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History of CAMDEN COUNTY
in the Great War
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ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY
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History of Camden County in the Great War, 1917-1918
From the author with best wishes to a distinguished friend Frank Sheridan
HISTORY OF
CAMDEN COUNTY
IN THE
GREAT WAR
1917-1918
Authorized by the Victory Jubilee and Memorial Committee and published by the Publicity and Historical Committee
FRANK SHERIDAN, Chairman
CAMDEN, NEW JERSEY, : NINETEEN NINETEEN
Allen County Publie M'hrery 900 Wohnte PO Box 2200 Fort Wane. IN 0900: 1275
COPYRIGHT BY FRANK SHERIDAN.
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HARRISSEWING,
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WASHINGTONO.S.
HON. WOODROW WILSON President of the United States
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FOREWORD
R ECORDS and facts published in this history were gathered from authoritative sources. When the Publicity and Historical Committee was authorized by the Victory Jubilee and Memorial Committee to compile this history the Government was asked for an official list of the heroic dead of Camden county. The War Department replied that it was a physicial impossibility for their bureaus to furnish such information because of the great number of men in service of the nation. The members of the committee, with the aid of the police, secured the information for their records by visiting the homes of those who died in the war and having their relatives fill out questionnaires printed by the Victory Jubilee and Memorial Committee.
The members of the Publicity and Historical Com- mittee were newspapermen of the city and county and the facts relative to Camden county's part in the war were gathered from accounts written by them during the war. The histories of the famous Twenty-ninth and Seventy-eighth Divisions were written from the records published in official newspapers of the American Ex- peditionary Forces and from data supplied by officers of these divisions.
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
Publicity and Historical Committee O
FRANK SHERIDAN, Chairman
FRANK H. RYAN, Secretary
BENJAMIN W. COURTER
FRANK S. ALBRIGHT
CHARLES J. HAAGA
JAMES L. POLK
CHARLES H. SCHUCK
WILLIAM B. WELLS
RICHARD B. RIDGWAY
DANIEL P. MCCONNELL
ALVAH M. SMITH
DANIEL M. STEVENS
JOHN D. COURTER
WILLIAM H. JEFFERYS
WILLIAM ROTHMAN
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
PRESIDENT WILSON'S WAR CABINET
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
INTRODUCTORY
W HEN war was declared by the United States against the Imperial Government of Germany after many overt acts that had aroused the ire of every patriotic American, Camden entered into the preparation made throughout the country to administer the decisive blow against the enemy with a spirit that evidenced its thorough sincerity in the great cause of civilization. Men and women in all walks of life not only volunteered their services for whatever work that might be assigned to them, but were so insistent in being accepted that those in charge of the various phases of the war program had great difficulty in making selections. As time went on there was real work for everyone and it may be stated there were no shirkers in Camden city or county.
At the very outbreak of hostilities many Camden county boys enlisted immediately in the various army or navy services. They were scattered over the country in many camps and on the high seas. Particular interest was manifested in the old Third Regiment, with a glor- ious history stretching back to the days of the Sixth Regiment formed soon after the Civil War; Battery B; the newly formed company of Engineers and the Naval Reserves. Their service has cast enduring honor upon Camden and all the towns and boroughs within the county. Some failed to return because they made the great sacrifice, either on land or sea, and these will re- main Camden county's heroes.
Charles H. Ellis, Mayor of Camden, formed a Public Safety Committee of the city's leading men early in the war, and this body of staunch Americans looked after the many problems that presented themselves in the pre- liminaries. This body continued in service throughout the
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
war and took an active part in the various activities. It was finally resolved into the Victory Committee after the signing of the armistice and under this name planned the home-coming receptions to the heroes of the city and county.
From time to time there were campaigns, drives and the like and in every instance the county arose to the emergency. In the four Liberty Loans and one Victory Loan nearly $39,000,000 was raised by the citizens, giving substantial evidence of regard for country. In the Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army, Y. M. H. A. and other drives, including the United War Work Campaign, there was even more than generous response, because in every instance the quota sought was exceeded. It was not only the man of means who subscribed, but the man or woman who worked for comparatively small wages who was willing to make the sacrifices necessary and thus exemplify their sincere patriotism.
In an industrial way Camden has occasion to feel very much elated over what was accomplished. The great shipyards, employing thousands of men, worked day and night under the Emergency Fleet Corporation turn- ing out ships "and more ships," establishing a world record at the New York Shipbuilding plant in launching the Tuckahoe in twenty-eight days after the keel was laid. The factories were transformed into munition works and throughout the city and in various parts of the county everything was given over to a variety of work necessary to the war. Camden workers not only made ships, but airplane parts, ammunition and all sorts of machinery. All entered into the task with the true American spirit to accomplish the work presented to them and it is unnecessary to add their efforts were not in vain.
In connection with the work of the draft boards it was a revelation as to the manner in which the young man- hood responded. As members of the 78th Division or
CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
other units that went over the seas they acquitted them- selves with honor. The draft boards were composed of some of the county's leading men who devoted much time without compensation. That it was hard and diffi- cult work was recognized by all who came in contact with the task.
When the armistice was signed on November 11, 1918, Camden was in the very midst of wartime activity. It was rather difficult for a time to retard the motion of this rapidly moving machine, but in the subsequent months of reconstruction, as important as in the height of war itself, the city and county continued to do their share of the work in bringing back normal conditions. There was co-operation along all lines, evidencing the very sensible balance maintained here as distinct from the upheavals that marked some places in other parts of the country. In looking over the two and more years of war and reconstruction in which the community played a prominent part, the citizens cannot help but feel very much gratified with what was accomplished. What was done, what our boys did and the many activities incident to Camden in wartime is given in the succeeding pages in some circumstantial detail.
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
W 1 E weep to-day over their graves be cause they are our flesh and blood, but even in our sorrow we are proud that they so nobly died, and our hearts swell within us to think that we fought beside them. To the memory of these heroes this sacred spot is consecrated as a shrine where future generations of men who love liberty may come to do homage. It is not for us to proclaim what they did; their silence speaks more eloquently than words. But it is for us to uphold the conception of duty, honor and country for which they fought and for which they died. It is for us, the living, to carry forward their purpose and make fruitful their sacrifice.
"And now, dear, comrades, farewell. Here under the clear skies on the green hillsides and amid the flowering fields of France, in the quiet hush of peace, we leave you forever in God's keeping."
GENERAL JOHN J. PERSHING,
At Argonne Forest Memorial Day, 1919.
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
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[Copyright by Harris & Ewing] GENERAL JOHN J. PERSHING Commander-in-Chief of American Expeditionary Forces
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
Camden County's Heroic Dead
William S. Ablett Lawrence S. Adams John Robert Adams Thomas J. Allen, Jr. Albert J. Atger John Benj. H. Baker Arlington Baltimore David Barnaby
Frederick H. Baynes Otto H. Bean Edwin Beckley Charles Behrend Walter J. Behrer Ralph Benner Chester L. Bennett Carl F. Bicker David T. Borland Benjamin Borstein Allen H. Bossert Henry J. Bowes George A. Bowers John Otto Boyson Jack Brody Joseph Brznszkiewicz William J. Burke Walter Ernest Butsch Frank J. Carver Robert H. Carr Howard W. Cassady Louis J. Certain Robert F. Christy John Joseph Clynes William Coonrod Joseph F. Covert William Craig John Cunningham Jacob F. Currie Charles T. Daniels Gean Davidson
Tasker H. Davidson John T. Deighan Philip Diaz Leon A. Dickinson Alfred W. Dilks Edward H. Dorsey Otto Dreher Ernest Eckersley Ralph B. Elder Hammitt K. Elliott Christopher Evans, Jr. Frank M. Falls Nicola Fanello
William J. Farrell Henry P. Favereau Jacob Feldman James Fornek Raymond C. Frech Silas Furbush Richard Giest Stanislaw Gontarski Fred W. Grigg H. Rowland Gross Howard W. Haines
William S. Hey William M. Hickman Percy L. Hollinshed William Hoyle Elmer Hunt John T. Hyland Howard Jordan Emerson J. Kane Clarence E. Kantz Enos S. Kimble Herman John King Walter J. Kirk Wm. S. Laskowski Leon A. Lippincott Edgar Burton Lloyd Edward M. McGowan James A. McGuckin Hersey Mander Anthony Martin Charles A. Mathews
Edwin M. Matthews Edward B. May Robert E. Meggett John H. Meisle Allan Irving Morgan Angelo Mucci James L. Murray
Walter Murray James Murtha Norman Nicholson John A. Overland
Noah J. Palmer
Leon P. Parker Bert Pennington Oliver R. Purnell John Howard Read Cornelius Redd Samuel J. Reichard Richard L. Reighn James E. Reynolds Harry Roles David H. Ross
Benjamin J. Sandlow A. T. Schleicher, Jr.
William Schucker John J. Sheldon Kenneth L. Steck Harry A. Steeple Edw. J. Steigerwald Fred D. Stimpson Eben Stout William P. Tatem George E. Trebing Raymond C. Thoirs Albert C. Thompson Joseph A. Tinsman William Troutt William E. Truxton Walter Tucker Frank H. Valentine Gaetano Vinciguerra Harry C. Wagner Martin R. Waldvogel August F. Walter Elizabeth H. Weimann Philip C. Wendell Earl C. Willett Norman W. Wohlken John Wojtkowiak Thomas H. Wright Ellwood K. Young
Townsend C. Young
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
RECORDS OF HEROIC DEAD
J UST one hundred and thirty-four men and one woman from Camden county made the supreme sacrifice in the Great War. Sixty-two were either killed in action or died as the result of wounds received in action, while disease claimed sixty-two lives in army camps here or in France. Some few of the men died at home from disease while on furloughs.
The army's losses were the heaviest in the war, one hundred and seventeen dying in that branch of the ser- vice from this county. The casualties of the other branches of the service were as follows; Navy, seven; Marine Corps, six; Red Cross nurse, one; British army, two; Merchant Marine, one.
Fourteen died of wounds received in action. Six died at sea, five losing their lives in action with enemy ships. Six died from accidents, three of whom were aviators and there was one accidental drowning in France. The sole woman, who died in the service of the nation from this county, was Elizabeth H. Wiemann, a Red Cross nurse.
The records of each of Camden county's heroic dead follow :
WILLIAM S. ABLETT, Private, of 603 South Third street,
Camden, was killed in action in the Argonne Forest on October 27, 1918. Ablett enlisted in Company B, 104th Engi- neers, when that company was organized in this city on April 27, 1917. He was sent to Camp Edge, Sea Girt, and later to Camp McClellan, Anniston, Alabama. He was shot in the arms and legs in the Argonne Forest battle. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Ablett, of 603 South Third street.
ALBERT J. ATGER, Private, of 154 North Twenty-fifth street,
Camden, was connected with Battalion A, 45th Artillery, and was stationed at Camp Stanley, Texas. He died November 27,
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
1918, at the Base Hospital, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, from pneumonia. He enlisted May 31, 1918, in the cavalry and was sent to Camp Stanley for training in Troop G, 305th Cavalry. He was later transferred to the 45th Artillery. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gaston Atger, of 154 North Twenty-fifth street.
LAWRENCE S. ADAMS, Corporal, of 553 Bailey street, Cam- den, was mortally wounded in action on October 25, 1918, in the Argonne Forest battle. He was a member of Company D, 309th Machine Gun Battalion, and on the morning of October 25, his company was firing a barrage and the enemy answered it with artillery fire. A shell struck two of the com- pany's guns and Corporal Adams was so severely wounded that he died that same day in a hospital. He was a member of the Camden Police Department when called in the draft and sent to Camp Dix for training. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. D J. Adams, of 553 Bailey street.
JOHN ROBERT ADAMS, Private, of 644 Erie street, Camden,
died of pneumonia November 3, 1918, in a hospital in France. He was a member of the 303d Trench Mortar Battery and was drafted and sent to Camp Dix on April 25, 1918. His unit sailed for overseas three weeks later. He was twenty-five years old and was the son of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Adams, of 644 Erie street.
THOMAS J. ALLEN, JR., Private, of Lawnside, was drowned
in an accident in France after serving in three battles in the war and escaping uninjured. His death occurred at Bay City, France, April 25, 1919. He was called into service in October, 1917, and sent to Camp Hill, Virginia, where he became a member of Company I, 304th Stevedore Regiment. He sailed for France in April, 1918, and was transferred to Company M, 301st Infantry, and later to Company M, 811th Infantry. His parents reside at Lawnside.
JOHN BENJAMIN H. BAKER, Private. of 1004 Spruce street,
Camden, died in Base Hospital No. 35, in France, on Sep- tember 17, 1918, from blood poison as the result of bullet wounds received in action. He was drafted June 28, 1918, and sent to Camp Dix. He sailed for France on August 26, 1918, and was attached to the Medical Detachment of the 312thi Field Signal Battalion and was wounded carrying wounded from the field of battle. He was 28 years old and the son of Mrs. Elizabeth Kecse, of 1004 Spruce street.
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RECORDS OF HEROIC DEAD.
ARLINGTON BALTIMORE, Corporal, of 713 Cherry street,
Camden, died of Spanish influenza, at Camp Dix, on October 5, 1918. He was drafted September 26, 1918, and sent to that cantonement as a member of Company C, 5th Battalion, 153d Depot Brigade and was the son of Mrs. Henry Baltimore. His death occurred nine days after being sent to camp.
DAVID BARNABY, Private, of 521 Hunter street, Gloucester
City, was fatally injured when he was kicked by a horse over the right eye, near Hausen, Germany, on February 2, 1919. He was a member of Battery F, 76th Field Artillery, in the Army of Occupation, and was sent with a detail for horses to Hausen. On the return Barnaby asked permission to fall out to adjust his saddle. The detail had gone but one hundred yards when Corporal Hayes saw him fall. When the detail reached Barnaby they found him badly injured and he was taken to the hospital at Mayen, Germany, where he died on February 5. He was the son of Mrs. Rebecca Barnaby, of 521 Hunter street, Gloucester City.
FREDERICK H. BAYNES, Sergeant, of 935 Monmouth street,
Gloucester City, was killed in action in the Meuse-Argonne offensive on October 9, 1918. He enlisted in the old Third Regiment, National Guard of New Jersey, and was sent with the regiment to Camp Edge, Sea Girt, on July 25, 1917, and later transferred to Camp McClellan, Anniston, Ala. He be- came a member of Company G, when the regiment was changed to the 114th Infantry. He was the son of Frederick H. and Rebecca Baynes, of Gloucester City.
OTTO H. BEAN, of 445 Berkley street, Camden, was first assistant engineer of the American steamer Tuscarora, which was lost at sea after it had sailed from New York on December 6, 1917, for Halifax. The Tuscarora is believed to have been dashed to pieces on the rocky coast of Halifax. The last heard of the vessel was when it passed Father Point on the St. Lawrence river. The ship was in the service of the United States Shipping Board. First Assistant Engineer Bean was 39 years old and was the husband of Mrs. Margaret Bean, of 445 Berkley street.
EDWIN BECKLEY, Private, of 314 Mechanic street, Camden,
died of pulmonary tuberculosis in France on November 30, 1918. He was drafted in November, 1917, and sent to Camp Dix. He was the son of William S. and Lillie M. Beckley, of 314 Mechanic street.
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
CHARLES BEHREND, Gunner, of 809 Penn street, Camden,
was killed in the battle of St. Mihiel on September 26, 1918, when a high explosive shell of the enemy burst near him. Behrend was drafted and sent to Camp Dix, where he was assigned to Company C, 309th Infantry. He sailed for France in May, 1918, and spent his twenty-sixth birthday anniversary in the trenches before St. Mihiel. This soldier was an orphan and was the brother of Mrs. Lillian Walker, of 925 South Paxson street, Philadelphia.
WALTER J. BEHRER, Private, of 3284 Westfield avenue,
Camden, was killed in action September II, 1918, while bringing ammunition up to his battery. He was a member of Battery D, 307th Field Artillery. One other comrade was killed and four wounded together with Behrer when a German shell burst over their battery. Behrer was 24 years old and was drafted April 1, 1918, and sent to Camp Dix. His regiment sailed for France in May. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Behrer, of 3284 Westfield avenue.
RALPH BENNER, Private, of 828 North Sixth street, Cam-
den, died of nervous and mental diseases at Base Hospital, No. 214, Saveney, France, fifteen miles from St. Nazaire, on April 26, 1919. He was a member of the medical detachment of the 314th Infantry, of the 79th Division, and was in five bat- tles during the war. Private Benner was drafted in September, 1917, and sent to Camp Dix. He sailed to France in February, 1918. He was the son of Clinton C. Benner, of 828 North Sixth street.
CHESTER L. BENNETT, Private, of 34 Kresson avenue, Had-
donfield, was killed in action July 19, 1918, at Chateau Thierry at the beginning of the allies' major offensive after having participated in the battle of Cantigny. Machine gun bullets through the abdomen caused his death. He was the son of Mrs. Hattie E. Bennett and enlisted in the regular army January 27, 1917, before America entered the Great War. He was sent to Eagle Pass, Texas, being attached to the 30th Infan- try. He was later transferred to the Machine Gun Company of the 16th Infantry.
CARL F. BICKER, Private, of 1636 Broadway, Camden, en-
listed in the United States Marine Corps in the fall of 1917 , while attending college at Winona Lake. He was in service a year when stricken with the pneumonia at Camp Quantico, Va.
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RECORDS OF HEROIC DEAD.
He died September 29, 1918. Private Bicker was the son of the late Dr. Francis J. Bicker and was a nephew of Mrs. H. D. Burroughs, of 1636 Broadway.
DAVID T. BORLAND, 30 years old, lived with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. David Borland, at 2305 Howell street, Camden. He was a member of Company C. 312th Infantry, and went to Camp Dix on February 26, 1918, sailing overseas in May. He was killed in action on October 24, 1918, during the great battle in the Argonne.
BENJAMIN BORSTEIN, Corporal, of 1200 Everett street,
Camden, died at his home while on a furlough from Camp Dix on September 30, 1918, from influenza. He was a member of Company No. 41, T. R. B. 153d Depot Brigade. He was drafted July 16, 1918, and was the son of Joseph and Celia Borstein.
ALLEN H. BOSSERT, Sergeant, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bossert, of 113 Chestnut avenue, Woodlynne, entered the service in August, 1917, and was assigned to Company K, 3IIth Infantry, at Camp Dix. He was later assigned to the 311th Machine Gun Company, and was overseas from May. 1918, until October 3, 1918, when he was killed by shrapnel. At the time of his death he was about to be sent to school to study for a lieutenancy. His body rests in France. Sergeant Bossert was the only Woodlynne boy to make the supreme sacrifice.
HENRY J. BOWES, Lieutenant, of Wellwood avenue and Volan street, Merchantville, lost his life when the Submarine Chaser 209 was sunk off Fire Islands on August 27, 1918. He was in command of twelve chasers when the armed merchant- man Felix Paussip took the chasers for German submarines and opened fire, sinking the 209. The fatal mistake was made one hundred and fifty miles off Fire Islands, after three destroy- ers had left the twelve chasers. Two other chasers were sunk in the battle. Lieutenant Bowes enlisted in the Naval Reserves before this country entered the war in April, 1917, and was a junior grade officer. He was the husband of Mrs. Evelyn Humphreys Bowes, of Merchantville.
GEORGE A. BOWERS, Private, of 420 Broadway, Camden, died from influenza and pneumonia in France on January 24, 1919. He was a member of Company B, 104th Engineers, and enlisted in Camden in April, 1917, and was sent to Sea Girt
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CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR.
with his company on July 25, 1917. He served with his com- pany north of Verdun after being sent to France from Camp McClellan, Anniston, Alabama. He was the son of Louis and Emma Bowers, of 420 Broadway.
JOHN OTTO BOYSON, Private, of 629 Birch street, Camden,
died from peritonitis on October 5, 1918, at American Hos- pital No. I, France. He was a member of Company D, Casual Department, Medical Unit, and was assigned to the hospital where his death occured. The son of Mrs. Anna L. Boyson, of 629 Birch street, he enlisted on May 14, 1917, and was sent to Fort Slocum, New York, and assigned to Company B, 57th Infantry. Later he was transferred to Company D, Casual Department, Medical Unit, at Fort Jay, New York, and from this camp he was sent overseas.
JACK BRODY, Private, of 101 Chestnut street, Camden, was
killed in action on September 27, 1918, in the Argonne Forest and buried at Mount Blainville. He was the son of Solomon Brody and enlisted in the Third Regiment, National Guard of Pennsylvania, in July, 1917. He was assigned to a camp in West Philadelphia and later was sent to Camp Han- cock, Georgia, with the regiment which became the 10th Infan- try. Brody was assigned to Company G and the regiment sailed for France in May, 1918.
JOSEPH BRZNSZKIEWICZ, Private, of 1412 South Tenth street, Camden, was killed in a railroad accident in France on November 14, 1918. He was a member of Headquarters Company, 7th Training Battalion, Field Artillery Replacement Depot. He was drafted under the name of Joseph Briskle. He was a brother of Mrs. Maggie M. Iwanoski, of 1412 South Tenth street.
WILLIAM J. BURKE, Private, of 710 North Sixth street,
Camden, died from spinal meningitis following an attack of Spanish influenza on October 23, 1918, at United States Army Hospital, No. 3, Colonia, N. J. He was a member of Company H,16th Battalion, United States Guards. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Burke, of 710 North Sixth street.
WALTER ERNEST BUTSCH, Bugler, of 620 North Fifth street, Camden, died on November 6, 1918, from wounds received in action. He was a member of Company K, 311th Infantry. He was drafted September, 1917, and sent to Camp
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Dix. His unit left for France on May 20, 1918, and he was wounded at Lancon, near Grand Pre, France, on October 30, 1918, in the Argonne Forest battle and was carried to a base hospital in partially shell wrecked church at Vichy by Sergeant Theodore Roller, a comrade, where he died seven days later. Butsch was 24 years old and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Butsch, of 620 North Fifth street.
FRANK J. CARVER, Corporal, of 67 South Twenty-ninth street, Camden, died of pneumonia at Hempstead, Long Island, on October 21, 1918. He enlisted at the age of thirty- one years in the Aviation Corps on December 1, 1917, and was sent to Camp McArthur, Waco, Texas, where he was assigned to the 340th Aero Squadron on December 20. He was trans- ferred to Camp Greene, North Carolina, in March, 1918, and on August I was transferred to Hempstead. He was the son of Mrs. Eleanor Carver.
ROBERT H. CARR, Private, of 222 Amber street, Camden,
died from pneumonia in France on October 18, 1918. He was drafted and sent to Camp Dix and was a member of Com- pany E, 347th Infantry. He was the husband of Mrs. Mary Carr, of 222 Amber street.
HOWARD W. CASSADY, Sergeant, of 420 Webster street, Camden, was stricken with Spanish influenza aboard the United States ship Reina Mercedes. He was removed to the United States Naval Hospital at Annapolis, Maryland, where he died on October 19, 1918. He was buried in Camden. Ser- geant Cassady enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in January, 1917, and was sent to Paris Island, South Carolina, for training. He was later transferred to the Naval Academy at Annapolis and then assigned to the Reina Mercedes. He was the son of Joseph P. and Bella Cassady, of 2005 Arlington street, and was 22 years of age.
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