INSTALLATION OF A MEMORIAL TABLET COMMEMORATING THE SERVICES
OF THE 351st INFANTRY, 88TH DIV., A. E. F.
On August 12, 1921, in
pursuance of invitation and program, there assembled on the
main corridor floor of the Historical Building representatives
of the Three hundred and fifty-first Infantry, Eighty-eighth
Division, A. E. F., with the Governor of Iowa, members of the
Supreme Court, and other state officials and invited guests.
The program is herewith presented, after which follow the
proceedings of installation.
PROGRAM
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Music
Presiding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
William D. Evans, Chief Justice
Invocation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Rt.
Rev. Theodore N. Morrison, D. D.
Address. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The
351st Infantry Brigadier-General W. D. Beach, Retired
Music
Unveiling of Tablet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mrs.
Allen Eckerman
Presentation of Tablet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . H. F. Evans,
Maj. 351st Inf.
Significance and Symbolism of Tablet. . Sherry E. Fry,
Sculptor
Acceptance Of Tablet. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .N. E.
Kendall, Governor of Iowa
Music
Benediction
Proceedings
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CURATOR HARLAN
When you entered this building you may have seen carved
above the portal the legend, "State Historical, Memorial and
Art Building." The words imply the functions of the Historical
Department of Iowa. Whatever is within the realm of Iowa
history is within our interest.
Whatever has to do with memorials is likewise of our
concern. And so with things of art so far as the state
officially concerns itself at the seat of government. This
occasion embraces all these. Our Board of Trustees is
formed of the Governor, the Secretary of State, the
Superintendent of Public Instruction, and the Chief Justice
and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court. As administrative
head of this department it is for me to submit policies and
plans and when these are approved by our Board to execute and
report results. Such a plan in such a policy is this hour to
be completed.
This afternoon Chief Justice Evans is unable to be
present and at his request I now introduce the program and
present Hon. Thomas Arthur, of our Board, who will preside.
JUDGE ARTHUR
Heaven smiles upon us today. We are gathered for a high and
noble service—the unveiling of this tablet. Man- kind has
learned to commemorate great deeds and great thoughts by
symbolic statuary. It presents these sub- lime deeds and
thoughts to future generations. The soldier stirs the emotion
of the worshiper because he presents courage as his shield.
Perhaps obedience may be classed as the noblest of virtues,
but courage is the greatest because it protects them all. No
man was ever truly brave who never felt fear; fearless bravery
is unpraiseworthy. We measure the worth of the soldier by the
completeness of his victory over fear. It is the soldierly
tribute of a man that most attracts the people. It is the
courage of the soldier that stirs the emotions of men.
Soldierly qualities have always appealed to the hearts of the
people because the courage of the soldier is their protection,
and in the last war was their protection from barbarism. We
adore the soldier because he stands between us and harm.
The most popular picture of Washington is his act in crossing
the Delaware, although, the more I study the history of the
Constitutional Convention, the more I am impressed that his
broad statesmanship and lofty patriotism transcended his
ability as a soldier.
Grant, in a slouch hat before his camp in the Wilderness, or
seated on his charger in the battles before Richmond, is
pictured in nearly every hamlet in the country, although he
was a statesman. You will find some-where in the library
housed in this building a speech of President Grant made here
in Des Moines on "Education," and a reading of it will
convince you that he was a great statesman as well as a
soldier, yet he was most honored as a soldier. Napoleon is
always portrayed by the artist before Marengo and at
Austerlitz. He is never seen cast in bronze or marble holding
in his hand the "Code Napoleon," although, despite the
revolutions, France, under the Code, became the greatest
economical and industrial nation of that age.
Marlborough is only portrayed by the artist as the victor of
Blenheim, yet he was the most accomplished diplomat of his
age.
Thoughts like these, justifiable hero worship of the soldiers
who stood between us and harm in the hour of danger, have
inspired the procurement of this tablet to commemorate the
valiant deeds and service, and particularly in memory of the
dead comrades of the Three hundred and fifty-first Infantry of
the Eighty-eighth Division.
I now have the high honor to present to you Brigadier-General
W. D. Beach, who commanded the Three hundred and fifty-first
Regiment in France.
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Brigadier-General W. D.
Beach |
BRIGADIER-GENERAL W. D. BEACH
We have met to honor the memory of the officers
and enlisted men of one of the regiments of the national army
who gave their all at the call of their country. This
regiment, the Three hundred and fifty-first Infantry, was
organized in September, 1917, from men selected mainly from
the western counties of the great state of Iowa, but later, as
changes occurred by detachments being sent to other divisions,
the vacancies were filled with men from Minnesota, Missouri,
Kansas, Nebraska and North Dakota. The regiment that went
overseas was composed mainly of Iowans, but in part of
men from all this tier of middle western states - stalwart,
clear-eyed, rosy-cheeked young athletes from all walks of
life, animated by a single purpose—to serve their country in a
crisis, to give the best that was in them for the honor and
welfare of the great republic.
The regiment was one of two composing the One
hundred and seventy-sixth Brigade of the Eighty-eighth
Division, to which I was assigned, and it is my privilege to
narrate some few facts about the organization. This regiment,
as was the case with other organizations, was made up mainly
of men unacquainted with things military, but keen to learn.
They realized that their own success in action must depend
upon discipline and knowledge and training, and I will say,
from the point of view of their brigade commander, that their
efforts were highly successful. Officers and men were
subjected to the most severe military training that I have
ever imposed or witnessed in my forty years of service.
The daily grind of drill, of instruction, of target
practice, of the many seemingly trifling things that go to
instill discipline and training were cheerfully carried out.
Our time was short. France was calling for assistance and our
orders were to train the men quickly, to get them in shape in
the shortest possible time. We worked with them for three
months, then came orders from Washington to send them
thousands of men elsewhere. The calls were so urgent, our men
had acquired their training so quickly, that it was evident
the inspectors had recommended that they be transferred to
France, so a thousand of the men were sent here, two thousand
there. To one division at Atlanta we sent over four thousand
men whom we had trained. Our division and this regiment were
reduced very, very materially, but immediately the vacancies
were filled up with a similar lot of men. The next contingent
came from this state, the Dakotas, Minnesota, Nebraska, and a
few from Illinois. Then the grind commenced again. The younger
officers who did not have much experience at first were better
fitted by this time, and the second contingent were put
through the training period more effectively. The division
during the first seven months lost over forty-eight thousand
men by transferring them to outgoing divisions, and I happen
to have the records of the battle losses of five of these
divisions. They were forty thousand five hundred and eight
men. We were again filled up, but our officers were becoming
discouraged, due to the fear that we might never get across.
In July, 1918, however, orders came for the division to B° to
France. I do not know the percentage of men in this particular
regiment who had over three months' training, but the division
as a whole had eight thousand men of over three months'
training, thirteen thousand between one and three months, and
six thousand with less than one month's training.
Conscious of its power and its ability to render
the highest service, the regiment went across, landing in
France in the early days of September and continuing its
training there where it was in touch with actual war
conditions. We lacked considerable equipment, but it was later
supplied, and in less than a month from our landing the
regiment was sent to the front line trenches, there to meet
the enemy it had been training to meet while here at Camp
Dodge and overseas; but unfortunately we were met at the
outset by a more insidious enemy, one for which our training
was useless. I refer to Spanish influenza. In the division we
had over seven thousand cases, but, thanks to the devotion of
our medical officers and nurses, our total loss was only
slightly over four hundred men; greater, however, than our
battle casualties. While still much depleted by sickness, the
brigade was directed to take over the front line trenches in
the Alsace sector from a French division. As the Three hundred
and fifty-first appeared to the commanding general to be
better prepared to take over these trenches than the other
regiment of the brigade, two hundred men were immediately sent
from it to serve with and assist the French troops and get the
benefit of their experience; later the entire sub-sector was
taken over by this regiment, it being relieved later by the
Three hundred and fifty-second.
The easiest thing in war is to get men killed; the
hardest is to get results and not suffer casualties. An
incident which occurred in connection with an American brigade
which preceded ours impressed me as a soldier more than any
other one thing in a long career. That American brigade was
subjected to a German gas attack and over two hundred men
suffered from its effects. They were brought back to our
sector. There was a French hospital there and these men were
taken to that hospital and thence day by day were carried to
the military cemetery. It was a very sad and a very impressive
sight, so much so that the brigade commander called his
officers together and said in effect: "These are avoidable
casualties. You are to see that every officer and man is
thoroughly qualified in the use of the gas mask, which alone
affords complete safety. We cannot avoid casualties by bullets
and high explosive shells, but we can avoid them from gas."
The discipline of this regiment was such that when it did go
as a body into the line, not one man lost his life from gas.
Not one of our men "went west" through being
subjected to gas poisoning, although we had the same
experience in a gas attack as the previous brigade which I
mentioned. The colonel of this regiment told me that one of
his men had a gas shell explode so near him as to wound his
foot and have the liquid mustard splash on his forehead, and
yet, although burned, he got his mask on before the fumes
could reach him.
The one hundred and ten casualties of the
regiment were almost all from flu, a few from bullets or shell
fire, and none from gas; and yet, all who "went west" died
soldiers' deaths as truly as though they had been classed as
battle casualties. I relate this to show how the study and the
work and the energy of these young officers and men were
instrumental in preventing loss of life. Our losses would
otherwise have been very much greater.
On November 11 we were drawn back, and the maintenance
of discipline without the incentive of action began again. It
was equal to any in the army. We knew it and General Pershing
told us so after the armistice.
The war had ended in victory for our arms, and the time
had arrived for us to return to the states. On my way to the
coast I passed through the city of Paris. One Sunday morning I
came out from the Red Cross Hotel and looking up toward the
brilliant blue sky—the sky seemed bluer in Paris than anywhere
else—there appeared a bank of dark clouds over in the east and
from that bank of clouds emerged five white aeroplanes. They
were French planes flying in formation and they silently
passed a strip of blue sky and disappeared in a mass of white
sunlit clouds to the west. Their altitude was so great that
the noise and whir of the propeller blades and motors could
not be heard. Their appearance was most impressive. They
looked like great white birds and were going west. In the army
we talk about "going west," never about death. It was my
privilege
to investigate the origin of that expression, and I found that
the idea dates back to the fifteenth century, when the
adventurous navigators and explorers of old sailed west
looking for a land of promise— for new lands, for the spring
of perpetual youth—and it seemed to me that those white planes
were symbolical of that. They emerged from dark clouds,
crossed the sky and entered bright clouds, lighted by the sun.
It seemed to me that it was symbolic of the lives of many of
our men over there who made the supreme sacrifice.
While we sincerely mourn their loss, we feel they went
in a great undertaking, a great national emergency, and that
they contributed their all to the success of the cause of
freedom and right. We will not say that they lost their lives,
notwithstanding this tablet to their memory. They did not lose
their lives—they gave them—gave them willingly to their
country, and for this we, their comrades, will always cherish
and honor their memories and hold fast the principles for
which they fought.
JUDGE ARTHUR
The singing not being in our immediate presence, I
might announce that these two beautiful, inspiring solos so
splendidly rendered have been given by Dean Cowper who trained
the boys in singing, I understand, at Camp Dodge.
We have the high privilege of witnessing the unveiling
of the tablet by a mother of a soldier [Lieut. Matthew Dale
Eckerman] who lost his life in the World War. I present to you
Mrs. Allen Eckerman.
(Mrs. Eckerman stepped to the platform, lifted the
hangings at the right, gathered them together, took them clear
off the tablet, placed them behind it at the left and was
assisted to a seat by Adjutant-General Lasher.)
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Louis G. Lasher, Iowa Adjutant
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JUDGE ARTHUR
We have the rare privilege now of
listening to the sculptor's narrative explanation of the
tablet through Curator Harlan.
CURATOR HARLAN
The members of the Three hundred and fifty-first
Regiment who survived contributed a fund intended to afford
some lasting testimonial of their thought. The fund was put in
my hands to be used towards that end. It was placed at
interest and later the commission issued to Mr. Fry. When his
work was done the principal sum and accumulated interest
without the diminution of a cent went as if from the palms of
the soldier contributors to the purse of the soldier artist.
The Historical Department of Iowa out of its funds paid for
the casting, the transportation, and the erection of the
memorial.
The sculptor, Sherry Fry, of New York City, an Iowa man, was
among the first to become interested as an American soldier in
the camouflage service in the World War. He saw in this and in
personal association with other branches of the Service
exhibitions of rare courage and exalted action. With
instinctive powers of a sculptor trained in long years under
the best masters in the finest traditions of his art, war
service gave him the rarest chance of knowing the spirit of
his comrades. His conceptions are here, an exquisite symbolic
expression in bronze, his definition of and tribute to the
theme.
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Sherry Edmundson Fry, Sculptor
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After his long and ardent efforts at arriving at a
delineation of his thought, the artist wrote that at first he
wanted to represent a sleeping, or expiring, or dead soldier
at the feet of what he conceived to be the spirit of war, but
found that no matter how he tried to avoid it, he introduced
too much of the unpleasant memory of his own experience, so he
ended by simply making the figure rise from symbolic forms and
in curving lines spread over slight indications which one
recognizes as a tangle of front line trenches. He purposely
kept this part indistinct wishing above all to have the
soldiers not reminded more than could be helped of the bad
part of it. All he did was to try to say that with him they
have a glorious memory. The halo about the head does not
betoken any religious idea, but is, as most know, a
conventional expression of glorious accomplishment. He chose
the type of line and modeling of the figure that best
represents repression, confidence and dignity, trying to
elevate that above creed or cult to a memorial religion.
Neither the letter nor the form and meaning of this tablet
are applied specifically to men as individuals of this
regiment or even of our glorious army. They allude to motives
and men as one. It is our racial spirit and our contribution
in this war. The sculptor knew and recognized that in the
archives of our general government are assembled the names of
all the men, and he well knew that in the commonwealths from
which this regiment came the name and something of the history
of each man will sacredly be kept. He knew that in this very
building there is assembled in photographic likeness and in
biographical outline, a complete grouping of materials
illustrative of these men.
When this indestructible tablet shall today have been
placed upon these walls, all that the state can do, so small
compared to what they did, will have been done.
JUDGE ARTHUR:
We are favored with the presence of
Major Evans of the Three hundred and fifty-first Infantry, and
it is most fitting that he should present this tablet to the
state of Iowa
MAJOR EVANS:
As senior Iowa officer of the regiment, I have been
requested to act officially on this occasion of dedicating a
memorial to our dead, and I do so with a full appreciation of
the honor and responsibility conferred. The idea of a memorial
was conceived while our unit was still in France, and every
man in the organization contributed to the purpose. It is a
regimental gift, not the gift of any individual, and it has
been made possible by the splendid co-operation received from
the state in the person of Mr. Harlan, acting in his turn for
the Iowa Historical Depart-
ment. This day would be incomplete
without an expression of gratitude to the Iowa Historical
Department for the assistance it has rendered.
The spirit of this ceremony is two fold: First, there
is the personal side as it relates to the members of our
regiment and to the relatives of those we commemorate;
secondly, the broader aspect as it relates to the public in
general. Very briefly I want to touch on these two features.
From a personal point of view, each of us who knew them
living, has certain direct and private memories of our dead
comrades-associations so sacred and dear that we guard them
jealously from public view. As man grows older he seems to
cultivate the habit of drawing
somewhat into his shell, of fencing in certain moments of his
life which are especially his own; and in this private
enclosure he secretly places his personal thoughts, his joys
and sorrows, and all those little treasures which men use to
cheat despair. In this sanctuary of our thoughts the memories
of our friends and loved ones who died in the war hold a very
prominent place. Because we have lost them we are deeply sad,
but our sorrow is tempered by the realization that they gave
their lives in the honorable service of a worthy cause, in a
manner that brave men throughout history have hoped to die.
Often, when I think of our dead, my mind goes back to a
scene in an Iowa city during the early days of the war. The
first contingent of local troops was leaving town that night
and a mass meeting was held in the nature of a farewell.
Certain prominent citizens spoke and I recall distinctly the
remarks of one of them. He said, "After you have gone, many of
those who stay behind will wish they had gone with you." And
today, as our thoughts turn to those who have gone, even
though we take up with gratitude the lives that were spared us
in the war, we cannot but realize that in some ways their
passing is attended by certain advantages. Those whom we
commemorate today are embalmed forever in our imagination.
Theirs is the glory, theirs the honor. They will not change,
they never will seem less young, less fresh, less glorious,
than when in the full flush of youth and vigor they gave their
lives to their country. They shall go down through the
generations in their glory, with brows marked with youth and
honor. They can never
Swell the rout,
0f lads that wore their honors out,
Runners whom renown outran
And the name died before the man.
And so to us, their relatives and comrades, who
must meet the inevitable defeats and sorrows of life, it
has come to be a happy, not a sad thing to hold in our place
of memories their laurels which can never fade.
The second aspect of this ceremony is the broader part,
and perhaps in one sense the more important part. We are
offering to our state and nation the privilege of sharing with
us our pride and our sorrow by presenting this public
testimonial to the courage and spirit that prompted these men
to do their full share of duty. By this ceremony we publicly
display our honor for our dead. By it we solemnly perpetuate a
national act of heroism and we express our belief that to act
with enthusiasm and faith is to act greatly. It is our hope
that, through this testimonial, the generations that follow
may receive some quickening of the pulse, some inspiration,
some better realization of the true meaning of citizenship.
The old world of 1914 has gone forever and with it has
passed much that is good. The old gods have fallen and the new
gods have not yet arisen; and the new gods when they come must
be better than the old, if our civil-ization is not to go down
in despair and ruin. We live in a changing age, a chaotic
world. All the hard bought gains of the ages, the beauties of
our civilization, seem endangered. There are too many men who
seem to feel quite superior to all that has gone before and
who have little faith in anything that lies beyond. Too many
men measure life in terms of their own personal self-interest
and satisfaction, and it seems to be almost a general feeling
that the world owes a man a living, and not that a man owes
humanity his life.
Today our thoughts go out to all those millions in the
world who suffer, who have paid the price for our
civilization. First, we think of those in America to whom the
war years have brought sorrow, and then our thoughts travel
over the seas to Europe and we view the millions in England
and on the Continent who have sacrificed, who are striving for
happiness, or even existence, and whose cup is bitter. It is
inconceivable that this terrible price paid so gallantly shall
have brought the world nothing. Somehow mankind must receive
the worth of the sacrifice, for otherwise the dead we mourn
are doubly dead.
It is fitting, therefore, that we place this memorial
tablet before the eyes of the coming generation as a reminder
of the sacrifice that has bought their security. In a world
grown too cynical it is well that the schoolboy pause before
this memorial and reflect that another boy, hardly older than
himself, gave even his life that he might walk down peaceful,
sunlit streets. It is well that our whole generation remember
that all we own is not ours by divine right, but the gift of
those who gave years of labor and even their lives that our
civilization might live. To worthily use that gift, to justify
the sacrifice made, is the task of our own and future
generations. With these thoughts, and as the official
representative of the Three hundred and fifty-first Infantry,
I present to the state of Iowa this tablet, that it may remain
a living memorial to our dead; that it may stand as a token of
our respect and admiration for them; and that it may prove a
source of inspiration and guidance to those who follow after.
JUDGE ARTHUR
And now, my friends, the tablet has been unveiled by
the noblest of them all, the mother of a boy who "went west."
It has been presented by Major Evans, a worthy soldier, its
symbolism and significance has been ex-plained by the
sculptor, and now it is to be accepted by the state of Iowa.
This institution, housed here in this building, is a part of
Iowa, one of Iowa's governmental institutions. I have the
privilege of presenting to you the Governor of Iowa who will
accept the tablet.
On behalf of the entire commonwealth of Iowa I
earnestly thank you for your presence this afternoon at this
impressive ceremonial. I never so completely realize the
inadequacy of my own speech as upon occasions such as this
when I am required in the present times of peace merely to say
things of the heroic souls who in the dark days of war
actively did things. It is a commendable practice observed by
nations, states and communities to establish memorials to
those who, by conspicuous courage in war or by special
achievement in peace, have con-tributed largely to the welfare
of humanity. We in Iowa have been derelict in recognizing the
propriety of such monuments. In New England and indeed
throughout the East, the sojourner is constantly encountering
here a tablet and there a statue, indicating the spot on which
some great man was born, or performed some signal service, or
died. Of course, those sections are older than ours and the
people are naturally more profoundly att-ached to their
honorable history, but the time is coming when we shall
imitate their example in this respect. Some day we shall erect
suitable testimonials to those who, on the crimson
battlefields of the Civil War, effected the emancipation of
the slave and assured the permanence of the Union; to those
who overthrew the despotism of Spain in the West Indies and
forever banished a European sceptre from the Western
Hemisphere; to those who left all, chanced all, suffered all,
to preserve the freedom of mankind in the most enormous combat
in all the annals of the race. It is of these last that we are
thinking today with solemn pride and tender reverence. After
the wonderful address of General Beach, how can I venture to
vocalize the poignant emotions which overwhelm this assembly?
These gallant boys whom you commanded, my dear General, and
whose incomparable valor is here forever commemorated, were
the very flower of our great American manhood. They were
reared in the environment of free homes and free schools and
free thought and free speech, and from all these they had
imbibed conceptions of duty as lofty as any that ever animated
the human heart. They struggled to the utter- most, not for
increase of wealth, or expansion of power, or enlargement of
territory, but for that exalted ideal of liberty and equality
and justice which must finally possess the intelligence of
civilized men everywhere. They answered every emergency with a
fortitude, a devotion, a daring, which forever characterized
the spirit of America and, though they passed and are not,
their works do follow them. Ours it is to hold aloft the
flaming torch which fell from their eager hands. What they
died for, we must live for.
On behalf of the patriotic people of Iowa, I gratefully
accept this splendid memorial.
JUDGE ARTHUR
This sublime and sacred event has passed into history;
benediction will be pronounced by Bishop Morrison.
BISHOP MORRISON
Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let light
perpetual shine upon them. In the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost we dedicate this tablet
in memory of the soldiers of the Three hundred and fifty-first
Infantry, Eighty-eighth Division, who laid down their lives
for the honor and security of our country and for the peace
and welfare of the world. They fought a good fight. They were
faithful unto death. Let us pray.
O Almighty God, Heavenly Father, we bless and magnify
Thee, for the faithfulness and sacrifice of the faithful men
whom we commemorate today. We give thanks to Thee for the
victory they won. We beseech Thee that we may show as a people
true thankfulness such as may appear in our lives by continual
devotion to any personal cost to Liberty, to Justice, to
Righteousness, to the establishment among all men and in every
nation of a Democracy based upon the teaching of Jesus, the
Son in whom Thou was well pleased, and in ever increasing
presence and power of the Kingdom of Heaven among men. We pray
this day with all earnestness Thy Kingdom come— Thy will be
done on earth as it is done in Heaven. Grant that we may be
ready and obedient. Think with us. Lighten our minds. May we
desire the realization of universal brotherhood and fellowship
and co-operation of true Democracy. We know not the mystery of
Thy purpose, we cannot measure Thy power, we know not when the
fullness of the time may be, but this day the sorrow and
yearning of the world turns to Thee. Restrain, as far as may
be, selfishness and pride and greed and class hatred and
national ambition. Bless every word spoken for peace and the
coming of a new life and a new organization of peoples and
races and nations in federated relation-ship. Bless every
effort made for disarmament at the coming conference. Hasten
through our willing yearning desire the day when men shall
learn war no more. Live Thy life in us. Work through us. May
these men whom we commemorate today know, wherever they be,
that they died to save the world. In the spirit and in the
name of Jesus, who lived and died to establish Thy Kingdom of
love and fellowship—of humanity— we make this our prayer.
Amen.
The 88th Infantry Division, nicknamed Clover Leaf
Division, was a unit of the U.S. Army in the Great
War. Activated August 5, 1917 at Camp Dodge, Iowa the
division was sent overseas on September 7, 1918.
Commanders were Maj. General Edward H. Plummer
(August 25, 1917), Brig. General Robert N. Getty
(November 27, 1917, Maj. Gen. Edward H. Plummer
(February 19, 1918), Brig. Gen. Robert N. Getty
(March 15, 1918), Brig. Gen. William D. Beach (May
24, 1918) and Maj. Gen. William Weigel (September 10,
1918). The unit was inactivated June 10, 1919 at Camp
Dodge, Iowa. Two years later, it was reconstituted in
the organized reserves at Minneapolis, Minn.
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Shoulder Shield |
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The shield is blue for Infantry. The Regiment was
first organized in Minnesota, and the three stars are
taken from the state flag of Minnesota, the “North
Star State.” The large star at the top represents
Polaris, the North Star. The fleur-de-lis symbolizes
the service of the organization in Alsace, France
during the Great War.
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Shoulder Sleeve
Insignia |
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An infantry blue quatrefoil, formed by two Arabic
numeral "8s".
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Matthew Dale Eckerman
January 4, 1895 - 1918
Matthew Dale Eckerman was born in Sibley,
Osceola co. Iowa, the son of Allen H. and
Lulu Eckerman. On the 1900 census, the
Eckerman's, Allen H., Lulu, Velma & Matthew
are living in Sibley, Holman twp., Osceola
co. By 1910, the family has moved to Des
Moines, Polk co. Iowa where his father was a
traveling machinery salesman and 15 year old
Matthew delivered newspapers. In 1917 when
Matthew registered for the draft, he had
already served 2 years in the ROTC infantry
as a Cadet Capt. at Iowa State College.
Matthew died as a result of an accident in
[?December] 1918. He is buried in Woodland
cemetery, Des Moines. |
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Sherry Edmundson Fry, Sculptor
(1879 -1966) Sherry E. Fry was
born on a farm in Pleasant twp. Union co.
Iowa, near the town of Creston on September
29, 1879. His parents were J. W. Fry, a
farmer, born in Illinois; and Ellen Fry,
nativity Ohio.
He studied at the Chicago Art Institute, the
Julian Academy and the Beaux Arts of Paris,
a year in Florence, and later worked with
great sculptors of his time -Frederick
McMonnies (Paris), Barrias, Verlet and
Lorado Taft (Chicago). He won an honorable
mention at the Paris Salon of 1902. Possibly
the most famous Iowa sculpture by Fry is the
bronze figure of Chief Mahaska that graces
the courthouse square in Oskaloosa, Mahasha
co. Iowa. Fry first displayed a model of
Chief Mahaska in the 1907 Paris Salon. In
1908 he exhibited the completed Mahaska and
was awarded the Prix de Rome for which he
received $1,200 a year and the opportunity
to study in Rome at the American Academy for
three years. A few years later, as a member
of the National Academy of Design, he
modeled Ceres, Greek Goddess of Green for
the state capital building dome in Jefferson
City, Missouri.
During the Great War, Fry co-founded, with American
painter Barry Faulkner, the American
Camouflage Corps.
He lived for many years in New York City, Manhattan and
Litchfield, Connecticut. |
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