CO. K. HOLDS FIRST REUNION
Sixty-two Members of Original Company Recruited for World War
Present
MEET DECORATION DAY
Play Prominent Part in Program For Day
Co. K, the company recruited at LeMars for World War service,
held its first reunion in LeMars on Decoration Day. A large
majority of the original members of this company were from LeMars
and nearby towns and sixty-two of them reported for their first
reunion. They participated n the Decoration Day exercises and
presentation of the Distinguished Service Cross to Laurence
Heiden, under the command of Clay Butler , first sergeant of the
company, who also arranged the details of the reunion.
At noon the members of the old Co. K and their families to the
number of almost 200, enjoyed a picnic on the college campus at
the site of Camp Faber, where they were camped while being
recruited in war strength.
In the evening they enjoyed a dinner and reunion at Columbia hall
at which they renewed acquaintances and recounted the experiences
of service days. So pleased were they with their first reunion
they voted to have another next year and named Clay Butler as
president of the organization with authority to appoint vice
presidents in Remsen, Kingsley, Merrill, Akron, Ireton and other
nearby towns which furnished members of the company.
Many compliments were paid the company for the fine appearance
they made in the parade and Distinguished Service Cross program
and their reunion contributed much to the services of the day.
Co. K, Iowa National Guard, was organized in LeMars Dec. 9, 1913,
with J. G. Koenig as captain. On June 20, 1916, they went to
Brownsville on the Mexican border, where they remained until the
following spring. A picture of the company taken just before they
left for the border is printed on page three
of this paper. On March 23, 1917, they were mustered out of
service in DesMoines and sent home to LeMars where three days
later they began recruiting for World War service. On August 17,
1917, sixty-seven men from the company were transferred to the
168th Infantry at DesMoines and a few weeks later left for France
with the Rainbow Division. On August 27, the balance of the
company went to Camp Cody on the Mexican border where they
remained three days less than a year. They then entrained for the
Atlantic seaboard and September 7, 1918, the first detachment
sailed for France. The other men were quarantined because of the
flu epidemic and held up for a few weeks, but alter joined their
comrades in France where they served for several months after the
Armistice.
The following members of the original Co. K attended the reunion
in LeMars on Decoration Day, 1930.
J.G. Koenig |
LeMars |
Wm. Rothermal |
Chicago, Ill. |
Russell Bowers |
LeMars |
Warren C. Butler |
LeMars |
Orville Tincher |
Sioux City |
Harry Van De Steeg |
Sioux City |
Frank Muraine |
Cherokee |
Claude L. Hodapp |
Merrill |
Walter W. Held |
Hinton |
Fred Eilers |
Hinton |
Walter C. Huxtable |
LeMars |
Kenneth Clarke |
Sioux City |
Charles A. Kale |
Vermillion, S.D. |
Clyde Smith |
Frankfort, Kansas |
Walter Bogen |
LeMars |
Russell Green |
LeMars |
Harry Smith |
Ireton |
Edward Bergin |
Iona, Minn. |
Gene Brucher |
LeMars |
Sam Campbell |
Anthon |
Frank Cannon |
Onawa |
Harry Cannon |
LeMars |
Grant Case |
Kingsley |
Robert Dempster |
LeMars |
Parley Derby |
Slayton, Minn. |
Dewey Forbes |
Pierson |
Nelson Hart |
Sheldon |
Ray Hearn |
Kingsley |
John Little |
Kingsley |
Carl Lorenzen |
LeMars |
Richard Morgan |
Hawarden |
Clarence Morris |
LeMars |
Earl Nichol |
Kingsley |
Louren Paulin |
Remsen |
Ralph Rippey |
Kingsley |
Homer Samspon |
Fargo, N.D. |
Lisle Sexton |
LeMars |
Lester Stinton |
Sioux City |
Raymond Teefey |
LeMars |
Fay Terpenning |
LeMars |
Cecil Todd |
Moville |
Ray Walden |
Tulsa, Okla. |
Frank Wiggins |
Sioux City |
Glenn Winders |
LeMars |
Theo. Strause |
Sioux City |
Herbert Bourne |
Ireton |
Clarence Bristow |
Sioux City |
John Calhoon |
LeMars |
Cecil Clarke |
Sioux City |
Sylvester Fideler |
Remsen |
John T. Harker |
Sioux City |
Addes Hamann |
Merrill |
Will Hardie |
Pierson |
Floyd Harney |
Kingsley |
Laurence Heiden |
Merrill |
Fay Houlton |
Hartford, S.D. |
Melvin Kanago |
LeMars |
Wm. Miller |
Ireton |
Frank Murray |
Kingsley |
Charles Reid |
Ireton |
Edgar Spink |
Kingsley |
David Youngbluth |
LeMars |
J.U. Sammis, Jr. |
Chicago, Ill. |
~ source: LeMars Sentinel Newspaper, LeMars,
Plymouth Co., Iowa;
3 June 1930
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