War Casualties Of Hardee County, Florida
By Spessard Stone
American Legion Monument
Inscription on Monument near
American Legion Building, Wauchula, Florida:
"They, whom the
inscription upon the memorial commemorated, are those from Hardee
County, who at the final call, left all that was dear to them, endured
hardships, faced danger, and finally passed out of the sight of man by
the path of duty and self-sacrifice, giving their lives that others
might live in freedom. Let those who come after see to it that their
names be not forgotten."
The following honored dead appear on the
mounument:
World War I
Edward Alderman
Army
Jebtha L. (Zeb) Altman
Army
Albert W. Bryan
Army
Grady Burch
Army
Leslie Collier
Army
Isaac Davis
Army
D. E. Donahue
Army
Alton Grice
Army
Fred Holland
Army
John Jones
Army
Arthur Madden
Army
W. E. (Willie) Mitchell
Army
James R. Orr
Army
Henry Thomas
Army
Joseph T. Webb
Army
Nathaniel Weeks
Army
Herger Williams(1)
Army
World War II
Merle Ballard
Army
J. B. Baucom (2)
Army
John Tol Brewer
Navy
Henry G. Cejka (3)
Army
Freddie L. Chestnut
Army
Albert L. Crane (4)
Marines
Herman Watson Davis
Navy
Roger O. Davis, Jr.
Army
Bradford W. Dees
Army
Jack K. Dennis
Army
Robert D. Evers
Army
Donald Clifton Fussell (5)
Navy
Jack H. Fussell (5)
Navy
Thomas O. Gilliam
Army
Dave Clifton Jones
Army
Harold O. Lambert
Navy
Frank P. Lanier
Army
John Robert Maddox
Army
Edwin Adolph Makowski
Navy
Jack Mays
Navy
Murrell G. McCall
Army
Malcolm E. McLean
Army
Francis J. Minor
Army
Chester Montgomery
Army
Douglas T. Moore
Army
Oscar C. Moseley
Army
Levy T. North, Jr.
Army
Stanley J. Okscin (6)
Army
James M. Patterson
Navy
Roy H. Petteway
Army
J. P. Pringle (7)
Army
Halcott L. Smith
Army
W. Edgar Southerland (8)
Army
Arthur Lemmie Stanton (9)
Navy
Jessie J. Taylor
Army
John S. Taylor
Army
Marquis B. Taylor
Army
Charles R. Tew
Army
William S. White
Army
Andrew J. Wingate
Army
Leslie B. Witt
Army
Korean Conflict
Elmer G. Barefoot
Army, died April 29, 1951
Orville C. Howze
Army, died Sept. 7, 1950
Jim John Ryan
Army, died Oct. 20, 1950
Note: Orville C. Howze is listed in Polk
County, Florida.
Vietnam War
Boyd Timothy Adams
Marines, died April 21, 1969
Raymond Lavoy Boatwright
Army, died Jan. 19, 1966
Terrel Elbert Carter
Navy, died Jan. 15, 1967
Charles C. Dickey, Jr.
Army, died March 31, 1967 (10)
Varl Eston Fulford
Army, died June 6, 1966
Charles Edward Long
Navy, died July 29, 1967
Warren Larue Long
Air Force, died March 8, 1969
Johnny Means
Marines, died Oct. 26, 1967
Robert Glenn Pendley
Army, died Dec. 11, 1968
Frederick Dale Rickels
Marines, died May 12, 1968
Roy Edward Shaw, Jr.
Army, died Dec. 6, 1970
See
The Vietnam Memorial Wall Page.
Endnotes
(1) Herger Williams, son of W. J. and
Elvie Williams, was born August 8, 1897 in the Oak Grove section of
DeSoto (now Hardee) County, Florida. While serving with Company B, 9th
Infantry, he died in France on July 31, 1918.
Victor Irby, a nephew,
related on November 14, 1988: "On May 23, 1919, the organizational
meeting of the American Legion Post was held at the Simmons Hotel in
Wauchula and in June of that year at the state headquarters in
Jacksonville the Wauchula post was the first to present papers for
charter, but during the meeting another set of charter papers was placed
on the top of the Wauchula application with the results that the
Wauchula post was officially chartered as the Herger Williams Post No.
2, American Legion Department of Florida, instead of Post number one.
"Herger Williams, son of W. J. and Elvie Williams of the Oak Grove
section, was the first Hardee County man to give his life during World
War I on July 31, 1918, at the age of 20 while serving in Company B of
the 9th Infantry in France.
"In 1918, when other men, including his
brother, Lester, were leaving for service, Herger slipped aboard the
train headed for Camp Wheeler, Georgia, and was not discovered until the
train arrived at Camp Wheeler. Since he was not old enough to enlist in
the army, special permission had to be given by his father, who knowing
of his great desire to serve his country gave his permission for Herger
to enlist.
"Herger was an excellent marksman and was sent to the
front lines due to his ability with a rifle and was killed in France and
was buried at Lemonge Heights on the Marne River in France in 1918. His
remains were returned home in the spring of 1921 and he was buried in
Oak Grove Cemetery with full military honors. See The Herald-Advocate,
November 17, 1988, page 7-C.
(2) J. B. Baucom was born March 17,
1914 and died June 13, 1944, buried New Hope Cemetery, Hardee County.
(3) The Florida Advocate of Friday, April 20, 1945 reported:
"Just shortly before Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cejka left the first of the week
for Roxbury, Mass., where they expect to visit their daughter, Mrs.
Arthur Cochlis, they received notification from Henry L. Stimson,
secretary of war, that their son, Lt. Henry G. Cejka, Infantry, had
posthumously been awarded the Purple Heart.
"Secretary Stimson (in
part) wrote: "He has gone, however, in honor and the goodly company of
patriots. Let me, in communicating to you the country's deep sympathy,
also express to you the gratitude for his valor and devotion."
(4) The Florida Advocate of Friday, April 6, 1945 reported:
"Mr. and
Mrs. R. L. Crane, of Ona, last week were notified that their son, Cpl.
Albert L. Crane, 20, was killed in action during the invasion of Iwo
Jima on February 19.
"Cpl. Crane enlisted in the Marine Corps in
July, 1942. He spent 16 months overseas in the Pacific area with the
Fourth Division and participated in the invasion of Saipan, Tinian and
Roi Nawr and was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation Ribbon bar and
the Blue Star for bravery exhibited while serving on Saipan.
"In
addition to his parents, he is survived by his widow, Mrs. Beverly
Crane, of Annapolis, who is now visiting in Ona; two sisters, Mrs. Mary
Dantzler, of Orlando, and Miss Beatrice Crane, of Ona; two brothers,
Cpl. William R. Crane, of the U. S. Marines, who has participated in the
invasion of several of the Pacific islands, and Master Jeff Crane, of
Ona.
(5) Donald Fussell and Jack H. Fussell, brothers, were
aboard the USS Houston in the South Pacific when it responded to a SOS
from a Dutch vessel on January 28, 1942. Neither survived the ensuing
Japanese attack. See Molly Sweeney, "Soldier [Will Fussell, middle
brother] recalls his frigid post in the Aleutians,"The Tampa Tribune,
Heartland-1, December 5, 1991.
(6) His named is spelled "Oskin"
on the monument, but "Okscin" is believed to be the correct spelling.
(7) The Florida Advocate of Friday, May 4, 1945 reported:
"Parents of Lt. Joe P. Pringle, Jr., of Fort Green, were notified April
30 by the war department of his death in Germany April 5. He is a son of
Joe P. Pringle, Sr., and Mrs. Mollie B. Hancock, both of Fort Green. Two
sisters, Mrs. A. E. Abbott, of Fort Green, and Mrs. Carl Reese, of
Panama City, also survive.
"Lt. Pringle, 28, had been in the service
a little more than four years and had been overseas 14 months. He was
attached to the Field Artillery and was with Patton's Third Army. He
took part in several battles, including the hard fought battle of Malo,
France. His outfit was among the first in Patton's Army to cross the
Rhine.
"Lt. Pringle graduated from Wauchula High School and the
University of Florida. He received his commission of 2nd lieutenant
shortly after his graduation and entered the service."
(8)
William Edgar Southerland, son of William A. and Ella Louise (Carlton)
Southerland, was born December 1, 1903, Wauchula. While serving in the
United States Army Air Corps in World War II, Edgar was killed on
December 6, 1944 on the island of Leyte in the Philippine Islands. He
had been decorated for heroism and is buried in the American National
Cemetery in Manila.
The Florida Advocate of Friday, February 23, 1945
reported:
"Mrs. Ella Southerland, of East Bay street, last week
received through the War Department citations which had been presented
to her son, the late Cpl. Edgar Southerland, who was killed in action
during the battle for Leyte in the Philippines last December.
"Among
them was the Purple Heart, which was awarded posthumously. The citation
was for exemplary conduct and bravery in the line of battle."
(9)
The Florida Advocate of Friday, January 11, 1946 reported:
"Mrs.
Doris Sloat Stanton, of this city, received a wire and a letter from
Navy, last week, informing her that the Navy Department had carried her
husband, Arthur Lemmie Stanton, chief motor machinist's mate, U. S. N.,
on the official record in the status of missing in action as of Dec. 12,
1944, that he was reluctantly forced to the conclusion that he is
deceased.
"Stanton, 31, is the son of Mrs. Ellen Stanton, of 113 West
Giddens street, Tampa. He is also survived by two children, Kenneth and
Alice Stanton, who live with their mother in Wauchula.
"Stanton
served 12 years in the Navy and 10 of those years were with the
submarine branch of the Service. He was a native of Arcadia but most of
his boyhood was spent in Tampa.
(10) Lt. Dickey, prior to his
death, had written Lawrence Roberts, commander of the Herger Williams
post: "We believe we are right and that God is on our side, and we will
do our best while we are here to further our country's aims. Of course,
we don't want our friends who have died to have died in vain." See
"Memorial Day Service Honors Hardee Men Killed In Wars," The
Herald-Advocate, June 9, 1994, 11-A.
November 22-25, 2001,
April 14, 2005
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