|
Herbert A. lll Sherman was born in New York in 1923. In Rye his family lived at 734 Boston Post Road. Herbert enlisted and served in the U.S. Army during World War II.
Pfc. Sherman Lost Pipe in Invasion
Pfc. Herbert A. Sherman lost his pipe in the invasion of the continent and has written home for another; otherwise he has nothing to complain about. He had to swim ashore, sleep in a ditch and collected a few gray hairs as a result of it all, but the loss of his pipe troubled him most of all. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Sherman and nephew of Judge Roger Sherman of Rye, he is in the First Division and has been In the Army since March 1943. He first saw action in the Sicilian campaign. I got through the invasion, he writes, but it was very close there while on the beach. Shells were bursting just a few feet from me, so you can imagine how I felt. I finally got off that beach and into a pillbox to rest for a few minutes. When I got off the LCI, I had to wade through water up to my chest. I hit a hole and had to swim part of the way. That night, I slept in a ditch along the road and, boy, was it cold. Snipers raised hell with us the next day, but we soon got them underhand. Pfc. Sherman is a brother of 1st Lieut. Winchester Sherman, who was brought home from England to convalesce from illness and is now on leave with his father near Willimantic, Conn.
Friday, July 14, 1944 THE RYE CHRONICLE PAGE FIVE
Pfc. H. A. Sherman In Army Hospital
Pfc. Herbert A. Sherman, wounded at Aachen, Germany, has been returned to this country on a hospital ship and is now at Lovell General Hospital, Mass, Visited last weekend by his uncle. Judge Roger Sherman of Rye, the 21 year old infantryman was found in good health, but still carrying a piece of shrapnel in his left leg. He was virtually buried alive when a direct shell hit near his dugout at two oclock in the morning. Pfc. Sherman had 128 days of steady fighting with the 26th infantry of the First Division. He had been in the service since enlisting in February, 1943. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Sherman, former Rye residents, the young soldier attended Milton School, Rye High School and graduated from New London Conn. High School. He has received the Purple Heart, the Combat Infantry Badge and his unit was awarded the Presidential Citation.
PAGE FOUR T H E RYE CHRONICLE Friday, February 1, 1945
We have not been able to find an Obituary for this Veteran. Newspaper archives change daily at below source(s). Please try link(s) below to locate this Veterans obituary which will help complete their biography.
Search Newspapers.com for Veterans Obituary
You need to be logged in to Ancestry.com in order to access below source. See instructional video for Newspapers.com
1) Go to the "Service History" tab on this page and Click on "1940 Census" link. This will open Ancestry.com with all related links to this veteran 2) There may be a link ''U.S., Newspapers.com Obituary Index, 1800s-current'' on this page that will go right to this veterans obituary in Newspapers.com. 3)There may also be a link saying "U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600s-Current", this also may lead to obituary information After trying above, if there are no links, then go directly to Newspapers.com using the link below to search for obituary information. Click here to Search Newspapers.com for this Veterans Obituary If you are able to locate this veterans obituary please copy it or the link location and send it to [email protected].
|
|
|