File:N.Y. Newspaper Men Reported Killed in Battle in the New-York Tribune of Manhattan, New York City on August 16, 1918.jpg

Page contents not supported in other languages.
This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Original file(546 × 3,595 pixels, file size: 363 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

Description
English: N.Y. Newspaper Men Reported Killed in Battle in the New-York Tribune of Manhattan, New York City on August 16, 1918
Date
Source New-York Tribune of Manhattan, New York City on August 16, 1918
Author AnonymousUnknown author
Other versions https://www.newspapers.com/clip/72518684/new-york-tribune/

Text

N. Y. Newspaper Men Reported Killed in Battle. Jersey City Soldier Gassed, Wounded and Missing Within Few Days. U-Boat Kills Cadet. Taking Maiden Voyage on Tanker Kellogg When It Was Torpedoed. Lieutenant Franklin A. llarwood, a] New York newspaper man and former y one of the best known footb.ii! playrs in the South, was reported yesterday as killed in the Marne battle. A member of the advertising staif of "The Times," he was the second employee of that publication to make great sacrifice in the cause of the Allies. Captain 11. A. Bullock, a former it- ? porter, was killed pin a bombing at? tack on May 30. After attending the officers training camp at Plattsburg, Lieutenant Hardwood was assigned to the 10th Infantry, and went to France ; with that unit. William 1?. Stillman, who was killed ! when the tanker Frederick It. Kellogg I was torpedoed, was manager of the ! Providence branch of the American Surety Company when he enlisted in the Naval Reserve Force lust May. He. was twenty-nine years old. Private Patrick J. Fitzpatrick was \ killed in action during the fighting at the Marne between July 18 and 24. He lived at 132 West Thirtieth Street, I Hayonne, N. J. Corporal John J. Kane, jr., of the | Machine Gun Company of the 18th In- j fantry, was killed in action on July 18. ! His home was at 2112 Eighth Street, ! Jersey City. Corporal Charles R. Mitchell, of j Company D, 9th Infantry, who was re- j ported missing in action on July 18, is the son of William E. Mitchell, of 114 j Wilkinson Avenue, Jersey City, On July 12 he wrote that he had been gassed and a few days later his family received a card of the French Ambulance Service saying that he had been wounded in the leg. Private Julian Wadsworth Baldwin, j of the 112th Field Artillery, died in; France of pneumonia on July 28, sixteen ?lays after he had written a letter to his father, the Rev. Fred Clare Baldwin, of Orange, N. J., in which j he said that he never had felt better j in his life. He was twenty-eight years old. Cadet Chester C. Cubberly, who was killed when the tanker Frederick R. ; Kellogg was torpedoed, was the son of * Mrs. Isaac X. Cubberly, of Long Branch, New Jersey, and was making his first tri;> on the tanker. He was twenty-one years old. Private Albert A. Klaiber, of the 106th Machine Gun Hat talion, who was killed in action on July 31, was the! son of Mr. and Mrs. Maximilian Klaiber, of North Hackensack, N. J. Private Frank W. isheki, reported killed in action, was a Pole who took out his first naturalization papers just before the United States entered the I war. He was a carpenter at Rockaway j Point. Private William E. Tilley, Roslyn, L. I., killed in action, was a member of1 the 106th Machine dun Company. Private George H. Johnson, 165th Infantry, killed in action on July 20, is believed to have met death in the same engagement with Major James A. Mc Kenna, Jr., of the same command, who fell while leading his men across the River Ourcq. Johnson was nineteen years old and lived at 486 East Seventeenth Street. Private Harry Schneider, nineteen years old. 660 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, was severely wounded in action. He enlisted two years ago in the 13th Infantry. Sergeant William Mafera, 3Cth Infantry, has been missing in action since July 2,5. "I am doing my best to maintain my rank and shall serve my country to the best of my ability," he said in his last letter to his mother, Mrs. Sarah Mafera, 1220 Thirty-eighth Street, Brooklyn. Sergeant William E. Ensko, Freeport, Long Island, was killed in an automobile accident in France on July 28. He was a member of the 318th Pioneer Engineers.

People

Licensing

Public domain
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

Public domain works must be out of copyright in both the United States and in the source country of the work in order to be hosted on the Commons. If the work is not a U.S. work, the file must have an additional
Public domain
in the United States//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:N.Y._Newspaper_Men_Reported_Killed_in_Battle_in_the_New-York_Tribune_of_Manhattan,_New_York_City_on_August_16,_1918.jpg

Captions

N.Y. Newspaper Men Reported Killed in Battle in the New-York Tribune of Manhattan, New York City on August 16, 1918

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

16 August 1918Gregorian

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current03:41, 3 March 2021Thumbnail for version as of 03:41, 3 March 2021546 × 3,595 (363 KB)Richard Arthur Norton (1958- )Uploaded a work by {{Anonymous}} from New-York Tribune of Manhattan, New York City on August 16, 1918 with UploadWizard
No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).