hammer, Emil A.........86-145 Hammerberg, Erick.......... 169 Hammerberg, Fred......130-145 Hammerberg, Hubert.....85-145 Hammerberg, Miss Hulda....192 Hammerberg, John..........145 Hammerberg, Knut.......95-145 Hammerberg, Richard.... 92-145 Hammerberg, Tycko.....103-145 Hanna, George...............168 Hannon, John T....... 21-23-109 Hannon, Michael G.......65-144 Hannon, Mrs. Michael.......182 Hannon, William H.....117-144 Hansen, Mrs. A.............186 Hanson, Alfred N............141 Hansen, Alfred W\........... 37 Hanson, Mrs. And.......191-192 Hanson, Arthur Edmund.... 85 Hansen, Mrs. C. C..........183 Hansen, C. C.....160-163-165-172 Hansen, Mrs. Chas...........189 Hansen, Louis C.... 164-165-172 Hansen, Earl...............38 IIanson, Edward C.......86-145 Hansen, Edwin H........... 68 Hanson, Mrs. Ed............191 Hanson, Elmer C.........85-145 Hansen, Evert................ 54 Hanson, Hans.......169-170-174 Hansen, Harold.............155 Hansen, Harold C...........150 Hanson, Harold F........... 124 Hanson, Harvey.............211 Hanson, Herbert Lester.......124 Hanson, John................211 Hansen, John Henry.....133-146 Hansen, Mrs. Jens...........193 Hansen, John Peter.......... 43 Hansen, Miss Marie.........189 Hanson, Martin......169-170-175 Hansen, Norman A..........123 Hansen, Ralph L............148 Hansen, Mrs. Sievert........202 Hansen, Mrs. Theodore......193 Hanson, Walter.............. 86 Harding, Miss Marie........194 Harmon, William, Jr.........211 Harmon, Mrs. WVm. Webb................ 165-183-184-207-209 Harmon. Wm. Webb.............157-159-161-163-165-172-211 Harrington, Willis S,....133-145 Harris, Mrs. Michael, Jr......................... 170-198-207 Harris, Michael. Jr.......... 169 Harris, Mrs. Michael, Sr..170-193 Harris, M. H................ 161 Harris, M. B................161 Harris, Royal............ 88-146 Harrison, William B.........109 Hart, Mrs. A. E.........192-201 Hart, Mrs. Clara............192 Hart, Louis.................146 Harteau, Walter A.......... 61 Page Harter, Clarence.........159-168 Hartl, John................27-69 Hartnett, Mrs. Ed..........194 Harto, Miss Coretta..........194 Haslanger, Mrs. H..........18d Hass, Mrs. Albert...165-183-209 Hass, Harold Walter..21-22-109 Hass, Herbert H............. 43 Hassel, Mrs. C. A........165-184 Hastings Dorothy............207 Hastings, Mrs. Eva..........183 Hastings, Mrs. George......165 Hastings, G. L.............160 Hastings, Mrs. Maurice......183 Hastings, M. E..............163 Haulette, Mrs. Joe..........189 Hawley, Rurrick F..........137 Hayden, Mrs. Martin........186 Hayes, Miss Helen..........194 Hayes, Miss Marion.........194 Hebert, Earl B..........21-23-73 Hebert, George S............125 Hebert, Homer L............ 122 Hebert, Ray W.............. 79 Heckel, Lieut. Col. Ed...... 27 Hecyk, George A........... 71 Hedgecock, Mrs. Charles.184-185 Hedgecock, C. B......80-210-211 Heftie, Mrs. G...............192 Heftie, Walter L........137-145 Heidinger, John............. 41 Heighdale, Axel.............. 91 Heimerdinger, Mrs. Chas.....183 Heimerdinger, Chas.........163 Heimerdinger, Walter E..... 46 Heindenreich, Felix.........145 Heinrichs, Mrs. H.... 18-13-184 Hejnal, Mary................ 199 Helander, Mrs. Peter....183-186 Hemer, Anna.................199 Hemer, Isha.................. 199 Hemer, Katherine............199 Hemer, Marie............... 199 Henderson, William......... 146 Hendrickson, Alfred......... 141 Hendrickson, Henry P....... 144 Hendrickson, Hugo A...137-144 Henes, Mrs. John, Jr............ 158-163-165-166-184-196-209 Henes, Mrs. John, Sr........183 Henes, John................ 163 Henes, Othmar H.......... 158 Henes, Walter E........129-160 Hennessy, Miss Catherine...183 Heraly, Joseph L...........119 Herbst, Charles.............165 Herlache, Edward.......... 141 Herlae.he, George............ 63 Herlache, Roy E............ 75 Hermansen, Corry C............................. 21-23-27-64 Herrild, Nels J............. 141 Herron, Mrs................ 185 Herscheid, John P........... 56 Herson, Mrs. Emil.........189 Heslin, Miss Mary..........186 Hicks, Braxton.............. 67 Hicks, Miss Helen..........185 Hicks, Mrs. John F..........207 Hicks, Mrs. Walter R..................179-181-184-196-209 Hicks, Dr. Walter R.....165-177 Hill, ID. B.............. 161-162 Hill, Mrs. Flora S.......165-183 Hills, Robert 0............ 146 Hinges, Miss Adelia.........187 Hinker, J. H............... 163 Hlavach. Charles R......172-233 Hlvoc, Barbara..............199 Hlinka, Anna............... 199 Hlinka, Clarence A..........117 Hlinka, Mrs. James..........187 Hlinka, Miss Jennie.........182 Hlinka, Jermer..........151-155 Hlinka, Mrs. John.......184-185 Hlinka, Joseph E............ 39 Hnilicka, Edward........... 121 Hobbins, Mrs. Dan..165-184-185 Hodan, Barbara..............199 Hoegh, Roy................. 49 Hoffman, Anna............. 199 Hoffman, Mrs. Louis........194 Hogan, Charles T...........137 Hogan, James...............141 Hogan, Mrs. Louise.........192 [240] Page Hogan, Miss Mary C........196 Hoida, Mrs.................. 189 Hoida, Jacob F......... 76-144 Hoida, Mrs. Margaret.......189 Holman, Louis..............145 Holmes, Anton C............175 Holmes, Benjamin................206 Holmes, Guy.................206 Holmes, Ray.................206 Holmes, Mrs. William... 207-209 Holstein, Mrs. Richard......192 Holstrom, Arthur....... 102-144 Holter, Reider D........... 30 Holub, Mrs. Albert......182-183 Holub, Miss Elsie............ 233 Holub, Frank J............. 41 Holub, Fred.................137 Holub, Miss Jessie B........233 Holub, Marie................. 199 Holub, Miss Mayme.........233 Hood, Henry............... 144 Hopkins, Rev. R. D.........161 Hornick, Miss Barbara......164 Hornick, Mrs. Charles......187 Hornick, Joseph............ 27 Hornick, Michael........... 155 Horton, Mrs. H............183 Horton, Harry F........151-155 Horton, Lloyd Earl.........117 Horvath, Joseph J..........137 Hoskin, Miss Gertrude......183 Hoskin, Jean................ 207 Hoskin, Richard A......210-211 Hoskin, Mrs. R. W. S..........................179-181-195-196 Hoskin, R. W. S.............................. 163-172-179-181 Houle, Mrs. D............... 191 Houle, Mrs. John............193 Houle, Walter D.........93-144 Houte, Mrs. E..........168-190 Houte, Eugene J...........116 Houte, Reynold J............125 Howes, Chester................175 Hranach, Joseph L.......... 30 Hranach, Mary.............. 199 Hrdina, Josephine..........199 Hruska, Anna...............199 Hruska, Joseph.............. 41 Hruska, Mary............... 199 Hubbard, Mrs. J.........183-209 Hubbard, Jessie..............164 Hubbardc Warren J......... 94 Hubert, Mrs. Derrick................ 158-165-166-183-184-209 Hubert, Derrick, Jr.........155 Hubert, Derrick. Sr......... 165 Hubert, Miss Ella...........183 Hubert, Miss Marie.........183 Humphrey, Mrs. Al.........191 Humphrey, Mrs. Carrie..165-188 Hupy, Henry............... 211 Hupy, Herbert A...........114 Husemeier, Mrs. Ernest H........................... 185-187 Hutchinson, Mrs. C. W..................... 165-183-205-207-209 Hutchinson, Miss Eleanor... 183 Hutchinson, Lou Jean......207 Hutchinson, Robert J....38-206 Hutchinson, Mrs. Wm.......186 Hutton, Dr. T. J........... 181 1l i 4 4 1 1 f t 4 4 4 4 I Imhof Walter.............28-95 Istas, Mrs. W. P....181-189-209 Istas, W. P................. 211 J Jacklin, Benjamin G........142 Jackman, Mrs. Leopold C..184 Jacobson, Arnold........ 95-145 Jacobson, Frank............. 146 Jacobson, Herman, Jr.......137 Jacobson. Herman, ST.......169 Jacobson, Hilmer............ 145 Jacobson, Mrs. John........ 192 Jacques. John............... 37 Jadin, Joseph J............. 137 Jaeger, Miss Anna..........187 Jahnek, Anna.............. 199 Jakela, Arvid W............ 137 Jakobson, Edwin............ 76 James, Mrs. Gladys..........194 Janke, Mrs. Emil...........187 4 4 - I AkA " ~r E LI~r ~ r *I -- 4 - - - A- _ -_- O._ O ~ c = ~: - ~~ — No - -W ~ -- -*~ ~ I*l 4 I4 Page Janowicz, Frank............. 142 Janowicz, Jacob............. 142 Janson, Mrs. A............. 183 Jensen, Gustaf H............ 119 Janson, Miss Louise......... 189 Janson Walter C..........27-142 Jean, Mrs. August..........192 Jean, Miss Delina........... 192 Jean, Peter A........... 106-145 Jean, Sam................. 146 Jennings, Mrs. Emma................... 179-183-184-196-209 Jennings, Robert E.......... 56 Jennings, Stephenson.... 137-155 Jensen, Miss Anna..182-184-185 Jensen, Miss Bernice....... 194 Jensen, Miss Dora..........194 Jensen, Harvey............. 142 Jensen, Mrs. Henry..... 190-194 Jensen, Henry...169-170-175-194 Jensen. Mrs. J..........193-194 Jensen, Jens John.......146-149 Jensen, Miss Julia.182-184-185 Jensen, Norman.............155 Jensen, Peder................ 165 Jensen, Soren C...........28-64 Jerue, Miss A................ 191 Jerue, Andrew J............ 90 Jerue, Miss Kate............ 19t Jerue, Andrew............... 169 Jervais, Mrs. Walter........ 191 Jessel, Charles J...........27-77 Jilek, Elizabeth.............. 199 Jilek, Francis................ 199 Johnson, Albert......21-22-27-56 Johnson, Albin............... 146 Johnson, Mrs. Anna......... 187 Johnson, Anton......21-23-27-73 Johnson, Arthur H........... 116 Johnson, Arvid...........165-167 Johnson, August............. 169 Johnson, August............. 118 Johnson, Mrs. Axel......186-187 Johnson, Miss Beatrice......192 Johnson, Carl J.............. 168 Johnson, Carl J.............. 38 Johnson, Christ.. 21-22-107-145 Johnson, David E............ 96 Johnson, Miss Ellen......... 187 Johnson, Elmer.............. 169 Johnson, Emil............... 211 Johnson, Miss Esther N.....189 Johnson, Frank............. 155 Johnson, Fred M............ 137 Johnson, Mrs. Gust A...... 189 Johnson, Mrs. Harold.......191 Johnson, Harold C......104-144 Johnson, Harold..... 21-22-27-70 Johnson, Harry L............ 98 Johnson, Harry A........... 137 Johnson, Floyd Herman.... 137 Johnson, Miss Hilda......... 192 Johnson, Miss Ireno C....... 192 Johnson, John C........101-144 Johnson, Capt. John C.... 79-144 Johnson, John E............. 144 Johnson, Miss Julia........187 Johnson, Julius..............145 Johnson, Kenneth............120 Johnson, Lanious S..132-144-145 Johnson, Mrs. Laura........189 Johnson, Lawrence.......... 101 Johnson, Miss Marguerite...192 Johnson, Maurice P......... 47 Johnson, Mrs. Nels..........192 Johnson, Olof................155 Johnson, Peter............ 62 Johnson, Mrs. P. R......... 192 Johnson, Roland............. 211 Johnson, Samuel.............155 Johnson, Victor C........... 137 Johnson, Walter............ 211 Johnson, Walter D.......... 35 Jolly, Mrs. A. H......... 183-184 Jones, Carl John............ 126 Jones, George Oliver........ 73 Jones, John IE............... 158 Jopek, Frank J.............. 44 Joslyn, Miss Isaola.......... 183 Jossart. Ambrose............ 137 Jozwiak, Joseph.............. 7-47 Juneau, Maxim............. 146 Jungling, Edward H........ 54 Jungling, Jakob L........... 77 Jurgens, Miss Astrid........ 185 K Kadletz, Anothony...........211 Kahlow, Henry Robert.... 27-47 Kajeski, Fred................ 143 Kalando, Sylvester............ 27 Kalchik, Charles F.......... 108 Kalchik, John W............106 Kanels, Anton............... 165 Kanyuh, George J........... 137 Kanyuh, Mitchell............ 67 Kanzel, Joe.................. 146 Kapir, Mary.................. 199 Karas, Helen............... 199 Karch, Rev. Victor A....... 161 Karels, Mrs. Antone........189 Kartheiser, Edward N...... 54 Kasmarek, Frank Julius.... 33 Kasmarek, Michael J........ 51 Kass, John................ 21-23 Kass, Mrs. Peter............ 193 Kaufman, Charles M........ 52 Kaufman, Miss Mary........ 187 Kaufman, William........... 120 Keener, Mrs. T............. 192 Kell, Clarence R............ 133 K ell, Oscar.................. 146 Keller, Fred............... 116 Kelley, Clarence E........27-55 Kellner, Edward C.... 28-100-155 Kellogg, Mrs. C............. 189 Kellogg, Miss Ruth.......... 202 Kellogg, Mrs. Stephen....... 185 Kelly, James M.......... 42-144 Kelly, Sylvester John....... 138 Kennedy, Mrs. James.......191 Kent, Mrs. Bryan........... 194 Kerwin, Mrs. W. F.....165-209 Kerwin, W. F..............163 K eshick, Geo................. 146 Keshick, Peter E.........98-146 Keshick, Stephen W...... 98-146 Kesler, Mrs. James.........192 Kesler, Miss Margaret......192 Kesler, Miss Marion C......192 Kesler, Russell A............ 82 Kessler, Lewis E............ 138 Kickbush, Louis F..........138 Kiefer, Miss Aurelia....... 187 Kienitz, Mrs. Fred.......... 187 Kimber, Edward............ 27 Kimber, W. A............... 142 Kimpel. Walter H............ 138 King, Miss Agnes.......166-196 King, Albert.............. 27-142 King, Mrs. Alice...... 180-189 King, Edward L............. 77 King, Henry A............... 67 King, Joseph C.............. 78 King, Mrs. Louis........... 176 King, Mrs. Lousia........... 166 King, Miss Margiret.........186 King, Mrs. 0 M............. 185 King, Samuel C............112 King, William C............. 150 Kinney, Miss Mary..........191 Kinsella, Miss Anna........194 Kirby, Mrs. Robert......190-194 Klar, Elof.................... 36 Klar, Harold................. 121 Klaus, Mrs. Fred............ 186 Klaus. Frederic.............. 27 Kleipamp, Herman........... 146 Kleiman, Frank.............. 146 Kleiman, John............... 146 Kleinke, Arthur..............114 Kleinke, Francis............. 211 Kleinke, Kermit Frederick..123 Kleinke, Richard............ 168 Kluba, Leo L................ 109 Klumb, Mrs. A. J...183-184-189 Klum b. A. J................. 163 Kmieciak, A lbert............ 41 Knudsen, Albert.............125 Knudsen, William............ 41 WKnutsor Sia-urd M....28-37-155 Kohel, George................ 77 Kohel, John G............... 33 Kohlbeck. Frank Joseph....148 Kohls, Miss Minnie.......... 187 Kopf, Clarence............. 211 [241] Page Jurgens, Mrs. A. H.. 184-185-202 Jurgens, A. H.......163-172-203 Juttner, Mrs. A. A...... 184-209 Juttner, A. A.......157-165-172 Page Kopf, Mrs. J. G.............209 Korunkiewicz, Bart......155-211 Kossewsk'i, Antonio...21-22-108 Kossewski, Walter........... 143 Kovar, Joseph............... 72 Krabs, Albert................146 Krabs, Joe................ 146 Kraker, Rev. Father John...162 Kramer, Emil................ 56 Krantz, Mrs. Gust...........189 Krantz, Gust................. 165 Krasnicky, Agnes............199 Krasnicky, Frank............ 138 Krasnicky, Joseph...........138 Kraus, Charles.............. 62 Kraus, Earl L............... 62 Kresky, Leo................. 155 Kreuz, Albert................149 Kreuz, Miss Frances.... 183-187 Kreuz, Mrs. Joseph.........186 Kreuz, Joseph G............. 79 Kreuz, Miss Josephine..186-187 Kreuz, Mrs. Louis........... 186 Kreuz, Louis................. 158 Kreuz, Mrs. Peter...........187 Kreuz, Peter................. 163 Kreuz, Miss Rose........... 187 Kritch, Miss Clara...... 190-198 Kritch, Miss Martha.........194 Krohn, Lennie............... 145 Kronsnoble, Albert J........103 Krueger, Rudolph...... 21-22-105 Krummel, Mrs. And......... 189 Kuber, Lewis J.............. 120 Kubiak, Frank J............. 124 Kubiak, Joseph R........... 149 Kubiak, Raymond J.......27-63 Kubiak, Raymond............ 151 Kubiak, Steven W.......... 151 Kubiak, W illiam............. 63 Kuchenbecker. Lester C..... 62 Kuder, Mrs. F. A.......-.184-209 Kuder, Rev. Frederick.......................... 161-162-172 Kuder, Merle................ 211 Kudlideki, Sigmund T.....27-67 Kuhnle, Mrs. WXm. Sr....... 186 Kuich, John L.............. 95 Kunesh, Katherine........... 199 Kuntze, Mrs. Max A.........192 Kusch, William..............143 Kuse, Mrs. Anton.... 100-191-198 Kuse, Anton......... 168-169-175 Keveton, Frank............... 155 Keveton, Katherine.........199 L LaBeau, Miss Flossie.......192 LaBelle, Eugene.... 21-23-27-138 LaBelle, M rs. E..............192 LaBillois, Mrs. Joseph N............................. 184-186 LaBillois, Joseph N...... 160-165 Labre,.Mrs.' Xavier.......... 193 LaBrie, Mrs. Michael........186 Lacanne, John............... 69 Lacanne, Peter........... 64-155 LaCombe, Joseph............ 138 LaCombe, Mrs. Napoleon....191 LaCombe, Oliver......... 138-145 LaCount, Charles E..... 95-145 LaCount, Earl A.........103-145 Lacourciere, Henry.......... 51 Lacourciere, Joseph M....... 54 Lacoursiere, Mose...........116 Lacrosse, William........... 98 Laduron, Arthur J........... 39 Laduron, Mrs. Arthur.......164 Lafdol, Edward.............. 142 Laforest, Rev. Father Geo... M. 0........... 161-162-163-172 Lafrombois, Louis J.........132 Lahey, Mrs. Hannah........184 Lahey, Richard.............. 169 Laid, Mrs. R. A............. 185 Lamack, Mrs. J............ 183 Lamack, James...........91-165 LaMaire, Solomon............ 107 Lamanski. Frank............ 60 LaMont, Floyd A............ 142 Landre, Joseph.............. 155 Landre, Lawrence........... 211 Landre, Mrs. W............. 191 Landsborough, Mrs. D. R............................ 188-192 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 4 4 1 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 f 4 ~ M * I $0 $ 4 4 4 \L c AhL ARL AL I. o.400. 4i, 40. 4-1 10.-Xb C= 4 4 r 4 r i I~ 40 41 - 40. 410 4 4 4 4 4 4 I~ 4 p i;wmI M W l t i -------------- Page Landsborough, Dr. D. R................... 161-169-177-181 Langill, Norman............ 50 Langill, Mrs. Ross..185-186-189 Lanthier, Francis Earl......148 Lanthier, Mrs. L. N.........191 Lanthier, Miss Viola M......152 LaPerriere, Arthur C........ 60 LaPerriere, George H....... 41 LaPerriere, Miss Nellie.....202 Lapoint, David............. 94 LaPoint, Joseph............. 155 LaRoche, Charles E.........106 LaRoche, Joseph J.......... 91 LaRock, Albert...........81-169 Larch, Mrs. Joe.............192 Larsen, Mrs. Albert........165 Larsen, Albert..........159-165 Larsen, Alfred............27-74 Larson, Miss Alma..........189 Larson, Mrs. A. M..........191 Larson, Anton...............107 Larson, Arthur A...103-144-145 Larson, Arthur...............165 Larson, Mrs. Clarence, Sr...192 Larson, Mrs. Clarence, Jr...192 Larson, Mrs. Clem..........192 Larsen, Edward E.......130-144 Larsen, Elmer...............126 Larson, Emil...............110 Larson, Mrs. Frank.........191 Larsen, Frank...............165 Larson, Gordon............. 211 Larson, Gustaf N...........115 Larson, H. C................ 138 Larsen, Hans P............. 48 Larson, Harold C........... 57 Larson, Henry V..........83-144 Larson, Herbert........21-23-77 Larsen, Julius C............123 Larsen, Mrs. Lloyd..........183 Larsen, Louis J.............. 74 Larsen, Louis, Jr.............124 Larsen, Louie C............. 39 Larson, Mrs. M........... 193 Larson, Mrs. Ole...........189 Larson, Oscar............... 142 Larson, Richard Walter.....138 Larson, Mrs. Sena..........192 Larsen, William M.......... 48 LaSalle, Mrs. John......182-209 Lassack, Albert J..........142 Laughton, Franklin Vivian...................... 21-23-80 Laundree, Mrs. George......189 Laurin, Miss Elizabeth.....192 Laurin, Mrs. Wilfred........ 192 Lauzer, Conrad.............. 27 Lauzon, Albert.............. 50 Lauzon, Ernest A........29-155 Laveau, Mrs. Pete..........192 Laveck, James..............144 Lavigne, Mrs. Axel J........ 192 Lavigne, Dan................46 Lavigne, Eugene........76-146 Lavigne, Mrs. Minnie.......189 Laviollette, O. H...........169 Law, Mrs. C. H.............. 159-165-183-184-185-200-201-................... 207-208-209 Law, C. H...........163-172-179 Law, Mrs. R. A..........165-209 Law, Dr. Robert A..........177 Lawrence, Dalliba T..... 79-146 Lawrence, Mrs. Geo.........193 Lawrence, Harry..........88-146 Lawrence, Louis F..........138 Lawrence, Mrs. Tom........193 Lawrence, Mrs. Will........193 Laycock, Mrs. L...........191 Leanna, Edward Joseph..82-144 Leanna, George.........138-144 Leanna, Miss Louise.........189 Leaveck, Samuel N.....138-144 LeBeau, Fred............... 88 Leblanc, Mrs. Jerry.........193 LeBoeuf, Edward J......98-146 LeBoeuf, Mrs. Julia.........193 LeBoeuf, William.........98-146 LeBrun, Clarence...........155 LeBrun, Miss Stella.........186 Lee, Mrs. Frank............ 194 Legault, Alfred............. 155 Legault, Dan............... 145 Leger, Otto 0........... 88-146 Page LeGoise, Mrs. F.............192 Legreve, Frank P............ 90 Lehmann, Wallace...........142 Lehnkering, Mrs. H......... 184 Leisen, Mrs. Joseph.....165-184 LeMay, Mrs. Cypren....193-198 LeMay, Miss Edna..........194 LeMay, William............145 Lemieux, Albert............ 43 Lemieux, Miss Belle.........196 Lemieux, Frank W.......... 34 Lemieux, George E.......... 34 Lemieux, Miss Ida..........184 Lemieux, R. A..........160-163 Lemke, Charles H............ 42 Lemke, Otto Adolph......... 35 Lemke, William A.......... 66 Lentz, Peter........... 21-23-73 Lentz, William............... 54 Lesage, Miss Emma.........186 Lessnick, Stephen.......... 101 Letourneau, Gilbert....... 27-52 Leveck, Pat................. 169 Lewitz, Edward............211 Lewitz, Mrs. J..................183 Liebherr, Fred J............ 67 Liebsteckel, Jacob...........169 Liedegens, Rev. Father Carl B....................162-175 Liegeois, Mrs. John...190-194 Lienna, Clarence F..........101 Lillgroot, Miss Mabel........191 Lindberg, Mrs.............189 Lindberg, Elmer C..........48 Lindberg, Oscar W..........142 Lindblom, Mrs............... 189 Lindgren, Ernest........... 145 Lindgren, Ernest F..........146 Lindgren, George G......145-146 Lindholm, Alfred............. 57 Lindholm, Herbert........... 57 Lindquist, Carl Albert.......127 Lindstrom, Mrs. Chas.......192 Lindstrom, Clarence......... 29 Linsmeier, Charles...........112 Linsmeier, Miss Katherine..187 Linsmeier, Miss Mary.......187 Lip.ke, Effin................ 144 Lipke, i William..............144 Lishka, Frank..............172 Lishka, Otto V............132 Lishka, Miss Rose..........233 Little, Mrs. Harvey.........193 Little, Justus G.........138-144 Lloyd, Cyrus................ 211 Lloyd, Mrs. Frank G....165-184 Lloyd, Jack................. 211 Lloyd, Marshall B...157-159 -Lly......... 163-172 Lloyd Manufacturing Co......................... 185-195 Loewecke, Alvin............ 211 Loewecke, Mrs. Charles.....187 Lofgren, Walter............ 144 Lohf, Edward W........ 90-145 Lohf, Mrs. Fred........190-194 Lombard, Mrs. Dell.........194 Lombard, Miss Mar y........194 Longcoy, Adelbert D........ 55 Longfellow, Elmer...155-164-172 Longlais, Walter M......... 41 Longlais, William..........155 Lonkey, Miss Effie..........194 ~Lora, Andrew.......... 100-145 Lord, Miss Geneva..........191 Lord, Mrs. George.......... 191 Loth, Mrs. A. N.............191 Lovell, Mrs. Benjamin...........................182-183-185 Lovell, Miss Caroline.......183 Lovell, Charles W........... 55 Lovell, Emery............... 55 Lovell, William S...........142 Lucier, Joseph............... 39 Lucke, A. G................. 169 Lucke, Henry.............. 161 Ludwig, Mrs. Aug....165-183-209 Ludwig, August......158-165-173 Luedke, Mrs. W.............187 Luedtke, William............ 76 Luedtke, Robert F........... 76 Lueskow, Arthur G...21-22-112 Lueskow, George........... 119 Lund, Robert................146 Lundberg, Elmer C.......... 44 [242] Page Lundberg, Mrs. Selma Siegel........................ 166-176 Lundgaard, Mrs. Fred........191 Lundgaard, Harry........ 92-144 Lundgaard, John..........94-144 Lundgren, Mrs. Ed......... 189 Lundin, Carl A............120 Lynch, John.................155 Lynch, Mrs. Thomas........192 Lyon, Miss Abigail..........207 Lyon, Mrs. F. J.............182 Lyon, Mrs. James........184-185 M Maas, George C............. 73 Maas, Mrs. Anna............184 Macauley, Harris M.....113-146 MacCosham, Mary B........152 Mackay, Roy A..........62-155 Madden, Arthur Paul........129 Madden, Mrs. Jerry..165-201-209 Madden, Joseph..............155 Madsen, Adolph.............. 45 Madsen, Hans C. S.......... 62 Madsen, Peter S............110 Magee, Charles L.......... 179 Magnusen, Miss Anna.......185 Magnusen, Mrs. Carl........185 Magnusen, Lewis............ 211 Magnusen, Miss Lucille......185 Magnusen, Magnus.......... 27 Magnusen, Siguard.......... 30 Maheu, Wilfred.............144 Maihofer, Anton G...........45 Maihofer, Mrs. Joseph.......187 Maihofer, Joseph A........ 40 Maihofer, Miss Louise......185 Maihofer, Miss Marie........192 Maliniemi, Eino H.......... 44 Malienemi, Ewald..........131 Malienemi, Felix............ 63 Malienemi, Mrs. Mary.......184 Manacek, Mrs................ 192 Mancl, James W.............142 Mantle, Mrs. Del............186 Marchaterre, Fred J....114-145 Marchaterre, Joseph H. Jr..169 Marchaterre, Miss Stella....194 Marcoe, Ellsworth C....107-145 Marcoe, Miss Queenie........194 Marcoe, Rueben J.......131-145 Marcouiller, Arthur.......39-155 Marcouiller, Francis........ 121 Marcouiller, Mrs. I..........186 Marcouiller, Miss Jean..183-186 Marcouiller, Miss Lucy......183 Marcouiller, Miss Marie..183-186 Markivitz, Walter J..........138 Marquadt, Miss Anna........187 Marriner, Mrs. Robert G.185-207 Marriner, Dr. Robert G......177 Marsik, Flor................ 199 Marsik, Johanna............199 Marson, Mrs. Joseph E......191 Marson Joseph........... 161-165 Marston, John............... 27 Martell, Nerville A..........117 Martell, Wilbur W...........117 Martin, Miss Helen..........191 Martin, Mrs. W............193 Martinek, Edward M........ 33 Martinek, Mrs. Jacob........186 Martinek, J. J...............165 Martinick, Joe................ 146 Mason, Mrs. Stephen C..153-209 Mason, Dr. Stephen C................... 163-177-210-211-234 M ass, Paul B............... 55 Massa, Miss Minnie.........194 Mathews, Major Chas. D.... 27 Mathews, Joseph )........ 142 Mathiasen, Mrs. C.......... 202 Mathieu, Mrs. Joseph J.....186 Matson, Alec................169 Ma;ttatrd, Joseph A........92-145 Mattie, Arthur...............175 Mattke, Mrs. Herman.......187 Maurus, Anton.............169 Mtves, Arthur XV.......108-145 Maves, Walter...............146 Mayer, Irvin.................211 Mayer, Mrs. Max.......... 186 McComb, Dr. E'arl V.....56-177 McCormick, Mrs. G. W...... 159-165-179-181-183-184-200-........... 201-205-207-208-209 Im. n, I I 1 4 4 4 1 4 4 * 4 4 4 I I I i I -r - I - -- -- I IC~ --- —-ll I I - - - C -- Z-ZZ T -0.. 4 Ahdkkd L In - y ^ -. - '1 --— L; _C?-; -- s "- -- x -, - j-_,,,, I V"I C s f 1 C j: Page McCormick, G W....................... 161-162-163-173 McCormick, Harris Stephen son............. 45 McCormick, Morrison....210-211 McCormick, Mrs. Nellie..185-196 McCormick, Wellesley....... 211 McCue, E. A...............163 McCue, Ellis P.............125 McCullough, Jacob..........146 McDonald, Dalniel........... 138 McDonald, George........... 27 McDonald, William J... 149-155 McFarland, Robert..........155 McGilligan, Mrs. E.........191 McGilligan, George E.... 92-144 McGillis, Mrs. A. F..........184 McGillis, Donald F......131-155 McGillis, Frank..............155 McGinnis, Bernard J....128-146 McGinnis, Miss Margarethe 194 McGowan, Mrs. Jennie......186 McGrath, William P.........138 McGraw, Mrs. James........192 McGuire, Abner V..........139 McGuire, Ademore......... 211 McGuire, Albert J.......... 48 McGuire John J.............121 McGuire, Patrick........... 211 McGuire, Mrs. T............186 McKesson, Leonard..........211 McKibbin, Mrs. Jim........194 McMartin, Miss Pauline.....183 McMartin, Mrs. M..........185 McMonigle, Mrs..............191 McNeely, Miss Florence.....185 Meade, Mrs. H. L...........191 Megunuph, Archie...........146 Meissner, Arthur E......78-155 Meissner, Mrs. Fred........185 Melchoir, Ernest P......... 91 Melchoir, Wallace F........ 91 Melewski, Anton........... 146 Mellen, Victor..............145 Menacher, Miss Eleanor.... 187 Menacher, Miss Isabelle....187 Menacher, Louis............. 164 Menacher, Louis A..........127 Menacher, Mrs. Louis.......187 Menacher, Miss Margaret...187 Menard, Clifford............ 89 Menard, Mrs. Dick...........192 Menard, Edward...21-22-109-145 Menard, Miss Ida........190-198 Menard, Mrs. J.............189 Menard, Samuel R........90-145 Menard, William............ 89 M. & M. Box Company......195 Menzie, John...............169 Merrell, Mrs. James.........192 Merrell, Torrence........106-145 Merrell, William James..106-145 Metzdorf, Charles G........ 33 Meurer, John G..............142 Meyer, Carl E...........90-145 Meyer, Mrs. Erick......190-194 Meyer, Eirick.............. 194 Meyer, Miss Frances........187 Meyer, Harvey...............146 Meyer, James A.............139 Meyer, Miss Mary...........187 Meyer, Orrin R.........100-146 Michaels, Frank E...........124 Michaud, Daniel............. 119 Michaud, Mrs. Ed...........192 Mikolasek, Frank........132-155 Mikolasek, James............ 68 Mikolasek, Katherine.......199 Mikolasek, Mrs. M...........187 Mikolasek, William J........155 Miller, Arthur H............. 77 Miller, Edward........... 27-102 Miller, Mrs. Fred............ 185 Miller, George C............. 66 Miller, Henry E.....21-22-2.7-61 Miller, John.................. 142 Miller, Loren............. 210-211 Miller, Tony................ 146 Miller, William J............ 66 Miller, Miss Zana............165 Mineau, Leo..............105-146 Minne, Miss Clara.......... 185 Minne, Martin N............ 53 Minne, Mrs. Nels M......... 185 Minne, Rev. Nels........161-162 Page Miscovick, Mike............ 146 Moberg, John...............169 Moerchen, Frank............. 44 Moll, Mrs. Max.............194 Moll, Victor................. 146 Monahan, Mrs. A. J.........209 Mondor, Miss Clara......183-186 Monson, Martin G..........121 Montpas, Miss Alberta......194 Montpas, Clarence E.........125 Montpas, Mrs. Ed............194 Montpas, Mrs. Jean..................... 180-183-184-185-209 Montpas, Jean W............117 Moore, Joseph J..............142 Moran, Mrs. R..............193 Moran, R. A................ 164 Moreau, Mrs. Geo.180-183-185-186 Moreau, Miss Gretchen......233 Moreau, Harris.............155 Moreau, Paul........ 164-173-195 Moreau, Warren G...........119 Moritz, Fred................. 30 Morral, Robert..............146 Morreau, Mrs. Dan..........193 Morreau, Joseph.........145-146 Morrigan James G..........145 Morris, Amy............ 183-207 Morris, Mrs. G. H........183-207 Morrison, Howard R.........122 Morrison, Mrs. Robert.......194 Morrow, Mrs. E..............194 Mosiman, Miss Anna........187 Mosiman, Miss Josephine...187 Mosiman, Miss Margaret.... 187 Mosiman, Mrs. R. J......... 187 Motch, Mrs. A...............186 Motley, Frank P.............142 Mottle, Mary................. 199 Mulholland, Joseph R........ 37 Mulholland, Robert........... 60 Mullen, James R.........144-145 Mullins, Mrs. Ray.......184-209 Mullins, Ray................. 155 Mulzer, Anton........... 168-169 Muma, Mrs. J. A...........191 Munger, Mrs. Gertrude.. 186-207 Munroe, P. C........160-163-173 Munroe, Paris N.........210-211 Murphy, Roy.................112 Murphy Miss Vera...........186 Murray, Clarence R......150-155 Murray, Edward F...........126 Murray, Fred Willis.... 21-22-53 Murray, Harry E.............45 Murray, Robert.............211 Murray, Samuel W......148-155 Murray, Mrs. T............ 183 Murray, Thomas.............160 Musson, Mrs. J. D......... 194 Muth, Mrs. Jacob...........185 Myers, Harold F.............139 Myers, Mrs. A. B..................165-183-184-186-201-209 N Nadeau, Miss Alice..........192 Nadeau, George W........87-145 Nadeau, Mrs. H..............209 Nadeau, Howard E.............159-161-163-165-173-181-211 Nadeau, Mrs. Joe............ 192 Nadeau, Mrs. Louis..192-193-201 Nadeau, Louis B..........87-145 Nadeau, Louis, Sr....161-167-169 Nadeau, Oliver B.........113-145 Nadeau, Raymond N.....113-145 Nadeau, Miss Stella.........192 Nagler, Charles John........ 63 Namick, Chas............... 146 Nault, Fred................. 146 Nellis, Henry G.............. 55 Nelson, Mrs. A............ 185 Nelson, Mrs. Alfred..........189 Nelson, Miss Alma.......... 187 Nelson, Mrs. August.........189 Nelson, Rev. Carl........... 80 Nelson, Carl F...............115 Nelson, Carl.................. 139 Nelson, Mrs. Chas...........189 Nelson, Miss Edith..........189 Nelson, Elmer V...........21-23 Nelson, Elof................. 145 Nelson, Miss Elsie...........189 Nelson, Enoch..............145 Page Nelson, Mrs. Frank.......... 189 Nelson, Mrs. Gust............191 Nelson, Miss Hannah........189 Nelson, Miss Hedwig....185-187 Nelson, Helgar..........105-146 Nelson, Henning.............155 Nelson, Hjalmer N...........116 Nelson, John.................. 70 Nelson, Joseph Bernard.....146 Nelson, Ralph................145 Nelson, Thomas Henry......113 Nelson, Walter F........27-32 Nelson, Mrs. Wilbert.........192 Nelson, William Albert...... 73 Nesbitt, Mrs. A.............191 Nesbitt, Miss Eva............191 Nesbitt, George.............169 Nesbitt, George P..........126 Nesbitt, Miss Mae........... 191 Neumair, Rev. Father Joseph...................161-162-173 Neumaier, Mrs. Joseph......186 Neumaier, Miss T............183 Neumeier, Joseph, Jr...21-22-119 Neumeier, Joseph........... 61 Neuville, Leon J.........83-144 Neuville, Miss Mabel........191 Neville, Mrs. August.........191 Newbauer, Frank S.........103 Newbauer, William A........ 82 Newhouse, Peter W.......... 33 Newlin, Mrs. Andrew........189 Newlin, Mrs. Emil...........189 Newlin, Miss Esther.........189 Newlin, Mrs. O. P...........189 Newlin, Otto S.............. 57 Newlin, Miss Ruth..........189 Nicholas, Mrs. F. S......165-183 Nidifski, Lawrence.......89-145 Neilsen, Mrs. K..............202 Niemann, Walter A......131-145 Niemann, William K......80-145 Niezgadski, Frank...........144 Nimetz, Anna................199 Nines, Richard...............155 Nobes, Raymond H.........110 Nohlechek, Edward.......... 34 Nohlechek, Peter........168-175 Nohlechek, Walter Leopold..123 Nohlecheck, Dr. William F... 46 Norcross, Fred S., Jr........ 79 Norcross, Mrs. F. S..183-184-209 Norcross, F. S............160-165 Nordquist, Mrs. Oscar.......191 Norlin, Walter..............144 Norman, Reuben............. 144 Norton, Henry J..........89-146 Novarkoski, Anna...........199 Nowack, Edward.........158-163 Nowack, Dr. Robert.........139 Nowack, Walter............. 35 Nyberg, Alfred Nels......27-121 Nyberg, Frederick....... 148-155 Nye, R. L........161-163-200-203 Nylen, Erick G...............139 Nylund, Everett............. 55 Nylund, Miss Ina........166-187 Nylund, Raymond...........148 0 Oberdorffer, Miss Jessie.....191 Oberdorffer, Mrs. W. G......191 Oberdorffer, William J...167-175 Oberkircher, Miss Clara.....184 Obert, Mrs. Max..............191 O'Brien, Charles J.........27-32 O'Brien, Mrs. H.............187 O'Brien, Harry............. 27 O'Brien, Miss K..............186 O'Connor, Miss Agnes Elizabeth......................152 O'Connor, Mrs. Belle........183 O'Connor, Frances Earl.....114 O'Connor, Mrs. John.........186 O'Connor, John P............ 84 O'Connor, Miss Mary........ 186 O'Connor, Norman E......... 34 O'Donnell, Miss Celia........191 O'Donnell, Miss Florence....191 Ogreen, Harold G............116 O'Green, Mrs. John......183-184 Ogreen, Miss Mae...........189 O'Hara, Mrs. J. J........165-209 O'Hara, J. J.... 161-162-163-173 O'Hara, Michael E...161-162-173 $,1.0 I I* 4 4 4 a4I f [243] -.,!m;-w. _j]6cy ii.2 Ul! I — mo.1! _- Ik-. * - iC ~, ~ -.< ] 11 Page Olander, Harris G..........115 Olander, Roland.............155 Olive Clarence.............. 86 Olive, Levi W.............. 96 Oliver, Harry...............142 Olson, Mrs. And.............. 189 Olson, Arthur W...........27-31 Olson, Arthur................145 Olson, Carl..............59-155 Olson, Mrs. Chas.............192 Olson, Miss Emily........... 189 Olson, Miss Emma...........189 Olson, Miss Esther...........189 Olson, Mrs. F.................191 Olson, Frank B..............116 Olson, George A............ 87 Olson, Hayward.............116 Olson, Hugo.................110 Olson, Mrs. John............191 Olson, Mrs. Ole..............192 Olson, Otis B............139-145 Olson, Ralph................ 146 Olson, Robert................142 Orth, John J................ 42 Osterberg, John..............102 Osvald, Marie................199 Ounsworth, W. H....161-163-173 Ounsworth, William S.......127 Ourada, Charles........... 121 Ourada, Thomas F..........150 Ouradova, Anna.............199 Ouradova, Katherine........ 199 P Pada, Emil................. 112 Pada, Walter H......21-22-27-52 Page, Mrs. A...............193 Page, John.................. 146 Paital, Josephine............199 Palm, Arthur............ 103-144 Palm, Mrs. Frank...........192 Palm, Mrs. Joseph.......188-192 Palm, Mrs. Regnar.......... 192 Palmer, Mrs. Mary.......... 194 Palzow, Miss Frances.......189 Panzram, Lawrence......... 142 Paquette. Arthur............211 Parent, Eugene J.........46-165 Parent, Miss Laura..........186 Paris, Henry J.............142 Parrett, Mrs. M............191 Parrett, Raymond........... 144 Parrott, Mrs. Alfred........191 Parrott, Mrs. Howard.......191 Parrott, Mrs. James........191 Parrott, Mrs. John..........191 Parrott, Mrs. Melvin........191 Parsek, Frank............27-155 Parsek, John F............27-47 Parsek, John P............. 49 Patch, W. S...............163 Patrick, Mrs. Sarah........207 Patrie, Alphonse.............146 Patrie, George A...........122 Paul William................127 Paulsen, Miss Anna.........185 Paulson, Charles J..........144 Paulson, Hans............... 39 Paulsen, Mrs. J. B..........184 Paulsen, Paul B........... 40 Paulsen, Miss Sena.........185 Pavlat, Geo.................169 Payne, Clifford W..........125 Payne, Mrs. F. W..........193 Payne, George C........... 38 Payne, Harold John........ 49 Payne, Mrs. John.......183-186 Payne, William J............125 Pearson, Gust................ 34 Pearson, Herman............ 63 Pearson, Siguard............ 40 Peatl, George...............155 Pecard, Leo................. 203 Pecote, Alex................ 127 Pedersen. Lars C............ 71 Peets, Mrs. Thomas........194 Peets, Thomas.......161-169-170 Pelka, Joe..................146 Pelka, Rollo................ 146 Pelka. William..............146 Pelletier, Miss Gladys................. 165-184-185-202 Pelletier, Willie............. 146 Pelnar, James..............211 Pelnar, Mrs. James F.......183 I Page Pelnar, Walter J........... 51 Pelnar, William J.......... 149 Penberthy, Francisco.... 148-155 Penberthy, Paul............ 72 Pengilly, W. A.............165 Penl, Andrew................163 Perras, Hubert.............169 Perrizo, Mrs. Edward... 188-192 Perrizo, Edward......... 167-175 Perrizo, Miss Gladys Elizabeth..................... 233 Perrizo, Miss Maureen......192 Perrizo, Mrs. Paul..... 192-201 Perrizo, Paul............167-175 Perry, Henry A.............173 Perry, Joseph H............40 Peters, Robert..............168 Peterson, Albert.............139 Peterson, Mrs. Andrew......189 Peterson, Arthur E......... 34 Peterson, Arthur P..........124 Peterson, Arvid.............. 165 Peterson, Mrs. Bent........192 Peterson, Miss Bertha......185 Peterson, Carl 0........... 42 Peterson, Carl V............. 34 Peterson, Carl...............211 Peterson, Charles A....139-146 Peterson, Charles........167-169 Peterson, Ellen C...........153 Peterson, Emil.............. 165 Peterson, Miss Esther......187 Peterson, Frank L.......... 70 Peterson, Frederick C......112 Peterson, Gilbert M.......... 51 Peterson, Harold W........126 Peterson, Henry...........21-22 Peterson, Miss H. C........ 187 Peterson, Miss Hilma........187 Peterson, Miss Ida..........187 Peterson, Miss Jennie..185-187 Peterson, John A............ 38 Peterson, Lester R......75-144 Peterson, Miss Lou..........194 Peterson, Mrs. Louis.......191 Peterson, Miss Maude......185 Peterson, Nels P........... 77 Peterson, Nicholas......169-170 Peterson Olget V........... 60 Peterson, Oscar E.......... 39 Peterson, Mrs. Peter.......................... 169-188-191 Peterson, Miss Stella........194 Petitclair, Joseph.......... 143 Petitclair, William..........142 Pfaffl, Albert J.............. 52 Pfaffl, William M........... 74 Pfankuch, Anton............ 89 Pfankuch, Miss Gertrude.... 187 Pfankuch, John............ 89 Pfankuch, Joseph E......... 63 Pfankuch, Miss Margaret...187 Philipp, Chester............144 Phillips, Mrs. B. T......183-209 Phillips, Mrs. Wm..........189 Phillips, William............165 Philomon, Archie............ 146 Piche, Miss Mary............192 Piche, Mrs. Tom............192 Pickl, Mrs. Caroline........187 Pieropan, Girolano........90-145 Pieropan, Peter.........108-145 Pietch, Mrs. Joseph.........186 Pinowski, Mrs. Fred........187 Pinowski, Miss Margaret.... 187 Pirlot, Jno.................. 146 Pittman, Mrs. George........191 Pittman, Walter.............144 Pivonka, Anna.............. 199 Pivonka, Frank............21-23 Pivonka, Joseph J........... 53 Pivonka, Katherine..........199 Plaister, Miss Anna.........185 Plautz, Miss Alma......... 187 Plautz, Miss Clara..........187 Plautz, Leo F................ 142 Pluchak, Mrs. Adolph........191 Podore, Mrs. E.............183 Podore, Mrs. Joseph........ 19 Podore, Miss Mabel.......... 19 Polaski, Frank.............. 32 Pongalet, Joe............... 146 Pope, Mrs. WV...............192 Popore. Mrs. P..............192 Poquette, Aldridge.......139-145 [244] Page Poquette, Clarence E........139 Poquette, Mrs. Delore......192 Poquette, Ed................ 146 Pouquette, Mrs. F..........192 Poquette, Hector........... 29 Poquette, Oliver.............107 Poquette, Raymond A... 107-146 Poquette, Theodore......139-145 Porter, Fred L................143 Posephny, Kathrine......... 199 Posephny, Slavic.............155 Pothie, Charles..............139 Pothie, Levarn..............126 Pothie, William..............142 Potter, Edward D........... 71 Potter, William H.......... 72 Poupore, Ferdinand..... 105-145 Poupore, Harry J.......105-146 Poupore, Jerry...........139-146 Poupore, William R.....105-146 Powell, Miss Ella...........183 Powers, Mrs. George......................... 165-207-208-209 Powers, Miss Mary.........186 Praner, Mrs. Kate..........187 Pratt, Mrs. Myrtle Horton..153 Prescott, Mrs. C. S...................... 165-180-184-196-209 Prescott, iCurry S......129-206 Prescott, Don S............ 130 Prescott, Mrs. F. H........209 Prescott, Fred H.......129-206 Prescott, Mrs. Fred M..............165-180-184-196-207-209 Prescott, Fred M....................157-159-163-173-179-181 Prescott, James C.......129-206 Prescott, Miss Joyce.......183 Prescott, Mrs. Loren........................ 165-184-185-209 Prescott, Loren L...157-163-173 Pretto, A. A................ 145 Pribek, Anna................199 Prince, Mrs. George........193 Prince, George C........158-161 Prince, Miss Lucy........... 194 Profrock, Mrs. August......187 Prohuska, James............112 Prohuska, John J........... 53 Prohuska, Joseph H......... 74 Prospero, Eugenio....... 99-146 Provancher, Lyle.............155 Provancher, Mrs. Nester.... 186 Prudhome, Gilbert...........143 Prudhome, Louis.............142 Prudhome, Samuel........... 143 Prudhome, Thomas..........143 Pryor, Mr................... 194 Pryor, Mrs. Rev.............194 Pryor, Rev.................. 194 Pryor, Mrs. Will............194 Przalomski, Stanley A....... 34 Pulzind, Mrs. A............ 187 Putrow, Carlyle.............. 211 Putrow, Clayton E.......... 30 Putrow, George.............. 68 Q Quade, C. J..................170 Quade, Miss Etta C........194 Quam, Odin.................. 165 Quimby, Mrs. George....183-209 Quimby, Mrs. Jas...........184 Quinlan, Miss Margareth....192 R Rabitoy, Alex................102 Rabitoy, John A...........124 Raboin, Steve................ 85 Race, J. H....................163 Radford, Miss Anna.........194 Radford, Charles F.......99-146 Radford, E. P...161-170-181-194 Radford, Miss Frances D.................163-184-194-198-209 Radford, Miss Hazel........194 Radque, William, Jr.........169 Raffin, Miss Louise.........183 Raiche, Mrs. A. W........................ 153-184-208-209 Raiche, A. W................ 163 Raiche, Mrs. P. L...........192 Raiche, Mrs. Victor.........194 Rank, Nicholas J............ 32 4 4 m i 4 4I -; X 4 4 4 * l _ _ __ _ — _ — ----L --- — I L L 00,4 Ak I O~MMUM MOOL Ahl Ak ~*r ~AL - ol 111 -i.X -, - - -I-N-, ' AL - -, 1 -^^0^.^ ___ -- 4 Page Rappleye, Mrs. Elizabeth............................ 183-184 Rappleye, Miss Edna....184-185 Rasmussen, Miss Marion....202 Rasmussen, Olaf H.......... 56 Raue, Mrs. Will............194 Ravet, Joseph........... 88-146 Ray Hugh....................145 Raymaker, Albert William..121 Raymaker, Edwin H........ 58 Raymaker, Leonard W...... 68 Raymond, Mrs. Fred........194 Reece, Mrs. William........183 Reed, Mrs. Stephen.........187 Reel, Frank.................. 27 Regner, Otto.............27-144 Reindl, Mrs. John............................ 180-183-185-186 Reindl, John G..............158 Reindl, Wolfgang........160-163 Reineman, Ervin A.......... 71 Reiner, William.............143 Reiter, Miss Anna...........187 Reiter, Joseph...............129 Reiter, Lawrence G........27-32 Reiter, Miss Lena...........187 Reiter, Mrs. Rose...........189 Reitmeyer, Mrs. A..........191 Reitmeyer, Alex........... 144 Reitmeyer, Leo P........144-149 Remington, Miss E..........189 Remington, Mrs. Theo..185-186 Renvszewski, Stanley........ 78 Revord, Tony...... 21-23-112-145 Reynolds, E. P............169 Reynolds, William E........139 Rian, Edward............. 27-139 Richard, Mrs. D.............192 Richard, Francis............. 77 Richards, Arthur........... 145 Richards, Wilfred...........145 Rickaby, Mrs. A............191 Rickinson, James B.....168-175 Riddenbush, Gust F.........145 Rielly, Mrs. James......185-189 Riley, Mrs. John....165-181-209 Riley, John H...........158-163 Rinesh, Barbara............199 Ritz, Miss Frances..........187 Ritz, George................. 144 Ritz, Miss Mayme..........187 Rivers, Breeze A............143 Roberts, Miss Zelma V..197-233 Robinson, Loren D......... 146 Robinson, Richard......... 146 Rook, Mrs. C. F............183 Roper, Mrs. Fred A............ 165-179-183-184-197-2.08-209 Roper, Fred A......................... 161-174-179-181-203 Roper, Mrs. Harry A............165-166-183-184-197-208-209 Roper, H. A................ 163 Roper, Olive............... 207 Roper, J. R.............. 163 Roper, Mrs. Virginia............................ 183-184-209 Rose, Edward Gerald....144-148 Rose, Miss Esther...........191 Rose, George F............. 35 Rose, Robert H.............. 35 Ross, Charles............... 159 Roth, John............... 168-175 Rotter, Alvin................. 78 Rotter, Mrs. George......194-198 Rouse, Mrs. Hayes..........191 Rouse, Mrs. M. A...........192 Rouse, Mrs. Otto............192 Rouse, Mrs. W............ 194 Rousseau, Francis X.....98-145 Rovinsky, Joseph W......... 61 Rovinsky. Stanley...........115 Rowe, Mrs. Lois............. 183 Ruatti. Joseph V............. 33 Rulo. Robert................ 133 Rundquist, Hjalmar E...... 50 Ryan, William E............ 35 Ryan, Mrs. W. J...........165 Rye, Carl W................. 71 Rynish, Martin.............. 94 Page St. Aubin, Joseph E.....100-145 St. Aubin, Miss Mae........192 St. Germain, George A......122 St. Laurent, Alex............155 St. Martin, Archie W........ 99 St. Martin, Elmer............ 60 St. Onge, Mrs. Amanda......176 St. Onge, Bert............99-145 St. Onge, Eli................ 145 St. Onge, Harry.........107-145 St. Onge, Herman W....107-145 St. Onge, Samuel.........99-145 St. Onge, Mrs. W. J...................... 165-184-193-201-209 St. Onge, W. J..............165 St. Peter, Alfred..........93-144 St. Peter, Francis............211 St. Peter, Frank X.......... 36 St. Peter, Mrs. F. X................... 165-182-184-186-209 St. Peter, F. X..160-163-174-211 St. Peter, Fred.........21-23-72 St. Peter, Joseph............ 151 St. Peter, Miss Lena........191 St. Peter, Mrs. Lillian House 191 St. Peter Margaret..........207 Salawsky, Charles.......... 168 Salewsky, Robert............ 30 Samuelson, Carl R.......... 49 Samuelson, Herbert V....... 49 Samuelson, Oscar.......... 169 Sandberg, Miss Emaline.....191 Sanders, Albert, Jr.......79-144 Sanderson, Mrs. S. B.................... 180-184-189-197-209 Sanderson, S. B............165 Sanford, Mrs. A. T..........191 Sanford, Mrs. Arthur.......191 Sanford, Glen P. 159-164-165-175 Sanford, Miss Loleta....... 191 Sanford, Mrs. Nellie....169-188 Satusky, Mary...............199 Saucier, Mrs. Ernest........186 Savoy, George M........140-145 Slawall, Albert................ 144 Sawall, Fred................ 144 Sawall. John................ 144 Sawbridge, Dorothy..... 153-201 Sawbridge, Dr. Edward......................161-165-177-181 Sawbridge, Miss Irene.......................................... 169-188-198 Sawtbridge, Robert M....113-144 Sawyer, Mrs. A. L.......... 207 Sawyer, A. L........................ 161-162-163-165-174-203 Sawyer, Harold G........... 206 Sawyer, Mrs. M..............209 Sawyer. M. P........ 161-162-211 Sawyer, Miss Ruth.........07 Sawyer, Miss Wilda.........207 Sawyer William M.......... 206 Saxe, Charles E..21-23-139-145 Saxe, Richard B........140-145 Saxton, Mrs. Jas............183 Saxton, Silas J..............140 Scanlon, P...................163 Schafer, Miss Bessie........191 Schafer, Edward C..........102 Schafer, Miss Elizabeth......233 Schafer, Mrs. Frank.....165-188 Schaefer, Miss Louise.......183 Schaefer, Miss Mae.....183-186 Schale, Albert W............ 80 Schetter, Fred P........140-145 Schetter, Henry.............. 169 Schetter. Joe................. 145 Schilawski, Mrs. Fred.......187 Schick, Anthony......... 27-120 Schick, Frank................ 78 Schick, John................. 30 Schick, Victor............. 27-31 Schlagenhaft, Ambrose...... 84 Schleis, James...............143 Schmidt, Alfred............ 122 Schmidt, Miss Anna.........187 Schmidt, Arthur.............155 Schmidt, Axel N........... 66 Schmidt, Carl F..............58 Schmidt, Miss Christiana...185 Schmidt, Miss Ellen........185 Schmidt, Frederick W....... 65 Schmidt, H. P.......... 158-163 Schmidt, Hein P........... 149 Page Schmidt, Joseph C.... 21-22-102 Schmidt, Miss Milda.........185 Schmidt, Mrs. Otto..........187 Schmidt, Otto................144 Schmidt, Mrs. Richard......187 Schoen, Ervin...............146 Schoen, John A.............161 Schoener, Frederick W.....140 Scholtz, Bertram.......132-145 Scholtz, Henry...............144 Scholtz, John............... 140 Scholtz, Norman.........100-145 Schomer, Elmer............. 64 Schrank, George R.......... 31 Schuette, Miss Dorothy.....189 Schuette, Mrs. Ed. E....188-189 Schuette, Edward............ 167 Schuette, Mrs. Fred.........189 Schuette, Miss Hazel........189 Schuette, Mrs. H. A.........189 Schuette, Henry G..159-165-167 Schuette, Joseph............. 165 Schultz, Albert...............145 Schultz, Miss Bertha........191 Schultz, Mrs. Charles.......187 Schultz, Chester Ernest........................ 21-22-140-144 Schultz, Mrs. F.............187 S'chultz, Frank.............. 75 Schultz, John E.......... 21-22 Schultz, Mrs. Minnie.......187 Schultz, Mrs. Nancy..182-184-185 Schultz, Wm.................145 Schulz, Ewald............... 45 Schulz, Otto.................. 120 Slchulz, Severt.............. 155 Schulz, Waldemar............ 70 Schumacher, Frank..........128 Schumacher, Samuel H...... 39 Schwartz, August.......... 27-35 Schwellenbach, Mrs. Henry.......................193-198-201 Schwellenbach, Henry.........................155-161-175-181 Scofield, Mrs. E............. 183 Scott, Elmer F.............. 65 Scott, Harry E.......... 45-155 Scott, James J.............. 50 Sedenquist, Mrs. Christina..187 Sederquist, Adolph..........104 Seidl, Carl..................211 S'eidl, Mrs. Frank.......165-209 Seidl, Frank W.............. 160 Seidl, John Wolfgang...... 27-60 Seidl, Joseph WV............ 59 Seidl, Miss Mary...........187 Seidl, M. G.......... 160-163 Seidl, Walter G.............. 32 S.eifert, Rev. Fr. Frank A... 80 Sellen, Mrs. T. E......... 165 Selstrom, Arthur C......... 145 Semrau, Stanley Joseph 21-22-81 Seneca, Joseph P........... 32 Senical, Andrew.............145 Servais, Clifford P.......140-145 Servais, Mrs. Joe............189 Servais, Louis J.........86-145 Sethney, Dr. Henry T............................33-177-234 Setunsky, Leon, Jr..........155 Setunsky, Mrs. Louis.......183 Setunsky, Louis.............163 Shainholts, Mrs. F. R........................... 181-184-189 Shampo, Napoleon...........144 Shannon, Miss Anna........194 Shannon, Irving N.......88-146 Shannon, Mrs. M. P........193 Sharkey, Charles.............155 Shatusky, Harry H......... 44 Shaver, Miss Frank.........209 Shemick, Earl E........... 62 Shepeck, Albert C.......... 68 Shepeck, James A.......... 67 Shockley, Mrs. Wm. A..........................183-197-209 Shockley, W. A.........163-211 Shorkey, Arthur.............146 Shugg, Mrs. Rev............191 Sibenaler, Miss Edith.......187 Sibenaler, Mrs. Peter.... 184-186 Sibenaler, Peter............. 203 Siegel, Arvid Walter......... 44 Siegel, August............... 44 i 4 i 4 I 4;II S Safstrom, Mrs. Albert......191 St. Antoine, Ed..............146 Set. Antoine, Henry...........146 [245] L! 0 4 e! t o t. _ -_ - NW& w 4b 'o! 4 4. 0. 4w 0. 40 4- E — - w %Olk -?qxpwk" — 91 I -.- - -- I Page Siegel, Arthur B...... 21-23-123 Sieman, Mrs. Henry........187 Siem an, H.................... 163 Sienman, William............. 69 Silvernale, Mrs. John............................ 165-184-209 Silvernale, John L................. 159-161-163-203-204-211 Silvernale, Paul..............211 Silvernale, Ruth............. 207 Simansky, Mrs. Jos................................ 165-181-184-209 Simansky, Miss Lillian...... 183 Simeon Miss Bernice........185 Simmett, Leopold C..... 144-175 Simon, John................. 144 Simons, Jacob............... 144 Simpson, Jean H...........153 Simpson, Peter B........... 75 Simpson, Sydney.............211 Simpson, Mrs. William.................. 182-183-184-197-209 Sjorgen, W alter.............. 43 Skolova, Mary............... 199 Sekovgaard, Rev. A. C... 161-174 Skovinski, George Albert.... 52 Skucygnski Venceslus...... 143 Slack, Miss Josephine.......194 Slack, Julius E.......... 89-145 Slack, Mrs. Julius........... 198 Slack, Miss Marie........... 194 Slack, Mrs. Walter...... 190-194 Slavick, Joseph G...21-22-27-57 Slavinski, George............ 27 Sloup, Miss Mary............ 184 Smaglick, Paul.............. 144 Smalter, John Joseph, Jr.... 70 Smalter, Joseph.............. 65 S-nalter, Louis W........... 48 Smeykal, Johanna........... 199 Smith, Mrs. Alex........... 189 Smith, Mrs. A. M.......... 181 Smith, Mrs. A. W.......... 209 Smith, A. W.............. 163 Smith, Capt. Bert L........140 Smith, Charles............... 143 Smith, Mrs. E. P............209 Smith, E. P..........159-163-174 Smith, Gordon............... 211 Smith, James................ 155 Smith,Mrs. J. E............193 Smith, Lieut. Lotha A....... 46 Smith, Miss Lou........193-198 Smith, Mrs. Martha E.... 193-198 Smith, Mary................ 199 Smith, Mathew W........... 62 Smith, Robert................ 129 Smith, William.............. 143 Sobeski, Joseph.............. 144 Sobotta, Fred................144 Sobotta, John............ 84-144 Sobotta, Rudolph..........84-144 Sollen, Mrs. Henning........ 186 Solmes, Mrs. F. R.......... 183 Solmes, Dr. F. R........165-177 Solway, Miss Edith.......... 153 Solway, Ernest.............. 27 Somerville, Mrs. Emeline C..185 Sorensen, Adolph R......... 58 Sorensen, Alfred G.......95-145 Sorensen, Mrs. Andrew...... 192 S'orensen, Miss Ella......... 184 Sorensen, Mrs. Eskild........ 192 Sorensen, Eskild.............169 Sorensen, Miss Magda....... 185 Sorensen, Nels P............ 120 Page Stauber, Mrs. Anton........ 186 Stauber, Edward A........... 58 Stauber, Joseph M.........27-38 Stauber, Miss Louise........ 187 Stauber, Miss Mathilda...... 187 Stauber, Mrs. Mike......... 186 Stauber, Michael A.......... 55 Stauber, John Richard........................................21-22-27-59 Stauber, William G.......... 53 Steber, Joseph............... 165 Steberl, Edward F........... 143 Steberl, Frank............... 27 Stecker, Harold..........126-145 Stecker, Mrs. Justin......... 194 Stefan, Anna................. 199 Stefan, Mrs. Antonia........ 199 Stefel, Emma................ 199 Steinbrecher, Jerome.... 140-145 Steinbrecher, Virgil T....... 113 Stenstrup, James C.......... 57 Stephenson, Mrs. Augusta.................................................. 181-184 Stephenson, Mrs. Ed........ 165 Stephenson, Ferdinand....... 37 Stephenson, Mrs. Ferdinand A......................... 185 Stephenson, George..........159 Stephenson, Mrs. S. M......185 Steward, Henry W..........143 S'tewart, Sidney M.......... 128 Stiber, Anna................. 199 S'tiles, Harry G..............143 Stiles, John................. 143 Stiles, Hon. J. W...........163 Stireman, Mrs. M........... 186 Stireman, Miles R.......... 116 Stireman, Mrs. J. W........ 183 Stocklin, Mrs. C. L......... 209 Stocklin, C. L............... 163 Stodolova, Katherine........ 199 Stoik, Mrs. Katherine....... 193 Stoik, Mrs. Mary........193-198 Stoneberg, Charles F........ 30 Stoneberg, Harry N.......... 29 Stoppenbach, Mrs. Frank E 183 Stoppenbach, Frank E...... 46 Sturdy, Clarence G.......... 115 Sturdy, Ellsworth L......... 54 Sturdy, Mrs. G. A............183 Sturdy, Mrs. Robert......... 192 Sturdy, Mrs. Theresa........ 183 Suchorski, David.............143 Suchorski, David J.......... 117 Suchorski, Frank Fred...... 46 Suchorski, Mrs. Kate........ 182 Suehner, Miss Bertha........187 Suehner, Miss M............187 Suhr, William................ 70 Sullivan, Miss Ann........202 Sullivan, Howard............ 143 Sullivan, Miss Nora......... 183 Sundberg, Clarence...... 140-144 Sutherland, Miss Flossie.... 191 Sutherland, Miss Hazel..... 191 Sutliff, Miss Evelyn........ 207 Sutliff, Miss Grace.......... 183 Sutliff, Lloyd A............ 118 Sutliff, Ralph F.............. 118 Svehla, Francis............. 199 Sveyda, Mary................199 Svoboda, Marie.............. 199 Swaningson, Mrs. S......... 191 Swanson, Miss............... 194 Swanson, Mrs. Albert........193 Swanson, Arthur............. 96 Page T Tagge, Emil E.............. 96 Tanguay, Clifford........114-146 Tanguay, Miss Della......... 192 Tanguay, Edmond........97-146 Tanguay, Mrs. Joe........... 193 Tanguay, Mrs. Marie........ 176 Tanguay, Mose.............. 168 Tanguay, Paul P........ 114-146 Tanguay, Theodore...... 114-146 Tappen, Julius B9............ 60 Tauscheck, Frank T........ 49 Tauscher, John.............. 165 Taylor, Arthur........... 100-145 Taylor, Frank........... 100-145 Taylor, Mrs. J. C............194 Tebo, Earl L.............27-84 Tebo, Ernest D.............. 59 Teichler, Alfred L........... 65 Teichler, Mrs. Edward..... 186 Teichler, John C.... 21-22-27-65 Telot, Harry................. 155 Telot, Michael J.............. 36 Tenny, R. W............... 201 Tessmer, Max A............ 85 'retro, Mrs. Robert..........191 Tetro, Robert G.........165-167 Theriault, Mrs. Anna........ 189 Therriault, Eugene.......... 27 Thomas, Walter........21-22-106 Thompson, Mrs. George..... 192 Thompson, Grover C.......27-38 Thompson, Mrs. J. M........ 165-179-180-181-183-184-197 207-209. Thompson, J. M..... 159-160-163 Thoune, Arthur............. 144 Thoune, William.............128 Tideman, Mrs. Harold..165-185 Tideman, Harold.............163 Tideman, Mrs. Wm...... 183-209 Tideman, Winm. M........... 163 Tierney, Mathew A.......... 60 Tislov, Miss Maud...........183 Tjaden, Bernard............. 211 Toberg, Emil................ 81 Toberg, Harry D............. 82 Todish, Ed..................155 Todish, Mrs. Frank..165-182-185 Todish, Frank 0..........27-155 Todish, George R............ 124 Todish, Scoffie G............ 41 Todish, Miss Sophie.........185 Todish, Thomas..............143 Tomack, Edward............. 143 Tomack, John............... 143 Tomack, Peter............... 143 Tomasi, Joseph..........107-145 Torbygozen, Miss............194 Torbygozen, Mrs............ 194 Trautner, Miss Anna........187 Trautner, Miss Frances.....187 Trautner, George A......... 37 Treml, George J............. 52 Trodahl, Howard.............140 Trombley, Mrs. Ed.......... 192 Trombley, Edward........... 145 Trombley, Walter............145 Trudell, Felix A............. 32 Trudell, Mrs. Fabian J.............. 180-181-184-197-207-209 Trudell, F. J.... 157-159-174-234 Trudell, Miss Margaret....................... 165-180-184-197 Trudell, Miss Olive.................. 166-184-197-207-209-234 I t ' Soults, Edwin Q.......... 70 Swnson Arvid P.......99-145 Tufts, Mrs. Fred.... 166-183-209 Soults, Joseph E............ 46 Swanson, August........... 144 Tufts, Fred..............158-163 Sperline, Miss Mary........192 Swanson, Mrs. Axel.........192 Tuinstra, Archibald K......100 * Spies, F. A................. 163 Swanson, Axel 0.......90-145 Tunell, Albin C..............144 Spies, Gerald A............. 140 Swanson, Axel...............175 Tunell, Mrs Andrew........176 Spies, Miss Margaret.... 184-202 Swanson, Ben...............155 Tunell, Anton L......... 101-144 Spoerke, Ernest H.......27-57 Swanson, Mrs. Charles, Sr..194 Tunell, Miss Ellen..........191; Sporrer, Michael J.......... 42 SIwanson, Mrs. Charles Jr...194 Tunell, Harry E......... 93-144 Sporrer, Michael..............163 Swanson, Charles H........104 Tunell, Mando I.........93-144 Sruka, Elmer.............. 146 Swanson, Charles............169 Tupper, Fred J..............155 Staaleson, Miss Esther 189 Swanson, David..........107-145 Tupper, Leroy H............ 46 Stadlbauer, Mrs A. E.184-209 Swanson, Miss Esther 187 Turner, W.................... 169 Staknelr, Mrc Jos*eph 1 8.... *. 6 Swanson, George F.........103 Turnwall, Arthur........... 114 Si takel, Miss Margaret.:187 Swanson, Mrs. Oscar.... 189 Turnvall, August..........85-144 Stangenberg, Miss May.....187 Swanson, William........104-144 Turnwall, Charles WV.......104 Stanton, Mrs. James.........185 SSword, Jesse E............. 92 Turnwall, Philip...........103 ( S'tarrs, Robert..............144 Symonds, Charles D.....161-170 Turnwall, William...........104 Stauber, Miss Agnes........187 Symonds, John H...........101 Tutas, Otto..............131-145 [246].. s ^ AL -7 -4 - 0 "I ~ f3 ~ 1 0. 0 4~ - - ^ - I 3 1 II I-L 14 Ml - r1.0 v I 0 -— C~ L I.~r~~-Y- CS- I 'i 0 1 1 I 0 0 0 4 4 4 4 f Page Tvrsnik, Josephine.........199 Tworek, Roman.............155 U Umnus, Mrs. Frank..........187 IUmnus, Mrs. Fred...........187 Umnus, Leonard.............211 V Vachon, Joseph P.........87-146 Vachon, William J.......98-146 Valcq, Cyril R............... 38 Valley, Alexander C......... 76 Valley, Godfrey............... 140 Valliere, Ernest..............143 Vancourt, William...........101 Vandenberg, Arthur.......... 69 Vandenberg, Miss Carolyn.................. 183-185-186-203 Vandenberg, George..........143 Vandenberg, Robert A....... 122 Vandenberg, William J......233 Vanderhee, George........... 27 Valnderlip, Mrs. Albert.......183 Vanderlip, Chester H....... 37 Vanderlip, Mrs. Mark.......189 Vanderlip, Melbourn C...... 42 Vanderstone, Irving... 21-23-69 Vandervest, Henry C....... 140 Vassaw, Charles F......113-144 Venier, Mrs. F............. 194 Vennema, Mrs. H. A................. 165-184-205-206-207-209 Vennema, Rr. H. A......165-177 Verhagen, John.............. 145 Vescolani, Mrs. B............194 Vescolani, Bartelo.......... 175 Vickery, Mrs. C. M..190-194-198 Vickery, C. M...............194 Vicklund, Mathias.......... 104 Vincent, Arthur.............. 27 Vincent, Miss Eva...........186 Vincent, Fred............106-146 Virch, Mrs. N................ 191 Vizner, Francis..............199 Vogels, Clarence J..........123 Vogeltanz, Mary.............199 Voight, Albert...............169 Vojcahosky, Joseph A........ 48 Volk, Mrs. C. W.............189 Volk, C. W................... 165 Voltner, Mary................99 W Wachowiak, Stanley.........140 Wachowiak, Thad..........140 Wachter, Fred E........... 85 Wagner, George..............102 Wagner, William.............140 Waite, Miss Addie...........183 Waite, Leslie Osgood....141-206 Waite, Mrs. W. F................ 183-184-185-195-197-207-209 Waite, William Fuller........................... 161-162-174 Walcher, Dexter Mack...... 84 Walker, Robert.............211 Walker, Mrs. Robert 183-184-209 Walker, Dr. Robert A.......177 Walker, Stanley H.......... 31 Wallin, Mrs. Aug...........189 Wallin, Mrs. John..........189 Wallin, Miss Selma..........189 Walter, Henry..............159 Walton, Miss Callie..........192 Walton, James Howard.....143 Walton, Ulmont F...........128 Wanek, Miss Anna..........187 Wanek, Mrs. Joseph........187 Ward, Mrs. Charles H......201 Warner, Mrs. Ed............191 Watry, John B..........82-144 Page Watson, John E............. 30 Watson, Mrs. O. Gould...165-183 Watson, Orrin Gould 46-155-163 Watson, Samuel W.......... 53 Watz, Nels P............... 75 Weber, Anton............. 86-145 Weber, Otto.................. 143 W'ebber, Mrs. A...........192 Weideman, Robert......210-211 Weideman, Mrs. Robert M............... 179-181-195-197-209 Weideman, R. M 163-174-203-211 WVeidling, Mrs. C. J.........209 Wieimer, Walter Herman.... 69 Weise, Frank................ 70 Weise, Mrs. John...........187 Weiss, Henry............... 143 Wellner, George A.......... 34 Wrells, Mrs. A. C. 179-181-197-209 Wells, A. C.............159-163 W;ells, Mrs. B............... 194 W ells, Daniel................ 59 Wells, John................. 211 Wells, Mrs. J. WA.......... 153- 65-183-184-185-200-201 209. WVell, John- X.......157-165-174 Wells, L. A................. 155 Wells, Mrs. R. WV...............165-183-184-200-201-207-209 Wells, R...... 1.160-163-174-203 WTendt, Mrs. August.........194 WTeng. Mrs. Andrew......... 192 XWeng, Andrew 159-161-167-175 Weng, Arthur A.........96-144 WXeng, Miss Florence........192 WXeng, Miss Mabel..........192 Weng, Miss Myrtle.........192 Wnenzel, Mrs. Anton........ 186 Wery, Ernest................ 94 W~escher, Frank.........158-163 West, Winefred.............207 West, Mrs. R. 1.....165-207-209 West, R. D................. 163 Westerberg, Mrs. G.........192 Westerdahl, Lars C.........148 Westman, Carl.............. 31 WVestman, Oscar.............. 31 Wheaton, Christiann.......... 75 Wheaton, Jens P........... 123 WTheaton, P..........159-163-203 Wheaton, Viggo.............211 Wheeler, Mrs. E............183 Wheeler, Elmer..............155 Wheeler, Mrs. G.......... 183 Wheeler. Geo. W..........165 Wheeler, Mrs. Pete.......... 193 Wheeler, William J......88-146 White, Earl C..............141 White, Mrs. John...........191 White, Joseph H.........93-144 White, Roy................. 163 Whiteshield, Mrs. C. F..193-198 Whiteshield, Dr. Charles F.......................169-177 Whiteshield, Charles J..105-146 Whiteshield, James A.... 97-146 Whiting, Mrs. August.......194 Whittemore, Mrs. A. B.....209 Whitton, Mrs. Chas..........189 Whitton, Charles............165 Wicklander, Axel.............94 Wilcox, Mrs. D. M.......................... 165-183-184-209 Wilcox, Dr. D. M........163-177 Wilcox, Marion.............207 Wilkins, C. W.......159-168-175 Williams, Mrs................192 Williams, Alvin...............125 Williams, Howard R......... 52 Williams, Mrs. John... 190-191 Williams, John.......... 81-169 Williams, Hon. John Skelton 179 Page Williams, Lyle L........ 125-169 Williams, Miss Mae..........191 Williams, Milton M......114-169 Wilson, A. M........158-163-174 Wilson, Frank 0........... 27-57 Wilson, D. G............................ 155-163-164-174-203 Wilson, Llewellyn D........118 Wilson, Merritt B.........27-43 Wilson, Hon. Woodrow......179 Wiltzens, John.............. 92 Winkel, Miss Elizabeth.....164 WVinkel, Joseph............... 73 Winnekins, Ralph E......... 112 Winter, Mrs. Albert......188-191 Winter, Carl................. 151 Winter, Miss Dorothy.......191 Winter, Miss Lenora.......191 Winter, Walter P.........83-144 Winter, Mrs. WX. B.......... 191 Winter, Wrilliam B 161-165-167 Winther, Mrs.. 0..........207 Wistrand, Ernest F.......... 43 W5istrand, Walter H......... 71 Witrick, Frederick.......... 144 Wizner, John George........127 Wizner, James............... 49 Woberg, Henry W........... 128 Woberg, John L............ 96 Woessner, Carl.............211 Woessner, Mrs. Fred........191 Woessner, Miss Ruth........191 Wolf, Miss Lola D..........192 Wolfe, William A........... 47 Wolff, Miss Emma......... 187 Wolff, Miss Elsie.......... 187 WVrolff, George C............. 29 Wolff, Mrs. Philip........... 187 Wolff, Philip H............. 52 Wollenschlager, Miss Minnie 189 Wollenschlager, Mrs. Theo. 189 Woodford, Mrs. G. A..................... 182-183-184-197-209 Worth, Dorothy...............207 Worth, Jean.................. 211 Worth, Halstead........... 155 Worth, Mrs. H............ 183 Worth, H....................163 Worthen, Mrs. H. M........189 Wortner, Edward J.........128 Wosniak, Walter...........143 Wrozneski, Barney........... 78 Woznaik, Bruno............. 30 Wozniak, Martin M......... 72 Wozniak, Stanley G......... 91 Wright, Mrs. C. B......183-184 Wright, Charles T..........150 Wright, Howard H.......... 49 Wright, Mrs. J. M..........184 Wright, Mrs. Walter........191 VWyse, Mrs. Katherine........185 y Yale, Mrs. Jennie............194 Yale, Reuben.................145 Young, Clarence.............211 Younk, Ed.................... 27 Younk, Henry J.........108-145 Z Zache, Mrs. C..............187 Zache, Chas. F.............163 Zache, Mrs. H................187 Zickler, Mrs. A.............187 Zickler, A................... 163 Zielowski, Felix W..........123 Zielowski, Joseph H......... 77 Zielowski, Thomas C........ 78 Zimmer, Frank.............. 50 Zimmerman, Herman........169 Zorgey, Jno.................. 146 Zschau, Mrs. Chas..........186 I, II 4 4 4 1 i * -....... I. -= q [247] I -L ~ ~ --, - - 1. -.1 11 rr1 — -,,S IVw w M EMOR A N DA IdJ& # i/ - [248] 4 4 4 i,, -,. * * 1 W MEMORANDA M - A a i 6 ~ 4 * 4., 1 I m J 4 4. t l 1.. *1 I' 4 [249] I -0 - 40. 4 40.41. -D. 10 m -WOMMMA X - -- -- -- ws M EMORANDA [2501 I