Contrasting lives: WWI Black Veterans Everett Johnson and Robert ChaseUnconventional Memorials Created by the Forgotten Female Veterans of World War ICall for Papers: “Lesser-Known Stories of the Great War: Women, Minorities, Civilians, and the Untold”This symposium, hosted by the First Division Museum and sponsored by The Great War Institute at Park University will be held May 13-14, 2022, at the First Division Museum, 1s151 Winfield Road, Wheaton, IL., 60189. Paper and panel proposals in all fields of history related to “Lesser-Known Stories of the Great War: Women, Minorities, Civilians, and the Untold” are invited. The symposium is particularly interested in proposals for complete sessions, including panelists, chairs, and commentators. All proposals should be submitted no later than March 1, 2022. The symposium encourages aspiring and young historians, including graduate students, to present their work. For questions about submitting a proposal, please contact us at gsrcentre@park.edu. |
Orange County Historian Johanna Yaun will host a trip to Belgium and France next year to honor the soldiers who served in the 369th New York Infantry Regiment. The trip will take place from July 10 -19, 2023 and will explore locations that served as notable backdrops during World War I. Harlem’s Rattlers, the 369th New York Infantry Regiment, later nicknamed the Harlem Hellfighters, was a regiment of soldiers of African American descent from New York City, the Hudson Valley and other parts of the county. Click here to read more, and find out how you can join this limited-space tour to sites of significance related to the 369th. |
In 2021, Arlington National Cemetery (ANC) served as the designated government leader of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Centennial Commemoration, recognizing the 100th anniversary of the Tomb’s creation at ANC on November 11, 1921. The ANC team produced a wealth of content for the public about the history and meanings of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, much of which focused on World War I, which will be shared with Dispatch readers in the coming months. Click here to read more, and learn about ANC's amazing Commemorative Guide to the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. |
A man is only missing if he is forgotten. Our Doughboy MIA this month is1st LT Leonard Charles Aitken. Born in Reno, Nevada on 10 June 1897, Leonard Aitken grew up in California, where he joined the California National Guard at 18 years of age. When the trouble broke out with Mexico, he reported for duty in June 1916 and served along the border with the hospital corps, attending elements of what would, a year later, become the 160th Infantry, 40th Division. Following America’s declaration of war on Germany, on 7 April 1917, Aitken reported to the Officers Training School at San Diego and upon graduation was shipped to France in August 1918 as a 2nd lieutenant with the 158th Infantry, 40th Division. There, on 20 October 1918, he was sent as a replacement officer to the 372nd Infantry, 93rd Division, then holding a section of the line in the Alsace sector near Hill 607. On 7 November, while leading his platoon on a night action, Aitkens and his men captured several prisoners but unknowingly walked into the line of fire of a German machine gun nest, which opened up on them, killing or capturing all but two enlisted men of the patrol and freeing the prisoners. Without hesitation Lieutenant Aitken immediately advanced against the position with the intent of eliminating it, but he was shot twice in the chest and killed in the endeavor. The end result was that they captured 1 officer (Aitkens) and 22 men; however, the date of Aitkens’ death is given as 8 November 1918. Following the Armistice, Graves Registration Service (GRS) officials went on the search for Aitkens’ remains, but had little luck. Their hardest clue was a report that German officers had buried Aitkens with full military honors “in the church yard of the tiny hamlet of La Paive, some 40 miles east of Epinal, France.” There being no town by that name anywhere in that area, this was almost certainly actually the town of La Pariee which is indeed in the area of the action of 7 November. Nothing was ever found however, and his remains continued to be unlocated in the years following the war. As investigations continued, in January 1924, GRS sent a letter to Aitkens’ father requesting a civilian dental chart, but also admitting in the letter that in all probability he was among the Unknown burials, though how this information was considered is not stated in his surviving file. A final attempt at some kind of identification came in December 1926 when the case files of Aitkens and one other officer from the 372nd Infantry were checked against a set of Unknown remains at the Meuse-Argonne Cemetery morgue. It was a long shot, however, as the remains being checked came from a French cemetery in the Marne sector some 300 kilometers northwest of where both officers in question were at the time of their deaths. Not surprisingly, neither officer’s remains were a match and Aitkens’ case was officially closed in 1932 without resolution.
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