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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Company B, 307th Infantry, by Julius Klausner
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Company B, 307th Infantry
+ Its history, honor roll, company roster, Sept., 1917, May, 1919
+
+Author: Julius Klausner
+
+Release Date: October 12, 2010 [EBook #33932]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPANY B, 307TH INFANTRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Patrick Hopkins and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+- Illustration captions in {brackets} have been added by the transcriber
+for reader convenience.
+
+- The position of some illustrations has been changed to improve
+readability.
+
+- Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. In all
+other cases geographical references, spelling, hyphenation, and
+capitalization have been retained as in the original publication.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: {Statue of Liberty with "77"}]
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _La Forêt de Nesle, France. 307th Infantry in France_]
+
+
+
+
+ COMPANY B
+ 307th INFANTRY
+
+ ITS
+ HISTORY
+ HONOR ROLL
+ COMPANY ROSTER
+
+
+
+ Sept., 1917 [Illustration: AEF] May, 1919
+
+
+
+ _Compiled by_
+ Julius Klausner, Jr.
+ 1920
+
+
+
+ =============================================================
+ Upton * Flanders * Vosges * Lorraine * Vesle * Argonne * Home
+ =============================================================
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: _We Who Live Remember--_]
+
+And remembering, we shall always seek to justify the self-sacrifice made
+by those companions who trained with us and fought with us but whom by
+virtue of their supreme service, we returned without.
+
+They died, but being dead, live on, and their spirits beckon us to
+strive toward that for which they died.
+
+The flag was their shrine--the fields of France their tomb--and they
+shall ever be wreathed with God's great glory.
+
+ [Illustration: © _Underwood & Underwood_
+ MAJOR-GENERAL ROBERT ALEXANDER
+ Commander of the Seventy-Seventh Division]
+
+
+
+
+Major-General Robert Alexander to Company B
+
+
+GREETINGS!
+
+I am very glad that Company B--307th Infantry is putting into this form
+the many memories of the Great War which remain with those of us who
+participated therein as bright spots in our path through life.
+
+The work done by the 77th Division was most notable and in that work
+Company B--307th Infantry took full part and contributed its full share.
+The record of the Company is one of which any organization might well be
+extremely proud. It took part in the operations in the Vosges; on the
+line of the Vesle; and in the advance from the Vesle to the Aisne--the
+77th Division being the _only_ American division to reach the latter
+river. In the Argonne-Meuse Offensive which brought the war to a
+successful conclusion, the Company, with its Regiment, Brigade, and
+Division, played a noteworthy part. The battle losses incurred by
+Company B and the battle honors conferred upon members thereof speak for
+themselves.
+
+Not the least of the Company's exploits was that which, culminating on
+the evening of October 7th, 1918, brought relief to the long-beleaguered
+Battalion under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Charles W.
+Whittlesey--the so-called "Lost" Battalion.
+
+The officer to whom was granted the supreme honor of sharing with you as
+your Divisional Commander the toils, the dangers, and the honors of that
+supreme campaign salutes you! No Commander could ask more loyal support
+from his comrades of all ranks than was freely given me. For your future
+careers in civil life or wherever Fortune may lay your paths, you will
+carry with you my sincere best wishes and my affectionate regard. The
+qualities of courage, fidelity, and loyalty displayed by you during your
+service as soldiers will be, I am sure, at the disposal of your Country
+as well in Peace as they were in War.
+
+ [Illustration: Signature]
+ _Formerly Major-General in Command of the 77th Division._
+
+November 19th, 1919.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: CAPTAIN BLANTON BARRETT
+ _Killed in Action, July 21st, 1918_ ]
+
+
+
+
+ =============================================================
+ Upton * Flanders * Vosges * Lorraine * Vesle * Argonne * Home
+ =============================================================
+
+
+THE HISTORY OF COMPANY B
+
+307th INFANTRY
+
+
+Camp Upton--September 10th to April 5th
+
+Invited--all of us. And we trooped down Yaphank-way, out
+on Long Island, as tho bound for a picnic. Which, for a week, it was.
+Then we were brought up short. On September 17, 1917, the 77th Division
+came to life. One of the first units to be organized within the division
+was Company B--307th Infantry, formed also on September 17th.
+
+Immediately we were on paper as a regular unit, we quickly took
+semblance of a military organization. Under the leadership of Captain
+Blanton Barrett, 1st Lieutenant Alexander D. B. Pratt, and 2d
+Lieutenants Philip Cheney and Everett A. Butterfield, we were gradually
+whipped into an efficient machine. Corporals were made and
+unmade--sergeants came and went--and we were drilled, drilled, drilled.
+
+We had exchanged our hair mattresses for straw, our china for tin, our
+homes for barracks, and they made us like it. At first we occupied but
+one building,--a rambling two-story affair having bunk rooms on all the
+upper floor. The lower floor was given over to kitchen, mess hall, and
+recreation room. The recreation room, however, was short lived, for as
+we grew in numbers it became necessary to fill it with bunks. And then,
+when we had grown to full strength--two hundred and fifty officers and
+men--we overflowed into another barracks of which we occupied half of
+both upper and lower floors.
+
+The advantages of a billiard table, a piano, and a talking machine were
+ours. We supported a miniature barber shop and a tailor. Talent we had
+a-plenty, and we ran our own shows.
+
+But we drilled, drilled, drilled. And we had schools--lots of 'em. When
+we were not doing the "school of the soldier", we attended bayonet
+school. The "school of the squad" divided time with gas instruction. The
+study of the automatic rifle was complicated, but so was the "school of
+the platoon". We practiced the manual of arms and learned how to throw
+hand grenades. Little by little we were perfected in the art of
+thinking, and knowing, and doing, the right thing at the right time.
+
+ [Illustration: _Camp Upton, New York. Bird's-eye View from Tower
+ Hill_]
+
+Early in 1918 we felt ready. On Washington's Birthday our division
+paraded down Fifth Avenue a complete fighting machine. We were prepared
+for the next move and the cheers of the crowds had barely died when it
+came.
+
+
+Upton to France--April 6th to April 20th
+
+On the night of April 5th we were ordered to roll packs. We stacked our
+bunks and drew ammunition. And we were posted on a vigil of waiting.
+April 6th, 1918, Saturday, was the first anniversary of America's
+declaration of war. At two-thirty on that morning, in an air pleasantly
+crisp and flooded with moonlight, we marched to the railroad and
+entrained. Leaving Camp Upton at three-fifteen, we pulled into Long
+Island City just in time to be greeted by the usual six o'clock factory
+whistles.
+
+A waiting ferry engulfed our battalion and we were transported down the
+East River, around the Battery, and up the Hudson to Pier 59, at the
+foot of West Eighteenth Street, Manhattan. A methodical transfer was
+accomplished from the squat and stunted ferry to the gigantic but little
+known _Justicia_.
+
+While still under process of construction in the shipyards at Belfast,
+in Ireland, for the Holland American Line, the _Statendam_ was
+commandeered by Great Britain at the beginning of the European war and
+was operated as a transport under the name _Justicia_ by the White Star
+Line. She was at the time the fifth largest vessel afloat and that she
+was the especial prey of the German undersea navy is indicated by the
+fact that a submarine attacked her on a subsequent trip from England to
+the United States, on July 20th, and after a dramatic engagement lasting
+some twenty-four hours, she was sunk. Fourteen of a crew of seven
+hundred were lost.
+
+All day men and equipment poured onto the decks and into the hold of the
+giant transport. Our entire regiment and one battalion of the 308th
+Infantry were quartered between decks. Next morning, before reveille,
+the _Justicia_ slipped quietly down New York Bay, thru Ambrose Channel,
+and into the Atlantic.
+
+B Company had no quarters _de luxe_. We were crowded into small
+space--Section K--far down on D deck, with sleeping hammocks slung over
+our mess tables. And our mess, served by the British, was a sorry series
+of meals. We were compelled to wear during the day, and to sleep with
+during the night, ungainly life preservers. But discomforts were
+subordinated to the interest in our new surroundings. The mysteries of
+the big ship, its spotless engine-room, the intricacies of navigation,
+the precautions against possible attack,--all held us.
+
+ [Illustration: _Among Those Present--A Group of NCO'S at Camp_]
+
+On leaving New York we pursued a northerly course, and at nine o'clock
+that night anchor was dropped in lower Bedford Bay, at Halifax. Early
+next morning we steamed up into the inner harbor and before us lay the
+sadly devastated city of Halifax. Immense areas of the city had been
+totally destroyed by the explosion resulting from the collision between
+a Belgian relief ship and one bearing a cargo of explosives.
+
+That day and the next, while waiting for our convoy to assemble, was
+spent in practicing with lowered boats.
+
+Late on the afternoon of April 9th our convoy of ten passenger and cargo
+ships passed out of the harbor, sped by the cheers of the crews of two
+American battleships. We were escorted by _U. S. S. St. Louis_ and _H.
+M. S. Victoria_.
+
+Boat drill, a well-ordered scramble for life boats, took place twice
+daily. Each morning we indulged in strenuous setting-up exercises in
+order that we might remain in trim. Practice with depth bombs and smoke
+screens helped to relieve the tedium of the long trip.
+
+As we neared our unknown destination, our escort was increased by ten
+British torpedo boat destroyers. Veritable sea dogs they were, darting
+every which-way, breasting wave after wave, ever watchful for the tricky
+Hun.
+
+And then, on Friday. April 19th, land! Just a ridge above the
+horizon--the blue hills of Wales--but already we could feel in our
+imaginations the solidity which our unsailorly legs had missed.
+
+As the day waned we sighted the lighthouse at the mouth of the River
+Mersey. With cheers of relief we were permitted to doff our bulky life
+belts. Just before dusk we entered the Mersey, passing closely by the
+beautiful seaside resort of New Brighton.
+
+Forging up the river we reached Liverpool and, at nine o'clock that
+evening, after almost fourteen days afloat, our transport was moored.
+The city, as we saw it from the decks of the _Justicia_, lay quietly,
+with lights beginning to twinkle in the increasing gloom.
+
+One by one the companies formed and debarked, and at 11:15 P.M. B
+Company marched down the gang plank, thru half-lighted sheds, into those
+curious side-door railway cars so peculiar to Europe. Exactly at
+midnight our train pulled out of Liverpool. At 3:00 A.M. a short stop
+for hot coffee was made at Rugby. We passed thru the outskirts of London
+at 6:00 A.M. and at nine-twenty the train rolled into the terminal at
+Dover.
+
+The private yacht of Belgium's Queen Elizabeth had been pressed into
+service as a cross-channel ferry and in this royal craft, under escort
+of destroyers, aeroplanes, and dirigibles, we crossed to Calais in an
+hour and thirty-five minutes. The crossing was enlivened when two
+riflemen of the crew took to firing at mines that endangered our
+passage.
+
+
+Picardy and Flanders--April 20th to June 10th
+
+ [Illustration: © _Underwood & Underwood_
+ _"Let's Go!" Washington's Birthday, 1918_]
+
+Once in Calais we found that we divided honors with Company C of our
+regiment in being the first two National Army companies to land in
+France, having debarked on French soil April 20, 1918.
+
+That night we experienced our first real touch of war. Sheltered in
+tents in British Rest Camp No. 6, we received a call of welcome from a
+squadron of Jerry aeroplanes. A truly thrilling reception it was, with
+the thunder of Hun bombs alternating with the "ping!" of British
+anti-aircraft guns,--and thru it all the "pat-pat" of a multitude of
+machine guns. But best of all, there were no casualties.
+
+Next day we spent in adding to our equipment gas masks and trench
+helmets and we exchanged our American Enfield rifles for British
+Enfields,--lighter, shorter pieces having a magazine capacity of ten
+rounds of ammunition.
+
+April 23d introduced us to the famous little "_40 hommes--8 chevaux_"
+box-cars of the French. A three-hour journey in these brought us to the
+British base at Audruicq. Our first real hike started from here and
+ended at Zouafques, a little village in Picardy. We occupied some of the
+best sheep-pens, cattle stalls, and hen roosts in town and during our
+five-week stay we became really comfortable inhabitants.
+
+Zouafques proved to be a sort of military high school, where we polished
+our elementary knowledge of tactics. Our "noncoms" were sent to
+specialized schools in scouting, sniping, musketry, automatic rifles,
+grenades, and infantry tactics. The instruction, as well as the food and
+equipment, was distinctly British.
+
+Five weeks of this work and we took our next step trench-ward. Hiking
+from Zouafques at 1.30 A.M., May 13th, we entrained _a la chevaux_ at
+Audruicq. A day's journey _via_ Calais, Boulogne, Etaps, and Doullens
+brought us to Mondrecourt, in Flanders. Then an almost heartbreaking
+hike thru Pas to the war-worn village of Couin.
+
+Our assimilation by the British forces became most complete when we
+found ourselves brigaded with a battalion of the Lancashire Fusileers of
+the 125th British Brigade. Our position was in reserve of the British
+lines north of Amiens and southwest of Arras.
+
+Here another five weeks of training gave us the right to work alone.
+Once again we traded rifles, retrieving our American guns, and on June
+6th we started on a three-day march. Thru Gézaincourt, Bernaville, Ailly
+le-Haut Clocher, to Pont Remy, where we entrained.
+
+
+Vosges and the Lorraine--June 11th to August 7th
+
+Two days by rail, _via_ Amiens, Versailles, Bar-le-Duc, and Nancy, and
+we detrained on June 11th at Thaon, in the Vosges. Then an intermittent
+hike, with stops at Longchamps, Destord, and Menil, passing thru
+Rambervillers and Baccarat, to Vacqueville, in the Lorraine.
+
+A stirring incident occurred _en route_ when we passed the boys of the
+old Sixty-Ninth New York Regiment. Brooklyn hailed Brooklyn; Harlem
+called to Harlem; Bronx met Bronx. It was a breath of home to the
+already veteran Sixty-Ninth and more than a cheering welcome to us.
+
+We shared Vacqueville with a battalion of the Alabama regiment of the
+42d "Rainbow" Division. Advance parties were sent into the lines to
+acquaint themselves with the position which we were to take over. And in
+the dead of night, on June 20th-21st, Company B took over that part of
+the line between Ancerviller and Badonviller designated as P. C. (post
+commandant) Hameau and P. C. Montreux.
+
+The first and second platoons of our Company held a position in the
+Grand Bois (Big Woods), a section of forest southeast of Ancerviller.
+The second and third platoons and Company headquarters occupied the
+ruined village of St. Maurice. St. Maurice was a part of the line at
+this point and had been subjected at different times to severe shelling.
+Only bare skeletons of the buildings remained and any nook or cranny
+between sections of walls and under a bit of roof was used as shelter.
+Deserted cellars had been bolstered, reinforced, and barricaded so that
+they would serve as shell-proof protection in the event of attack.
+
+
+The First Gas Attack
+
+It was usually Fritz's intention to place a harassing barrage on any
+section of the line where he knew that a relief was being effected. But
+he was less watchful than usual when we went in.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _"Hotel de Barn"--Showing Barber Shop and Reading and Writing
+ Rooms_]
+
+The enemy awoke, however, three days later, on the morning of Monday,
+June 24th, and attacked our regimental outposts. In order to effectively
+prevent any assistance being rendered by the platoons stationed in St.
+Maurice, a heavy barrage was laid on the town beginning at 3:30 A.M.
+During the early part of the shelling the continual use of H. E.'s
+(high explosive shells), with an occasional gas shell, served to keep
+the men not only penned in their bomb-proof cellars, but also forced the
+continued use of gas masks. Gradually the H. E.'s were interspersed with
+gas shells until a point was reached where far more gas shells than high
+explosives fell into the town, resulting in a heavy blanket of phosgene,
+mustard, and lachrymatory gases settling over the position.
+
+The barrage did not lift until 6:00 A.M. and when it did the platoons
+were forced to take a defensive position to guard against any possible
+success of the enemy.
+
+During the night before the attack, the men had been digging until a
+late hour on a system of trench defense. This entailed a lack of sleep
+which, together with the continued wearing of the gas mask and the
+exposure endured immediately after the barrage, weakened their
+resistance to such an extent as to make them easy victims to the
+poisonous gases.
+
+Seventy-nine men were forced to the hospital by the effects of the
+combined phosgene and mustard. Among them were our first sergeant,
+supply and mess sergeants, all but one of our cooks, and both mechanics,
+which left us decidedly crippled.
+
+The shadow of our losses was deepened when we heard that Cook George
+Alberts, always popular, had died from gas inhaled while trying to
+prepare the company breakfast in a gas-filled kitchen. He was our first
+loss by death.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _Shell-Proof Dugout--A Shelter in St. Maurice_]
+
+An immediate result of our losses was the extra work shouldered by those
+who had escaped any of the serious effects. The men left in St. Maurice
+remained on constant guard until the Company was relieved several days
+later.
+
+During the short rest period that followed, a reorganization of the
+Company was accomplished and we again entered the lines in July, taking
+over P. C.'s Hameau and Montreux, as before.
+
+
+The Daylight Raid
+
+On Sunday, July 21st, a patrol of fifty-two men from our Company,
+accompanied by two medical first-aid men, engaged in a raid on the
+German trenches at two-thirty in the afternoon. The party advanced on
+the enemy lines in single file, divided in four groups which were
+respectively commanded by Sergeant Todd, Captain Barrett, Sergeant
+Bromback and Lieutenant Mohlke.
+
+The intent was to surprise the enemy with a daylight raid and thereby
+obtain information thru capture and observation. But either thru
+knowledge or by chance, the Germans had prepared against this maneuver
+and the surprise was reversed.
+
+Waiting until our patrol was fairly within their lines, and then
+partially surrounding them, the enemy centered upon our men a deadly
+fire of rifles, machine guns, and grenades. The raiders fought valiantly
+in return but were outnumbered four to one. After an hour's fighting,
+seventeen of our party, including Captain Barrett, lay dead, and sixteen
+were captured. Of the twenty-one who returned, thirteen were wounded. We
+were informed by two German prisoners captured a few days later that
+seventeen Germans had been killed.
+
+The loss sustained in this daylight raid occasioned considerable
+comment, chiefly because it was generally believed that Captain Barrett
+had misread his orders,--that the time for action had really read 2:30
+A.M. instead of 2:30 P.M. This, however, is quite untrue, inasmuch as
+all the Company officers, as well as the supply sergeant and company
+clerk, were conversant with the orders. Captain Barrett's immediate
+battalion and regimental superiors were present at or near the time of
+action and possessed full knowledge of the entire plan.
+
+The defeat was caused solely by the lack of the intended element of
+surprise. Whether or not the enemy had possession of our plans, and if
+they had possession, how they obtained it, is something we shall never
+know.
+
+ [Illustration: _The Baccarat Sector, Showing St. Maurice and the
+ Grand Bois_]
+
+A telegram was received by the Divisional Commander from General
+Headquarters to the effect that the entire action had been investigated
+and found creditable.
+
+The casualties suffered from the raid, together with those resulting
+from the gas attack of June 24th, so depleted the Company as to make an
+immediate relief imperative and that same night Company L took over our
+sector.
+
+A subsequent reorganization of the entire regiment distributed the men
+of the various companies so that all would have an equal strength. Our
+numbers were so few that we lost none of our men in this process but
+instead received increases not only from many of the other companies,
+but also from the 76th New England Division.
+
+As tribute to those men whom we had lost, a Company B mass was held at
+the Catholic Church in Vacqueville at which Chaplain Father Walsh of
+our battalion officiated. The entire strength of the Company was
+present.
+
+Another rest and another turn up front, after which the entire division
+was relieved by the 37th Ohio and Kentucky Division. Once again we
+crossed the Vosges, halting for three days at Seranville. Leaving there,
+we bivouaced for a night in the Forêt de Charmes and entrained at
+Charmes next morning, August 7th, at dawn.
+
+
+From the Vesle to the Aisne--August 10th to September 15th
+
+ [Illustration: _The Advance from the Vesle to the Aisne_]
+
+Two days later, August 10th, we took transport on an immense train of
+motor trucks--"lorries" we called them, after the English. They were
+driven by Indo-Chinese serving under the French. After nine cramped but
+interesting hours--we passed thru Chateau-Thierry--our trip ended at
+Fere en Tardenois. For three days we camped in a small wood and then we
+moved to a position supporting the attack on Fismes. We were stationed
+in the Bois de la Pissotti, adjoining the Forêt de Nesle. While there we
+were engaged in digging a series of reserve trenches near
+Mont-sur-Courville.
+
+On August 28th the battalion moved around Chéry-Chartreuve to a position
+east of Le Prés Farm. September 1st we again shifted, this time crossing
+the Vesle and relieving the Third Battalion, just east of Bazoches. Here
+we repulsed a raiding party, inflicting heavy losses upon the enemy. We
+were then moved to a ravine, which gave us the opportunity of taking a
+two-day rest.
+
+Our next move brought us to face with the enemy just south of Merval,
+where we took a position in an exposed field, our only protection being
+the individual "funk holes" which had been deserted by the retreating
+German troops.
+
+After three days of little water and practically no food, at 5:30 on the
+afternoon of September 8th--still brilliant daylight--we crawled from
+our funk holes and, each squad in single file in formation known as
+"squad columns", we advanced against German artillery in an effort to
+straighten the line. As we reached the outskirts of Merval we were
+subjected to an intense barrage of H. E.'s, suffering the loss of four
+men killed and five injured.
+
+ [Illustration: _Our Path Thru the Argonne_]
+
+No gain was made by this sortie and we drew back to our funk-hole
+position awaiting further developments.
+
+Early on the morning of September 14th, supported by a barrage laid down
+by combined American, French, and Italian artillery, we attacked the
+enemy position that lay on the far side of the Ravine Merval.
+
+The advance was made down the side of the valley in the face of a
+withering fire of enemy machine guns. Tho suffering heavy casualties,
+our progress was unchecked and we swarmed up the opposite slope with
+undiminished vigor. So rapid were our gains that we had to pause to
+allow our flanks to catch up. Our Third Platoon was so far ahead of the
+line of advance as to be mistaken by the commander of the cooperating
+French forces for a body of the enemy and it required considerable
+persuasion to correct his misconception. The day's end saw the German
+horde driven across the Aisne, and we were well beyond our original
+objective. But we had advanced true to form. Commenting on a previous
+attack made by another American unit, a French officer had remarked:
+"The Americans,--they are fools. Tell them to take one trench,--and they
+take _three_!"
+
+We had been operating on the line of the Vesle with several divisions
+but the 77th was the only American division to drive its way to the
+Aisne.
+
+Our gains were paid for with numerous casualties and when we received
+our relief it was thoroly welcome. It had been our longest consecutive
+stretch in the front line and we suffered not only from battle losses
+but we had also endured the utmost privation. Short rations, little
+water, exposed positions, and the constant necessity for watchfulness
+had undermined our strength to an unusual degree. We had been operating
+on the will to accomplish rather than on food and water.
+
+An Italian unit relieved our Company and we withdrew to a reserve
+position in the Vesle Valley, east of Fismes. Here, on the night of
+September 16th, our division was relieved by an Italian division and we
+pulled out of the sector.
+
+We looked forward to a period of rest, but it was not to be. Twenty
+kilometres of hiking brought us to the Arcis le Ponsart Forest, where we
+bivouaced for a day. Then into lorries for an all-night ride to Le
+Chatelier-sur-Marne, where our losses were replaced by a detachment from
+the 40th "Sunshine" Division. Two days of speculating as to our chances
+for a rest terminated when on the night of September 20th we were
+ordered to roll packs. We stepped off on a thirty-two kilometre hike at
+1:00 A.M., _via_ St. Menehould and Florent, and seventeen hours later we
+dragged ourselves into the Forêt de Maisons Petites where we were
+quartered in barracks at the edge of the Argonne Forest.
+
+
+The Argonne--September 26th to November 11th
+
+The memorable and decisive drive known as the Argonne-Meuse Offensive
+started on September 26th. That day found us entrenched near the main
+road at Florent,--a position in reserve of the 1st Army Corps.
+
+Actual operations were started that night, when the entire cannon of
+half a hundred divisions poured forth on the enemy its scorching fire.
+Next morning we moved to a position north of Florent, and three days
+later we moved thru the town of Le Four de Paris into those trenches
+north of La Harazee that had been deserted by the 122d German Regiment
+of the 2d Landwehr Division.
+
+
+The "Lost" Battalion
+
+October 2d we left the reserve and assumed a support position. On that
+day the forces in the line drove forward, but in the execution of the
+advance Companies E, H, I, K, L, and M of the 308th Infantry and Company
+K of the 307th Infantry found themselves trapped by the enemy on a hill
+north of the Bois de la Buironne. These units were the only ones to
+reach their objective but by thus advancing ahead of their flanks, they
+gave the enemy an opportunity to surround them. In this hazardous
+position they struggled as the "Lost" Battalion.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _Grim Business in the Argonne_
+ _A Unit of the 307th Infantry Waiting Orders to "Mop Up"_]
+
+We went forward to their relief on October 4th, but were held back by
+the effective machine-gun fire of the enemy. Next day we again strove to
+extricate the besieged battalion, but again we failed. Certain enemy
+machine guns were so placed that their hail of death was impassable.
+They seemed an insurmountable obstacle in the path of the entire 307th
+Infantry. The men of Company B knew that the machine-gun positions of
+the enemy must be taken. There was nothing, at that moment, that counted
+more than the capture of these positions. So on October 6th we attacked,
+giving no thought to risk. We did what we thought would have been
+impossible before we knew that it had to be done. Persistently we
+attacked in the face of the enemy fire and as the German resistance
+gradually weakened, we took the heretofore impregnable positions. Seven
+of our men were that day cited for exceptional bravery.
+
+On October 7th our division organized a concerted attack on the German
+lines. We realized the awful plight of the "Lost" Battalion and all day
+we fought against the enemy machine-gun nests. One by one they were
+silenced, and at 5:00 P.M. Company B, alone of all the division,
+succeeded in reaching and saving the "Lost" Battalion. The Germans were
+driven beyond the hill and once more the line was straightened out.
+
+
+Grand-Pre
+
+Another week and we had driven the Germans across the River Aire. We
+remained in a clump of woods until October 16th and then, not even
+waiting for our engineers to throw their bridges across the Aire, we
+waded the river and drove against Grand-Pre, which was the keystone of
+the enemy defense in the sector opposed by our division.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _The Ruined Prize--Grand-Pre, Captured October 16th, 1918_]
+
+We were stubbornly opposed by the 253d German Infantry of the 76th
+Reserve Division. Again and again we assaulted the position and finally,
+after a running fight thru the streets, the town was ours and the
+American wedge was in a fair way to split the entire German defense.
+
+We pulled out of the line on October 17th and withdrew 10 kilometres to
+a small forest near Apremont, being relieved by the 78th New Jersey
+Division. As usual, there was no rest, and on October 21st we moved to
+Fleville for a three-day stretch of trench digging. October 31st was
+spent in digging trenches in the Chattel Valley.
+
+We resumed our activities at the front on November 2d, keeping in mind
+that half injunction, half promise, credited to General Pershing: "Hell,
+Heaven, or Hoboken by Christmas!" We gave little thought to Heaven and
+less to Hell but, we were beginning to long for Hoboken, and we went
+forward with irresistible determination. Hiking _via_ St. Juvin to
+Thenorgues, we loaded into motor trucks. Unloading close to the lines,
+we swung into immediate action and on November 3d we wrested the village
+of Fontenoy from the 45th German Reserve Division, the following day
+capturing the village of Oches from the 76th German Reserve Division.
+
+
+Stonne
+
+Stonne, a village of strategical importance, was next selected by the
+enemy as a point of resistance. On November 5th the combined strength of
+our entire Regiment was hurled against the 195th German Division, and
+Stonne fell to us. The capture succeeded in liberating a French
+population that for four years had been under the dominance of an enemy
+army.
+
+ [Illustration: _The Company Sergeants. Camp Mills, May 1st, 1919_]
+
+The enemy by this time was retreating fast, and so closely did we press
+them, we were far in advance of our cannon. The progress of the big guns
+was much delayed by poor roads, but the spirit of victors was in us all
+and little did we miss our artillery.
+
+In quick succession we took town after town, the enemy losing to us in
+one day,--November 6th,--the villages of Raucourt, Haraucourt,
+Angecourt, and Remilly. The terror-stricken Hun gave little resistance
+and we kept within five minutes of their rear guard.
+
+
+The Armistice
+
+We came to a halt on the banks of the Meuse, four miles from the
+historic city of Sedan and, after augmenting our depleted ranks by
+replacement from the 38th "Cyclone" Division, we organized for what we
+hoped would be our final attack.
+
+But the final attack had already been made. The unconquerable Argonne
+had been conquered; a ruthless enemy was vanquished.
+
+Germany sued for Peace with defeat rather than face peace with Death.
+The last shot was fired at the Eleventh Hour of the Eleventh Day of the
+Eleventh Month, Nineteen Eighteen, and we rested on our arms worn and
+tired, but victorious and happy.
+
+The joy of accomplishment was ours and we celebrated the declaration of
+the armistice in a spirit far more triumphant than relieved.
+
+On November 12th the same French who had laughed at us in pity as we
+shouldered their task in the Argonne, hailed us with gratitude as they
+took over our positions.
+
+The march from the Meuse to our rest base in the Chateauvillain area
+took twenty-four days and covered 300 kilometres. It was an intermittent
+hike and we stopped successively at La Berliere, Oches, Harricourt,
+Fleville, Le Four de Paris, Florent, Sivry-sur-Ante, Noyers, Andernay,
+Hoericourt, Eclaron, Fresnay, Maisons, and Bayel, arriving at our base
+in Lanty on December 5th.
+
+It was soon apparent that altho we had been spared the alternatives we
+still were not going to see Hoboken before Christmas. So we made
+ourselves comfortable and settled down to a long stay.
+
+It was necessary to the maintenance of discipline and the morale of the
+army that drills should be continued, and as well as any recruit, we
+were once again schooled in the finesse of the salute, the art of the
+right face, and the strategy of shoulder arms. We engaged in manouvers
+to practice the lessons that we learned in the Argonne. And we passed in
+reviews before princes, generals, and congressmen. Time passed: not too
+quickly, but still it passed.
+
+
+Christmas, 1918
+
+Christmas was not the dreary day a Christmas away from home usually is.
+We had much for which to be thankful, and the intervening miles between
+Lanty and Home were no bar to those good wishes that came from our
+folks.
+
+We celebrated, we ate, and we played Santa Claus. A tree was erected in
+the centre of the village and we passed out to the civilian population
+candy and biscuits and tobacco. The women and children and men sincerely
+appreciated our tokens, and happiness reigned.
+
+The mess sergeant had an inspiration of genius and he served us with a
+truly Christmas dinner.
+
+New Year's Day was red-lettered with another meal worthy of our mess
+sergeant's reputation. The holiday season was over and we entered upon
+the new year full of new hopes and ambitions.
+
+
+Home
+
+Not until February 9th was another move made. Then, _en freight car_, we
+journeyed to the Le Mans area, detraining at Poillé from whence we hiked
+to La Roches Farm, near Auvers-le-Hamon. April 15th we entrained at
+Sable for Brest, where we were quartered at Camp Pontazaine.
+
+ [Illustration: ©_Underwood & Underwood_
+ _"La Guerre est Fini!" The Parade on Our Return. May 6th, 1919_]
+
+On April 19th, exactly one year after our arrival at Liverpool, we were
+lightered out to the United States Transport _America_.
+
+A fast ship and smooth waters combined to give us a rapid and enjoyable
+voyage and we docked at Hoboken at 9:00 A.M., April 28th. We proceeded
+to Camp Mills, Mineola, Long Island, where immediate passes gave us the
+opportunity to greet our home folks, eat home meals, and sleep in
+regular beds.
+
+The Company moved on May 5th to the armory of the 22d New York Engineers
+in New York City to await final orders for the parade of welcome
+arranged by New York City.
+
+We formed for the parade near Washington Square at 8:00 A.M. next
+morning and at 10:00 A.M. we marched out to Fifth Avenue and swept up
+that thorofare to the acclaim of a million throats. No greeting could
+have been more sincere, no welcome more impressive, and this, our last
+hike as Company B, was a march of glory.
+
+We returned to Camp Upton, our first station and our last, and we were
+demobilized on May 9th, 1919, to return to our respective states. Ours
+was a truly American company, composed of true and representative
+Americans. Our homes lay in thirty-two different states, scattered
+between New York and Maine in the east, Minnesota and the Dakotas in the
+north, Utah, Oregon, and California in the west, and Texas, Louisiana,
+and Florida in the south.
+
+So ends the History of Company B. We were mustered out of the service
+military, but the spirit that withstood the Lorraine, the valor that
+gained the Aisne, and the fire that conquered the Argonne, lives on, and
+we have banded ourselves together so that we may, in the words of our
+commander, Major General Robert Alexander, "serve our Country as well in
+Peace as we did in War".
+
+
+Sept., 1917 [Illustration: AEF] May, 1919
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: THEY SLEEP
+
+ GEORGE ALBERTS
+ CLAIR ANDREWS
+ BARNEY BARDMAN D·S·C·
+ BLANTON BARRETT
+ CHRISTIAN A. BATY
+ RAFFELE BIBO
+ JOHN BLACKBURN
+ JACOB BORKER
+ HUGH A. BRADY
+ LOUIS BRETH
+ WILLIAM F. BROPHY
+ CLAUDE C. BROWER
+ FRANK W. BURKE
+ MICHAEL CARLO
+ WALTER CASSIDY
+ FRANK CHARLES
+ JAMES CONNER
+ JAMES L. CRONIN
+ RICHARD CULLEN
+ JOHN P. DOLAN
+ JOSEPH V. DOMKUS
+ HYMAN FISHFANGER
+ ROBERT FLANAGAN
+ JAMES FOLLIAT, JR.
+ IRVING H. FRIEDMAN
+ HUGO GARBADEN
+ GEORGE E. GERRETT
+ JOHN GROVE
+ CLARENCE I. GRUBBS
+ JOSEPH P. HANLEY
+ SALIE HAUSNER
+ GEORGE L. HICKY
+ CHARLES L. KAURIN
+ JOSEPH KAYES
+ JOHN E. KELLY
+ PETER KNAB
+ MICHAEL MCCORMICK
+ MARTIN MCHUGH
+ ANDREW MCKINLEY
+ W. ALAN MATHEWS
+ EARL MILLSAP D·S·C·
+ ROYAL E. MORRIS
+ CHARLES MUNZINGER
+ ALFRED W. NICKERSON
+ PRIVATE NOONAN
+ WILLIAM OTTO
+ ALBERT C. PETERSON, D·S·C·
+ ERNEST W. PETERSON
+ PRIVATE PLAUMAN
+ ALBERT PRITCHARD
+ WILLIAM R. REID, D·S·C·
+ JOHN P. RHYNARD
+ ALBERT J. ROBARE
+ JAMES ROBINSON
+ W. ROZICHUCK
+ GEORGE F. RUSSELL
+ ELMER O. SELLERS
+ PRIVATE SCHILDKNECHT
+ BENJAMIN SILVERMAN
+ FRANK SKEETS
+ FRANK STANISKI
+ JOSEPH STRAUSS
+ MAURICE WACHTEL
+ JAMES WALSH
+ G. H. WOODS
+ PAUL ZUKASKY]
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: ROOKIES--_Camp Upton_.]
+
+THE ROSTER OF COMPANY B
+
+ Major Weston C. Jenkins, D. S. C. 208 West Thomas St., Rome, N. Y.
+ Major Fred A. Tillman, Legion of
+ Honor 19 Commercial St., Boston, Mass.
+ Captain Blanton Barrett, DECEASED Chamblee, Georgia.
+ *Captain Everett A. Butterfield,
+ Black Star Lambs' Club, New York.
+ Captain Philip Cheney South Manchester, Connecticut.
+ Captain Alexander D. B. Pratt 120 Broadway, New York.
+ Captain Alonzo D. Slagle Address unknown.
+ Captain Howard S. Smith New Haven, Connecticut.
+ 1st Lieutenant Joseph D. M. Adrian,
+ Jr. 50 Broad St., New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Marcus L. Chasins 27 William St., New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Alexander J.
+ Gillespie 251 West 81st St., New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Kenneth C. Lincoln 29 Bedford St., Fall River, Mass.
+ 1st Lieutenant George S. Mott Scranton, Pennsylvania.
+ 1st Lieutenant William R. Reid,
+ D. S. C., DECEASED Brooklyn, New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Harry R. Weiman St. Louis, Missouri.
+ 2d Lieutenant Atwood New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant William Eliot Long Island City, New York.
+ 2d Lieutenant Clarence I. Grubbs,
+ DECEASED Kansas City, Missouri.
+ 2d Lieutenant Foster A. Gunn Main St., Ottawa, Kan.
+ 2d Lieutenant Arthur J. Hamblen 150 West 106th St., New York.
+ 2d Lieutenant F. Hartig Address unknown.
+ 2d Lieutenant Hardon Yale Club, New York.
+ 2d Lieutenant Harrison McCann 2156 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ 2d Lieutenant George C. Mohlke 816 Grand Ave., Racine, Wis.
+ 2d Lieutenant O'Connell, DECEASED New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant Thomas O'Sullivan New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant William Randall New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant James Schofield 88 Main St., North Andover, Mass.
+ 2d Lieutenant Austin W. Woolford Virginia.
+ *1st Lieutenant William F. Babor 417 East 75th St., New York.
+ *1st Lieutenant Arthur D. Bromback 41 Division St., New Rochelle, N. Y.
+ *1st Lieutenant Raymond S. Hill East St. Louis, Illinois.
+ *1st Lieutenant Euclid L. Levasseur Farmers Loan & Trust Co., Paris, Fr.
+ *2d Lieutenant Herbert H. Harris 1445 Broadway, New York.
+ *2d Lieutenant Arthur S. Hoit 71 Broadway, New York.
+ *2d Lieutenant Paul F. Hunnewell 287 Main St., Winthrop, Mass.
+ *2d Lieutenant Louis Katz New York City.
+ *2d Lieutenant W. Alan Mathews,
+ DECEASED Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
+ *2d Lieutenant David H. Rose 915 Intervale Ave., New York.
+ *2d Lieutenant Edgar L. Schwartz 10 West 93rd St., New York.
+
+The officers before whose names has been placed an asterisk (*) were
+commissioned from the enlisted ranks of Company B and assigned to duty
+with other organizations.
+
+ Elwin Abbott, 188 Crescent St., Rutland, Vt.
+ Samuel Abrahamson, Nicolet, Minn.
+ Clarence R. Ackerly, 624 Broad St., Bridgeport, Conn.
+ Allan Adams, 68 West 102d St., New York.
+ James Adams, 107 West 89th St., New York.
+ Adolph Albrecht, 190 East 3d St., New York.
+ Carl Aldridge, Glen Allen, Ala.
+ Fred Alexander, Carterville, Ill.
+ M. Alpert, Watertown, N. Y.
+ Machis Ambrogio, 412 N. 21st St., Herrin, Ill.
+ Samuel Anders, McConnells, Ala.
+
+ [Illustration: _N. Y., February, 1918_]
+
+ Lloyd C. Anderson, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Robert Angeles, Route 2, Bethpage, Tenn.
+ Paul Annello, Box 19, Bristol, Conn.
+ Hugo Antonelli, 732 Nostrand Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Paul Antonelli, 732 Nostrand Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Nathan Aronson, 26 Norman St., Salem, Mass.
+ Isaac Ascher, 111 Haverschoff St., Boston.
+ Elmer O. Barber, Hillsboro, Ore.
+ Luke M. Barendsen, Valier, Vt.
+ Robert Barr, 108 West 49th St., New York.
+ John Barry, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Harry Bartlett, Mendon, Utah.
+ Fred C. Batchellor, 260 Laurel St., Hartford, Conn.
+ Thomas Baxter, 604 N. Maine St., Butte, Mont.
+ Herman Beck, 84 Rivington St., New York.
+ Louis Beckendorf, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ William Bell, 158 East 107th St., New York.
+ Earl D. Bement, Route 3, Sioux Falls, S. D.
+ David Bennett, 438 52d St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Thomas Bennett, Seymour, Conn.
+ Fred Berge, Bismarck, N. D.
+ Edward Bolma, Hill, Mont.
+ Paul D. Bond, 208 Cedar Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y.
+ J. A. Boyle, Long Island City, N. Y.
+ Leslie Bradney, Pangborn, Ark.
+ Charles H. Bradshaw, 179 Bainbridge St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Michael Bresnan, 95 Myrtle Ave., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Ralph U. Brett, 701 West 178th St., New York.
+ William Brunner, 193 Ann St., Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Harry Buckley, Columbia, Miss.
+ Volney Burnett, Box 464, Buhl, Idaho.
+ George Busko, Breckenridge, Minn.
+ Paul Calandra, 3 Eighth St., Rochester, N. Y.
+ Frank Camp, Route 10, Shelbyville, Ind.
+ James Carlin, 1115 Portland Ave., Woodhaven, N. Y.
+ Albert Carlson, Route 5, Hillsboro, Ore.
+ Charles J. Carolan, 497 Chauncey St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Thomas Carroll, 1894 Third Ave., New York.
+ Amedeo Caruso, 254 Allen St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Gregory Cavanaugh, 298 Lockwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Tony Charmonte, 2134 Moody Ave., Chicago.
+ Nordahl Chilsen, Blue Earth, Minn.
+ Nels C. Christiansen, Route 31, Tyler, Minn.
+ Isidore Cohen, 71 West 115th St., New York.
+ Leroy Connett, 2412 Roosevelt Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.
+ Patrick Conway, New York.
+ Frederick Coombs, Freeport, N. Y.
+ Joseph Coscia, 830 Cortland Ave., New York.
+ Leo Covert, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Edward M. Crimmins, 38 Maiden St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Michael J. Cudmore, 12 Mygott St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Joseph Covington, Meridan, Miss.
+ George Dahlquist, Winchester, Mass.
+ Walter L. Daum, Sullivan, Ill.
+ Antonio De Santis, 768 Vernon Ave., Long Island City, N. Y.
+ George Diegel, 22 Wissner Ave., Newburgh, N. Y.
+ A. James DiMaggio, 83 Oldtown Road, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Hugh A. Donnelly, 240 Ainslie St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Abraham Drazien, 446 E. 145th St., N. Y.
+ Fred Durham, Toluca, Ill.
+ Edward J. Dwyer, 523 North Division St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Elisha Eaves, Route 3, Macon, Miss.
+ Harold Eckstrom, 148 East 54th St., New York.
+ William Ehrmann, 138 Carlton Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Max Eisenberg, 547 83d St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Elwin M. Eldredge, 780 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Lewis Ellenbogen, 531 Bedford Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Ezra Epstein, 109 Eighth Ave., New York.
+ Anthony Esposito, South Nyack, N. Y.
+ Josiah E. Evans, 90 High St., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Thomas J. Fisher, Lincoln Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Don Fitzgerald, Wallerville, Miss.
+ Jerry Flanagan, 76 Michigan Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Albert Flass, 121 Ash St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ M. Fontanetta, 453 East 186th St., New York.
+ Charles Freidman, 107 East 2d St., New York.
+ Hershel Friedland, 215 Caldwell Ave., N. Y.
+ Samuel Friedman, 634 Kosciusko St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Richard Gadd, 375 61st St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Leslie Gaines, 713 South Huston Ave., Denniston, Tex.
+ George Gibson, Kimball, S. D.
+ J. Joseph Gillig, 324 East 4th St., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
+ Leslie Gleason, St. Mary's Home, Binghamton, N. Y.
+
+ [Illustration: VETERANS--_Auvers-le-Hamon_.]
+
+ Fred A. Gleiforst, 56 Freedom Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y.
+ John E. Glynn, 232 Jackson St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Samuel Goldenberg, 647 East 5th St., N. Y.
+ Ira Gomer, Marion, Pa.
+ Rossie Goodie, Prairie Elk, Mont.
+ Max Gordon, 761 Blake Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ John Greany, 171 East 99th St., New York.
+ Max Green, 1033 Hoe Ave., New York.
+ Herman Greening, 1029 Sherman Ave., South Bend, Ind.
+ Frank Guaracio, 612 Fort Hamilton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Edwin F. Haeg, Route 3, Ronneby, Minn.
+ Harry Hagen, Box Elder, Mont.
+ P. M. Hagen, Lansford, N. D.
+ Virgil M. Hale, Case Creek, Ark.
+ William J. Halperin, Dixwell Ave., New Haven, Conn.
+ Chris Hanson, Hannaford, N. D.
+ Gillrock Hanson, Route 1, Creston, Mont.
+ Theodore Harris, 500 West 175th St., N. Y.
+ Michael Hartnett, Main St., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Richard Hayden, Derby, Conn.
+ Raymond Healy, 547 West 186th St., New York.
+ Alfred Heller, 461 Steinway Ave., Astoria, N. Y.
+ John Henchy, 172 East 112th St., New York.
+ August Henke, Goshen, N. Y.
+ James Herron, Englewood, N. J.
+ Joseph Holland, Heber Springs, Ark.
+ Carl Holmes, Lambert Paper Co., Salt Lake City, Utah.
+ Carroll Honnicut, Burnsville, Miss.
+ William F. Howard, 315 Sixth Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ John Huston, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Ernest C. Hutchings, Manhasset, N. Y.
+ John Jackson, Box 145, Troy, Ind.
+ Leslie Jacobus, Broadway, Grand View, N. Y.
+ Harry Jensen, Route 9, Penn Yann, N. Y.
+ Kenneth Jensen, Shelly, Idaho.
+ Edward T. Johnson, Elkland, Pa.
+ Robert R. Johnson, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Julius Kaplan, 15 Walnut St., New Rochelle, N. Y.
+ Henry Kaufman, 1652 Madison Ave., N. Y.
+ Edward Kelly, 352 West 18th St., New York.
+ John F. Kelly, Adler, Mont.
+ J. H. Kiernan, 575 Main St., Wareham, Mass.
+ W. Claire Kiernan, 402 Second St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Elbert N. Kipp, 19 Charlotte St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Terence Kirk, 3 Hill St., Granton, N. J.
+ Julius Klausner, Jr., 324 East 4th St., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
+ George A. Klein, Jr., 95 Vernon Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Wallace S. Kline, Route 3, Neshoba, Tenn.
+ Frank X. Klotz, Davenport's Neck, New Rochelle, N. Y.
+ Peter Koch, Box 96, Stickney, S. D.
+ Anthony Kochan, Box 1000, Gowanda, N. Y.
+ Jack Konowich, Lackawanna, N. Y.
+ Reuben Koplowitz, 236 New Jersey Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Harvey L. Kreuscher, N. Spgville, S. I., N. Y.
+ Richard Lamb, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Arthur Lantman, Box 517, Hibbing, Minn.
+ Samuel Lapidus, 136 Clinton St., New York.
+ Timothy Leary, 427 West 13th St., New York.
+ David Leff, 91 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Patrick Lenihan, 249 West 135th St., New York.
+ Samuel Lesowitz, 1865 Park Place, Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Isaac Liebowitz, 531 Dumont Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Herman Lipman, 33 Montgomery St., N. Y.
+ Carl Lucas, 41 Water St., Ansonia, Conn.
+ James J. Lydon, 68 Gansevoort St., New York.
+ Thomas McCann, 709 West Dominick St., Rome, N. Y.
+ John McGinley, 183 Kingsland Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Arthur McManus, 199 Howard Ave., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Walter K. McNair, 26 East Ave., Gasport, N. Y.
+ James J. Malone, 28 Sedway St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ William Manz, 1275 Third Ave., New York.
+ John Marrow, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Waclaw Matyzasik, Beacon Falls, Conn.
+ William Mayer, 1919 Seventh Ave., New York.
+ James Menzies, 13A Green St., Everett, Mass.
+ E. R. Meyrowitz, 371 Vernon Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Ray Milburn, Keensburgh, Ill.
+ Herbert Millville, R. F. D. 14, La Salle, N. Y.
+ Joseph P. Monihan, 706 Woodlawn Ave., Wilmington, Del.
+ Richard Morgan, Dewitt, Ark.
+ David M. Moroney, 337 West 12th St., N. Y.
+ Thad L. Morris, Creshaw, Miss.
+ Edward Murphy, 56 West 105th St., New York.
+ Maurice Murphy, 124 Adelphi St., Bklyn, N.Y.
+ Stephen A. Murphy, 108 Eighth Ave., N. Y.
+ Harold Nicolson, Falton, Minn.
+ Morgan Norris, Cashion, Okla.
+ Charles A. O'Bryan, 1002 E. 98th St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ John Occhino, 6 Hanover Square, New York.
+ Carl Oeftering, 48 Penn Ave., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Daniel O'Neil, 951 Lafayette Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ S. Oshinsky, Wards Island, New York.
+
+ [Illustration: _France, April, 1919_]
+
+ Gilbert Paneth, 326 East 91st St., New York.
+ Gustave Pankratz, 17 Madison St., Rochester.
+ Benjamin Parker, 77 Kingsbury St., Waterbury, Conn.
+ Elmer Patterson, Burt, N. Y.
+ George Petersen, Kimbalton, Iowa.
+ Julian Poluzzi, 59 Hall Pl., W. Quincy, Mass.
+ John Prescott, 305 Webster St., Monterey, Cal.
+ Porter Priest, Mt. Morriston, Fla.
+ Andrew R. Purcella, 128 Caroline St., Derby, Conn.
+ John J. Quinn, Main St., Beacon Falls, Conn.
+ Patrick J. Quinn, 155 McConnell Ave., Buffalo.
+ Isidore Rabelskie, 55 Avenue C, New York.
+ Vito Racano, 1946 First Ave., New York.
+ Robert Radford, 112 Wilson Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Joseph Rainone, 438 East 116th St., New York.
+ Carey J. Reed, Prospect, Tenn.
+ Ralph Reid, Route A, St. Petersburg, Fla.
+ Frank Reid, 967 Madison St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Edward Rennie, 29 Franklin St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ George F. Roberts, 15 Ivy St., Elmhurst, N. Y.
+ Johannes Rodenburg, Star Route, Cumberland, Iowa.
+ Howard F. Roeding, 97 Miller Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Harry Roessler, 409 16th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ John A. Ross, 14 First St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Alexander Rossino, 228 Myrtle Ave., Buffalo.
+ Theodore Rubinstein, 215 Fourth Ave., N. Y.
+ Frank Russell, Carthage, Tenn.
+ James Sareri, Box 176, Oyster Bay, N. Y.
+ Edward Sasse, 204 Fifth Ave., Astoria, N. Y.
+ Clyde Savage, 80 Maple St., Bangor, Me.
+ Thomas J. Scanlon, 354 West 12th St., N. Y.
+ William Schaeffer, E. Topper St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Sigmund Schulz, 748 9th Ave., L. I. C., N. Y.
+ Harry Schwartz, 702 East Fifth St., New York.
+ Karl Schwarz, Jamaica Creek, Springfield Gardens, N. Y.
+ Fred E. Shaddock, 151 Ridgewood Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Harry Shapiro, 230 East 115th St., New York.
+ Aris M. Shellman, 303 West 111th St., N. Y.
+ Carl Shubert, Suffolk, Mont.
+ Abraham Siegel, 251 Amboy St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Morris Silver, 210 Riverdale Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ William Simpson, 620 Hudson St., New York.
+ William Skeets, Lockport, N. Y.
+ William Slater, South Dartmouth, Mass.
+ William Smith, Englewood, Cal.
+ W. E. Snyder, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Lee Solomon, Palmyra, Ill.
+ Arthur D. Soper, 28 Huron St., East Lynn, Mass.
+ Soren Sorenson, Ruthton, Minn.
+ Jacob Squire, 568 Grand St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Christopher Staudigal, 143 Bleecker St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Brodie Stewart, Rutherford, Tenn.
+ Earl C. Stewart, White Pine, Tenn.
+ William J. Strong, R. F. D. 12, Springville, Ala.
+ Otis Summers, Dwyer, Tenn.
+ Martin Swenson, Wetonka, S. D.
+ Thomas Swinehardt, 223 East Hendrick St., Shelbyville, Ind.
+ Philip Tasman, 155 Hickory St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Dudley Taylor, Turner, Ore.
+ James Taylor, Newmarket, Tenn.
+ Norman Taylor, Ashley, Mont.
+ R. F. Taylor, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Volney O. Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.
+ Voss Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.
+ Monroe Todd, Allen, S. C.
+ Deorato Tortora, 7 Old Wood Point Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Ray Turk, 6 Cedar St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Thomas F. Twyford, 807 E. 8th St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ John Urban, 28 Crandall St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Hillery Vaughn, Briggsville, Ark.
+ John P. Vaughn, 567 East Ave., Akron, O.
+ Modestino Vecchiarino, 16 Durand St., Danbury, Conn.
+ Fred Viemer, 11 Meadow St., Seymour, Conn.
+ Joseph Visentin, Wappinger Falls, N. Y.
+ Abraham Wald, 238 East 24th St., New York.
+ Cleve Wallace, Dyersburg, Tenn.
+ Donald M. Wallach, 71 East 92nd St., N. Y.
+ Harry Wernet, Eagle Grove, Iowa.
+ John J. Whalen, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Pearl Whittington, Gloucester, Miss.
+ Lee Wilkerson, Winchester, Ark.
+ Joseph Will, 12 Alice St., Rochester, N. Y.
+ Roland H. Williams, 25 Summerfield Place, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Edward J. Williamson, Jeffrey, La.
+ Albert G. Wilson, Jr., 400 Third St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ William Wilson, 240 Chestnut St., Lockport, N. Y.
+ Charles O. Woods, Beaver, Ore.
+ Merton Yandes, 115 South Union St., Rochester, N. Y.
+ Lewis Yasner, 190 Floyd St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Samuel Zashinsky, 381 Leonard St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Edward P. Zehler, Strykersville, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: {Distinguished Service Cross medal}]
+
+All Hail the Brave!
+
+Courage--that fidelity to purpose despite physical welfare--is the
+natural attribute of the soldier. But there are those exceptional deeds
+of valor that are committed beyond the right of expectation; they are
+deeds that combine the highest intelligence with the utmost bravery;
+they are those instances of self-sacrificial service that are rendered
+not with thought of hardship nor of pain nor of reward, but only with
+the hope that the foundations of our Country and our Homes remain
+unshaken.
+
+ [star] Star indicates a posthumous award.
+ * Asterisk denotes those who were killed after their citation.
+
+ [star]Private 1st Class Barney Bardman, Distinguished Service Cross,
+ Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ [star]Private Earl Millsap, Distinguished Service Cross, Asotin,
+ Washington.
+ [star]Private Albert C. Peterson, Distinguished Service Cross, Stacy,
+ Minnesota.
+ [star]1st Lieutenant William R. Reid, Distinguished Service Cross,
+ Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Major Weston C. Jenkins, Distinguished Service Cross, Rome, New York.
+ Major Fred A. Tillman, Chevalier, Legion d'Honneur de France, Ulster,
+ Pa.
+ Captain Everett A. Butterfield, French Order of the Black Star,
+ New York.
+
+
+Divisional Citations
+
+ Capt. Alexander D. B. Pratt, New York.
+ [star]2d Lt. Clarence I. Grubbs, Kansas City, Mo.
+ 2d Lt. Arthur J. Hamblen, New York.
+ 2d Lt. F. Hartig, address unknown.
+ 2d Lt. Kenneth C. Lincoln, Fall River, Mass.
+ 2d Lt. Harry R. Weiman, St. Louis, Mo.
+ Sergt. Lloyd C. Anderson, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Charles H. Bradshaw, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Louis Beckendorf, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ *Private Jacob Borker, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Ralph U. Brett, New York.
+ Pvt. 1st Class George Busko, Breckenridge, Minn.
+ *Pvt. James Conner, New York.
+ Corp. Patrick Conway, New York.
+ Sergt. Edward M. Crimmins, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Sergt. A. James DiMaggio, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Hugh A. Donnelly, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Corp. Edward J. Dwyer, Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Pvt. William Ehrmann, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Josiah E. Evans, Ansonia, Conn.
+ Pvt. 1st Class John Greany, New York.
+ Pvt. 1st Class P. M. Hagen, Lansford, N. D.
+ Corp. Gilrock Hanson, Creston, Mont.
+ Sergt. William F. Howard, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Ernest C. Hutchings, Manhasset, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Robert R. Johnson, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Pvt. John F. Kelly, Adler, Mont.
+ Sergt. George A. Klein, Jr., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Harvey A. Kreuscher, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class James J. Lydon, New York.
+ Sergt. Joseph P. Monihan, Wilmington, Del.
+ [star]Pvt. Alfred Nickerson, Lewiston, N. Y.
+ Pvt. Andrew R. Pucella, Derby, Conn.
+ Sergt. John A. Ross, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ [star]Sergt. George F. Russell, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Thomas J. Scanlon, New York.
+ Sergt. Aris M. Shellman, New York.
+ [star]Pvt. 1st Class Joseph Strauss, New York.
+ Sergt. Monroe Todd, Allen, S. C.
+ [star]Pvt. J. Robinson, Newfane, N. Y.
+ Pvt. Volney O. Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.
+ Corp. Frederick Viemer, Seymour, Conn.
+ Sergt. Donald M. Wallach, New York.
+
+
+
+
+ The
+ Burke [Illustration: {American Legion seal}] Kelly
+ Post
+
+
+
+That spirit of dominant Americanism with which the war was fought seems
+in these times of peace to be best reflected by the American Legion.
+
+Appreciating this, those members of Company B, 307th Infantry, who
+regarded with favor the idea of a post-bellum organization applied to
+the American Legion for a charter. One was granted and they were
+admitted as the Burke-Kelly Post No. 172.
+
+The name was selected in honor of the memory of two of their comrades:
+Sergeant Frank W. Burke, killed by a high explosive shell on the line of
+the Vesle, August 23d, 1918, and Corporal John E. Kelly, killed by a
+high explosive shell during the battle of Merval, September 8th, 1918.
+
+This publication of the History of Company B was made possible by the
+members of the Burke-Kelly Post under the following officers:
+
+ _President_
+ WILLIAM F. HOWARD
+
+ _Vice-Presidents_
+ JOHN A. ROSS
+ ARTHUR J. HAMBLEN
+ ALFRED HELLER
+
+ _Secretary_
+ A. JAMES DIMAGGIO
+
+ _Treasurer_
+ THOMAS F. TWYFORD
+
+ _Corresponding Secretary_
+ JULIUS KLAUSNER, JR.
+
+ _Executive Committee_
+ DONALD M. WALLACH
+ FRED A. GLEIFORST
+ RALPH U. BRETT
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: Watching the Home Fires]
+
+
+They were watched, and high they burned, by those who more than all else
+represented to us the concrete reason for which we served.
+
+None of us but _felt_ that we were fighting for our Country; but all of
+us _knew_ that we were fighting for our Home.
+
+Our Home Folks,--our Mothers and our Fathers, our Sisters and our Wives
+and our Sweethearts and our Friends--all banded together so that we,
+while never losing the _thought_ of Home, were also not to lose its
+_touch_.
+
+Those tenders of the fireside whom we knew as the "Family Unit" were
+organized as the Company B Family Unit and were affiliated with the
+307th Regimental Family Unit. They formed on our embarkation for
+overseas, and by virtue of a succession of meetings under the active and
+enthusiastic leadership of Mrs. William Vanamee and Miss Virginia Fuller
+they became welded into a body that accomplished immeasurable benefit
+not only for our physical but also for our spiritual welfare.
+
+The socks, the cigarettes, the wristlets and the soap were needs of vast
+import, but our knowledge that those behind us were marshaled just as we
+were was more warming than wristlets, more comforting than cigarettes.
+
+The officers during the early period were Miss Virginia Fuller,
+President; Miss Helen Pritchard, Secretary; Mrs. W. B. Wise, Treasurer.
+The meetings were held in a barren loft at 6 East 30th Street, New York
+City. Here the ideas were conceived, the plans formulated, and the
+policies acted upon, that were so far-reaching and effective.
+
+Tho first drawn together for the good of Company B, their own sufferings
+served to consolidate their interests and to strengthen their purpose.
+
+As notice after notice issued from Washington advising as to losses in
+battle by death and by wounds, the need for common consolation became
+most urgent and a noble response came from those who were in a position
+to give comfort. These were trying days, days of mental agony, days of
+longing and hoping and praying.
+
+In September one of our own men, Sergeant George A. Klein, Jr., who had
+been returned to the United States as an instructor, appeared at a
+meeting and gave word, mostly welcome, some sad, to the news-hungry
+relatives.
+
+These various activities were recorded in a small four-page bulletin
+published for and distributed to us overseas.
+
+And then the Armistice. Relief from the tension of the meetings was
+given by the final let-up of the war and soon the time came when much
+thought was given to filling those "9x4x3" boxes of Christmas cheer.
+
+ [Illustration: _The Ring_]
+
+The date of our return was flashed across the waters during the early
+part of April and immediately wheels were set in motion to prepare for
+it.
+
+Their welcome took the form of a reception and dance. For the first
+time, and the only time, Company B and the Family Unit were together.
+And as a token of their affection and regard they presented to each of
+us a silver signet ring bearing our Divisional insignia--Liberty,
+together with the Company and Regimental designation. Inside the ring
+they had placed as their wish: "May God Protect You."
+
+Guests of especial honor were the two McIntyre sisters, who were so
+active overseas with the Salvation Army and who for so long a time had
+been identified with our Division, having for a while been assigned to
+our own Regiment.
+
+Thus culminated the activities of the Family Unit of Company B. But just
+as we have decided upon a continuation of our organization--the same in
+substance, if not in form,--so the Unit decided to serve as the
+Auxiliary to the Burke-Kelly Post, American Legion.
+
+The Auxiliary meetings are held in the rooms adjoining those of the
+Burke-Kelly Post, at the 77th Division Club. The original board of
+officers includes Mrs. A. J. Hamblen, President; Miss Virginia Fuller,
+Miss Sarah Kelly, and Mrs. William Charles, Vice-Presidents; Miss Anna
+Charles, Secretary, and Mrs. W. B. Wise, Treasurer.
+
+And their banner is still held aloft. A new name, but the old purpose.
+
+ [Illustration: {Decoration}]
+
+ [Illustration: {Bugler playing Taps}]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Company B, 307th Infantry, by Julius Klausner
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPANY B, 307TH INFANTRY ***
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Company B, 307th infantry, by Julius Klausner.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Company B, 307th Infantry, by Julius Klausner
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Company B, 307th Infantry
+ Its history, honor roll, company roster, Sept., 1917, May, 1919
+
+Author: Julius Klausner
+
+Release Date: October 12, 2010 [EBook #33932]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPANY B, 307TH INFANTRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Patrick Hopkins and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tn">
+
+<h3>Transcriber's Note</h3>
+
+<p>&bull; Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. In all
+other cases geographical references, spelling, hyphenation, and
+capitalization have been retained as in the original publication.</p>
+
+<p>&bull; The position of some illustrations has been changed to improve readability.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 428px;">
+ <img src="images/icover.jpg" id="coverpage" width="428" height="600" alt="The History of Company B" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 157px;">
+ <img src="images/i001.jpg" width="157" height="400" alt="{Statue of Liberty with &quot;77&quot;}" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i002.jpg" width="600" height="343" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><i>U. S. Official Photo</i><br />
+ <i>La Forêt de Nesle, France. 307th Infantry in France</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<div style="background-image: url('images/i003b.jpg'); width: 600px; height: 820px; background-repeat: no-repeat; padding: 100px 10px 30px 0px; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;">
+<h1>COMPANY B<br />
+<br />
+307th INFANTRY</h1>
+<br />
+<br />
+<h2>ITS<br />
+HISTORY<br />
+HONOR ROLL<br />
+COMPANY ROSTER</h2>
+
+
+<div style="float: left; width: 33%; text-align: right; padding-top: 40px;">Sept., 1917</div>
+
+<div style="float: left; width: 33%; text-align: center;">
+ <img src="images/i003a.jpg" width="200" height="144" alt="AEF" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<div style="float: right; width: 33%; padding-top: 40px; text-align: left;">May, 1919</div>
+
+<div style="clear: both;">
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Compiled by</i><br />
+Julius Klausner, Jr.<br />
+1920</p>
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<div style="display: inline-block; padding: 5px 0 5px 0; text-align: center; border-top: 3px double black; border-bottom: 3px double black; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;">
+Upton * Flanders * Vosges * Lorraine * Vesle * Argonne * Home
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a><br />
+<a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px; text-align: right;">
+ <img src="images/i005.jpg" width="600" height="390" alt="{Man with US flag}" title="" />
+ <span style="font-size: 220%; font-style: italic;">We Who Live Remember&mdash;</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="noin">And remembering, we shall always seek to justify the self-sacrifice made
+by those companions who trained with us and fought with us but whom by
+virtue of their supreme service, we returned without.</p>
+
+<p class="noin">They died, but being dead, live on, and their spirits beckon us to
+strive toward that for which they died.</p>
+
+<p class="noin">The flag was their shrine&mdash;the fields of France their tomb&mdash;and they
+shall ever be wreathed with God's great glory.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 401px;">
+ <img src="images/i006.jpg" width="401" height="600" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption">© <i>Underwood &amp; Underwood</i><br />
+ <span class="smcap">Major-General Robert Alexander</span><br />
+ Commander of the Seventy-Seventh Division</span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>Major-General Robert Alexander to Company B</h2>
+
+<p class="noin"><span class="smcap">Greetings!</span></p>
+
+<p class="noin">I am very glad that Company B&mdash;307th Infantry is putting into this form
+the many memories of the Great War which remain with those of us who
+participated therein as bright spots in our path through life.</p>
+
+<p class="noin">The work done by the 77th Division was most notable and in that work
+Company B&mdash;307th Infantry took full part and contributed its full share.
+The record of the Company is one of which any organization might well be
+extremely proud. It took part in the operations in the Vosges; on the
+line of the Vesle; and in the advance from the Vesle to the Aisne&mdash;the
+77th Division being the <i>only</i> American division to reach the latter
+river. In the Argonne-Meuse Offensive which brought the war to a
+successful conclusion, the Company, with its Regiment, Brigade, and
+Division, played a noteworthy part. The battle losses incurred by
+Company B and the battle honors conferred upon members thereof speak for
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p class="noin">Not the least of the Company's exploits was that which, culminating on
+the evening of October 7th, 1918, brought relief to the long-beleaguered
+Battalion under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Charles W.
+Whittlesey&mdash;the so-called "Lost" Battalion.</p>
+
+<p class="noin">The officer to whom was granted the supreme honor of sharing with you as
+your Divisional Commander the toils, the dangers, and the honors of that
+supreme campaign salutes you! No Commander could ask more loyal support
+from his comrades of all ranks than was freely given me. For your future
+careers in civil life or wherever Fortune may lay your paths, you will
+carry with you my sincere best wishes and my affectionate regard. The
+qualities of courage, fidelity, and loyalty displayed by you during your
+service as soldiers will be, I am sure, at the disposal of your Country
+as well in Peace as they were in War.</p>
+
+<div style="float: right; text-align: center;">
+<img src="images/i007.jpg" width="300" height="90" alt="Signature" title="" /><br />
+<i>Formerly Major-General in Command of the 77th Division.</i></div>
+
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+<p class="noin">November 19th, 1919.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 460px;">
+ <img src="images/i008.jpg" width="460" height="600" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Captain Blanton Barrett</span><br />
+ <i>Killed in Action, July 21st, 1918</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+
+<div style="padding: 5px 0 5px 0; margin-bottom: 60px; text-align: center; border-top: 3px double black; border-bottom: 3px double black; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;">
+Upton * Flanders * Vosges * Lorraine * Vesle * Argonne * Home
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2>THE HISTORY OF COMPANY B<br />
+<br />
+307th INFANTRY</h2>
+
+<h3>
+<br />
+Camp Upton&mdash;September 10th to April 5th</h3>
+
+<p class="noin"><img src="images/i009.jpg" width="80" height="82" alt="I" title="" style="float: left; margin-right: 2px;" />NVITED&mdash;all of us. And we trooped down Yaphank-way, out
+on Long Island, as tho bound for a picnic. Which, for a week, it was.
+Then we were brought up short. On September 17, 1917, the 77th Division
+came to life. One of the first units to be organized within the division
+was Company B&mdash;307th Infantry, formed also on September 17th.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately we were on paper as a regular unit, we quickly took
+semblance of a military organization. Under the leadership of Captain
+Blanton Barrett, 1st Lieutenant Alexander D. B. Pratt, and 2d
+Lieutenants Philip Cheney and Everett A. Butterfield, we were gradually
+whipped into an efficient machine. Corporals were made and
+unmade&mdash;sergeants came and went&mdash;and we were drilled, drilled, drilled.</p>
+
+<p>We had exchanged our hair mattresses for straw, our china for tin, our
+homes for barracks, and they made us like it. At first we occupied but
+one building,&mdash;a rambling two-story affair having bunk rooms on all the
+upper floor. The lower floor was given over to kitchen, mess hall, and
+recreation room. The recreation room, however, was short lived, for as
+we grew in numbers it became necessary to fill it with bunks. And then,
+when we had grown to full strength&mdash;two hundred and fifty officers and
+men&mdash;we overflowed into another barracks of which we occupied half of
+both upper and lower floors.</p>
+
+<p>The advantages of a billiard table, a piano, and a talking machine were
+ours. We supported a miniature barber shop and a tailor. Talent we had
+a-plenty, and we ran our own shows.</p>
+
+<p>But we drilled, drilled, drilled. And we had schools&mdash;lots of 'em. When
+we were not doing the "school of the soldier", we attended bayonet
+school. The "school of the squad" divided time with gas instruction. The
+study of the automatic rifle was complicated, but so was the "school of
+the platoon". We practiced the manual of arms and learned how to throw
+hand grenades. Little by little we were perfected in the art of
+thinking, and knowing, and doing, the right thing at the right time.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i010.jpg" width="600" height="435" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><i>Camp Upton, New York. Bird&#39;s-eye View from Tower Hill</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Early in 1918 we felt ready. On Washington's Birthday our division
+paraded down Fifth Avenue a complete fighting machine. We were prepared
+for the next move and the cheers of the crowds had barely died when it
+came.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Upton to France&mdash;April 6th to April 20th</h3>
+
+<p>On the night of April 5th we were ordered to roll packs. We stacked our
+bunks and drew ammunition. And we were posted on a vigil of waiting.
+April 6th, 1918, Saturday, was the first anniversary of America's
+declaration of war. At two-thirty on that morning, in an air pleasantly
+crisp and flooded with moonlight, we marched to the railroad and
+entrained. Leaving Camp Upton at three-fifteen, we pulled into Long
+Island City just in time to be greeted by the usual six o'clock factory
+whistles.</p>
+
+<p>A waiting ferry engulfed our battalion and we were transported down the
+East River, around the Battery, and up the Hudson to Pier 59, at the
+foot of West Eighteenth Street, Manhattan. A methodical transfer was
+accomplished from the squat and stunted ferry to the gigantic but little
+known <i>Justicia</i>.</p>
+
+<p>While still under process of construction in the shipyards at Belfast,
+in Ireland, for the Holland American Line, the <i>Statendam</i> was
+commandeered by Great Britain at the beginning of the European war and
+was operated as a transport under the name <i>Justicia</i> by the White Star
+Line. She was at the time the fifth largest vessel afloat and that she
+was the especial prey of the German undersea navy is indicated by the
+fact that a submarine attacked her on a subsequent trip from England to
+the United States, on July 20th, and after a dramatic engagement lasting
+some twenty-four hours, she was sunk. Fourteen of a crew of seven
+hundred were lost.</p>
+
+<p>All day men and equipment poured onto the decks and into the hold of the
+giant transport. Our entire regiment and one battalion of the 308th
+Infantry were quartered between decks. Next morning, before reveille,
+the <i>Justicia</i> slipped quietly down New York Bay, thru Ambrose Channel,
+and into the Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>B Company had no quarters <i>de luxe</i>. We were crowded into small
+space&mdash;Section K&mdash;far down on D deck, with sleeping hammocks slung over
+our mess tables. And our mess, served by the British, was a sorry series
+of meals. We were compelled to wear during the day, and to sleep with
+during the night, ungainly life preservers. But discomforts were
+subordinated to the interest in our new surroundings. The mysteries of
+the big ship, its spotless engine-room, the intricacies of navigation,
+the precautions against possible attack,&mdash;all held us.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 600px;">
+ <a href="images/i011_full.jpg"><img src="images/i011.jpg" width="600" height="371" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><i>Among Those Present&mdash;A Group of NCO'S at Camp</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>On leaving New York we pursued a northerly course, and at nine o'clock
+that night anchor was dropped in lower Bedford Bay, at Halifax. Early
+next morning we steamed up into the inner harbor and before us lay the
+sadly devastated city of Halifax. Immense areas of the city had been
+totally destroyed by the explosion resulting from the collision between
+a Belgian relief ship and one bearing a cargo of explosives.</p>
+
+<p>That day and the next, while waiting for our convoy to assemble, was
+spent in practicing with lowered boats.</p>
+
+<p>Late on the afternoon of April 9th our convoy of ten passenger and cargo
+ships passed out of the harbor, sped by the cheers of the crews of two
+American battleships. We were escorted by <i>U. S. S. St. Louis</i> and <i>H.
+M. S. Victoria</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Boat drill, a well-ordered scramble for life boats, took place twice
+daily. Each morning we indulged in strenuous setting-up exercises in
+order that we might remain in trim. Practice with depth bombs and smoke
+screens helped to relieve the tedium of the long trip.</p>
+
+<p>As we neared our unknown destination, our escort was increased by ten
+British torpedo boat destroyers. Veritable sea dogs they were, darting
+every which-way, breasting wave after wave, ever watchful for the tricky
+Hun.</p>
+
+<p>And then, on Friday. April 19th, land! Just a ridge above the
+horizon&mdash;the blue hills of Wales&mdash;but already we could feel in our
+imaginations the solidity which our unsailorly legs had missed.</p>
+
+<p>As the day waned we sighted the lighthouse at the mouth of the River
+Mersey. With cheers of relief we were permitted to doff our bulky life
+belts. Just before dusk we entered the Mersey, passing closely by the
+beautiful seaside resort of New Brighton.</p>
+
+<p>Forging up the river we reached Liverpool and, at nine o'clock that
+evening, after almost fourteen days afloat, our transport was moored.
+The city, as we saw it from the decks of the <i>Justicia</i>, lay quietly,
+with lights beginning to twinkle in the increasing gloom.</p>
+
+<p>One by one the companies formed and debarked, and at 11:15 P.M. B
+Company marched down the gang plank, thru half-lighted sheds, into those
+curious side-door railway cars so peculiar to Europe. Exactly at
+midnight our train pulled out of Liverpool. At 3:00 A.M. a short stop
+for hot coffee was made at Rugby. We passed thru the outskirts of London
+at 6:00 A.M. and at nine-twenty the train rolled into the terminal at
+Dover.</p>
+
+<p>The private yacht of Belgium's Queen Elizabeth had been pressed into
+service as a cross-channel ferry and in this royal craft, under escort
+of destroyers, aeroplanes, and dirigibles, we crossed to Calais in an
+hour and thirty-five minutes. The crossing was enlivened when two
+riflemen of the crew took to firing at mines that endangered our
+passage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>Picardy and Flanders&mdash;April 20th to June 10th</h3>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i012.jpg" width="600" height="362" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption">© <i>Underwood &amp; Underwood<br />
+ "Let's Go!" Washington's Birthday, 1918</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Once in Calais we found that we divided honors with Company C of our
+regiment in being the first two National Army companies to land in
+France, having debarked on French soil April 20, 1918.</p>
+
+<p>That night we experienced our first real touch of war. Sheltered in
+tents in British Rest Camp No. 6, we received a call of welcome from a
+squadron of Jerry aeroplanes. A truly thrilling reception it was, with
+the thunder of Hun bombs alternating with the "ping!" of British
+anti-aircraft guns,&mdash;and thru it all the "pat-pat" of a multitude of
+machine guns. But best of all, there were no casualties.</p>
+
+<p>Next day we spent in adding to our equipment gas masks and trench
+helmets and we exchanged our American Enfield rifles for British
+Enfields,&mdash;lighter, shorter pieces having a magazine capacity of ten
+rounds of ammunition.</p>
+
+<p>April 23d introduced us to the famous little "<i>40 hommes&mdash;8 chevaux</i>"
+box-cars of the French. A three-hour journey in these brought us to the
+British base at Audruicq. Our first real hike started from here and
+ended at Zouafques, a little village in Picardy. We occupied some of the
+best sheep-pens, cattle stalls, and hen roosts in town and during our
+five-week stay we became really comfortable inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>Zouafques proved to be a sort of military high school, where we polished
+our elementary knowledge of tactics. Our "noncoms" were sent to
+specialized schools in scouting, sniping, musketry, automatic rifles,
+grenades, and infantry tactics. The instruction, as well as the food and
+equipment, was distinctly British.</p>
+
+<p>Five weeks of this work and we took our next step trench-ward. Hiking
+from Zouafques at 1.30 A.M., May 13th, we entrained <i>a la chevaux</i> at
+Audruicq. A day's journey <i>via</i> Calais, Boulogne, Etaps, and Doullens
+brought us to Mondrecourt, in Flanders. Then an almost heartbreaking
+hike thru Pas to the war-worn village of Couin.</p>
+
+<p>Our assimilation by the British forces became most complete when we
+found ourselves brigaded with a battalion of the Lancashire Fusileers of
+the 125th British Brigade. Our position was in reserve of the British
+lines north of Amiens and southwest of Arras.</p>
+
+<p>Here another five weeks of training gave us the right to work alone.
+Once again we traded rifles, retrieving our American guns, and on June
+6th we started on a three-day march. Thru Gézaincourt, Bernaville, Ailly
+le-Haut Clocher, to Pont Remy, where we entrained.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>Vosges and the Lorraine&mdash;June 11th to August 7th</h3>
+
+<p>Two days by rail, <i>via</i> Amiens, Versailles, Bar-le-Duc, and Nancy, and
+we detrained on June 11th at Thaon, in the Vosges. Then an intermittent
+hike, with stops at Longchamps, Destord, and Menil, passing thru
+Rambervillers and Baccarat, to Vacqueville, in the Lorraine.</p>
+
+<p>A stirring incident occurred <i>en route</i> when we passed the boys of the
+old Sixty-Ninth New York Regiment. Brooklyn hailed Brooklyn; Harlem
+called to Harlem; Bronx met Bronx. It was a breath of home to the
+already veteran Sixty-Ninth and more than a cheering welcome to us.</p>
+
+<p>We shared Vacqueville with a battalion of the Alabama regiment of the
+42d "Rainbow" Division. Advance parties were sent into the lines to
+acquaint themselves with the position which we were to take over. And in
+the dead of night, on June 20th-21st, Company B took over that part of
+the line between Ancerviller and Badonviller designated as P. C. (post
+commandant) Hameau and P. C. Montreux.</p>
+
+<p>The first and second platoons of our Company held a position in the
+Grand Bois (Big Woods), a section of forest southeast of Ancerviller.
+The second and third platoons and Company headquarters occupied the
+ruined village of St. Maurice. St. Maurice was a part of the line at
+this point and had been subjected at different times to severe shelling.
+Only bare skeletons of the buildings remained and any nook or cranny
+between sections of walls and under a bit of roof was used as shelter.
+Deserted cellars had been bolstered, reinforced, and barricaded so that
+they would serve as shell-proof protection in the event of attack.</p>
+
+
+<h3>The First Gas Attack</h3>
+
+<p>It was usually Fritz's intention to place a harassing barrage on any
+section of the line where he knew that a relief was being effected. But
+he was less watchful than usual when we went in.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i013.jpg" width="600" height="412" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><i>U. S. Official Photo</i>
+ <i>"Hotel de Barn"&mdash;Showing Barber Shop and Reading and Writing Rooms</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The enemy awoke, however, three days later, on the morning of Monday,
+June 24th, and attacked our regimental outposts. In order to effectively
+prevent any assistance being rendered by the platoons stationed in St.
+Maurice, a heavy barrage was laid on the town beginning at 3:30 A.M.
+During the early part of the shell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>ing the continual use of H. E.'s
+(high explosive shells), with an occasional gas shell, served to keep
+the men not only penned in their bomb-proof cellars, but also forced the
+continued use of gas masks. Gradually the H. E.'s were interspersed with
+gas shells until a point was reached where far more gas shells than high
+explosives fell into the town, resulting in a heavy blanket of phosgene,
+mustard, and lachrymatory gases settling over the position.</p>
+
+<p>The barrage did not lift until 6:00 A.M. and when it did the platoons
+were forced to take a defensive position to guard against any possible
+success of the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>During the night before the attack, the men had been digging until a
+late hour on a system of trench defense. This entailed a lack of sleep
+which, together with the continued wearing of the gas mask and the
+exposure endured immediately after the barrage, weakened their
+resistance to such an extent as to make them easy victims to the
+poisonous gases.</p>
+
+<p>Seventy-nine men were forced to the hospital by the effects of the
+combined phosgene and mustard. Among them were our first sergeant,
+supply and mess sergeants, all but one of our cooks, and both mechanics,
+which left us decidedly crippled.</p>
+
+<p>The shadow of our losses was deepened when we heard that Cook George
+Alberts, always popular, had died from gas inhaled while trying to
+prepare the company breakfast in a gas-filled kitchen. He was our first
+loss by death.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i014.jpg" width="600" height="439" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><i>U. S. Official Photo</i><br />
+ <i>Shell-Proof Dugout&mdash;A Shelter in St. Maurice</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>An immediate result of our losses was the extra work shouldered by those
+who had escaped any of the serious effects. The men left in St. Maurice
+remained on constant guard until the Company was relieved several days
+later.</p>
+
+<p>During the short rest period that followed, a reorganization of the
+Company was accomplished and we again entered the lines in July, taking
+over P. C.'s Hameau and Montreux, as before.</p>
+
+
+<h3>The Daylight Raid</h3>
+
+<p>On Sunday, July 21st, a patrol of fifty-two men from our Company,
+accompanied by two medical first-aid men, engaged in a raid on the
+German trenches at two-thirty in the afternoon. The party advanced on
+the enemy lines in single<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> file, divided in four groups which were
+respectively commanded by Sergeant Todd, Captain Barrett, Sergeant
+Bromback and Lieutenant Mohlke.</p>
+
+<p>The intent was to surprise the enemy with a daylight raid and thereby
+obtain information thru capture and observation. But either thru
+knowledge or by chance, the Germans had prepared against this maneuver
+and the surprise was reversed.</p>
+
+<p>Waiting until our patrol was fairly within their lines, and then
+partially surrounding them, the enemy centered upon our men a deadly
+fire of rifles, machine guns, and grenades. The raiders fought valiantly
+in return but were outnumbered four to one. After an hour's fighting,
+seventeen of our party, including Captain Barrett, lay dead, and sixteen
+were captured. Of the twenty-one who returned, thirteen were wounded. We
+were informed by two German prisoners captured a few days later that
+seventeen Germans had been killed.</p>
+
+<p>The loss sustained in this daylight raid occasioned considerable
+comment, chiefly because it was generally believed that Captain Barrett
+had misread his orders,&mdash;that the time for action had really read 2:30
+A.M. instead of 2:30 P.M. This, however, is quite untrue, inasmuch as
+all the Company officers, as well as the supply sergeant and company
+clerk, were conversant with the orders. Captain Barrett's immediate
+battalion and regimental superiors were present at or near the time of
+action and possessed full knowledge of the entire plan.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 472px;">
+ <a href="images/i015_full.jpg"><img src="images/i015.jpg" width="472" height="433" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><i>The Baccarat Sector, Showing St. Maurice and the Grand Bois</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The defeat was caused solely by the lack of the intended element of
+surprise. Whether or not the enemy had possession of our plans, and if
+they had possession, how they obtained it, is something we shall never
+know.</p>
+
+<p>A telegram was received by the Divisional Commander from General
+Headquarters to the effect that the entire action had been investigated
+and found creditable.</p>
+
+<p>The casualties suffered from the raid, together with those resulting
+from the gas attack of June 24th, so depleted the Company as to make an
+immediate relief imperative and that same night Company L took over our
+sector.</p>
+
+<p>A subsequent reorganization of the entire regiment distributed the men
+of the various companies so that all would have an equal strength. Our
+numbers were so few that we lost none of our men in this process but
+instead received increases not only from many of the other companies,
+but also from the 76th New England Division.</p>
+
+<p>As tribute to those men whom we had lost, a Company B mass was held at
+the Catholic Church in Vacqueville at which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> Chaplain Father Walsh of
+our battalion officiated. The entire strength of the Company was
+present.</p>
+
+<p>Another rest and another turn up front, after which the entire division
+was relieved by the 37th Ohio and Kentucky Division. Once again we
+crossed the Vosges, halting for three days at Seranville. Leaving there,
+we bivouaced for a night in the Forêt de Charmes and entrained at
+Charmes next morning, August 7th, at dawn.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 290px;">
+ <a href="images/i016_full.jpg"><img src="images/i016.jpg" width="290" height="600" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><i>The Advance from the Vesle to the Aisne</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<h3>From the Vesle to the Aisne&mdash;August 10th to September 15th</h3>
+
+<p>Two days later, August 10th, we took transport on an immense train of
+motor trucks&mdash;"lorries" we called them, after the English. They were
+driven by Indo-Chinese serving under the French. After nine cramped but
+interesting hours&mdash;we passed thru Chateau-Thierry&mdash;our trip ended at
+Fere en Tardenois. For three days we camped in a small wood and then we
+moved to a position supporting the attack on Fismes. We were stationed
+in the Bois de la Pissotti, adjoining the Forêt de Nesle. While there we
+were engaged in digging a series of reserve trenches near
+Mont-sur-Courville.</p>
+
+<p>On August 28th the battalion moved around Chéry-Chartreuve to a position
+east of Le Prés Farm. September 1st we again shifted, this time crossing
+the Vesle and relieving the Third Battalion, just east of Bazoches. Here
+we repulsed a raiding party, inflicting heavy losses upon the enemy. We
+were then moved to a ravine, which gave us the opportunity of taking a
+two-day rest.</p>
+
+<p>Our next move brought us to face with the enemy just south of Merval,
+where we took a position in an exposed field, our only protection being
+the individual "funk holes" which had been deserted by the retreating
+German troops.</p>
+
+<p>After three days of little water and practically no food, at 5:30 on the
+afternoon of September 8th&mdash;still brilliant daylight&mdash;we crawled from
+our funk holes and, each squad in single file in formation known as
+"squad columns", we advanced against German artillery in an effort to
+straighten the line. As we reached the outskirts of Merval we were
+subjected to an intense barrage of H. E.'s, suffering the loss of four
+men killed and five injured.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 265px;">
+ <a href="images/i017_full.jpg"><img src="images/i017.jpg" width="265" height="963" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><i>Our Path Thru the Argonne</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>No gain was made by this sortie and we drew back to our funk-hole
+position awaiting further developments.</p>
+
+<p>Early on the morning of September 14th, supported by a barrage laid down
+by combined American, French, and Italian artillery, we attacked the
+enemy position that lay on the far side of the Ravine Merval.</p>
+
+<p>The advance was made down the side of the valley in the face of a
+withering fire of enemy machine guns. Tho suffering heavy casualties,
+our progress was unchecked and we swarmed up the opposite slope with
+undiminished vigor. So rapid were our gains that we had to pause to
+allow our flanks to catch up. Our Third Platoon was so far ahead of the
+line of advance as to be mistaken by the commander of the cooperating
+French forces for a body of the enemy and it required considerable
+persuasion to correct his misconception. The day's end saw the German
+horde driven across the Aisne, and we were well beyond our original
+objective. But we had advanced true to form. Commenting on a previous
+attack made by another American unit, a French officer had remarked:
+"The Americans,&mdash;they are fools. Tell them to take one trench,&mdash;and they
+take <i>three</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>We had been operating on the line of the Vesle with several divisions
+but the 77th was the only American division to drive its way to the
+Aisne.</p>
+
+<p>Our gains were paid for with numerous casualties and when we received
+our relief it was thoroly welcome. It had been our longest consecutive
+stretch in the front line and we suffered not only from battle losses
+but we had also endured the utmost privation. Short rations, little
+water, exposed positions, and the constant necessity for watchfulness
+had undermined our strength to an unusual degree. We had been operating
+on the will to accomplish rather than on food and water.</p>
+
+<p>An Italian unit relieved our Company and we withdrew to a reserve
+position in the Vesle Valley, east of Fismes. Here, on the night of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+September 16th, our division was relieved by an Italian division and we
+pulled out of the sector.</p>
+
+<p>We looked forward to a period of rest, but it was not to be. Twenty
+kilometres of hiking brought us to the Arcis le Ponsart Forest, where we
+bivouaced for a day. Then into lorries for an all-night ride to Le
+Chatelier-sur-Marne, where our losses were replaced by a detachment from
+the 40th "Sunshine" Division. Two days of speculating as to our chances
+for a rest terminated when on the night of September 20th we were
+ordered to roll packs. We stepped off on a thirty-two kilometre hike at
+1:00 A.M., <i>via</i> St. Menehould and Florent, and seventeen hours later we
+dragged ourselves into the Forêt de Maisons Petites where we were
+quartered in barracks at the edge of the Argonne Forest.</p>
+
+
+<h3>The Argonne&mdash;September 26th to November 11th</h3>
+
+<p>The memorable and decisive drive known as the Argonne-Meuse Offensive
+started on September 26th. That day found us entrenched near the main
+road at Florent,&mdash;a position in reserve of the 1st Army Corps.</p>
+
+<p>Actual operations were started that night, when the entire cannon of
+half a hundred divisions poured forth on the enemy its scorching fire.
+Next morning we moved to a position north of Florent, and three days
+later we moved thru the town of Le Four de Paris into those trenches
+north of La Harazee that had been deserted by the 122d German Regiment
+of the 2d Landwehr Division.</p>
+
+
+<h3>The "Lost" Battalion</h3>
+
+<p>October 2d we left the reserve and assumed a support position. On that
+day the forces in the line drove forward, but in the execution of the
+advance Companies E, H, I, K, L, and M of the 308th Infantry and Company
+K of the 307th Infantry found themselves trapped by the enemy on a hill
+north of the Bois de la Buironne. These units were the only ones to
+reach their objective but by thus advancing ahead of their flanks, they
+gave the enemy an opportunity to surround them. In this hazardous
+position they struggled as the "Lost" Battalion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i018.jpg" width="600" height="426" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><i>U. S. Official Photo<br />
+ Grim Business in the Argonne<br />
+ A Unit of the 307th Infantry Waiting Orders to "Mop Up"</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>We went forward to their relief on October 4th, but were held back by
+the effective machine-gun fire of the enemy. Next day we again strove to
+extricate the besieged battalion, but again we failed. Certain enemy
+machine guns were so placed that their hail of death was impassable.
+They seemed an insurmountable obstacle in the path of the entire 307th
+Infantry. The men of Company B knew that the machine-gun positions of
+the enemy must be taken. There was nothing, at that moment, that counted
+more than the capture of these positions. So on October 6th we attacked,
+giving no thought to risk. We did what we thought would have been
+impossible before we knew that it had to be done. Persistently we
+attacked in the face of the enemy fire and as the German resistance
+gradually weakened, we took the heretofore impregnable positions. Seven
+of our men were that day cited for exceptional bravery.</p>
+
+<p>On October 7th our division organized a concerted attack on the German
+lines. We realized the awful plight of the "Lost" Battalion and all day
+we fought against the enemy machine-gun nests. One by one they were
+silenced, and at 5:00 P.M. Company B, alone of all the division,
+succeeded in reaching and saving the "Lost" Battalion. The Germans were
+driven beyond the hill and once more the line was straightened out.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Grand-Pre</h3>
+
+<p>Another week and we had driven the Germans across the River Aire. We
+remained in a clump of woods until October 16th and then, not even
+waiting for our engineers to throw their bridges across the Aire, we
+waded the river and drove against Grand-Pre, which was the keystone of
+the enemy defense in the sector opposed by our division.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i019.jpg" width="600" height="407" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><i>U. S. Official Photo<br />
+ The Ruined Prize&mdash;Grand-Pre, Captured October 16th, 1918</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>We were stubbornly opposed by the 253d German Infantry of the 76th
+Reserve Division. Again and again we assaulted the position and finally,
+after a running fight thru the streets, the town was ours and the
+American wedge was in a fair way to split the entire German defense.</p>
+
+<p>We pulled out of the line on October 17th and withdrew 10 kilometres to
+a small forest near Apremont, being relieved by the 78th New Jersey
+Division. As usual, there was no rest, and on October 21st we moved to
+Fleville for a three-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>day stretch of trench digging. October 31st was
+spent in digging trenches in the Chattel Valley.</p>
+
+<p>We resumed our activities at the front on November 2d, keeping in mind
+that half injunction, half promise, credited to General Pershing: "Hell,
+Heaven, or Hoboken by Christmas!" We gave little thought to Heaven and
+less to Hell but, we were beginning to long for Hoboken, and we went
+forward with irresistible determination. Hiking <i>via</i> St. Juvin to
+Thenorgues, we loaded into motor trucks. Unloading close to the lines,
+we swung into immediate action and on November 3d we wrested the village
+of Fontenoy from the 45th German Reserve Division, the following day
+capturing the village of Oches from the 76th German Reserve Division.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Stonne</h3>
+
+<p>Stonne, a village of strategical importance, was next selected by the
+enemy as a point of resistance. On November 5th the combined strength of
+our entire Regiment was hurled against the 195th German Division, and
+Stonne fell to us. The capture succeeded in liberating a French
+population that for four years had been under the dominance of an enemy
+army.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 600px;">
+ <a href="images/i020_full.jpg"><img src="images/i020.jpg" width="600" height="277" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><i>The Company Sergeants. Camp Mills, May 1st, 1919</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The enemy by this time was retreating fast, and so closely did we press
+them, we were far in advance of our cannon. The progress of the big guns
+was much delayed by poor roads, but the spirit of victors was in us all
+and little did we miss our artillery.</p>
+
+<p>In quick succession we took town after town, the enemy losing to us in
+one day,&mdash;November 6th,&mdash;the villages of Raucourt, Haraucourt,
+Angecourt, and Remilly. The terror-stricken Hun gave little resistance
+and we kept within five minutes of their rear guard.</p>
+
+
+<h3>The Armistice</h3>
+
+<p>We came to a halt on the banks of the Meuse, four miles from the
+historic city of Sedan and, after augmenting our depleted ranks by
+replacement from the 38th "Cyclone" Division, we organized for what we
+hoped would be our final attack.</p>
+
+<p>But the final attack had already been made. The unconquerable Argonne
+had been conquered; a ruthless enemy was vanquished.</p>
+
+<p>Germany sued for Peace with defeat rather than face peace with Death.
+The last shot was fired at the Eleventh Hour of the Eleventh Day of the
+Eleventh Month, Nineteen Eighteen, and we rested on our arms worn and
+tired, but victorious and happy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The joy of accomplishment was ours and we celebrated the declaration of
+the armistice in a spirit far more triumphant than relieved.</p>
+
+<p>On November 12th the same French who had laughed at us in pity as we
+shouldered their task in the Argonne, hailed us with gratitude as they
+took over our positions.</p>
+
+<p>The march from the Meuse to our rest base in the Chateauvillain area
+took twenty-four days and covered 300 kilometres. It was an intermittent
+hike and we stopped successively at La Berliere, Oches, Harricourt,
+Fleville, Le Four de Paris, Florent, Sivry-sur-Ante, Noyers, Andernay,
+Hoericourt, Eclaron, Fresnay, Maisons, and Bayel, arriving at our base
+in Lanty on December 5th.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon apparent that altho we had been spared the alternatives we
+still were not going to see Hoboken before Christmas. So we made
+ourselves comfortable and settled down to a long stay.</p>
+
+<p>It was necessary to the maintenance of discipline and the morale of the
+army that drills should be continued, and as well as any recruit, we
+were once again schooled in the finesse of the salute, the art of the
+right face, and the strategy of shoulder arms. We engaged in manouvers
+to practice the lessons that we learned in the Argonne. And we passed in
+reviews before princes, generals, and congressmen. Time passed: not too
+quickly, but still it passed.</p>
+
+
+<h3>Christmas, 1918</h3>
+
+<p>Christmas was not the dreary day a Christmas away from home usually is.
+We had much for which to be thankful, and the intervening miles between
+Lanty and Home were no bar to those good wishes that came from our
+folks.</p>
+
+<p>We celebrated, we ate, and we played Santa Claus. A tree was erected in
+the centre of the village and we passed out to the civilian population
+candy and biscuits and tobacco. The women and children and men sincerely
+appreciated our tokens, and happiness reigned.</p>
+
+<p>The mess sergeant had an inspiration of genius and he served us with a
+truly Christmas dinner.</p>
+
+<p>New Year's Day was red-lettered with another meal worthy of our mess
+sergeant's reputation. The holiday season was over and we entered upon
+the new year full of new hopes and ambitions.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>Home</h3>
+
+<p>Not until February 9th was another move made. Then, <i>en freight car</i>, we
+journeyed to the Le Mans area, detraining at Poillé from whence we hiked
+to La Roches Farm, near Auvers-le-Hamon. April 15th we entrained at
+Sable for Brest, where we were quartered at Camp Pontazaine.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 600px;">
+ <img src="images/i021.jpg" width="600" height="430" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption">© <i>Underwood &amp; Underwood<br />
+ "La Guerre est Fini!" The Parade on Our Return. May 6th, 1919</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>On April 19th, exactly one year after our arrival at Liverpool, we were
+lightered out to the United States Transport <i>America</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A fast ship and smooth waters combined to give us a rapid and enjoyable
+voyage and we docked at Hoboken at 9:00 A.M., April 28th. We proceeded
+to Camp Mills, Mineola, Long Island, where immediate passes gave us the
+opportunity to greet our home folks, eat home meals, and sleep in
+regular beds.</p>
+
+<p>The Company moved on May 5th to the armory of the 22d New York Engineers
+in New York City to await final orders for the parade of welcome
+arranged by New York City.</p>
+
+<p>We formed for the parade near Washington Square at 8:00 A.M. next
+morning and at 10:00 A.M. we marched out to Fifth Avenue and swept up
+that thorofare to the acclaim of a million throats. No greeting could
+have been more sincere, no welcome more impressive, and this, our last
+hike as Company B, was a march of glory.</p>
+
+<p>We returned to Camp Upton, our first station and our last, and we were
+demobilized on May 9th, 1919, to return to our respective states. Ours
+was a truly American company, composed of true and representative
+Americans. Our homes lay in thirty-two different states, scattered
+between New York and Maine in the east, Minnesota and the Dakotas in the
+north, Utah, Oregon, and California in the west, and Texas, Louisiana,
+and Florida in the south.</p>
+
+<p>So ends the History of Company B. We were mustered out of the service
+military, but the spirit that withstood the Lorraine, the valor that
+gained the Aisne, and the fire that conquered the Argonne, lives on, and
+we have banded ourselves together so that we may, in the words of our
+commander, Major General Robert Alexander, "serve our Country as well in
+Peace as we did in War".
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<br /></p>
+<div style="float: left; width: 33%; text-align: right; padding-top: 40px;">Sept., 1917</div>
+
+<div style="float: left; width: 33%; text-align: center;">
+ <img src="images/i003a.jpg" width="200" height="144" alt="AEF" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<div style="float: right; width: 33%; padding-top: 40px; text-align: left;">May, 1919</div>
+
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 377px;">
+ <a href="images/i023_full.jpg"><img src="images/i023.jpg" width="377" height="600" alt="THEY SLEEP" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+ <a href="images/i024_full.jpg"><img src="images/i024.jpg" width="800" height="298" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Rookies</span>&mdash;<i>Camp Upton</i>.</span>
+</div>
+
+<h2>THE ROSTER OF COMPANY B</h2>
+
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>Major Weston C. Jenkins, D. S. C.</td><td>208 West Thomas St., Rome, N.&nbsp;Y.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Major Fred A. Tillman, Legion of Honor</td><td>19 Commercial St., Boston, Mass.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Captain Blanton Barrett, <span class="smcap">DECEASED</span></td><td>Chamblee, Georgia.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*Captain Everett A. Butterfield, Black Star</td><td>Lambs' Club, New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Captain Philip Cheney</td><td>South Manchester, Connecticut.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Captain Alexander D. B. Pratt</td><td>120 Broadway, New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Captain Alonzo D. Slagle</td><td>Address unknown.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Captain Howard S. Smith</td><td>New Haven, Connecticut.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>1st Lieutenant Joseph D. M. Adrian, Jr.</td><td>50 Broad St., New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>1st Lieutenant Marcus L. Chasins</td><td>27 William St., New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>1st Lieutenant Alexander J. Gillespie</td><td>251 West 81st St., New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>1st Lieutenant Kenneth C. Lincoln</td><td>29 Bedford St., Fall River, Mass.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>1st Lieutenant George S. Mott</td><td>Scranton, Pennsylvania.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>1st Lieutenant William R. Reid, D. S. C., <span class="smcap">DECEASED</span></td><td>Brooklyn, New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>1st Lieutenant Harry R. Weiman</td><td>St. Louis, Missouri.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Atwood</td><td>New York City.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant William Eliot</td><td>Long Island City, New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Clarence I. Grubbs, <span class="smcap">DECEASED</span></td><td>Kansas City, Missouri.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Foster A. Gunn</td><td>Main St., Ottawa, Kan.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Arthur J. Hamblen</td><td>150 West 106th St., New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant F. Hartig</td><td>Address unknown.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Hardon</td><td>Yale Club, New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Harrison McCann</td><td>2156 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant George C. Mohlke</td><td>816 Grand Ave., Racine, Wis.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant O'Connell, <span class="smcap">DECEASED</span></td><td>New York City.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Thomas O'Sullivan</td><td>New York City.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant William Randall</td><td>New York City.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant James Schofield</td><td>88 Main St., North Andover, Mass.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>2d Lieutenant Austin W. Woolford</td><td>Virginia.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*1st Lieutenant William F. Babor</td><td>417 East 75th St., New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*1st Lieutenant Arthur D. Bromback</td><td>41 Division St., New Rochelle, N.&nbsp;Y.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*1st Lieutenant Raymond S. Hill</td><td>East St. Louis, Illinois.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*1st Lieutenant Euclid L. Levasseur</td><td>Farmers Loan &amp; Trust Co., Paris, Fr.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*2d Lieutenant Herbert H. Harris</td><td>1445 Broadway, New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*2d Lieutenant Arthur S. Hoit</td><td>71 Broadway, New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*2d Lieutenant Paul F. Hunnewell</td><td>287 Main St., Winthrop, Mass.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*2d Lieutenant Louis Katz</td><td>New York City.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*2d Lieutenant W. Alan Mathews, <span class="smcap">DECEASED</span></td><td>Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*2d Lieutenant David H. Rose</td><td>915 Intervale Ave., New York.</td></tr>
+<tr><td>*2d Lieutenant Edgar L. Schwartz</td><td>10 West 93rd St., New York.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The officers before whose names has been placed an asterisk (*) were
+commissioned from the enlisted ranks of Company B and assigned to duty
+with other organizations.</p>
+
+<div class="col_left">
+<p class="hang">Elwin Abbott, 188 Crescent St., Rutland, Vt.</p>
+<p class="hang">Samuel Abrahamson, Nicolet, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Clarence R. Ackerly, 624 Broad St., Bridgeport, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Allan Adams, 68 West 102d St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">James Adams, 107 West 89th St., New York.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="col_right">
+<p class="hang">Adolph Albrecht, 190 East 3d St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Carl Aldridge, Glen Allen, Ala.</p>
+<p class="hang">Fred Alexander, Carterville, Ill.</p>
+<p class="hang">M. Alpert, Watertown, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Machis Ambrogio, 412 N. 21st St., Herrin, Ill.</p>
+</div>
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
+ <a href="images/i025_full.jpg"><img src="images/i025.jpg" width="800" height="297" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><i>N.&nbsp;Y., February, 1918</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="col_left">
+<p class="hang">Lloyd C. Anderson, Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Robert Angeles, Route 2, Bethpage, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Paul Annello, Box 19, Bristol, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Hugo Antonelli, 732 Nostrand Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Paul Antonelli, 732 Nostrand Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Nathan Aronson, 26 Norman St., Salem, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang">Isaac Ascher, 111 Haverschoff St., Boston.</p>
+<p class="hang">Elmer O. Barber, Hillsboro, Ore.</p>
+<p class="hang">Luke M. Barendsen, Valier, Vt.</p>
+<p class="hang">Robert Barr, 108 West 49th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Barry, Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Bartlett, Mendon, Utah.</p>
+<p class="hang">Fred C. Batchellor, 260 Laurel St., Hartford, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas Baxter, 604 N. Maine St., Butte, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">Herman Beck, 84 Rivington St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Louis Beckendorf, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Bell, 158 East 107th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Earl D. Bement, Route 3, Sioux Falls, S. D.</p>
+<p class="hang">David Bennett, 438 52d St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas Bennett, Seymour, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Fred Berge, Bismarck, N. D.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward Bolma, Hill, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">Paul D. Bond, 208 Cedar Ave., Richmond Hill, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">J. A. Boyle, Long Island City, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Leslie Bradney, Pangborn, Ark.</p>
+<p class="hang">Charles H. Bradshaw, 179 Bainbridge St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Michael Bresnan, 95 Myrtle Ave., Ansonia, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Ralph U. Brett, 701 West 178th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Brunner, 193 Ann St., Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Buckley, Columbia, Miss.</p>
+<p class="hang">Volney Burnett, Box 464, Buhl, Idaho.</p>
+<p class="hang">George Busko, Breckenridge, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Paul Calandra, 3 Eighth St., Rochester, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Frank Camp, Route 10, Shelbyville, Ind.</p>
+<p class="hang">James Carlin, 1115 Portland Ave., Woodhaven, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Albert Carlson, Route 5, Hillsboro, Ore.</p>
+<p class="hang">Charles J. Carolan, 497 Chauncey St., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas Carroll, 1894 Third Ave., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Amedeo Caruso, 254 Allen St., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Gregory Cavanaugh, 298 Lockwood Ave., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Tony Charmonte, 2134 Moody Ave., Chicago.</p>
+<p class="hang">Nordahl Chilsen, Blue Earth, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Nels C. Christiansen, Route 31, Tyler, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Isidore Cohen, 71 West 115th St., New York.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="col_right">
+<p class="hang">Leroy Connett, 2412 Roosevelt Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.</p>
+<p class="hang">Patrick Conway, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Frederick Coombs, Freeport, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Joseph Coscia, 830 Cortland Ave., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Leo Covert, Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward M. Crimmins, 38 Maiden St., Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Michael J. Cudmore, 12 Mygott St., Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Joseph Covington, Meridan, Miss.</p>
+<p class="hang">George Dahlquist, Winchester, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang">Walter L. Daum, Sullivan, Ill.</p>
+<p class="hang">Antonio De Santis, 768 Vernon Ave., Long Island City, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">George Diegel, 22 Wissner Ave., Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">A. James DiMaggio, 83 Oldtown Road, Staten Island, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Hugh A. Donnelly, 240 Ainslie St., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Abraham Drazien, 446 E. 145th St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Fred Durham, Toluca, Ill.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward J. Dwyer, 523 North Division St., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Elisha Eaves, Route 3, Macon, Miss.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harold Eckstrom, 148 East 54th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Ehrmann, 138 Carlton Ave., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Max Eisenberg, 547 83d St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Elwin M. Eldredge, 780 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Lewis Ellenbogen, 531 Bedford Ave., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Ezra Epstein, 109 Eighth Ave., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Anthony Esposito, South Nyack, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Josiah E. Evans, 90 High St., Ansonia, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas J. Fisher, Lincoln Ave., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Don Fitzgerald, Wallerville, Miss.</p>
+<p class="hang">Jerry Flanagan, 76 Michigan Ave., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Albert Flass, 121 Ash St., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">M. Fontanetta, 453 East 186th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Charles Freidman, 107 East 2d St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Hershel Friedland, 215 Caldwell Ave., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Samuel Friedman, 634 Kosciusko St., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Richard Gadd, 375 61st St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Leslie Gaines, 713 South Huston Ave., Denniston, Tex.</p>
+<p class="hang">George Gibson, Kimball, S. D.</p>
+<p class="hang">J. Joseph Gillig, 324 East 4th St., Mount Vernon, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Leslie Gleason, St. Mary's Home, Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
+ <a href="images/i026_full.jpg"><img src="images/i026.jpg" width="800" height="269" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Veterans</span>&mdash;<i>Auvers-le-Hamon</i>.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div style="float: left; width: 45%;">
+<p class="hang">Fred A. Gleiforst, 56 Freedom Ave., Richmond Hill, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John E. Glynn, 232 Jackson St., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Samuel Goldenberg, 647 East 5th St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Ira Gomer, Marion, Pa.</p>
+<p class="hang">Rossie Goodie, Prairie Elk, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">Max Gordon, 761 Blake Ave., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Greany, 171 East 99th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Max Green, 1033 Hoe Ave., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Herman Greening, 1029 Sherman Ave., South Bend, Ind.</p>
+<p class="hang">Frank Guaracio, 612 Fort Hamilton Ave., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edwin F. Haeg, Route 3, Ronneby, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Hagen, Box Elder, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">P. M. Hagen, Lansford, N. D.</p>
+<p class="hang">Virgil M. Hale, Case Creek, Ark.</p>
+<p class="hang">William J. Halperin, Dixwell Ave., New Haven, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Chris Hanson, Hannaford, N. D.</p>
+<p class="hang">Gillrock Hanson, Route 1, Creston, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">Theodore Harris, 500 West 175th St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Michael Hartnett, Main St., Ansonia, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Richard Hayden, Derby, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Raymond Healy, 547 West 186th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Alfred Heller, 461 Steinway Ave., Astoria, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Henchy, 172 East 112th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">August Henke, Goshen, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">James Herron, Englewood, N. J.</p>
+<p class="hang">Joseph Holland, Heber Springs, Ark.</p>
+<p class="hang">Carl Holmes, Lambert Paper Co., Salt Lake City, Utah.</p>
+<p class="hang">Carroll Honnicut, Burnsville, Miss.</p>
+<p class="hang">William F. Howard, 315 Sixth Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Huston, Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Ernest C. Hutchings, Manhasset, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Jackson, Box 145, Troy, Ind.</p>
+<p class="hang">Leslie Jacobus, Broadway, Grand View, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Jensen, Route 9, Penn Yann, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Kenneth Jensen, Shelly, Idaho.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward T. Johnson, Elkland, Pa.</p>
+<p class="hang">Robert R. Johnson, Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Julius Kaplan, 15 Walnut St., New Rochelle, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Henry Kaufman, 1652 Madison Ave., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward Kelly, 352 West 18th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">John F. Kelly, Adler, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">J. H. Kiernan, 575 Main St., Wareham, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang">W. Claire Kiernan, 402 Second St., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Elbert N. Kipp, 19 Charlotte St., Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Terence Kirk, 3 Hill St., Granton, N. J.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style="float: right; width: 45%; margin-left: 10%;">
+<p class="hang">Julius Klausner, Jr., 324 East 4th St., Mount Vernon, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">George A. Klein, Jr., 95 Vernon Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Wallace S. Kline, Route 3, Neshoba, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Frank X. Klotz, Davenport's Neck, New Rochelle, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Peter Koch, Box 96, Stickney, S. D.</p>
+<p class="hang">Anthony Kochan, Box 1000, Gowanda, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Jack Konowich, Lackawanna, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Reuben Koplowitz, 236 New Jersey Ave., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harvey L. Kreuscher, N. Spgville, S. I., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Richard Lamb, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Arthur Lantman, Box 517, Hibbing, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Samuel Lapidus, 136 Clinton St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Timothy Leary, 427 West 13th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">David Leff, 91 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Patrick Lenihan, 249 West 135th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Samuel Lesowitz, 1865 Park Place, Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Isaac Liebowitz, 531 Dumont Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Herman Lipman, 33 Montgomery St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Carl Lucas, 41 Water St., Ansonia, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">James J. Lydon, 68 Gansevoort St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas McCann, 709 West Dominick St., Rome, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John McGinley, 183 Kingsland Ave., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Arthur McManus, 199 Howard Ave., Ansonia, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Walter K. McNair, 26 East Ave., Gasport, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">James J. Malone, 28 Sedway St., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Manz, 1275 Third Ave., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Marrow, Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Waclaw Matyzasik, Beacon Falls, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Mayer, 1919 Seventh Ave., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">James Menzies, 13A Green St., Everett, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang">E. R. Meyrowitz, 371 Vernon Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Ray Milburn, Keensburgh, Ill.</p>
+<p class="hang">Herbert Millville, R. F. D. 14, La Salle, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Joseph P. Monihan, 706 Woodlawn Ave., Wilmington, Del.</p>
+<p class="hang">Richard Morgan, Dewitt, Ark.</p>
+<p class="hang">David M. Moroney, 337 West 12th St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thad L. Morris, Creshaw, Miss.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward Murphy, 56 West 105th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Maurice Murphy, 124 Adelphi St., Bklyn, N.Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Stephen A. Murphy, 108 Eighth Ave., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harold Nicolson, Falton, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Morgan Norris, Cashion, Okla.</p>
+<p class="hang">Charles A. O'Bryan, 1002 E. 98th St., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Occhino, 6 Hanover Square, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Carl Oeftering, 48 Penn Ave., Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Daniel O'Neil, 951 Lafayette Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">S. Oshinsky, Wards Island, New York.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
+ <a href="images/i027_full.jpg"><img src="images/i027.jpg" width="800" height="266" alt="" title="" /></a>
+ <span class="caption"><i>France, April, 1919</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<div style="float: left; width: 45%;">
+<p class="hang">Gilbert Paneth, 326 East 91st St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Gustave Pankratz, 17 Madison St., Rochester.</p>
+<p class="hang">Benjamin Parker, 77 Kingsbury St., Waterbury, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Elmer Patterson, Burt, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">George Petersen, Kimbalton, Iowa.</p>
+<p class="hang">Julian Poluzzi, 59 Hall Pl., W. Quincy, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Prescott, 305 Webster St., Monterey, Cal.</p>
+<p class="hang">Porter Priest, Mt. Morriston, Fla.</p>
+<p class="hang">Andrew R. Purcella, 128 Caroline St., Derby, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">John J. Quinn, Main St., Beacon Falls, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Patrick J. Quinn, 155 McConnell Ave., Buffalo.</p>
+<p class="hang">Isidore Rabelskie, 55 Avenue C, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Vito Racano, 1946 First Ave., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Robert Radford, 112 Wilson Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Joseph Rainone, 438 East 116th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Carey J. Reed, Prospect, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Ralph Reid, Route A, St. Petersburg, Fla.</p>
+<p class="hang">Frank Reid, 967 Madison St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward Rennie, 29 Franklin St., Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">George F. Roberts, 15 Ivy St., Elmhurst, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Johannes Rodenburg, Star Route, Cumberland, Iowa.</p>
+<p class="hang">Howard F. Roeding, 97 Miller Ave., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Roessler, 409 16th St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John A. Ross, 14 First St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Alexander Rossino, 228 Myrtle Ave., Buffalo.</p>
+<p class="hang">Theodore Rubinstein, 215 Fourth Ave., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Frank Russell, Carthage, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">James Sareri, Box 176, Oyster Bay, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward Sasse, 204 Fifth Ave., Astoria, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Clyde Savage, 80 Maple St., Bangor, Me.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas J. Scanlon, 354 West 12th St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Schaeffer, E. Topper St., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Sigmund Schulz, 748 9th Ave., L. I. C., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Schwartz, 702 East Fifth St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Karl Schwarz, Jamaica Creek, Springfield Gardens, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Fred E. Shaddock, 151 Ridgewood Ave., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Shapiro, 230 East 115th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Aris M. Shellman, 303 West 111th St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Carl Shubert, Suffolk, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">Abraham Siegel, 251 Amboy St., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Morris Silver, 210 Riverdale Ave., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Simpson, 620 Hudson St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Skeets, Lockport, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Slater, South Dartmouth, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Smith, Englewood, Cal.</p>
+<p class="hang">W. E. Snyder, Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Lee Solomon, Palmyra, Ill.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style="float: right; width: 45%; margin-left: 10%;">
+<p class="hang">Arthur D. Soper, 28 Huron St., East Lynn, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang">Soren Sorenson, Ruthton, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Jacob Squire, 568 Grand St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Christopher Staudigal, 143 Bleecker St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Brodie Stewart, Rutherford, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Earl C. Stewart, White Pine, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">William J. Strong, R. F. D. 12, Springville, Ala.</p>
+<p class="hang">Otis Summers, Dwyer, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Martin Swenson, Wetonka, S. D.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas Swinehardt, 223 East Hendrick St., Shelbyville, Ind.</p>
+<p class="hang">Philip Tasman, 155 Hickory St., Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Dudley Taylor, Turner, Ore.</p>
+<p class="hang">James Taylor, Newmarket, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Norman Taylor, Ashley, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang">R. F. Taylor, Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Volney O. Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.</p>
+<p class="hang">Voss Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.</p>
+<p class="hang">Monroe Todd, Allen, S. C.</p>
+<p class="hang">Deorato Tortora, 7 Old Wood Point Road, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Ray Turk, 6 Cedar St., Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Thomas F. Twyford, 807 E. 8th St., Bkln, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">John Urban, 28 Crandall St., Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Hillery Vaughn, Briggsville, Ark.</p>
+<p class="hang">John P. Vaughn, 567 East Ave., Akron, O.</p>
+<p class="hang">Modestino Vecchiarino, 16 Durand St., Danbury, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Fred Viemer, 11 Meadow St., Seymour, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Joseph Visentin, Wappinger Falls, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Abraham Wald, 238 East 24th St., New York.</p>
+<p class="hang">Cleve Wallace, Dyersburg, Tenn.</p>
+<p class="hang">Donald M. Wallach, 71 East 92nd St., N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Harry Wernet, Eagle Grove, Iowa.</p>
+<p class="hang">John J. Whalen, Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Pearl Whittington, Gloucester, Miss.</p>
+<p class="hang">Lee Wilkerson, Winchester, Ark.</p>
+<p class="hang">Joseph Will, 12 Alice St., Rochester, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Roland H. Williams, 25 Summerfield Place, Staten Island, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward J. Williamson, Jeffrey, La.</p>
+<p class="hang">Albert G. Wilson, Jr., 400 Third St., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">William Wilson, 240 Chestnut St., Lockport, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Charles O. Woods, Beaver, Ore.</p>
+<p class="hang">Merton Yandes, 115 South Union St., Rochester, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Lewis Yasner, 190 Floyd St., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Samuel Zashinsky, 381 Leonard St., Bklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">Edward P. Zehler, Strykersville, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 100px;">
+ <img src="images/i028.jpg" width="100" height="164" alt="{Military medal}" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<h2>All Hail the Brave!</h2>
+
+<div class="cap">COURAGE&mdash;that fidelity to purpose despite physical welfare&mdash;is the
+natural attribute of the soldier. But there are those exceptional deeds
+of valor that are committed beyond the right of expectation; they are
+deeds that combine the highest intelligence with the utmost bravery;
+they are those instances of self-sacrificial service that are rendered
+not with thought of hardship nor of pain nor of reward, but only with
+the hope that the foundations of our Country and our Homes remain
+unshaken.</div>
+
+<p class="center"><img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" /> Star indicates a posthumous award.<br />
+* Asterisk denotes those who were killed after their citation.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="noin"><img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />Private 1st Class Barney Bardman, Distinguished Service Cross, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.<br />
+<img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />Private Earl Millsap, Distinguished Service Cross, Asotin, Washington.<br />
+<img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />Private Albert C. Peterson, Distinguished Service Cross, Stacy, Minnesota.<br />
+<img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />1st Lieutenant William R. Reid, Distinguished Service Cross, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.<br />
+<img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Major Weston C. Jenkins, Distinguished Service Cross, Rome, New York.<br />
+<img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Major Fred A. Tillman, Chevalier, Legion d'Honneur de France, Ulster, Pa.<br />
+<img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Captain Everett A. Butterfield, French Order of the Black Star, New York.</p></blockquote>
+
+<h3>Divisional Citations</h3>
+
+<div class="col_left">
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Capt. Alexander D. B. Pratt, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />2d Lt. Clarence I. Grubbs, Kansas City, Mo.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />2d Lt. Arthur J. Hamblen, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />2d Lt. F. Hartig, address unknown.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />2d Lt. Kenneth C. Lincoln, Fall River, Mass.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />2d Lt. Harry R. Weiman, St. Louis, Mo.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Lloyd C. Anderson, Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Charles H. Bradshaw, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class Louis Beckendorf, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang">*Private Jacob Borker, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Ralph U. Brett, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class George Busko, Breckenridge, Minn.</p>
+<p class="hang">*Pvt. James Conner, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Corp. Patrick Conway, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Edward M. Crimmins, Binghamton, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. A. James DiMaggio, Staten Island, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class Hugh A. Donnelly, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Corp. Edward J. Dwyer, Buffalo, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. William Ehrmann, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Josiah E. Evans, Ansonia, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class John Greany, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class P. M. Hagen, Lansford, N. D.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="col_right">
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Corp. Gilrock Hanson, Creston, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. William F. Howard, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Ernest C. Hutchings, Manhasset, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class Robert R. Johnson, Newburgh, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. John F. Kelly, Adler, Mont.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. George A. Klein, Jr., Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Harvey A. Kreuscher, Staten Island, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class James J. Lydon, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Joseph P. Monihan, Wilmington, Del.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />Pvt. Alfred Nickerson, Lewiston, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. Andrew R. Pucella, Derby, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. John A. Ross, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />Sergt. George F. Russell, Brooklyn, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. 1st Class Thomas J. Scanlon, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Aris M. Shellman, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />Pvt. 1st Class Joseph Strauss, New York.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Monroe Todd, Allen, S. C.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/star.jpg" height="11" width="11" alt="{star}" />Pvt. J. Robinson, Newfane, N.&nbsp;Y.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Pvt. Volney O. Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Corp. Frederick Viemer, Seymour, Conn.</p>
+<p class="hang"><img src="images/1x1.gif" height="11" width="11" alt="" />Sergt. Donald M. Wallach, New York.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div style="clear: both;"></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>The<br />
+Burke <img src="images/i029.jpg" width="60" height="58" alt="{American Legion seal}" title="" style="vertical-align: middle;" /> Kelly<br />
+Post</h2>
+
+<p>That spirit of dominant Americanism with which the war was fought seems
+in these times of peace to be best reflected by the American Legion.</p>
+
+<p>Appreciating this, those members of Company B, 307th Infantry, who
+regarded with favor the idea of a post-bellum organization applied to
+the American Legion for a charter. One was granted and they were
+admitted as the Burke-Kelly Post No. 172.</p>
+
+<p>The name was selected in honor of the memory of two of their comrades:
+Sergeant Frank W. Burke, killed by a high explosive shell on the line of
+the Vesle, August 23d, 1918, and Corporal John E. Kelly, killed by a
+high explosive shell during the battle of Merval, September 8th, 1918.</p>
+
+<p>This publication of the History of Company B was made possible by the
+members of the Burke-Kelly Post under the following officers:</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>President</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">William F. Howard</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Vice-Presidents</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">John A. Ross<br />
+Arthur J. Hamblen<br />
+Alfred Heller</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Secretary</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">A. James DiMaggio</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Treasurer</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">Thomas F. Twyford</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Corresponding Secretary</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">Julius Klausner, Jr.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Executive Committee</i><br />
+<span class="smcap">Donald M. Wallach<br />
+Fred A. Gleiforst<br />
+Ralph U. Brett</span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 800px;">
+ <img src="images/i030.jpg" width="800" height="294" alt="Watching the Home Fires" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>They were watched, and high they burned, by those who more than all else
+represented to us the concrete reason for which we served.</p>
+
+<p>None of us but <i>felt</i> that we were fighting for our Country; but all of
+us <i>knew</i> that we were fighting for our Home.</p>
+
+<p>Our Home Folks,&mdash;our Mothers and our Fathers, our Sisters and our Wives
+and our Sweethearts and our Friends&mdash;all banded together so that we,
+while never losing the <i>thought</i> of Home, were also not to lose its
+<i>touch</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Those tenders of the fireside whom we knew as the "Family Unit" were
+organized as the Company B Family Unit and were affiliated with the
+307th Regimental Family Unit. They formed on our embarkation for
+overseas, and by virtue of a succession of meetings under the active and
+enthusiastic leadership of Mrs. William Vanamee and Miss Virginia Fuller
+they became welded into a body that accomplished immeasurable benefit
+not only for our physical but also for our spiritual welfare.</p>
+
+<p>The socks, the cigarettes, the wristlets and the soap were needs of vast
+import, but our knowledge that those behind us were marshaled just as we
+were was more warming than wristlets, more comforting than cigarettes.</p>
+
+<p>The officers during the early period were Miss Virginia Fuller,
+President; Miss Helen Pritchard, Secretary; Mrs. W. B. Wise, Treasurer.
+The meetings were held in a barren loft at 6 East 30th Street, New York
+City. Here the ideas were conceived, the plans formulated, and the
+policies acted upon, that were so far-reaching and effective.</p>
+
+<p>Tho first drawn together for the good of Company B, their own sufferings
+served to consolidate their interests and to strengthen their purpose.</p>
+
+<p>As notice after notice issued from Washington advising as to losses in
+battle by death and by wounds, the need for common consolation became
+most urgent and a noble response came from those who were in a position
+to give comfort. These were trying days, days of mental agony, days of
+longing and hoping and praying.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In September one of our own men, Sergeant George A. Klein, Jr., who had
+been returned to the United States as an instructor, appeared at a
+meeting and gave word, mostly welcome, some sad, to the news-hungry
+relatives.</p>
+
+<p>These various activities were recorded in a small four-page bulletin
+published for and distributed to us overseas.</p>
+
+<p>And then the Armistice. Relief from the tension of the meetings was
+given by the final let-up of the war and soon the time came when much
+thought was given to filling those "9x4x3" boxes of Christmas cheer.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 200px;">
+ <img src="images/i031a.jpg" width="200" height="155" alt="" title="" />
+ <span class="caption"><i>The Ring</i></span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The date of our return was flashed across the waters during the early
+part of April and immediately wheels were set in motion to prepare for
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Their welcome took the form of a reception and dance. For the first
+time, and the only time, Company B and the Family Unit were together.
+And as a token of their affection and regard they presented to each of
+us a silver signet ring bearing our Divisional insignia&mdash;Liberty,
+together with the Company and Regimental designation. Inside the ring
+they had placed as their wish: "May God Protect You."</p>
+
+<p>Guests of especial honor were the two McIntyre sisters, who were so
+active overseas with the Salvation Army and who for so long a time had
+been identified with our Division, having for a while been assigned to
+our own Regiment.</p>
+
+<p>Thus culminated the activities of the Family Unit of Company B. But just
+as we have decided upon a continuation of our organization&mdash;the same in
+substance, if not in form,&mdash;so the Unit decided to serve as the
+Auxiliary to the Burke-Kelly Post, American Legion.</p>
+
+<p>The Auxiliary meetings are held in the rooms adjoining those of the
+Burke-Kelly Post, at the 77th Division Club. The original board of
+officers includes Mrs. A. J. Hamblen, President; Miss Virginia Fuller,
+Miss Sarah Kelly, and Mrs. William Charles, Vice-Presidents; Miss Anna
+Charles, Secretary, and Mrs. W. B. Wise, Treasurer.</p>
+
+<p>And their banner is still held aloft. A new name, but the old purpose.
+<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;">
+ <img src="images/i031b.jpg" width="200" height="105" alt="{Decoration}" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 383px;">
+ <img src="images/i032.jpg" width="383" height="600" alt="{Bugler playing Taps}" title="" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Company B, 307th Infantry, by Julius Klausner
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Company B, 307th Infantry
+ Its history, honor roll, company roster, Sept., 1917, May, 1919
+
+Author: Julius Klausner
+
+Release Date: October 12, 2010 [EBook #33932]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMPANY B, 307TH INFANTRY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Patrick Hopkins and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note
+
+- Illustration captions in {brackets} have been added by the transcriber
+for reader convenience.
+
+- The position of some illustrations has been changed to improve
+readability.
+
+- Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note. In all
+other cases geographical references, spelling, hyphenation, and
+capitalization have been retained as in the original publication.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: {Statue of Liberty with "77"}]
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _La Foret de Nesle, France. 307th Infantry in France_]
+
+
+
+
+ COMPANY B
+ 307th INFANTRY
+
+ ITS
+ HISTORY
+ HONOR ROLL
+ COMPANY ROSTER
+
+
+
+ Sept., 1917 [Illustration: AEF] May, 1919
+
+
+
+ _Compiled by_
+ Julius Klausner, Jr.
+ 1920
+
+
+
+ =============================================================
+ Upton * Flanders * Vosges * Lorraine * Vesle * Argonne * Home
+ =============================================================
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: _We Who Live Remember--_]
+
+And remembering, we shall always seek to justify the self-sacrifice made
+by those companions who trained with us and fought with us but whom by
+virtue of their supreme service, we returned without.
+
+They died, but being dead, live on, and their spirits beckon us to
+strive toward that for which they died.
+
+The flag was their shrine--the fields of France their tomb--and they
+shall ever be wreathed with God's great glory.
+
+ [Illustration: (C) _Underwood & Underwood_
+ MAJOR-GENERAL ROBERT ALEXANDER
+ Commander of the Seventy-Seventh Division]
+
+
+
+
+Major-General Robert Alexander to Company B
+
+
+GREETINGS!
+
+I am very glad that Company B--307th Infantry is putting into this form
+the many memories of the Great War which remain with those of us who
+participated therein as bright spots in our path through life.
+
+The work done by the 77th Division was most notable and in that work
+Company B--307th Infantry took full part and contributed its full share.
+The record of the Company is one of which any organization might well be
+extremely proud. It took part in the operations in the Vosges; on the
+line of the Vesle; and in the advance from the Vesle to the Aisne--the
+77th Division being the _only_ American division to reach the latter
+river. In the Argonne-Meuse Offensive which brought the war to a
+successful conclusion, the Company, with its Regiment, Brigade, and
+Division, played a noteworthy part. The battle losses incurred by
+Company B and the battle honors conferred upon members thereof speak for
+themselves.
+
+Not the least of the Company's exploits was that which, culminating on
+the evening of October 7th, 1918, brought relief to the long-beleaguered
+Battalion under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Charles W.
+Whittlesey--the so-called "Lost" Battalion.
+
+The officer to whom was granted the supreme honor of sharing with you as
+your Divisional Commander the toils, the dangers, and the honors of that
+supreme campaign salutes you! No Commander could ask more loyal support
+from his comrades of all ranks than was freely given me. For your future
+careers in civil life or wherever Fortune may lay your paths, you will
+carry with you my sincere best wishes and my affectionate regard. The
+qualities of courage, fidelity, and loyalty displayed by you during your
+service as soldiers will be, I am sure, at the disposal of your Country
+as well in Peace as they were in War.
+
+ [Illustration: Signature]
+ _Formerly Major-General in Command of the 77th Division._
+
+November 19th, 1919.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: CAPTAIN BLANTON BARRETT
+ _Killed in Action, July 21st, 1918_ ]
+
+
+
+
+ =============================================================
+ Upton * Flanders * Vosges * Lorraine * Vesle * Argonne * Home
+ =============================================================
+
+
+THE HISTORY OF COMPANY B
+
+307th INFANTRY
+
+
+Camp Upton--September 10th to April 5th
+
+Invited--all of us. And we trooped down Yaphank-way, out
+on Long Island, as tho bound for a picnic. Which, for a week, it was.
+Then we were brought up short. On September 17, 1917, the 77th Division
+came to life. One of the first units to be organized within the division
+was Company B--307th Infantry, formed also on September 17th.
+
+Immediately we were on paper as a regular unit, we quickly took
+semblance of a military organization. Under the leadership of Captain
+Blanton Barrett, 1st Lieutenant Alexander D. B. Pratt, and 2d
+Lieutenants Philip Cheney and Everett A. Butterfield, we were gradually
+whipped into an efficient machine. Corporals were made and
+unmade--sergeants came and went--and we were drilled, drilled, drilled.
+
+We had exchanged our hair mattresses for straw, our china for tin, our
+homes for barracks, and they made us like it. At first we occupied but
+one building,--a rambling two-story affair having bunk rooms on all the
+upper floor. The lower floor was given over to kitchen, mess hall, and
+recreation room. The recreation room, however, was short lived, for as
+we grew in numbers it became necessary to fill it with bunks. And then,
+when we had grown to full strength--two hundred and fifty officers and
+men--we overflowed into another barracks of which we occupied half of
+both upper and lower floors.
+
+The advantages of a billiard table, a piano, and a talking machine were
+ours. We supported a miniature barber shop and a tailor. Talent we had
+a-plenty, and we ran our own shows.
+
+But we drilled, drilled, drilled. And we had schools--lots of 'em. When
+we were not doing the "school of the soldier", we attended bayonet
+school. The "school of the squad" divided time with gas instruction. The
+study of the automatic rifle was complicated, but so was the "school of
+the platoon". We practiced the manual of arms and learned how to throw
+hand grenades. Little by little we were perfected in the art of
+thinking, and knowing, and doing, the right thing at the right time.
+
+ [Illustration: _Camp Upton, New York. Bird's-eye View from Tower
+ Hill_]
+
+Early in 1918 we felt ready. On Washington's Birthday our division
+paraded down Fifth Avenue a complete fighting machine. We were prepared
+for the next move and the cheers of the crowds had barely died when it
+came.
+
+
+Upton to France--April 6th to April 20th
+
+On the night of April 5th we were ordered to roll packs. We stacked our
+bunks and drew ammunition. And we were posted on a vigil of waiting.
+April 6th, 1918, Saturday, was the first anniversary of America's
+declaration of war. At two-thirty on that morning, in an air pleasantly
+crisp and flooded with moonlight, we marched to the railroad and
+entrained. Leaving Camp Upton at three-fifteen, we pulled into Long
+Island City just in time to be greeted by the usual six o'clock factory
+whistles.
+
+A waiting ferry engulfed our battalion and we were transported down the
+East River, around the Battery, and up the Hudson to Pier 59, at the
+foot of West Eighteenth Street, Manhattan. A methodical transfer was
+accomplished from the squat and stunted ferry to the gigantic but little
+known _Justicia_.
+
+While still under process of construction in the shipyards at Belfast,
+in Ireland, for the Holland American Line, the _Statendam_ was
+commandeered by Great Britain at the beginning of the European war and
+was operated as a transport under the name _Justicia_ by the White Star
+Line. She was at the time the fifth largest vessel afloat and that she
+was the especial prey of the German undersea navy is indicated by the
+fact that a submarine attacked her on a subsequent trip from England to
+the United States, on July 20th, and after a dramatic engagement lasting
+some twenty-four hours, she was sunk. Fourteen of a crew of seven
+hundred were lost.
+
+All day men and equipment poured onto the decks and into the hold of the
+giant transport. Our entire regiment and one battalion of the 308th
+Infantry were quartered between decks. Next morning, before reveille,
+the _Justicia_ slipped quietly down New York Bay, thru Ambrose Channel,
+and into the Atlantic.
+
+B Company had no quarters _de luxe_. We were crowded into small
+space--Section K--far down on D deck, with sleeping hammocks slung over
+our mess tables. And our mess, served by the British, was a sorry series
+of meals. We were compelled to wear during the day, and to sleep with
+during the night, ungainly life preservers. But discomforts were
+subordinated to the interest in our new surroundings. The mysteries of
+the big ship, its spotless engine-room, the intricacies of navigation,
+the precautions against possible attack,--all held us.
+
+ [Illustration: _Among Those Present--A Group of NCO'S at Camp_]
+
+On leaving New York we pursued a northerly course, and at nine o'clock
+that night anchor was dropped in lower Bedford Bay, at Halifax. Early
+next morning we steamed up into the inner harbor and before us lay the
+sadly devastated city of Halifax. Immense areas of the city had been
+totally destroyed by the explosion resulting from the collision between
+a Belgian relief ship and one bearing a cargo of explosives.
+
+That day and the next, while waiting for our convoy to assemble, was
+spent in practicing with lowered boats.
+
+Late on the afternoon of April 9th our convoy of ten passenger and cargo
+ships passed out of the harbor, sped by the cheers of the crews of two
+American battleships. We were escorted by _U. S. S. St. Louis_ and _H.
+M. S. Victoria_.
+
+Boat drill, a well-ordered scramble for life boats, took place twice
+daily. Each morning we indulged in strenuous setting-up exercises in
+order that we might remain in trim. Practice with depth bombs and smoke
+screens helped to relieve the tedium of the long trip.
+
+As we neared our unknown destination, our escort was increased by ten
+British torpedo boat destroyers. Veritable sea dogs they were, darting
+every which-way, breasting wave after wave, ever watchful for the tricky
+Hun.
+
+And then, on Friday. April 19th, land! Just a ridge above the
+horizon--the blue hills of Wales--but already we could feel in our
+imaginations the solidity which our unsailorly legs had missed.
+
+As the day waned we sighted the lighthouse at the mouth of the River
+Mersey. With cheers of relief we were permitted to doff our bulky life
+belts. Just before dusk we entered the Mersey, passing closely by the
+beautiful seaside resort of New Brighton.
+
+Forging up the river we reached Liverpool and, at nine o'clock that
+evening, after almost fourteen days afloat, our transport was moored.
+The city, as we saw it from the decks of the _Justicia_, lay quietly,
+with lights beginning to twinkle in the increasing gloom.
+
+One by one the companies formed and debarked, and at 11:15 P.M. B
+Company marched down the gang plank, thru half-lighted sheds, into those
+curious side-door railway cars so peculiar to Europe. Exactly at
+midnight our train pulled out of Liverpool. At 3:00 A.M. a short stop
+for hot coffee was made at Rugby. We passed thru the outskirts of London
+at 6:00 A.M. and at nine-twenty the train rolled into the terminal at
+Dover.
+
+The private yacht of Belgium's Queen Elizabeth had been pressed into
+service as a cross-channel ferry and in this royal craft, under escort
+of destroyers, aeroplanes, and dirigibles, we crossed to Calais in an
+hour and thirty-five minutes. The crossing was enlivened when two
+riflemen of the crew took to firing at mines that endangered our
+passage.
+
+
+Picardy and Flanders--April 20th to June 10th
+
+ [Illustration: (C) _Underwood & Underwood_
+ _"Let's Go!" Washington's Birthday, 1918_]
+
+Once in Calais we found that we divided honors with Company C of our
+regiment in being the first two National Army companies to land in
+France, having debarked on French soil April 20, 1918.
+
+That night we experienced our first real touch of war. Sheltered in
+tents in British Rest Camp No. 6, we received a call of welcome from a
+squadron of Jerry aeroplanes. A truly thrilling reception it was, with
+the thunder of Hun bombs alternating with the "ping!" of British
+anti-aircraft guns,--and thru it all the "pat-pat" of a multitude of
+machine guns. But best of all, there were no casualties.
+
+Next day we spent in adding to our equipment gas masks and trench
+helmets and we exchanged our American Enfield rifles for British
+Enfields,--lighter, shorter pieces having a magazine capacity of ten
+rounds of ammunition.
+
+April 23d introduced us to the famous little "_40 hommes--8 chevaux_"
+box-cars of the French. A three-hour journey in these brought us to the
+British base at Audruicq. Our first real hike started from here and
+ended at Zouafques, a little village in Picardy. We occupied some of the
+best sheep-pens, cattle stalls, and hen roosts in town and during our
+five-week stay we became really comfortable inhabitants.
+
+Zouafques proved to be a sort of military high school, where we polished
+our elementary knowledge of tactics. Our "noncoms" were sent to
+specialized schools in scouting, sniping, musketry, automatic rifles,
+grenades, and infantry tactics. The instruction, as well as the food and
+equipment, was distinctly British.
+
+Five weeks of this work and we took our next step trench-ward. Hiking
+from Zouafques at 1.30 A.M., May 13th, we entrained _a la chevaux_ at
+Audruicq. A day's journey _via_ Calais, Boulogne, Etaps, and Doullens
+brought us to Mondrecourt, in Flanders. Then an almost heartbreaking
+hike thru Pas to the war-worn village of Couin.
+
+Our assimilation by the British forces became most complete when we
+found ourselves brigaded with a battalion of the Lancashire Fusileers of
+the 125th British Brigade. Our position was in reserve of the British
+lines north of Amiens and southwest of Arras.
+
+Here another five weeks of training gave us the right to work alone.
+Once again we traded rifles, retrieving our American guns, and on June
+6th we started on a three-day march. Thru Gezaincourt, Bernaville, Ailly
+le-Haut Clocher, to Pont Remy, where we entrained.
+
+
+Vosges and the Lorraine--June 11th to August 7th
+
+Two days by rail, _via_ Amiens, Versailles, Bar-le-Duc, and Nancy, and
+we detrained on June 11th at Thaon, in the Vosges. Then an intermittent
+hike, with stops at Longchamps, Destord, and Menil, passing thru
+Rambervillers and Baccarat, to Vacqueville, in the Lorraine.
+
+A stirring incident occurred _en route_ when we passed the boys of the
+old Sixty-Ninth New York Regiment. Brooklyn hailed Brooklyn; Harlem
+called to Harlem; Bronx met Bronx. It was a breath of home to the
+already veteran Sixty-Ninth and more than a cheering welcome to us.
+
+We shared Vacqueville with a battalion of the Alabama regiment of the
+42d "Rainbow" Division. Advance parties were sent into the lines to
+acquaint themselves with the position which we were to take over. And in
+the dead of night, on June 20th-21st, Company B took over that part of
+the line between Ancerviller and Badonviller designated as P. C. (post
+commandant) Hameau and P. C. Montreux.
+
+The first and second platoons of our Company held a position in the
+Grand Bois (Big Woods), a section of forest southeast of Ancerviller.
+The second and third platoons and Company headquarters occupied the
+ruined village of St. Maurice. St. Maurice was a part of the line at
+this point and had been subjected at different times to severe shelling.
+Only bare skeletons of the buildings remained and any nook or cranny
+between sections of walls and under a bit of roof was used as shelter.
+Deserted cellars had been bolstered, reinforced, and barricaded so that
+they would serve as shell-proof protection in the event of attack.
+
+
+The First Gas Attack
+
+It was usually Fritz's intention to place a harassing barrage on any
+section of the line where he knew that a relief was being effected. But
+he was less watchful than usual when we went in.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _"Hotel de Barn"--Showing Barber Shop and Reading and Writing
+ Rooms_]
+
+The enemy awoke, however, three days later, on the morning of Monday,
+June 24th, and attacked our regimental outposts. In order to effectively
+prevent any assistance being rendered by the platoons stationed in St.
+Maurice, a heavy barrage was laid on the town beginning at 3:30 A.M.
+During the early part of the shelling the continual use of H. E.'s
+(high explosive shells), with an occasional gas shell, served to keep
+the men not only penned in their bomb-proof cellars, but also forced the
+continued use of gas masks. Gradually the H. E.'s were interspersed with
+gas shells until a point was reached where far more gas shells than high
+explosives fell into the town, resulting in a heavy blanket of phosgene,
+mustard, and lachrymatory gases settling over the position.
+
+The barrage did not lift until 6:00 A.M. and when it did the platoons
+were forced to take a defensive position to guard against any possible
+success of the enemy.
+
+During the night before the attack, the men had been digging until a
+late hour on a system of trench defense. This entailed a lack of sleep
+which, together with the continued wearing of the gas mask and the
+exposure endured immediately after the barrage, weakened their
+resistance to such an extent as to make them easy victims to the
+poisonous gases.
+
+Seventy-nine men were forced to the hospital by the effects of the
+combined phosgene and mustard. Among them were our first sergeant,
+supply and mess sergeants, all but one of our cooks, and both mechanics,
+which left us decidedly crippled.
+
+The shadow of our losses was deepened when we heard that Cook George
+Alberts, always popular, had died from gas inhaled while trying to
+prepare the company breakfast in a gas-filled kitchen. He was our first
+loss by death.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _Shell-Proof Dugout--A Shelter in St. Maurice_]
+
+An immediate result of our losses was the extra work shouldered by those
+who had escaped any of the serious effects. The men left in St. Maurice
+remained on constant guard until the Company was relieved several days
+later.
+
+During the short rest period that followed, a reorganization of the
+Company was accomplished and we again entered the lines in July, taking
+over P. C.'s Hameau and Montreux, as before.
+
+
+The Daylight Raid
+
+On Sunday, July 21st, a patrol of fifty-two men from our Company,
+accompanied by two medical first-aid men, engaged in a raid on the
+German trenches at two-thirty in the afternoon. The party advanced on
+the enemy lines in single file, divided in four groups which were
+respectively commanded by Sergeant Todd, Captain Barrett, Sergeant
+Bromback and Lieutenant Mohlke.
+
+The intent was to surprise the enemy with a daylight raid and thereby
+obtain information thru capture and observation. But either thru
+knowledge or by chance, the Germans had prepared against this maneuver
+and the surprise was reversed.
+
+Waiting until our patrol was fairly within their lines, and then
+partially surrounding them, the enemy centered upon our men a deadly
+fire of rifles, machine guns, and grenades. The raiders fought valiantly
+in return but were outnumbered four to one. After an hour's fighting,
+seventeen of our party, including Captain Barrett, lay dead, and sixteen
+were captured. Of the twenty-one who returned, thirteen were wounded. We
+were informed by two German prisoners captured a few days later that
+seventeen Germans had been killed.
+
+The loss sustained in this daylight raid occasioned considerable
+comment, chiefly because it was generally believed that Captain Barrett
+had misread his orders,--that the time for action had really read 2:30
+A.M. instead of 2:30 P.M. This, however, is quite untrue, inasmuch as
+all the Company officers, as well as the supply sergeant and company
+clerk, were conversant with the orders. Captain Barrett's immediate
+battalion and regimental superiors were present at or near the time of
+action and possessed full knowledge of the entire plan.
+
+The defeat was caused solely by the lack of the intended element of
+surprise. Whether or not the enemy had possession of our plans, and if
+they had possession, how they obtained it, is something we shall never
+know.
+
+ [Illustration: _The Baccarat Sector, Showing St. Maurice and the
+ Grand Bois_]
+
+A telegram was received by the Divisional Commander from General
+Headquarters to the effect that the entire action had been investigated
+and found creditable.
+
+The casualties suffered from the raid, together with those resulting
+from the gas attack of June 24th, so depleted the Company as to make an
+immediate relief imperative and that same night Company L took over our
+sector.
+
+A subsequent reorganization of the entire regiment distributed the men
+of the various companies so that all would have an equal strength. Our
+numbers were so few that we lost none of our men in this process but
+instead received increases not only from many of the other companies,
+but also from the 76th New England Division.
+
+As tribute to those men whom we had lost, a Company B mass was held at
+the Catholic Church in Vacqueville at which Chaplain Father Walsh of
+our battalion officiated. The entire strength of the Company was
+present.
+
+Another rest and another turn up front, after which the entire division
+was relieved by the 37th Ohio and Kentucky Division. Once again we
+crossed the Vosges, halting for three days at Seranville. Leaving there,
+we bivouaced for a night in the Foret de Charmes and entrained at
+Charmes next morning, August 7th, at dawn.
+
+
+From the Vesle to the Aisne--August 10th to September 15th
+
+ [Illustration: _The Advance from the Vesle to the Aisne_]
+
+Two days later, August 10th, we took transport on an immense train of
+motor trucks--"lorries" we called them, after the English. They were
+driven by Indo-Chinese serving under the French. After nine cramped but
+interesting hours--we passed thru Chateau-Thierry--our trip ended at
+Fere en Tardenois. For three days we camped in a small wood and then we
+moved to a position supporting the attack on Fismes. We were stationed
+in the Bois de la Pissotti, adjoining the Foret de Nesle. While there we
+were engaged in digging a series of reserve trenches near
+Mont-sur-Courville.
+
+On August 28th the battalion moved around Chery-Chartreuve to a position
+east of Le Pres Farm. September 1st we again shifted, this time crossing
+the Vesle and relieving the Third Battalion, just east of Bazoches. Here
+we repulsed a raiding party, inflicting heavy losses upon the enemy. We
+were then moved to a ravine, which gave us the opportunity of taking a
+two-day rest.
+
+Our next move brought us to face with the enemy just south of Merval,
+where we took a position in an exposed field, our only protection being
+the individual "funk holes" which had been deserted by the retreating
+German troops.
+
+After three days of little water and practically no food, at 5:30 on the
+afternoon of September 8th--still brilliant daylight--we crawled from
+our funk holes and, each squad in single file in formation known as
+"squad columns", we advanced against German artillery in an effort to
+straighten the line. As we reached the outskirts of Merval we were
+subjected to an intense barrage of H. E.'s, suffering the loss of four
+men killed and five injured.
+
+ [Illustration: _Our Path Thru the Argonne_]
+
+No gain was made by this sortie and we drew back to our funk-hole
+position awaiting further developments.
+
+Early on the morning of September 14th, supported by a barrage laid down
+by combined American, French, and Italian artillery, we attacked the
+enemy position that lay on the far side of the Ravine Merval.
+
+The advance was made down the side of the valley in the face of a
+withering fire of enemy machine guns. Tho suffering heavy casualties,
+our progress was unchecked and we swarmed up the opposite slope with
+undiminished vigor. So rapid were our gains that we had to pause to
+allow our flanks to catch up. Our Third Platoon was so far ahead of the
+line of advance as to be mistaken by the commander of the cooperating
+French forces for a body of the enemy and it required considerable
+persuasion to correct his misconception. The day's end saw the German
+horde driven across the Aisne, and we were well beyond our original
+objective. But we had advanced true to form. Commenting on a previous
+attack made by another American unit, a French officer had remarked:
+"The Americans,--they are fools. Tell them to take one trench,--and they
+take _three_!"
+
+We had been operating on the line of the Vesle with several divisions
+but the 77th was the only American division to drive its way to the
+Aisne.
+
+Our gains were paid for with numerous casualties and when we received
+our relief it was thoroly welcome. It had been our longest consecutive
+stretch in the front line and we suffered not only from battle losses
+but we had also endured the utmost privation. Short rations, little
+water, exposed positions, and the constant necessity for watchfulness
+had undermined our strength to an unusual degree. We had been operating
+on the will to accomplish rather than on food and water.
+
+An Italian unit relieved our Company and we withdrew to a reserve
+position in the Vesle Valley, east of Fismes. Here, on the night of
+September 16th, our division was relieved by an Italian division and we
+pulled out of the sector.
+
+We looked forward to a period of rest, but it was not to be. Twenty
+kilometres of hiking brought us to the Arcis le Ponsart Forest, where we
+bivouaced for a day. Then into lorries for an all-night ride to Le
+Chatelier-sur-Marne, where our losses were replaced by a detachment from
+the 40th "Sunshine" Division. Two days of speculating as to our chances
+for a rest terminated when on the night of September 20th we were
+ordered to roll packs. We stepped off on a thirty-two kilometre hike at
+1:00 A.M., _via_ St. Menehould and Florent, and seventeen hours later we
+dragged ourselves into the Foret de Maisons Petites where we were
+quartered in barracks at the edge of the Argonne Forest.
+
+
+The Argonne--September 26th to November 11th
+
+The memorable and decisive drive known as the Argonne-Meuse Offensive
+started on September 26th. That day found us entrenched near the main
+road at Florent,--a position in reserve of the 1st Army Corps.
+
+Actual operations were started that night, when the entire cannon of
+half a hundred divisions poured forth on the enemy its scorching fire.
+Next morning we moved to a position north of Florent, and three days
+later we moved thru the town of Le Four de Paris into those trenches
+north of La Harazee that had been deserted by the 122d German Regiment
+of the 2d Landwehr Division.
+
+
+The "Lost" Battalion
+
+October 2d we left the reserve and assumed a support position. On that
+day the forces in the line drove forward, but in the execution of the
+advance Companies E, H, I, K, L, and M of the 308th Infantry and Company
+K of the 307th Infantry found themselves trapped by the enemy on a hill
+north of the Bois de la Buironne. These units were the only ones to
+reach their objective but by thus advancing ahead of their flanks, they
+gave the enemy an opportunity to surround them. In this hazardous
+position they struggled as the "Lost" Battalion.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _Grim Business in the Argonne_
+ _A Unit of the 307th Infantry Waiting Orders to "Mop Up"_]
+
+We went forward to their relief on October 4th, but were held back by
+the effective machine-gun fire of the enemy. Next day we again strove to
+extricate the besieged battalion, but again we failed. Certain enemy
+machine guns were so placed that their hail of death was impassable.
+They seemed an insurmountable obstacle in the path of the entire 307th
+Infantry. The men of Company B knew that the machine-gun positions of
+the enemy must be taken. There was nothing, at that moment, that counted
+more than the capture of these positions. So on October 6th we attacked,
+giving no thought to risk. We did what we thought would have been
+impossible before we knew that it had to be done. Persistently we
+attacked in the face of the enemy fire and as the German resistance
+gradually weakened, we took the heretofore impregnable positions. Seven
+of our men were that day cited for exceptional bravery.
+
+On October 7th our division organized a concerted attack on the German
+lines. We realized the awful plight of the "Lost" Battalion and all day
+we fought against the enemy machine-gun nests. One by one they were
+silenced, and at 5:00 P.M. Company B, alone of all the division,
+succeeded in reaching and saving the "Lost" Battalion. The Germans were
+driven beyond the hill and once more the line was straightened out.
+
+
+Grand-Pre
+
+Another week and we had driven the Germans across the River Aire. We
+remained in a clump of woods until October 16th and then, not even
+waiting for our engineers to throw their bridges across the Aire, we
+waded the river and drove against Grand-Pre, which was the keystone of
+the enemy defense in the sector opposed by our division.
+
+ [Illustration: _U. S. Official Photo_
+ _The Ruined Prize--Grand-Pre, Captured October 16th, 1918_]
+
+We were stubbornly opposed by the 253d German Infantry of the 76th
+Reserve Division. Again and again we assaulted the position and finally,
+after a running fight thru the streets, the town was ours and the
+American wedge was in a fair way to split the entire German defense.
+
+We pulled out of the line on October 17th and withdrew 10 kilometres to
+a small forest near Apremont, being relieved by the 78th New Jersey
+Division. As usual, there was no rest, and on October 21st we moved to
+Fleville for a three-day stretch of trench digging. October 31st was
+spent in digging trenches in the Chattel Valley.
+
+We resumed our activities at the front on November 2d, keeping in mind
+that half injunction, half promise, credited to General Pershing: "Hell,
+Heaven, or Hoboken by Christmas!" We gave little thought to Heaven and
+less to Hell but, we were beginning to long for Hoboken, and we went
+forward with irresistible determination. Hiking _via_ St. Juvin to
+Thenorgues, we loaded into motor trucks. Unloading close to the lines,
+we swung into immediate action and on November 3d we wrested the village
+of Fontenoy from the 45th German Reserve Division, the following day
+capturing the village of Oches from the 76th German Reserve Division.
+
+
+Stonne
+
+Stonne, a village of strategical importance, was next selected by the
+enemy as a point of resistance. On November 5th the combined strength of
+our entire Regiment was hurled against the 195th German Division, and
+Stonne fell to us. The capture succeeded in liberating a French
+population that for four years had been under the dominance of an enemy
+army.
+
+ [Illustration: _The Company Sergeants. Camp Mills, May 1st, 1919_]
+
+The enemy by this time was retreating fast, and so closely did we press
+them, we were far in advance of our cannon. The progress of the big guns
+was much delayed by poor roads, but the spirit of victors was in us all
+and little did we miss our artillery.
+
+In quick succession we took town after town, the enemy losing to us in
+one day,--November 6th,--the villages of Raucourt, Haraucourt,
+Angecourt, and Remilly. The terror-stricken Hun gave little resistance
+and we kept within five minutes of their rear guard.
+
+
+The Armistice
+
+We came to a halt on the banks of the Meuse, four miles from the
+historic city of Sedan and, after augmenting our depleted ranks by
+replacement from the 38th "Cyclone" Division, we organized for what we
+hoped would be our final attack.
+
+But the final attack had already been made. The unconquerable Argonne
+had been conquered; a ruthless enemy was vanquished.
+
+Germany sued for Peace with defeat rather than face peace with Death.
+The last shot was fired at the Eleventh Hour of the Eleventh Day of the
+Eleventh Month, Nineteen Eighteen, and we rested on our arms worn and
+tired, but victorious and happy.
+
+The joy of accomplishment was ours and we celebrated the declaration of
+the armistice in a spirit far more triumphant than relieved.
+
+On November 12th the same French who had laughed at us in pity as we
+shouldered their task in the Argonne, hailed us with gratitude as they
+took over our positions.
+
+The march from the Meuse to our rest base in the Chateauvillain area
+took twenty-four days and covered 300 kilometres. It was an intermittent
+hike and we stopped successively at La Berliere, Oches, Harricourt,
+Fleville, Le Four de Paris, Florent, Sivry-sur-Ante, Noyers, Andernay,
+Hoericourt, Eclaron, Fresnay, Maisons, and Bayel, arriving at our base
+in Lanty on December 5th.
+
+It was soon apparent that altho we had been spared the alternatives we
+still were not going to see Hoboken before Christmas. So we made
+ourselves comfortable and settled down to a long stay.
+
+It was necessary to the maintenance of discipline and the morale of the
+army that drills should be continued, and as well as any recruit, we
+were once again schooled in the finesse of the salute, the art of the
+right face, and the strategy of shoulder arms. We engaged in manouvers
+to practice the lessons that we learned in the Argonne. And we passed in
+reviews before princes, generals, and congressmen. Time passed: not too
+quickly, but still it passed.
+
+
+Christmas, 1918
+
+Christmas was not the dreary day a Christmas away from home usually is.
+We had much for which to be thankful, and the intervening miles between
+Lanty and Home were no bar to those good wishes that came from our
+folks.
+
+We celebrated, we ate, and we played Santa Claus. A tree was erected in
+the centre of the village and we passed out to the civilian population
+candy and biscuits and tobacco. The women and children and men sincerely
+appreciated our tokens, and happiness reigned.
+
+The mess sergeant had an inspiration of genius and he served us with a
+truly Christmas dinner.
+
+New Year's Day was red-lettered with another meal worthy of our mess
+sergeant's reputation. The holiday season was over and we entered upon
+the new year full of new hopes and ambitions.
+
+
+Home
+
+Not until February 9th was another move made. Then, _en freight car_, we
+journeyed to the Le Mans area, detraining at Poille from whence we hiked
+to La Roches Farm, near Auvers-le-Hamon. April 15th we entrained at
+Sable for Brest, where we were quartered at Camp Pontazaine.
+
+ [Illustration: (C)_Underwood & Underwood_
+ _"La Guerre est Fini!" The Parade on Our Return. May 6th, 1919_]
+
+On April 19th, exactly one year after our arrival at Liverpool, we were
+lightered out to the United States Transport _America_.
+
+A fast ship and smooth waters combined to give us a rapid and enjoyable
+voyage and we docked at Hoboken at 9:00 A.M., April 28th. We proceeded
+to Camp Mills, Mineola, Long Island, where immediate passes gave us the
+opportunity to greet our home folks, eat home meals, and sleep in
+regular beds.
+
+The Company moved on May 5th to the armory of the 22d New York Engineers
+in New York City to await final orders for the parade of welcome
+arranged by New York City.
+
+We formed for the parade near Washington Square at 8:00 A.M. next
+morning and at 10:00 A.M. we marched out to Fifth Avenue and swept up
+that thorofare to the acclaim of a million throats. No greeting could
+have been more sincere, no welcome more impressive, and this, our last
+hike as Company B, was a march of glory.
+
+We returned to Camp Upton, our first station and our last, and we were
+demobilized on May 9th, 1919, to return to our respective states. Ours
+was a truly American company, composed of true and representative
+Americans. Our homes lay in thirty-two different states, scattered
+between New York and Maine in the east, Minnesota and the Dakotas in the
+north, Utah, Oregon, and California in the west, and Texas, Louisiana,
+and Florida in the south.
+
+So ends the History of Company B. We were mustered out of the service
+military, but the spirit that withstood the Lorraine, the valor that
+gained the Aisne, and the fire that conquered the Argonne, lives on, and
+we have banded ourselves together so that we may, in the words of our
+commander, Major General Robert Alexander, "serve our Country as well in
+Peace as we did in War".
+
+
+Sept., 1917 [Illustration: AEF] May, 1919
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: THEY SLEEP
+
+ GEORGE ALBERTS
+ CLAIR ANDREWS
+ BARNEY BARDMAN D.S.C.
+ BLANTON BARRETT
+ CHRISTIAN A. BATY
+ RAFFELE BIBO
+ JOHN BLACKBURN
+ JACOB BORKER
+ HUGH A. BRADY
+ LOUIS BRETH
+ WILLIAM F. BROPHY
+ CLAUDE C. BROWER
+ FRANK W. BURKE
+ MICHAEL CARLO
+ WALTER CASSIDY
+ FRANK CHARLES
+ JAMES CONNER
+ JAMES L. CRONIN
+ RICHARD CULLEN
+ JOHN P. DOLAN
+ JOSEPH V. DOMKUS
+ HYMAN FISHFANGER
+ ROBERT FLANAGAN
+ JAMES FOLLIAT, JR.
+ IRVING H. FRIEDMAN
+ HUGO GARBADEN
+ GEORGE E. GERRETT
+ JOHN GROVE
+ CLARENCE I. GRUBBS
+ JOSEPH P. HANLEY
+ SALIE HAUSNER
+ GEORGE L. HICKY
+ CHARLES L. KAURIN
+ JOSEPH KAYES
+ JOHN E. KELLY
+ PETER KNAB
+ MICHAEL MCCORMICK
+ MARTIN MCHUGH
+ ANDREW MCKINLEY
+ W. ALAN MATHEWS
+ EARL MILLSAP D.S.C.
+ ROYAL E. MORRIS
+ CHARLES MUNZINGER
+ ALFRED W. NICKERSON
+ PRIVATE NOONAN
+ WILLIAM OTTO
+ ALBERT C. PETERSON, D.S.C.
+ ERNEST W. PETERSON
+ PRIVATE PLAUMAN
+ ALBERT PRITCHARD
+ WILLIAM R. REID, D.S.C.
+ JOHN P. RHYNARD
+ ALBERT J. ROBARE
+ JAMES ROBINSON
+ W. ROZICHUCK
+ GEORGE F. RUSSELL
+ ELMER O. SELLERS
+ PRIVATE SCHILDKNECHT
+ BENJAMIN SILVERMAN
+ FRANK SKEETS
+ FRANK STANISKI
+ JOSEPH STRAUSS
+ MAURICE WACHTEL
+ JAMES WALSH
+ G. H. WOODS
+ PAUL ZUKASKY]
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: ROOKIES--_Camp Upton_.]
+
+THE ROSTER OF COMPANY B
+
+ Major Weston C. Jenkins, D. S. C. 208 West Thomas St., Rome, N. Y.
+ Major Fred A. Tillman, Legion of
+ Honor 19 Commercial St., Boston, Mass.
+ Captain Blanton Barrett, DECEASED Chamblee, Georgia.
+ *Captain Everett A. Butterfield,
+ Black Star Lambs' Club, New York.
+ Captain Philip Cheney South Manchester, Connecticut.
+ Captain Alexander D. B. Pratt 120 Broadway, New York.
+ Captain Alonzo D. Slagle Address unknown.
+ Captain Howard S. Smith New Haven, Connecticut.
+ 1st Lieutenant Joseph D. M. Adrian,
+ Jr. 50 Broad St., New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Marcus L. Chasins 27 William St., New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Alexander J.
+ Gillespie 251 West 81st St., New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Kenneth C. Lincoln 29 Bedford St., Fall River, Mass.
+ 1st Lieutenant George S. Mott Scranton, Pennsylvania.
+ 1st Lieutenant William R. Reid,
+ D. S. C., DECEASED Brooklyn, New York.
+ 1st Lieutenant Harry R. Weiman St. Louis, Missouri.
+ 2d Lieutenant Atwood New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant William Eliot Long Island City, New York.
+ 2d Lieutenant Clarence I. Grubbs,
+ DECEASED Kansas City, Missouri.
+ 2d Lieutenant Foster A. Gunn Main St., Ottawa, Kan.
+ 2d Lieutenant Arthur J. Hamblen 150 West 106th St., New York.
+ 2d Lieutenant F. Hartig Address unknown.
+ 2d Lieutenant Hardon Yale Club, New York.
+ 2d Lieutenant Harrison McCann 2156 Cortelyou Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ 2d Lieutenant George C. Mohlke 816 Grand Ave., Racine, Wis.
+ 2d Lieutenant O'Connell, DECEASED New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant Thomas O'Sullivan New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant William Randall New York City.
+ 2d Lieutenant James Schofield 88 Main St., North Andover, Mass.
+ 2d Lieutenant Austin W. Woolford Virginia.
+ *1st Lieutenant William F. Babor 417 East 75th St., New York.
+ *1st Lieutenant Arthur D. Bromback 41 Division St., New Rochelle, N. Y.
+ *1st Lieutenant Raymond S. Hill East St. Louis, Illinois.
+ *1st Lieutenant Euclid L. Levasseur Farmers Loan & Trust Co., Paris, Fr.
+ *2d Lieutenant Herbert H. Harris 1445 Broadway, New York.
+ *2d Lieutenant Arthur S. Hoit 71 Broadway, New York.
+ *2d Lieutenant Paul F. Hunnewell 287 Main St., Winthrop, Mass.
+ *2d Lieutenant Louis Katz New York City.
+ *2d Lieutenant W. Alan Mathews,
+ DECEASED Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
+ *2d Lieutenant David H. Rose 915 Intervale Ave., New York.
+ *2d Lieutenant Edgar L. Schwartz 10 West 93rd St., New York.
+
+The officers before whose names has been placed an asterisk (*) were
+commissioned from the enlisted ranks of Company B and assigned to duty
+with other organizations.
+
+ Elwin Abbott, 188 Crescent St., Rutland, Vt.
+ Samuel Abrahamson, Nicolet, Minn.
+ Clarence R. Ackerly, 624 Broad St., Bridgeport, Conn.
+ Allan Adams, 68 West 102d St., New York.
+ James Adams, 107 West 89th St., New York.
+ Adolph Albrecht, 190 East 3d St., New York.
+ Carl Aldridge, Glen Allen, Ala.
+ Fred Alexander, Carterville, Ill.
+ M. Alpert, Watertown, N. Y.
+ Machis Ambrogio, 412 N. 21st St., Herrin, Ill.
+ Samuel Anders, McConnells, Ala.
+
+ [Illustration: _N. Y., February, 1918_]
+
+ Lloyd C. Anderson, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Robert Angeles, Route 2, Bethpage, Tenn.
+ Paul Annello, Box 19, Bristol, Conn.
+ Hugo Antonelli, 732 Nostrand Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Paul Antonelli, 732 Nostrand Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Nathan Aronson, 26 Norman St., Salem, Mass.
+ Isaac Ascher, 111 Haverschoff St., Boston.
+ Elmer O. Barber, Hillsboro, Ore.
+ Luke M. Barendsen, Valier, Vt.
+ Robert Barr, 108 West 49th St., New York.
+ John Barry, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Harry Bartlett, Mendon, Utah.
+ Fred C. Batchellor, 260 Laurel St., Hartford, Conn.
+ Thomas Baxter, 604 N. Maine St., Butte, Mont.
+ Herman Beck, 84 Rivington St., New York.
+ Louis Beckendorf, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ William Bell, 158 East 107th St., New York.
+ Earl D. Bement, Route 3, Sioux Falls, S. D.
+ David Bennett, 438 52d St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Thomas Bennett, Seymour, Conn.
+ Fred Berge, Bismarck, N. D.
+ Edward Bolma, Hill, Mont.
+ Paul D. Bond, 208 Cedar Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y.
+ J. A. Boyle, Long Island City, N. Y.
+ Leslie Bradney, Pangborn, Ark.
+ Charles H. Bradshaw, 179 Bainbridge St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Michael Bresnan, 95 Myrtle Ave., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Ralph U. Brett, 701 West 178th St., New York.
+ William Brunner, 193 Ann St., Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Harry Buckley, Columbia, Miss.
+ Volney Burnett, Box 464, Buhl, Idaho.
+ George Busko, Breckenridge, Minn.
+ Paul Calandra, 3 Eighth St., Rochester, N. Y.
+ Frank Camp, Route 10, Shelbyville, Ind.
+ James Carlin, 1115 Portland Ave., Woodhaven, N. Y.
+ Albert Carlson, Route 5, Hillsboro, Ore.
+ Charles J. Carolan, 497 Chauncey St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Thomas Carroll, 1894 Third Ave., New York.
+ Amedeo Caruso, 254 Allen St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Gregory Cavanaugh, 298 Lockwood Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Tony Charmonte, 2134 Moody Ave., Chicago.
+ Nordahl Chilsen, Blue Earth, Minn.
+ Nels C. Christiansen, Route 31, Tyler, Minn.
+ Isidore Cohen, 71 West 115th St., New York.
+ Leroy Connett, 2412 Roosevelt Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.
+ Patrick Conway, New York.
+ Frederick Coombs, Freeport, N. Y.
+ Joseph Coscia, 830 Cortland Ave., New York.
+ Leo Covert, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Edward M. Crimmins, 38 Maiden St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Michael J. Cudmore, 12 Mygott St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Joseph Covington, Meridan, Miss.
+ George Dahlquist, Winchester, Mass.
+ Walter L. Daum, Sullivan, Ill.
+ Antonio De Santis, 768 Vernon Ave., Long Island City, N. Y.
+ George Diegel, 22 Wissner Ave., Newburgh, N. Y.
+ A. James DiMaggio, 83 Oldtown Road, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Hugh A. Donnelly, 240 Ainslie St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Abraham Drazien, 446 E. 145th St., N. Y.
+ Fred Durham, Toluca, Ill.
+ Edward J. Dwyer, 523 North Division St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Elisha Eaves, Route 3, Macon, Miss.
+ Harold Eckstrom, 148 East 54th St., New York.
+ William Ehrmann, 138 Carlton Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Max Eisenberg, 547 83d St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Elwin M. Eldredge, 780 Jefferson Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Lewis Ellenbogen, 531 Bedford Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Ezra Epstein, 109 Eighth Ave., New York.
+ Anthony Esposito, South Nyack, N. Y.
+ Josiah E. Evans, 90 High St., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Thomas J. Fisher, Lincoln Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Don Fitzgerald, Wallerville, Miss.
+ Jerry Flanagan, 76 Michigan Ave., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Albert Flass, 121 Ash St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ M. Fontanetta, 453 East 186th St., New York.
+ Charles Freidman, 107 East 2d St., New York.
+ Hershel Friedland, 215 Caldwell Ave., N. Y.
+ Samuel Friedman, 634 Kosciusko St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Richard Gadd, 375 61st St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Leslie Gaines, 713 South Huston Ave., Denniston, Tex.
+ George Gibson, Kimball, S. D.
+ J. Joseph Gillig, 324 East 4th St., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
+ Leslie Gleason, St. Mary's Home, Binghamton, N. Y.
+
+ [Illustration: VETERANS--_Auvers-le-Hamon_.]
+
+ Fred A. Gleiforst, 56 Freedom Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y.
+ John E. Glynn, 232 Jackson St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Samuel Goldenberg, 647 East 5th St., N. Y.
+ Ira Gomer, Marion, Pa.
+ Rossie Goodie, Prairie Elk, Mont.
+ Max Gordon, 761 Blake Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ John Greany, 171 East 99th St., New York.
+ Max Green, 1033 Hoe Ave., New York.
+ Herman Greening, 1029 Sherman Ave., South Bend, Ind.
+ Frank Guaracio, 612 Fort Hamilton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Edwin F. Haeg, Route 3, Ronneby, Minn.
+ Harry Hagen, Box Elder, Mont.
+ P. M. Hagen, Lansford, N. D.
+ Virgil M. Hale, Case Creek, Ark.
+ William J. Halperin, Dixwell Ave., New Haven, Conn.
+ Chris Hanson, Hannaford, N. D.
+ Gillrock Hanson, Route 1, Creston, Mont.
+ Theodore Harris, 500 West 175th St., N. Y.
+ Michael Hartnett, Main St., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Richard Hayden, Derby, Conn.
+ Raymond Healy, 547 West 186th St., New York.
+ Alfred Heller, 461 Steinway Ave., Astoria, N. Y.
+ John Henchy, 172 East 112th St., New York.
+ August Henke, Goshen, N. Y.
+ James Herron, Englewood, N. J.
+ Joseph Holland, Heber Springs, Ark.
+ Carl Holmes, Lambert Paper Co., Salt Lake City, Utah.
+ Carroll Honnicut, Burnsville, Miss.
+ William F. Howard, 315 Sixth Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ John Huston, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Ernest C. Hutchings, Manhasset, N. Y.
+ John Jackson, Box 145, Troy, Ind.
+ Leslie Jacobus, Broadway, Grand View, N. Y.
+ Harry Jensen, Route 9, Penn Yann, N. Y.
+ Kenneth Jensen, Shelly, Idaho.
+ Edward T. Johnson, Elkland, Pa.
+ Robert R. Johnson, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Julius Kaplan, 15 Walnut St., New Rochelle, N. Y.
+ Henry Kaufman, 1652 Madison Ave., N. Y.
+ Edward Kelly, 352 West 18th St., New York.
+ John F. Kelly, Adler, Mont.
+ J. H. Kiernan, 575 Main St., Wareham, Mass.
+ W. Claire Kiernan, 402 Second St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Elbert N. Kipp, 19 Charlotte St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Terence Kirk, 3 Hill St., Granton, N. J.
+ Julius Klausner, Jr., 324 East 4th St., Mount Vernon, N. Y.
+ George A. Klein, Jr., 95 Vernon Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Wallace S. Kline, Route 3, Neshoba, Tenn.
+ Frank X. Klotz, Davenport's Neck, New Rochelle, N. Y.
+ Peter Koch, Box 96, Stickney, S. D.
+ Anthony Kochan, Box 1000, Gowanda, N. Y.
+ Jack Konowich, Lackawanna, N. Y.
+ Reuben Koplowitz, 236 New Jersey Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Harvey L. Kreuscher, N. Spgville, S. I., N. Y.
+ Richard Lamb, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Arthur Lantman, Box 517, Hibbing, Minn.
+ Samuel Lapidus, 136 Clinton St., New York.
+ Timothy Leary, 427 West 13th St., New York.
+ David Leff, 91 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Patrick Lenihan, 249 West 135th St., New York.
+ Samuel Lesowitz, 1865 Park Place, Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Isaac Liebowitz, 531 Dumont Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Herman Lipman, 33 Montgomery St., N. Y.
+ Carl Lucas, 41 Water St., Ansonia, Conn.
+ James J. Lydon, 68 Gansevoort St., New York.
+ Thomas McCann, 709 West Dominick St., Rome, N. Y.
+ John McGinley, 183 Kingsland Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ Arthur McManus, 199 Howard Ave., Ansonia, Conn.
+ Walter K. McNair, 26 East Ave., Gasport, N. Y.
+ James J. Malone, 28 Sedway St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ William Manz, 1275 Third Ave., New York.
+ John Marrow, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Waclaw Matyzasik, Beacon Falls, Conn.
+ William Mayer, 1919 Seventh Ave., New York.
+ James Menzies, 13A Green St., Everett, Mass.
+ E. R. Meyrowitz, 371 Vernon Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Ray Milburn, Keensburgh, Ill.
+ Herbert Millville, R. F. D. 14, La Salle, N. Y.
+ Joseph P. Monihan, 706 Woodlawn Ave., Wilmington, Del.
+ Richard Morgan, Dewitt, Ark.
+ David M. Moroney, 337 West 12th St., N. Y.
+ Thad L. Morris, Creshaw, Miss.
+ Edward Murphy, 56 West 105th St., New York.
+ Maurice Murphy, 124 Adelphi St., Bklyn, N.Y.
+ Stephen A. Murphy, 108 Eighth Ave., N. Y.
+ Harold Nicolson, Falton, Minn.
+ Morgan Norris, Cashion, Okla.
+ Charles A. O'Bryan, 1002 E. 98th St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ John Occhino, 6 Hanover Square, New York.
+ Carl Oeftering, 48 Penn Ave., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Daniel O'Neil, 951 Lafayette Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ S. Oshinsky, Wards Island, New York.
+
+ [Illustration: _France, April, 1919_]
+
+ Gilbert Paneth, 326 East 91st St., New York.
+ Gustave Pankratz, 17 Madison St., Rochester.
+ Benjamin Parker, 77 Kingsbury St., Waterbury, Conn.
+ Elmer Patterson, Burt, N. Y.
+ George Petersen, Kimbalton, Iowa.
+ Julian Poluzzi, 59 Hall Pl., W. Quincy, Mass.
+ John Prescott, 305 Webster St., Monterey, Cal.
+ Porter Priest, Mt. Morriston, Fla.
+ Andrew R. Purcella, 128 Caroline St., Derby, Conn.
+ John J. Quinn, Main St., Beacon Falls, Conn.
+ Patrick J. Quinn, 155 McConnell Ave., Buffalo.
+ Isidore Rabelskie, 55 Avenue C, New York.
+ Vito Racano, 1946 First Ave., New York.
+ Robert Radford, 112 Wilson Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Joseph Rainone, 438 East 116th St., New York.
+ Carey J. Reed, Prospect, Tenn.
+ Ralph Reid, Route A, St. Petersburg, Fla.
+ Frank Reid, 967 Madison St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Edward Rennie, 29 Franklin St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ George F. Roberts, 15 Ivy St., Elmhurst, N. Y.
+ Johannes Rodenburg, Star Route, Cumberland, Iowa.
+ Howard F. Roeding, 97 Miller Ave., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Harry Roessler, 409 16th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ John A. Ross, 14 First St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Alexander Rossino, 228 Myrtle Ave., Buffalo.
+ Theodore Rubinstein, 215 Fourth Ave., N. Y.
+ Frank Russell, Carthage, Tenn.
+ James Sareri, Box 176, Oyster Bay, N. Y.
+ Edward Sasse, 204 Fifth Ave., Astoria, N. Y.
+ Clyde Savage, 80 Maple St., Bangor, Me.
+ Thomas J. Scanlon, 354 West 12th St., N. Y.
+ William Schaeffer, E. Topper St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Sigmund Schulz, 748 9th Ave., L. I. C., N. Y.
+ Harry Schwartz, 702 East Fifth St., New York.
+ Karl Schwarz, Jamaica Creek, Springfield Gardens, N. Y.
+ Fred E. Shaddock, 151 Ridgewood Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Harry Shapiro, 230 East 115th St., New York.
+ Aris M. Shellman, 303 West 111th St., N. Y.
+ Carl Shubert, Suffolk, Mont.
+ Abraham Siegel, 251 Amboy St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Morris Silver, 210 Riverdale Ave., Bkln, N. Y.
+ William Simpson, 620 Hudson St., New York.
+ William Skeets, Lockport, N. Y.
+ William Slater, South Dartmouth, Mass.
+ William Smith, Englewood, Cal.
+ W. E. Snyder, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Lee Solomon, Palmyra, Ill.
+ Arthur D. Soper, 28 Huron St., East Lynn, Mass.
+ Soren Sorenson, Ruthton, Minn.
+ Jacob Squire, 568 Grand St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Christopher Staudigal, 143 Bleecker St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Brodie Stewart, Rutherford, Tenn.
+ Earl C. Stewart, White Pine, Tenn.
+ William J. Strong, R. F. D. 12, Springville, Ala.
+ Otis Summers, Dwyer, Tenn.
+ Martin Swenson, Wetonka, S. D.
+ Thomas Swinehardt, 223 East Hendrick St., Shelbyville, Ind.
+ Philip Tasman, 155 Hickory St., Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Dudley Taylor, Turner, Ore.
+ James Taylor, Newmarket, Tenn.
+ Norman Taylor, Ashley, Mont.
+ R. F. Taylor, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Volney O. Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.
+ Voss Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.
+ Monroe Todd, Allen, S. C.
+ Deorato Tortora, 7 Old Wood Point Road, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Ray Turk, 6 Cedar St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Thomas F. Twyford, 807 E. 8th St., Bkln, N. Y.
+ John Urban, 28 Crandall St., Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Hillery Vaughn, Briggsville, Ark.
+ John P. Vaughn, 567 East Ave., Akron, O.
+ Modestino Vecchiarino, 16 Durand St., Danbury, Conn.
+ Fred Viemer, 11 Meadow St., Seymour, Conn.
+ Joseph Visentin, Wappinger Falls, N. Y.
+ Abraham Wald, 238 East 24th St., New York.
+ Cleve Wallace, Dyersburg, Tenn.
+ Donald M. Wallach, 71 East 92nd St., N. Y.
+ Harry Wernet, Eagle Grove, Iowa.
+ John J. Whalen, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Pearl Whittington, Gloucester, Miss.
+ Lee Wilkerson, Winchester, Ark.
+ Joseph Will, 12 Alice St., Rochester, N. Y.
+ Roland H. Williams, 25 Summerfield Place, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Edward J. Williamson, Jeffrey, La.
+ Albert G. Wilson, Jr., 400 Third St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ William Wilson, 240 Chestnut St., Lockport, N. Y.
+ Charles O. Woods, Beaver, Ore.
+ Merton Yandes, 115 South Union St., Rochester, N. Y.
+ Lewis Yasner, 190 Floyd St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Samuel Zashinsky, 381 Leonard St., Bklyn, N. Y.
+ Edward P. Zehler, Strykersville, N. Y.
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: {Distinguished Service Cross medal}]
+
+All Hail the Brave!
+
+Courage--that fidelity to purpose despite physical welfare--is the
+natural attribute of the soldier. But there are those exceptional deeds
+of valor that are committed beyond the right of expectation; they are
+deeds that combine the highest intelligence with the utmost bravery;
+they are those instances of self-sacrificial service that are rendered
+not with thought of hardship nor of pain nor of reward, but only with
+the hope that the foundations of our Country and our Homes remain
+unshaken.
+
+ [star] Star indicates a posthumous award.
+ * Asterisk denotes those who were killed after their citation.
+
+ [star]Private 1st Class Barney Bardman, Distinguished Service Cross,
+ Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ [star]Private Earl Millsap, Distinguished Service Cross, Asotin,
+ Washington.
+ [star]Private Albert C. Peterson, Distinguished Service Cross, Stacy,
+ Minnesota.
+ [star]1st Lieutenant William R. Reid, Distinguished Service Cross,
+ Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Major Weston C. Jenkins, Distinguished Service Cross, Rome, New York.
+ Major Fred A. Tillman, Chevalier, Legion d'Honneur de France, Ulster,
+ Pa.
+ Captain Everett A. Butterfield, French Order of the Black Star,
+ New York.
+
+
+Divisional Citations
+
+ Capt. Alexander D. B. Pratt, New York.
+ [star]2d Lt. Clarence I. Grubbs, Kansas City, Mo.
+ 2d Lt. Arthur J. Hamblen, New York.
+ 2d Lt. F. Hartig, address unknown.
+ 2d Lt. Kenneth C. Lincoln, Fall River, Mass.
+ 2d Lt. Harry R. Weiman, St. Louis, Mo.
+ Sergt. Lloyd C. Anderson, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Charles H. Bradshaw, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Louis Beckendorf, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ *Private Jacob Borker, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Ralph U. Brett, New York.
+ Pvt. 1st Class George Busko, Breckenridge, Minn.
+ *Pvt. James Conner, New York.
+ Corp. Patrick Conway, New York.
+ Sergt. Edward M. Crimmins, Binghamton, N. Y.
+ Sergt. A. James DiMaggio, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Hugh A. Donnelly, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Corp. Edward J. Dwyer, Buffalo, N. Y.
+ Pvt. William Ehrmann, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Josiah E. Evans, Ansonia, Conn.
+ Pvt. 1st Class John Greany, New York.
+ Pvt. 1st Class P. M. Hagen, Lansford, N. D.
+ Corp. Gilrock Hanson, Creston, Mont.
+ Sergt. William F. Howard, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Ernest C. Hutchings, Manhasset, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Robert R. Johnson, Newburgh, N. Y.
+ Pvt. John F. Kelly, Adler, Mont.
+ Sergt. George A. Klein, Jr., Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Sergt. Harvey A. Kreuscher, Staten Island, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class James J. Lydon, New York.
+ Sergt. Joseph P. Monihan, Wilmington, Del.
+ [star]Pvt. Alfred Nickerson, Lewiston, N. Y.
+ Pvt. Andrew R. Pucella, Derby, Conn.
+ Sergt. John A. Ross, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ [star]Sergt. George F. Russell, Brooklyn, N. Y.
+ Pvt. 1st Class Thomas J. Scanlon, New York.
+ Sergt. Aris M. Shellman, New York.
+ [star]Pvt. 1st Class Joseph Strauss, New York.
+ Sergt. Monroe Todd, Allen, S. C.
+ [star]Pvt. J. Robinson, Newfane, N. Y.
+ Pvt. Volney O. Thompson, Honesdale, Idaho.
+ Corp. Frederick Viemer, Seymour, Conn.
+ Sergt. Donald M. Wallach, New York.
+
+
+
+
+ The
+ Burke [Illustration: {American Legion seal}] Kelly
+ Post
+
+
+
+That spirit of dominant Americanism with which the war was fought seems
+in these times of peace to be best reflected by the American Legion.
+
+Appreciating this, those members of Company B, 307th Infantry, who
+regarded with favor the idea of a post-bellum organization applied to
+the American Legion for a charter. One was granted and they were
+admitted as the Burke-Kelly Post No. 172.
+
+The name was selected in honor of the memory of two of their comrades:
+Sergeant Frank W. Burke, killed by a high explosive shell on the line of
+the Vesle, August 23d, 1918, and Corporal John E. Kelly, killed by a
+high explosive shell during the battle of Merval, September 8th, 1918.
+
+This publication of the History of Company B was made possible by the
+members of the Burke-Kelly Post under the following officers:
+
+ _President_
+ WILLIAM F. HOWARD
+
+ _Vice-Presidents_
+ JOHN A. ROSS
+ ARTHUR J. HAMBLEN
+ ALFRED HELLER
+
+ _Secretary_
+ A. JAMES DIMAGGIO
+
+ _Treasurer_
+ THOMAS F. TWYFORD
+
+ _Corresponding Secretary_
+ JULIUS KLAUSNER, JR.
+
+ _Executive Committee_
+ DONALD M. WALLACH
+ FRED A. GLEIFORST
+ RALPH U. BRETT
+
+
+
+
+ [Illustration: Watching the Home Fires]
+
+
+They were watched, and high they burned, by those who more than all else
+represented to us the concrete reason for which we served.
+
+None of us but _felt_ that we were fighting for our Country; but all of
+us _knew_ that we were fighting for our Home.
+
+Our Home Folks,--our Mothers and our Fathers, our Sisters and our Wives
+and our Sweethearts and our Friends--all banded together so that we,
+while never losing the _thought_ of Home, were also not to lose its
+_touch_.
+
+Those tenders of the fireside whom we knew as the "Family Unit" were
+organized as the Company B Family Unit and were affiliated with the
+307th Regimental Family Unit. They formed on our embarkation for
+overseas, and by virtue of a succession of meetings under the active and
+enthusiastic leadership of Mrs. William Vanamee and Miss Virginia Fuller
+they became welded into a body that accomplished immeasurable benefit
+not only for our physical but also for our spiritual welfare.
+
+The socks, the cigarettes, the wristlets and the soap were needs of vast
+import, but our knowledge that those behind us were marshaled just as we
+were was more warming than wristlets, more comforting than cigarettes.
+
+The officers during the early period were Miss Virginia Fuller,
+President; Miss Helen Pritchard, Secretary; Mrs. W. B. Wise, Treasurer.
+The meetings were held in a barren loft at 6 East 30th Street, New York
+City. Here the ideas were conceived, the plans formulated, and the
+policies acted upon, that were so far-reaching and effective.
+
+Tho first drawn together for the good of Company B, their own sufferings
+served to consolidate their interests and to strengthen their purpose.
+
+As notice after notice issued from Washington advising as to losses in
+battle by death and by wounds, the need for common consolation became
+most urgent and a noble response came from those who were in a position
+to give comfort. These were trying days, days of mental agony, days of
+longing and hoping and praying.
+
+In September one of our own men, Sergeant George A. Klein, Jr., who had
+been returned to the United States as an instructor, appeared at a
+meeting and gave word, mostly welcome, some sad, to the news-hungry
+relatives.
+
+These various activities were recorded in a small four-page bulletin
+published for and distributed to us overseas.
+
+And then the Armistice. Relief from the tension of the meetings was
+given by the final let-up of the war and soon the time came when much
+thought was given to filling those "9x4x3" boxes of Christmas cheer.
+
+ [Illustration: _The Ring_]
+
+The date of our return was flashed across the waters during the early
+part of April and immediately wheels were set in motion to prepare for
+it.
+
+Their welcome took the form of a reception and dance. For the first
+time, and the only time, Company B and the Family Unit were together.
+And as a token of their affection and regard they presented to each of
+us a silver signet ring bearing our Divisional insignia--Liberty,
+together with the Company and Regimental designation. Inside the ring
+they had placed as their wish: "May God Protect You."
+
+Guests of especial honor were the two McIntyre sisters, who were so
+active overseas with the Salvation Army and who for so long a time had
+been identified with our Division, having for a while been assigned to
+our own Regiment.
+
+Thus culminated the activities of the Family Unit of Company B. But just
+as we have decided upon a continuation of our organization--the same in
+substance, if not in form,--so the Unit decided to serve as the
+Auxiliary to the Burke-Kelly Post, American Legion.
+
+The Auxiliary meetings are held in the rooms adjoining those of the
+Burke-Kelly Post, at the 77th Division Club. The original board of
+officers includes Mrs. A. J. Hamblen, President; Miss Virginia Fuller,
+Miss Sarah Kelly, and Mrs. William Charles, Vice-Presidents; Miss Anna
+Charles, Secretary, and Mrs. W. B. Wise, Treasurer.
+
+And their banner is still held aloft. A new name, but the old purpose.
+
+ [Illustration: {Decoration}]
+
+ [Illustration: {Bugler playing Taps}]
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Company B, 307th Infantry, by Julius Klausner
+
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