French Guard Last Resting Places of Yanks
Paris
-- Americans will have no trouble in finding the graves of
relatives who fell on the field of battle in France, after
they
obtain from the graves registry bureau the location of the
interment. The French are taking excellent care of the last
resting
places of Americans. Crosses with name plates have been
erected over the burial places of every identified man that
has fallen. Usually the steel helmet of the man -- and it
generally has his name written on the hatband -- has been
placed on the grave, together with his bayonet, thrust into
the earth as a sort of foot stone. Often his canteen and
cartridge belt have been hung from the cross, and sometimes
papers describing his identity and how he fell have been
placed in a corked bottle, the neck of which is imbedded in
the earth.
There is no danger that French civilians in the regions where
the men are buried will appropriate any of these articles as
souvenirs. Four long years of war, with the discarded
equipment of Germans, British and French scattered over the
terrain has purged them of all desire or longing for
souvenirs. Civilians returning to their shell-shattered homes
have found their front gardens converted into a cemetery of
three or four graves. But the graves have not been molested,
on the other hand, they are kept up by civilians who keep the
edges trimmed and a spray of flowers or leaves on the mound.
Even the children respect the burial places, and while they
may pick up bayonets or grenades that they find in the fields,
they never
touch the equipment placed on the graves.
~source: Iowa City Citizen,
Friday, December 13, 1918 |