WORLD WAR 1
DEATHS
CORPORAL DANIEL GORDON FOSTER, who was killed in battle during the World War, was a son of DANIEL E. and MINNIE (OATES) FOSTER, of Hopkinsville. His father's parents were CAREY and ELIZA (BARSEAU) FOSTER, and his mother's parents were W. ROBERT and JANE (BASS) OATES. GORDON FOSTER enlisted July 26, 1917, and was made a Corporal of Company I, 336th Infantry, and went overseas with the 84th Division. He was transferred to the 77th Division on October 8, 1918, and was killed at Argonne Forest November 4, 1918 just one week before the Armistice. His body was brought back to Hopkinsville, and buried in Riverside Cemetery, September 21, 1921. He was born in Christian County, June 1, 1890, and was twenty-eight years old when he died for his country. His pioneer ancestors, BAYLESS and ELIZABETH (RANDOLPH) OATES were early settles in Muhlenberg County, at one time a part of Christian"I find a great consolation in serving the Old Flag. If I live it
is glorious or if I'm crippled I won't regret turning out to my country's
call, or if I'm killed there will be nothing to regret, for how could a
man die a more glorious death than a soldier in the uniform of his country.
It is one thing of my life that there are no regrets about. All I have
to do is to do my duty, and do my best to make a success of this job. In
fact, I think a man will prove what he is by how he does this work. We
men in uniform will never have a greater task in life than the one we are
engaged in now. I think a man may be judged by how he does his greatest
task. No man except the Son of Man or the Lord Jesus has ever done a greater
thing that we are doing now and no man ever will."
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Meuse-Argonne Cemetery at Romagne Frank Winston Dabney Jr. FRANK WINSTON DABNEY, JR., volunteered for service on April 9,
1917, and was sent to Fort Sill, Camp Doniphan, for his training in the
35th Division. They went to France in May, 1918, and had their first fighting
July 20th. He was wounded and in a hospital three weeks in August and rejoined
his regiment, the 140th, in time for the great Argonne battle. He was killed
on the first day, September 26, 1918, and was reported missing; but in
June of the next year, the Graves Registration Service found his body,
and it was interred in the Meuse-Argonne cemetery, at Romagne.
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JOHN C. GARY, JR., who was killed in action in the World War, was running an engine on the Big Four Railroad when he enlisted in a Cincinnati company. when the company disembarked in France, a call was made on it for volunteers to join an aviation corps. He was the only man in the company who did not volunteer, saying Uncle Sam had trained him to shoot a machine gun and he was going to shoot one. He was killed in a trench in the battle of the ARgonne, November 2, only nine days before the Armistice. He was twenty-eight years old, a son of MR. AND MRS. JOHN C. GARY, SR., of Hopkinsville. |
Arthur E. Grant, son of Luther Ellis Grant and Lennie Alice Reynolds, was born August 22, 1897, near Crofton, Christian County, Kentucky . His parents divorced by 1900 and Lennie Alice Reynolds remarried in 1903 to Thomas Calloway Marr and migrated to Texas about 1909. Arthur enlisted in the United States Army (Regular Army) on May 26, 1916 at Kingsville, Kleberg County, Texas and died July 20, 1918, near Soissons, France, during World War I. More on Arthur E. Grant and statement of Service Card |
Those Who
Gave Their Lives
John S. Armistead | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Cecil Armstrong | Lieut. | Hopkinsville |
Lyman E. Barnes | Lieut. | Hopkinsville |
John Watson Barr | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Julian Bertram Blakemore | Hopkinsville | |
Barney L. Carroll | killed in action (Oct. 11, 1918) | Hopkinsville |
Turner Lane Cline | killed in action | Dawson Springs |
John Covington, Jr. | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Frank W. Dabney | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
La Fayette Dunn | killed in action | Pembroke |
Daniel Gordon Foster | killed in action | Pembroke |
James William Gamble | Crofton | |
John C. Gary | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Meddie Hardway | Gracey | |
Charles Henderson | Hopkinsville | |
Mack House | Hopkinsville | |
John Johnson | H. Kirkmansville | |
H. Clay Jones | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Clarence Allen Lander | Hopkinsville | |
Vernon Allen Lindley | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
William Henry Lowry | killed in action | Oak Grove |
Raymond McCord | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
William Taylor Mc Knight | Crofton | |
Everett Parker | Dawson Springs | |
Ernest Raymond Pursley | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
William F. Reese | Cerulean Springs | |
Dr. Charles A. Robertson | killed on the battlefield while
attending a wounded comrad |
Hopkinsville |
Shellie Rogers | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Eugene Sedberry | lost at sea | Hopkinsville |
Gordon Shepherd | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Raymond L. Skerritt | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Howard Brame Smith | killed in action | Hopkinsville |
Marvin Smithson | Hopkinsville | |
George N. Stevens | Hopkinsville | |
Henry D. Wallace, Jr. | Lieut. | Hopkinsville |
Genie Ware | Pembroke | |
Frank Weakly | Hopkinsville | |
Edward O. White | Hopkinsville | |
Oscar E. White | Hopkinsville | |
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Albert Bell | Pembroke | |
Rivers Clardy | LaFayette | |
Sanders Collines | killed in action | LaFayette |
Lenzy Elam | Crofton | |
Walter McKinney | Hopkinsville | |
Ben McKnight | Hopkinsville | |
William S. Smith | Hopkinsville | |
Conrad Watt | Hopkinsville | |
Rogers Williams | killed in action | Pembroke |