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Source: Postville Herald, Friday, November 22, 1918, pg. 1 |
To One Who Died In France, And To All |
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It makes no difference
whether he is your son or your friend, when the news comes of another
death in France and when he is, you feel the sorrow of death before you
think of the glory of dying for one's country. We are thinking of a
young man whom we have known from childhood, Hewitt L. Williams, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Williams of Grand Meadow Farm, near Postville, who
died on October 15, in France of wounds received in action. He was not
called to the colors until last winter. He was taken to France in
August, a member of the 352nd infantry, Company L, 88th Division. They
must have been transferred almost immediately to the front and the
young man from an Iowa farm must have been one of the first to pay the
great price. How he was wounded or how he died even is not known yet -
it was only the message of his death that came through.
And we
speak of him not only because we know him so well and admired him so
much - fine fellow that he was, more than six feet in height, strong,
clean, upright physically and morally - but because he was so typical
of the young manhood that we need in Iowa and in the world, men who can
and who are willing to do the work that must be done. Born on a farm,
unlike many others, he chose to stay on the farm, and to make farming a
business. He went to Ames where he excelled in many ways. Returning to
his home he applied to the old farm of his father and his grandfather
the principles of modern science. He rebuilt barns and rejuvenated
herds. He is credited with having established one of the finest dairy
herds in northeastern Iowa. And when he had done that he heard the call
of his country and answered it. He might have claimed and he would no
doubt have been granted an exemption, because of his occupation. But he
did not ask it and he did not want it. He was all American and his
Americanism began in the bleak shores of New England centuries ago and
blossomed in the rich soils of the Mississippi valley. His life was
given for a great and a fine cause, but he had so much to live for if
that had been his happier fate.
And it is not of Hewitt Williams
alone that we are writing. We are writing of fifteen hundred others
from Iowa who have given their lives to this war - and we are thinking
of their fathers and their mothers and their friends. May heaven grant
to them all the visions of the sunlight that touches the clouds of
sorrow with the glory of hope. And may there abide with them the
remembrance of lives finely lived and deaths nobly died. -- Cedar
Rapids Daily Republican. |
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