MEDALS, CITATIONS AWARDED TO MEN FROM THIS LOCALITY
Ribbons, crosses and emblems earned for heroism while serving a nation at war will adorn the uniform of many a warrior from Muscatine and community when he returns from battle in World War No. 2.
For this area’s fighting sons have already earned a distinguished collection of awards. News stories from war centers have told of the acts of these men who have won distinction in battles—on the land, on the sea, and in the air.
From the most remote battle areas and from the most active theaters of war have come news stories of citations bestowed for heroism, for acts “beyond the call of duty,” and other commendable performances of young men who have gone forth from this community.
Many will be wearers of the “Purple Heart,” an award made for injuries suffered while on duty.
For some, the actions which merited official recognition, brought physical injuries—injuries so serious they meant the end of the war insofar as the individual hero was concerned.
Others, who suffered wounds of a lesser degree, recovered sufficiently at hospitals abroad to permit their re-entry into actual combat duty. For sulfa drugs, blood plasma and penicillin have spelled the difference between life and death, between slow and rapid recovery to many who were injured.
Some of the wounded from this area have returned to hospitals in this country to undergo further treatment and the possibility of return to war theaters or final discharge from the service.
The list of those who have suffered injuries or incurred ailments while in training in this country has added to the numbers of Muscatine service men who have already received honorable discharges or are scheduled for release from military service.
A partial list of those who suffered injuries while in active service abroad or while on duty in camps of this country, gathered from information supplied to the Journal are listed here:
Cpl. Edwin Leroy Stuart, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Stuart, 111 ½ East Fourth street, is back in the United States after being wounded in action in a combat zone. Word of his safe arrival came through the American Red Cross.
He had been in the Army for three years and had not been home during that time. He took his basic training in California and was then in the Panama Canal Zone for a year or more before going overseas.
Source: Muscatine Journal and News-Tribune, Annual Edition, December 30, 1943
Edwin Leroy Stuart was born Apr. 10, 1920 to Maxwell G. and Florence May Reinsager Stuart. He died Aug. 2, 1989 and is buried in Murdoch-Linwood Cemetery, Cedar Rapids, IA.
Cpl. Stuart served with the U.S. Army in World War II.