m 4 i IR {^iiM»Miia^^^B^ffl^HM^^Hi ^SSS5S3SS^^i^OraiEffi^^ Brown TN THE War V Report of the War Records Committee Published by the XJmvetmty l^rovidence, R. I. May 1, 1919 ss ^ ^ itiiiillHiiiiiiiiMWHiiwiHHiiiflH 3= Brown University in the War A Report by the War Records Committee, including a statement of the war work of the University, the biographies of Brown men who died in service, and a directory of the military service of alumni, former students and undergraduates Providence, R. I. May, 1919 SEP 18 W» PREFACE SOME day a Brown man will write the full story of Brown's part in the Great War. The time is yet too young for such a work, which, in its completion, will include not only the history of over two thousand Brown men in mihtary and naval service, but must also recall the achievements of as many more who served as nobly in civilian life. The purpose of the present publication is to record two things: the war work of the University as an institution, and the military and naval service of her graduates and former students. Professor James Ouayle Dealey, who played an extremely active part in the national service of the University, has written, very briefly, the history of that service in the pages which directly follow this preface. The War Records of the individual Brown graduates and former students represent the careful accumulation of over two years. Every possible source of information has been employed. And yet the task is, by its very nature, one which precludes accuracy. Those who have had one friend in service will remember the difficulty of following that friend through the many sudden transfers and movements which the military necessity made urgent. The problem of the War Records is that difficulty multiplied two thousand times. Notices of corrections or additions to the present records should be sent to the Editor at once on the form which will be found on page 43. Because the present publication is a directory of military and naval service only, it has been necessary to adopt the following definition of that service, formulated at an intercollegiate meeting on the subject at New Haven, on May 10, 191 8. " I. Men who have voluntarily enlisted or who have been drafted and mustered into the service ; and Men who have been commissioned and who have accepted the commis- sion and have been called into service. "2. Men who are actually engaged in service in Europe with the army or navy as workers under the direction of the Y. M. C. A., the Knights of Columbus, the Hebrew Y. M. A., or the Red Cross. This is to be interpreted as including men engaged in ambulance service, whether serving directly as part of the military organization, or in some semi-independent unit as the Norton-Harjes unit." This does not mean, however, that the University does not prize the records of important civilian service which have also been collected by the Committee. Such service is being preserved and tabulated with the greatest care and will be included when the University is able to publish a full statement of the national service of her sons. Bnnvn deeply regrets that these cannot also appear in the present edition. The Directory of Service lists Brown men alphabetically by classes. Opposite each man's name there appear, wherever possible, the last reported rank, the branch and arm in which that rank was obtained, his last reported assignment, and his last mihtary address. When men have returned from overseas and have been discharged, preference has been given to overseas' addresses. Whenever this information is known, the date of discharge is given. In individual instances, other data have also been added to the personal record where its importance seemed to deserve mention. Abbreviations of an obvious nature have been employed wherever possible. The present familiarity of these terms makes any further explanation of them unnecessary. The Executive Secretary is responsible for the publication of this booklet, for the biographies of the men on the Honor Roll and for the collection of all data in regard to the service of alumni, up to and including the class of 1916. For informa- tion in regard to the services of the classes 191 7-1922 inclusive, the Editor is indebted to the Dean of the University. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Preface 5, 6 Brown in the War g-15 Professor James Quayle Dealev A Tribute 16 President W. H. P. Faunce The Honor Roll 17-41 Statistics of Service ...... 42 Notice of Error or Omission 43 A Directory of Service ...... 45-74 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR GERMAN army mobilized! Belgium invaded! Great Britain declares war against Germany! Such were the startling news items of early August, 1914, flashed by cable across the Atlantic and duly headlined in the newspapers of Providence, at that time enjoying its summer siesta between seasons. Even the sleepy campus of Brown University dozing in the hot sun heard the news, causing dim memories of other wars in which it had played its part to flit through old University Hall of Revolutionary fame. In due time the infant class of 1918, some two hundred strong, appeared at the gates, little dreaming that within four years most of its members would be in national uniform and that some would lie buried on the battle- fields of France. For the United States was a peaceful nation, supposed to be "too proud to fight," and did not for a moment suspect that its navy and army would ever cross the seas to war against Germany. On the Brown campus, for over two years after the war began, there was comparatively little excitement. Newspapers sold readily, speakers at the University addressed the students on the issues of the day, varying in opinion from the preparedness of General Wood at one extreme to the pacifism of David Starr Jordan at the other. The class-rooms often listened to expositions of the world crisis given by teachers deeply interested in the progress and outcome of the war, and Presi- dent Faunce in many eloquent addresses spoke in behalf of the League of Nations and on questions arising from the war. Collections of gifts and money for the sufi^erers of Bel- gium were not infrequent; at Sayles Hall was duly commemorated the heroic death of Lieutenant (Professor) Micoleau at the battle of the Marne; and occasionally a stray student who felt the call of the blood would slip away to Canada so as to see service as a British subject from the "Province of Rhode Island." The Mexican border troubles, on the other hand, attracted many Brown men into service, principally in the Rhode Island National Guards, and these derived some valuable experience, useful in later months. In the summer of 1915 a few Brown men, believers in preparedness, found their way into the Citizens' Training Camp at Platts- burgh, and in 1916 a much larger number — students, graduates and two members of the faculty. The sinking of the Lusitania, May seventh, 1915, and similar incidents later, had filled college men with indignation and many felt that the LInited States must inevi- tably enter the war against Germany for the sake of higher civilization. The academic year, 1916-17, marks the time when the university "found itself" and be- came henceforth a vigorous factor in the na- tional movement for preparedness. Through- out the first semester there was occasional dis- cussion as to the desirability of military training, but the chief interest centered in ambulance work, starting with a movement developed by the Brown Christian Association for the raising of a fund to purchase ambulances for service in France. In due time, through the aid of many friends in the city and a benefit at Keith's, some $3400 was raised and two ambulances sent to France. This aroused interest in ambulance work, and when later the American Ambulance Service called for volunteers at their own expense, ten or twelve Brown men entered the service, including Professor Hunkins on sabbatical, and Hugh MacNair, whose courage in suffering and hon- ors for bravery shed lustre on his Alma Mater. Later in the year a Brown Ambulance Unit ot thirty-six men was formed, which with many changes in personnel finally found its way to the Italian front. On February twenty- third, after the armistice, fifteen Brown mem- bers of this Unit received each the Croce al Merito di Guerra from the hands of Colonel Galvani for brave and faithful service. Germany, on February first, 1917, since the United States had recently elected a president on a policy of peace, assumed that this country was definitely committed to neutrality, and therefore announced its policy of ruthless sub- marine warfare and marked out a straight and narrow path for American ships to follow, if they desired safety from attack. On Febru- ary third. President Wilson severed diplo- 10 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR matic relations with Germany and on the twenty-sixth asked Congress for authority to use the armed forces of the country to protect American rights and shipping. From that time pacifists were not popular on the campus. The Faculty took the lead by telegraphing on the twenty-eighth to the President, approving his maintenance of American rights on the seas and next day sent a formal letter endo'sing his policy towards Germany, pledging the support of the University and urging him to be "strong and bold" in leadership. Since war now seemed inevitable, excited groups of students began to discuss enlistment, and many within the next few months joined the national guards of the State, which had made an enviable record during the Mexican episode. Hasty enlistments, however, were discouraged by the Faculty, who early in February had seriously taken up the question of military training. In chapel addresses and in mass -meetings at the Union, it was urged that students remain in college, at their studies, working earnestly so as to prepare themselves for greater usefulness, and that they meanwhile take up military training so as to have a basis for more intensive instruction in case of war. A questionnaire submitted to the students, March sixth, showed in the returns a strong desire for military drill, so that the Faculty at once appointed a Committee on Military Training and on March twenty-ninth gave to it large discretionary powers in cases of emer- gency. The Committee, taking as its model the or- ganization of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (R. O. T. C), as laid down in General Orders forty-nine, promptly organized, March twelfth, a Brown Battalion, with Archibald C. Matteson ('93) in charge, aided by a capable body of military experts eager to assist in the training of the students. Application was soon made to the War Department for recognition and some rifles were borrowed from the State College and from the Light Infantry and later from the Hope Street High School. Platts- burgh uniforms were bought by the students at their own expense and the State granted the use of the State Armory and the rifle range for firing practice. Within a very few weeks the battalion was able to give a splendid exhi- bition when inspected by Colonel R. N. Dan- ford from the War Department and in conse- quence the Brown battalion was recognized as a unit of the R. O. T. C. This reputation for thorough work was consistently maintained by the unit as long as it existed, as testified by inspection reports, on parades, and in camp records. On April second. President Wilson recom- mended to Congress that war against Ger- many be declared and this was done by the sixth. At once a crisis developed on the campus, since students of enlisting age felt it incumbent on them to enter the service at once. Recruit- ing officers eagerly sought out these and pre- sented the claims of their respective organiza- tions, especially artillery, both field and coast, and the several branches of the Navy. The policy of the Faculty, however, as voiced by the Military Committee, remained fixed against too hasty enlistment, since it was believed that college men should not plunge too hastily into service as privates but should prepare for commissions. The course of military instruc- tion was therefore enlarged from three hours a week to nine and academic credit given. Other special courses bearing on military preparation were also at once developed and offered as electives, and additional credit was promised those who as members of the R. O. T. C. would attend military training camps in the summer. At the same time officers seeking to enlist stu- dents were freely admitted to the platform of the Brown Union, but no enlistments were allowed to be made at the close of the meetings nor on the campus, students being urged to postpone decisions for at least twenty four hours. This policy of intensive work and of enlistment only after mature deliberation kept the student body from being stampeded into service, resulting ultimately in wiser choices and the attainment of many more commissions than otherwise would have been the case. Early in May the shortage of farm help throughout the country became so evident, that the government appealed to students to devote their summer to farm work so as to add to the Nation's food supply. By Faculty vote students in good standing were allowed to leave by the middle of May, with a promise of aca- demic credit (and a medal) to those who brought back statements of at least three months' faith- ful labor on the farms. About fifty students took advantage of this offer and practically to a man fulfilled their obligations. Many members of the Faculty also engaged success- fully in food production during the summer. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR II some being careful to have photographs taken showing themselves engaged with hoe or spade. Since Colonel Matteson was not able after Commencement to remain in charge of the Brown battalion, on request from the Uni- versity the War Department ordered Major Charles W. Abbot, U. S. A. retired, Adjutant General of Rhode Island, to assume charge of the Brown R. O. T. C, a position he worthily retained until the disbanding of the Unit in 1919. An appreciation of the work of the R. O. T. C. appeared in the Providence Journal in a letter dated May twelfth, and part of it is quoted here as giving a student's point of view. for battery, coast artillery and other mobiliza- tion. "Practically all of the men left on the campus are taking intensive military training with the Brown battalion, including drill, military gymnastics under Professor Marvel's direction, lectures by Professor Gorham on military hygiene, lectures by the best authorities in the State on the broader aspects of military science, and specialized instruction in the artillery, map drawing, naval and wireless sections — or are at least drilling regularly. The battalion, organized by Professor Dealey's committee on military training, is now equipped with rifles and uniforms." (Signed) James G. Fernald. "To the Editor of the Journal: "The absence of sensationalism which has marked Brown University's rational, progres- sive fulfillment of her duty toward national preparedness has prevented her from attain- ing the notoriety outside of her home State accorded some Eastern institutions. Some of us on the hill are wondering whether even the people of Rhode Island fully appreciate both the efficient readiness with which Brown has responded to the call, and the opportunity afforded Rhode Island youth to combine higher education with effective training for service on the Brown campus. "Brown has taken a position of leadership in the first rank of American endowed universi- ties in providing military training for her students. If a few institutions whose far larger enrollments made possible earlier military or- ganizations be left out of consideration. Brown was the first endowed university in New Eng- land to organize for military training. Nearly a month before the Easter vacation, while many other institutions were but drawing up preliminary plans, Brown had half of her student body drilling creditably and receiving instruction in military science. "Today two hundred and twenty-five stu- dents have withdrawn from the university for military, naval or agricultural service, with assurance of college credit for such work sat- isfactorily performed. Many more who are now continuing their university work will leave with the organizations in which they have enlisted when the daily anticipated calls come In September, 1917, the university opened with the largest number of registered students in its history. A strong battalion of students was enrolled in the R. O. T. C. and the steady grind of military drill and theory, supplemented by allied military courses, was kept up through- out the whole year. Beginning with the second semester. Captain Alfred Douglas Borden, a wounded officer of the Canadian Infantry, gave instruction in the use of the bayonet and in methods of modern warfare. Captain Borden's energetic personality and deep interest in his work, combined with his picturesque Highland uniforms, gave variety and color to the bat- talion's activities and added much to the suc- cess of the year's work. Throughout the year stimulating competi- tions were developed between companies and individuals by offering, through Alumni, prizes in field sports and drill. In May of each year, 1917, 1918, battle manoeuvres also were held in Lincoln Woods so as to familiarize the students with the approved methods of "going over the top." In 1918 a bare one hundred and twenty- five participated, since during the year about two-thirds of the battalion's members had withdrawn and entered the service. At Com- mencement also, which occurred three weeks earlier than usual through the omission of vacations, eighty-one seniors only were gradu- ated, a number of these being absent in ser- vice and others passing over the stage with academic gown over the uniform of army or navy. At this Commencement also, hearty applause greeted the announcement that the 12 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Board of Fellows had withdrawn the honor- ary degree of Doctor of Laws from Count Johann Heinrich von Bernstorff, because he had been guilty of "conduct dishonorable alike in a gentleman and a diplomat." In its first months of military training the University concentrated its attention on the strengthening of the R. O. T. C. It was felt, however, that Brown with its many maritime and naval traditions should furnish naval in- struction also. In the second semester of 1917-1918 the Department of Mathematics offered a course in navigation, with Dr. T. H. Brown as instructor. Negotiations were then opened with the naval authorities at Newport who gladly welcomed the suggestion that Brown offer courses in naval instruction. These were authorized by the Faculty in April and a Committee on Naval Training appointed. Application was then made to the Navy De- partment that Brown be authorized to form a Naval Unit and later a request was made that Rear Admiral John R. Edwards, U. S. N. re- tired, residing at Bristol, be appointed in charge. Both of these requests were granted and application blanks were then distributed among the students, over a hundred signifying their desire to enter the naval unit. In June, after the students had left the campus, a hasty invitation came from the Yale Naval Unit requesting Brown to unite in holding a naval summer school for eight weeks from July first at Madison, Conn. Seven Brown men at- tended this at their own expense, devoting prac- tically their entire summer to training. Dr. T. H. Brown, who was in charge of the naval courses at Brown, was invited to give instruc- tion at the school and rendered to it very efficient service throughout the summer, with- out remuneration and at his own expense. The training received in the school enabled the young men to be very helpful in the drill of the Naval Unit in the Fall. During the spring and summer of 1918, at the request of the War Department, the pattern and mathine shops of the university and of the Rhode Island School of Design, together with the electrical engineering laboratory, were used for che vocational training of men drafted into the National Army. These came in two de- tachments of about one hundred and sixty men each and remained each about sixty days, the first arriving May sixteenth, the last de- parting September nineteenth. These men were housed, fed and drilled on the campus, the gymnasium being used as a barracks and the Union as a mess hall. They were divided into three unequal groups taking up respectively electricity, carpentry and gen- eral machine work. Professor Kenerson was in charge of the educational work of the de- rachments and with the help of an able corps of assistants developed remarkable results, considering the shortness of time. Social ac- tivities were under the direction of the Brown Christian Association and the Knights of Columbus, the latter organization using No. 5 University Hall as the centre for its social recreation. In anticipation of possible emergencies the Faculty before adjournment in May had formed a joint committee of the Curriculum and Military Committees, to make during the four months of summer any readjustments in curriculum or schedule necessitated by chang- ing conditions, and to plan a reorganization of the curriculum for the period of the war. Their report was published as a bulletin early in September, and the raising of a special fund was authorized by the Corporation so as to carry out suggestions made. During the four months following Commence- ment the university was in full stride. The annual meeting of the Corporation held May thirtieth had pledged the university's resources to the utmost in carrying out national demands. Practically every member of the college was at work, either in service, in camp or training school, or on farm or in munition or ship-build- ing plant. Twenty-two members of the in- struction force were in some form or other of war service. A picked body of members of the R. O. T. C. had been sent to Plattsburgh, so that their services might be utilized in the drill of the coming year. An incipient summer school of a,bout seventy students was in session receiving instruction chiefly in chemistry and biology, for governmental purposes. The campus was occupied by the unit of drafted men receiving vocational instruction. The Curriculum, Military and Naval Committees remained in the city, planning for the coming year and preparing to make necessary re- adjustments in case of emergencies. Meanwhile the War Department was pre- paring a mine to explode under the unsuspect- ing colleges of the land. Delegates from the Eastern colleges were invited to Boston early BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 13 in August and were given preliminary informa- tion to the effect that the coming draft bill would apply to all young men past eighteen years of age. Since the government recognized that this would virtually empty the colleges of students, it was arranging to induct those of proper age and conditions into the service as privates and to keep them in college, subject to call, under military training and discipline, so that by further study they would become candidates eligible for commissions, which henceforth might be given to men under twenty-one years of age. The colleges were therefore requested to surrender the privileges of the R. O. T. C. and to petition for the es- tablishment of a Students' Army Training Corps (S. A. T. C), to be made up of physi- cally fit students inducted into service but de- tailed for duty as students in college until needed for army or navy. Brown within a week promptly made the change of organiza- tion desired and waited for further informa- tion, meanwhile notifying students by circular letter of impending changes. By the end of August the new draft bill was in effect, making men from eighteen to forty-five liable to draft. A second conference to be held at Plattsburgh was called by the War De- partment early in September and further details were given to the colleges, but no defi- nite instructions respecting academic courses. Brown at once mailed broadcast a carefully prepared circular to schools and students, giving information about the plans of the government and about the military and naval courses offered by the college. On the twenty-first, four days before the opening of the university, came the needed in- structions respecting courses and it at once was seen that the reorganized curriculum could be applied only to the few civilian students, not to the great mass of those likely to be inducted into the S. A. T. C. or Naval Unit. ■ By these practically only military (naval) or "allied courses" might be taken, so that over half of the usual academic courses were "scrapped" and whole departments left without students. Further complications came through instruc- tions to organize new courses, such as War Aims, Military Law, and Geologic-Engineer- ing subjects; some confusion arose also from almost daily modifications of or additions to instructions, which kept pouring in for the next three months. Meanwhile a special meeting of the Faculty had been summoned for the eighteenth and the indications for the coming year explained. At once an Emergency Council under the chairmanship of the Dean was organized with power "to make decisions and take action upon matters concerning the relation of the uni- versity to the government." This body met daily and became wonderfully effective through its authority to make prompt readjustments or decisions whenever an emergency arose. A little later, when there arose conflicts of juris- diction between the army and navy units, or between these and the academic work of the university — conflicts chiefly due to ambiguous instructions of the government — an Admin- istrative Council was organized, in which these three sets of interests were represented, and all differences of opinion were promptly thrashed out, thus ensuring an harmonious policy. Through the agency of these two Coun- cils, supplemented by the innate courtesy of the Commandants, Brown enjoyed most ami- cable relations with the military and naval authorities on its campus and these with each other. To those familiar with the traditional relationship of army, navy and civilian, when yoked together as a team, this achievement was noteworthy and a standing tribute to the high character of those who made up the Councils. It may be well here to say that not the least of the tasks successfully accomplished at Brown was that devolving upon the Comptroller and his office. -Contracts, bonds, insurance, gov- ernmental supplies of all sorts and red tape without limit — all were handled with accu- racy, good sense and cheerfulness. Accounts were exactly and scrupulously kept and won commendation from Inspectors who had lost faith in human nature through their experiences with other accounting systems. The Brown Christian Association likewise rose splendidly to its opportunities through- out the entire war. It raised funds, sent books and magazines to the army and Christmas boxes to the Brown boys in France. It sold thrift stamps and liberty bonds to the students and in connection with the Brown Union fur- nished an open platform for discussions. Dur- ing the quarantine it reached its maximum of effort in helping to make life endurable on the campus by furnishing relaxation and enter- tainment at frequent intervals to worried and hard-worked students. 14 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR With the receipt of instructions September twenty-first, action at once became possible. The curriculum was reorganized over night and teachers without classes were promptly assigned to other departments suddenly over- loaded by the imposition of new courses and requirements. A special War News Issue of the Brown Herald was issued September twenty-third, giving information to students of the changed situation, and on the twenty- fourth registration began for the new academic year. The opening of the college year brought an unusually large number of applicants for en- trance. Many who ordinarily would pass from the high schools into business were attracted by the chance of a commission and a college education at the expense of the Government. Brown also was fortunate in having one of the very few naval units in the country and ranked easily as one of the three best. This proved attractive to many who preferred the navy to the army and were eager to get training leading towards an ensign's commission. In consequence, the classes in nautical science be- came so large that a new department was at once organized and Professor Slocum (Brown, '95) placed in charge. This is likely to be a permanent addition to the University, owing to the continued demand even after the armis- tice for instruction in nautical science. As rapidly as students were enrolled, they indicated preference for army or navy, were examined physically, and if successful were assigned to barracks. The students were form- ally inducted into service October first on the middle campus, and from that time settled down to business. Reveille sounded at 6:15, and taps at 10 p. m. Between these hours life consisted of drill, more drill, study, supervised study, mess, reports, military gymnastics and numerous extras in the form of guard duty and kitchen police. Manning Hall was given over to the Naval Unit and Rhode Island Hall to the S. A. T. C. Mess was at the Brown Union and all the dormitories were barracks whose rooms were devoid of all furniture save ser- vice cots and the simplest necessities. Student social life in the usual sense, including fratern- ities, passed away, for it was assumed that every student would be in active service with- in nine months and all energ}^ must be given to work. When influenza attacked the State, the University declared a quarantine, and guards day and night for weeks patrolled the camp guarding the gates and demanding passes from president, faculty and janitors alike. The quarantine was rigorous and effective, few cases developed and but one death took place. The thoroughness of the Brown organization was amply tested during these trying weeks. It was no easy matter to keep six hundred young men on a small campus; divided into two rival organizations, army and navy, under stern restraint and at hard work for so long a period. The spirit of the young men, however, was ad- mirable. They were there for a purpose and devoted themselves grimly to their books, awaiting the time when summoned to camp. These summons came early, and in rapid suc- cession, so that from the S. A. T. C. the best- drilled and most capable men were leaving for camps at frequent intervals. The policy of sending the best men was amply justified in the results, for with hardly an exception they made good in the training camps and gave Brown a well-earned reputation for thorough preparation both in drill, morale, and in mathe- matics for those sent to artillery service. At the time of the signing of the armistice about half of the members of the S. A. T. C. had already gone to camp or were preparing to go. Had the war continued, the remainder doubt- less, with few exceptions, would have been sent to training camps by the spring of 1919. The armistice naturally brought about a decided reaction, yet work went on, discipline was maintained and examinations given be- fore the units disbanded in Christmas week. By the first of January "the omelet had been un- scrambled," the S. A. T. C. and the Naval Unit were mere memories and when a civilian body of students met at the first chapel in January, little remained on the campus to remind one of the past, save the tall mast and rigging in front of Manning, or a stray uniform worn by a returning soldier or sailor who had not yet found opportunity to buy citizens' clothes. Once again Brown is a place of academic leisure and another memory has been added to University Hall. Three magnificent sets of national and state flags adorn the walls of the University, presented respectively to the R. O. T. C, the Naval Unit, and the S. A. T. C. A BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 15 generous collection of band instruments, pre- sented by the class of '78, will continue for years to stimulate marches and games. Soon a tablet will be placed in honor of those who found how dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. For the next sixty years, old graduates returning to Alma Mater will live over again the experiences of camp and battle, of wounds and the honors of war. Yet, best of all, an American university has shown that when the nation summons its colleges to turn from peace to war, its students can handle the bayonet as readily as the pen and can "carry on" to a victorious end, so as to "make the world safe for democracy." James Q. Dealey Chairman 0^ the Committees on Military and Naval Training By president FAUNCE VV'T'ITH sorrow, yet with pride, we print our Honor Roll. Beside each name is a sketch that all can read, but the life behind the sketch was finer and nobler than any words we read or write. ''When thou goest into the house of God, let thy words be few." These young men were dear to their own house- holds, but hardly less dear to Alma Mater. Some of them were leaders on the campus in former days. They sang the old songs and played the old games and dreamed of a long, bright future. Sooner than any thought have their dreams come true. Their faces vanish, but their souls are maching on. "Taps" has sounded for them ; " reveille" for us. Heaven helping us, we will be worthy of our unseen comrades. THE BROWN HONOR ROLL Biographical sketches of forty-two Brown men who died in mihtary or naval service Lieutenant Henri Ferdinand Micoleau, Re- serve Officer of French Infantry and Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Litera- ture at Brown University, was killed in action Lieutenant Henri Ferdinand Micoleau in the first battle of the Marne on September 9, 1914. He was the first representative of the LIniversity to give his life to that cause tor which, later, so many were to die. Professor Micoleau was born in 1885 of Norman French stock. After teaching French for a year in Germany, he came to New York at the age of 16, without English, without funds, without friends. He began his career as a teacher in the Berlitz school in New York, and then, climbing by sheer force of character and enthusiasm, became a teacher in a high school in Portland, Maine. It was there that he met his American wife, who, with their three children, survives him. Soon after his marriage he patriotically returned to France where he completed his two years' required service as a soldier. In 1912 he came to Brown as an instructor in French. Here his personal gifts, his en- thusiasm, his rare friendliness and sympathy, won him a sure place in the hearts of both faculty and students. In 1914 he had been promoted to the rank of associate professor. In the summer of 1914, Professor Micoleau, feeling that la prochaine guerre was inevitable, returned to France to join his company as a reservist officer and help France to prepare. He had left America before war was declared. After helping in the hurried training of new men for three weeks, he left St. Gaudens with his regiment on the 31st of August. He met the Boche near Virty-le-Francois, in what has come to be known as the first battle of the Marne. It was here that the brunt of the in- vasion was met and here that the French turned a heroic retreat into a charge which hurled back the enemy and saved Paris. It was here also, on the morning of September 9th, that Lieutenant Micoleau fell, instantly killed by a shell. His body was buried in a little pine grove near a farm called La Certine, a rude cross, surmounted by his military cap, marking the spot. Dr. William Henry Buffum, 1898, Lieuten- ant, Senior Grade, Medical Service, U. S. N., died of influenza in the Great Western Army and Navy Hospital at I^iverpool, England, on October 13, 1918. Dr. Buffum, son of the late George A. and Harriet Mitchel, was born in Providence, June 25, 1877; fitted for college at the well-known Mo wry & Goff School; took his A.B. degree at Brown University in 1898; and graduated in Medicine, with honors, from Harvard Uni- versity in 1902. In the Medical School he was a Charter Member of the Aescuiapian Society. After serving as Medical Interne in the Massachusetts Cxeneral Hospital in 1902 and 1903 he entered upon the Practice of Medicine in his native city, serving as Interne in the i8 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Providence Lying-in Hospital the first six months. At his death he was one of its Visit- ing Staff. Dr. William Henry Buffum He was appointed Medical Externe to the Out-Patient Department of the Rhode Island Hospital in October, 1903, Visiting Physician to the Out-Patient Department for Children's Diseases in January, 1906, Physician to the House for the new Clinical Department for infants affected by Diseases of the Digestive Organs in July, 1912. This position he held at his death. Among the first to enlist in the Medical Service of the World War, he joined the Rhode Island Naval Base Unit, ranking as Lieu- tenant, Senior Grade, and went to the Naval Hospital at Newport, R. I., last May. Or- dered abroad, he sailed from New York on the Oxfordshire September 25, 1918. After de- voted livork among the troops in the influenza epidemic that broke out on the crowded trans- port, during a long, perilous, stormy passage, he landed in Liverpool on October 8, with the early signs of the disease developing in himself, and proceeded at once to a hotel there. Two days later he developed pneu- monia and was sent to the Great Western Army and Navy Hospital, where he died after several hours of unconsciousness on October 13th. He married, November 1, 1904, Edith Camp- bell, daughter of James M. Campbell of this city. She and one son survive him, while another son, two years older, died four years ago. His mother and brother, G. Mitchel Buffum, live in California. Rev. Thomas Aloysius Coffey, a non-gradu- ate of the class of 1900, 1st Lieutenant Chap- lain, United States Army, died of pneumonia at St. Joseph's Hospital in Providence on January 5, 1919. Father Coffey was born in Ireland on August 21, 1878, son of James and Bridget Murphy Coffey. He was educated in the Providence public schools and entered Brown University in 1896 as a member of the class of 1900. He joined the Phi Kappa Fraternity. He withdrew from Brown in 1898 to enter the Grand Seminary at Montreal, P. Q. He studied there for two years and then trans- ferred to St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore, Md., from which he received the degree of Bachelor of Sacred Theology in June, 1903. He was ordained in the Cathedral in Baltimore on December 10, 1903, by Cardinal Gibbons. Rev. Thomas Aloysius Coffey He was appointed curate at St. Michael's Church in Providence where he remained until 1916, when he was transferred to St. Anthony's in Providence. He volunteered his BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 19 services to the Knights of Columbus as a Chaplain and was stationed at the Naval Training Station at Newport from April until November, 1918. Seeking overseas duty, he received a commission in the U. S. Army as Chaplain with the rank of 1st Lieutenant and was sent to Camp Sevier, S. C, where he was attached to the 20th Train, Headquarters and Mounted Police. He was taken ill with in- fluenza shortly after receiving his honorable discharge on December 15, 1918. Pneumonia developed, from which he died on January 5, 1919. William Everett Parker, a non-graduate of the class of 1901, Major in the U. S. Marine Corps, died on March 22, 1918, at the Naval Hospital, Washington, D. C. William Everett Parker Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Parker, was born at Newport, R. I., September 18, 1878. His early childhood days were spent in that city, but he received most of his school- ing, both grammar and high, in Cranston. In the fall of 1897 he entered Brown Uni- versity, but in the winter of 1899 he accepted a position as mechanical draughtsman and de- signer with the Brown & Sharpe Manufactur- ing Company of Providence, and in 1903 he received and accepted an appointment in the Ordnance Office of the War Department, Washington, D. C. January 16, 1904, he was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the U. S. Marine Corps by President Roosevelt and was assigned to Annapolis for instruction. On December 28th of the above year he was assigned to the Battleship "Kentucky" of the North Atlantic Squadron, and served under Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans. Promoted to First Lieutenant August 1, 1905, he was transferred from the "Kentucky" to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. From 1906 to 1909 he served with a regiment of Marines in the army of intervention in Cuba, and saw active duty in many parts of the island. It was while stationed there that he met and married Miss Mabel F. Hennersheets of Chicago, U. S. A. They were married at Havana, Cuba. Upon his return to the States he was sta- tioned for a while at Newport, R. I., in com- mand of the Marines at the Naval Training Station. In the spring of 1910 he was assigned to the command of the Marines on the Battle- ship "New York" which was the flagship of the United States Asiatic fleet. After a cruise of some four months, he was assigned to shore duty in the Philippine Islands, where he remained for nearly three years. While on this station of duty he was sent with the Marine expedition to protect American Mis- sions and commercial interests in China. Ordered to return to the United States for a change of duty, he was promoted to the rank of Captain in August, 1912, and was later or- dered to the Republic of Haiti, which was in a condition of serious insurrection. He was or- dered back to the States after his somewhat strenuous duties in Haiti in the fall of 1917 for promotion. The condition of his health at this time was of such a character as to delay his promotion for some months, and it was not until February 8, 1918, that he took the rank of Major. He failed to improve in health sufficiently to continue in active duties and was ordered to the Naval Hospital, Washing- ton, D. C, for treatment. He died there March 22, 1918, and is buried at Arlington Cemetery, D. C. 20 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Frederick Reynolds Belding Frederick Reynolds Belding, a non-gradu- ate of the class of 1906, Corporal in Company K, 107th Infantry, was killed in action on September 29, 1918, near La Catelet, France. Corporal Belding was born in Malone, N. Y., on March 30, 1883, and was the son of Dr. Dexter R. and Hattie K. Belding. He grad- uated from Franklin Academy at Malone, N. Y., in the year 1903. He entered Brown University immediately and at once became active in athletics especially baseball. At the end of his Sophomore year he became ill and was obliged to leave the University. Upon recovering from his illness he entered the New York University Law School, from which he graduated in 1908. After following his pro- lession for three years in New York he came back to Malone on account of his mother's illness, his father and brother having died in the meantime. He practiced law in Malone until he entered the service. When the first officers' training camps were opened he ap- plied for admission and was accepted, but a physical trouble prevented him from complet- ing the course and he was discharged. Im- mediately upon his return from this camp he enlisted in Company K, the local National Guard Company, as a private, determined to serve his country even though he could not do so as an officer. This company, with the other companies of the First Regiment N. G. N. Y., was merged with the 7th Regiment, which became the 107th and a part of the famous 27th Division. These gallant boys covered themselves with glory in France, having the credit for the breaking of the Hindenburg line in the famous battle of September 29, 1918. It was in this battle that Corporal Belding was killed. Sergeant Florence John Harrington Price, 1906, 42nd Overseas Battalion, Canadian Ex- peditionary Force, was mortally wounded by shrapnel at 3 p. m. on May 30th, 1916. He expired shortly after being hit. Sergeant Price was born in Dublin, Ireland. He entered Brown University in September, 1902, graduating with the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy in 1906. He was prominent in all branches of athletics, notably track, and made a brilliant record as a scholar. He was a member of Psi Upsilon. Sergt. Florence John Harrington Price After his graduation Sergeant Price was employed as a reporter on the New York Sun, and later was engaged by the B. F. Sturtevant Company of Hyde Park, Mass., in their New York office. He enlisted at Montreal, P. Q., on March 31st, 1915, with the Princess Patricia contin- gent, for although he had studied in this coun- try, he had never become naturalized. About a month later he sailed with the Canadian troops. On Decoration Day, 1916, Price was sleeping in a dugout near the front line trenches when a shrapnel shell burst over it, killing him almost instantly. He had just done a double tour of duty, having volunteered, after finishing his own period in the first line trenches, to work for a brother officer who was feeling ill. Had it not been for this, he would have been far behind the lines in a place of safety. He was buried in Menin Road (South) Mili- tary Cemetery in Belgium. His death came only a few days before he was to have been made a commissioned officer for his bravery. He was the first Brown graduate to fall in the war. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 21 Lieutenant-Commander Harold Stacey Bur- dick, U. S. N., a non-graduate of the class of 1908, died of pneumonia at the Naval Station at New Orleans on January 16, 1919. Lieutenant-Commander Harold Stacey Burdick, U.S.N. Commander Burdick was born in East Greenwich on April 14, 1887, and was educated in the Providence public schools, graduating from Hope Street High School in 1904. He then entered Brown University and, while a student there, took the examinations for ap- pointment to the Naval Academy, entering Annapolis in 1905. He was graduated in 1909, standing 32nd in his class. He was then ordered to duty on the battle- ship "Rhode Island," serving on that ship a year. He went to the "New Jersey" and did survey duty on the coast of Cuba and Haiti. He also served on the destroyers "Jouett" and "Monaghan." He had attained the rank of Lieutenant-Commander and was in charge of the Engineering Division of the 8th Naval District with headquarters at the Naval Sta- tion at New Orleans, La., when his death oc- curred. He is survived by his wife, Golda Burdick, his parents and two sisters, Annie P. Burdick and Ethel Burdick, teachers in the Provi- dence schools. He was a member of Mount Vernon Lodge No. 4, F. A. M., and of the Beta Theta Pi Fraternity. Robert Emmett McGough, a non-graduate of the class of 1910, private in Company L, 13th Regiment, U. S. Marines, died of pneu- monia while en route for France on Septem- ber 25, 1918. McGough was born In Providence on De- cember 5, 1887, the youngest son of John J. and Mary Lane McGough. He was educated in the private and public schools of Provi- dence, attended Classical High School here and entered Brown University in the class of 1910. He left Brown before his graduation and attended Cornell for a time. After leaving Cornell he went into the stock and bond brokerage business with Ki'vert & White of Providence and later with the firm of Newton P. Hutchison & Co., with which firm he was at the time of his enlistment in the U. S. Marines. Robert Emmett McGough In June, 1918, he enlisted as a private in the U. S. Marine Corps and was sent to Paris Island, the Marine training camp for recruits, in July. There he made a record as a marks- man and was selected for Marine Corps Offi- 22 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR cers' Training School at the big Marine camp at Quantico, Va. He was sent to Quantico on September 1st for his officer training, but being desirous of overseas action, he was transferred as a private to Company L, 13th Regiment, U. S. Marines, an aggregation of sharpshooters which was about ready for overseas. It was the crack regiment of the Marine Corps and numbered on its roster many college men such as Del Mayer, Eddie Mahan of Harvard and numerous others. It was called "The Black Cats." The 13th Regiment left Quantico on the 13th of September and took thirteen days to go across, arriving at Brest on September 26th. But 100 of the boys died of influenza on ship- board. Among them was Private Robert Emmet McGough who died almost within sight of the France which he so dearly loved and for which he was willing to give his life, on September 25th, 1918, from pneumonia which followed the influenza. His brother, John H. McGough, has written a tribute, from which the following verse is taken: "Like Brooke, you never reached the goal That was your manly heart's desire — A soldier's place in battle line. Head up, face front, and under fire. But now along the starry street That leads up to the Great White Throne, Joyce, Rupert, Alan and the rest Will gladly hail you as their own." Chester Thomas Calder, A.B., died of pneu- monia at AUentown, Pa., February 4, 1918. He was born at Providence December 29, 1889, the only child of William Curry and Ida Brown (Thomas) Calder. He prepared for college at the Hope Street High School, Providence, and entered Brown in September, 1907, re- ceiving the degree of A.B. in 1911. The next year he studied at the Harvard Law School and then went abroad for a year. The next two years^ he was a member of the reportorial staff of the Providence Journal. He was well known in amateur theatricals in Providence. He was also a member of the Players' casts. He enlisted in the Brown Ambulance Unit in June, 1917, and soon after went to the training camp at AUentown, where he died in the hospital. He was a member of Theta Delta Chi. Mr. Calder was buried with mili- tary honors at Providence. Chester Thomas Calder George Cormier Richardson, a non-graduate of the class of 1911, Machinists Mate, 2nd cl.. Naval Aviation, died of pneumonia Octo- ber 7, 1918, at the Great Lakes Naval Train- ing Station, Great Lakes, Illinois. Richardson was born in Chicago on Febru- ary 15, 1889. He received his early education at the Louis Nettlehorst Grammar School and the Lake View High School, from which he graduated in 1907. He was boy soloist in the choir of St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Chicago. Richardson entered Brown Uni- versity in 1907 with the class of 1911. He at once interested himself in undergraduate ac- tivities, becoming manager of the Freshman Football team. In a scrub game of football in his first year he received an injury, which, at the end of his sophomore year, forced him to leave college. On leaving college he became associated with his father in the sand and gravel business, under the name of the Richard- son Sand Company. He was married to Miss Winifred Goodsmith on June 1, 1916. On July 29th, 1918, he enlisted in the Navy as a Second Class Machinist's Mate in the Avia- BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR ^i tion Service. He was stationed at the Great Lakes Naval Training Station, Great Lakes, 111., where his death occurred on October 7th, George Cormier Richardson 1918. He is buried in Rosehill Cemetery, Chicago. Richardson was a member of the Phi Sigma fraternity in high school, and of the Pi Kappa and the Delta Phi fraternity in college. Frederick Eames Cooper, 1913, Captain of Ordnance and ofificer in charge of production at the Watertown Arsenal, Watertown, Mass., died of pneumonia September 24, 1918, at Watertown, Mass. Cooper was born on May 11, 1890. He was graduated from the Providence Classical High School in 1909, and in the Fall of that year entered Brown University, from which he was graduated in 1913. He attended the summer school of scientific management which was given by Dr. Frank B. Gilbreth, and became actively interested in this phase of industrial life. His first position was with the New England Butt Company of Providence. He was also with the firm of Bird & Son at East Walpole, Mass. From there he accepted a position with Boydon & Steacie, Boston, Mass., and was sent to the Wire Goods Company at Worcester, Mass. While in Worcester he con- ducted lectures for the Massachusetts Uni- versity extension courses in Industrial Organ- ization and Management in Springfield and Fitchburg. He also wrote one of the courses in modern business used by the Alexander Hamilton Institute. He enlisted in the Ordnance Department and was given the rank of 1st Lieutenant. He was assigned to the Watertown Arsenal, Watertown, Mass. While there he was pro- moted to a Captain and was placed in charge of production. He died at Watertown at the age of 28, of influenza-pneumonia. Frederick Eames Cooper Richard Dodson Robinson, 1913, 1st Lieu- tenant, Company K, 47th Infantry, American Expeditionary Force, France, died of wounds in Base Hospital No. 17, at Dijon, France, on August 31, 1918. Robinson was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on August 5, 1891. He attended the public schools of his native city, graduating from the Baltimore City College in June, 1909. In September, 1909, he entered the Freshman Class of Brown Uni- versity, and at once evinced a strong interest in the various college activities. He received the degree of Bachelor of Arts in June, 1913, 24 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR and was immediately invited to join the staff of Harris, Forbes & Compan}^ Bankers of New York City. Richard Dodson Robinson He entered enthusiastically upon his new duties, made rapid progress and gave promise of a brilliant future in the business world. When the United States entered the great war in April, 1917, he was not slow in measuring his responsibility and applied at once for ad- mission to the First Officers' Training Camp at Plattsburg. He received the commission of Second Lieu- tenant upon completing the course and was assigned to Company M of the 47th Regiment, then in Camp at Syracuse, New York. A few months later the Regiment was ordered to Camp Greene at Charlotte, N. C, where it remained until the latter part of April. The Regiment sailed from Hoboken May 9th, after spending more than a week at Camp Mills, Long Island. Although ranking as Second Lieutenant at that time, Lieutenant Robinson was placed in command of Company K, to which he had been transferred, his Captain having preceded him to the other side, — later he was commissioned First Lieutenant. His Regiment was in the rear of the Chateau Thierry Sector in July, and on the 29th en- tered its first engagement at Sergy. Only five of the twenty-three officers who were in the first fighting were able to go with the Regi- ment when it was ordered to cross the Vesle River on August 7. Early that morning as Company K reached the village of St. Thibaut which was being shelled by the Germans, Lieutenant Robinson was severely wounded in the right leg by a high explosive shell. He was sent to Base Hospital No. 17 at Dijon, where he died August 31. He was buried with full military honors in the Dijon Cemetery. Raymond Booth Scranton Raymond Booth Scranton, a non-graduate of the class of 1913, died November 8, 1918, at the hospital in Nevers, France. Scranton was born on April 7, 1890. He re- ceived his education at the Mercersburg Academy and at Brown University, where he was a member of the Delta Phi fraternity. He entered National Service in April, 1918. Clifford John Stevens Clifford John Stevens, 1913, Corporal in Company F, 168th Infantry, died March 15, 1918, from accidental grenade explosion while BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 25 serving as a member of the American Expe- ditionary Force in France. Corporal Stevens was born December 15, 1887, in Jackson, Maine, the son of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Stevens. Clifford was one of a family of seven children, five boys and two girls. His boyhood days were spent working on his father's farm and neighboring farms. When he was sixteen years old he went to Lawrence, Mass., and attended the Lawrence High School for one year. He then entered Worcester Academy where he took a full course graduating in 1909. He entered Brown the following fall and was graduated four years later. Soon after his graduation he went West and was for a long time connected with Swift & Company of Chicago. In the summer of 1916 he was a student at the Teachers' College at Cedar Falls, Iowa, after which he became an instructor in the schools of Negaunee, Michigan. His military connection was, however, with Iowa troops. He first served on the Mexican border with Company F, Iowa National Guard. When the United States declared war on Germany he went to France with the 168th Iowa as a member of the Rainbow Division. The following extract from a letter sent from France May 14th to his father, M. C. Stevens, Brooks, Maine, by Captain Charles J. Casey of his company, gives some details of his death. "No doubt you are already familiar with the mission that the company was on the day that we lost your son. The operation was completed and we were returning to our billets, a few miles back of the lines, when either a sack of grenades falling or a single grenade exploding inside the sack caused the death of Clifford. Death came without any suffering. We picked up our dead and wounded and to tell you of the heartaches that came to the boys that night would take pages. Our outfit had been under the most gruelling conditions for the previous seventy-two hours, and it was a most horrible climax and one that not a man that hurried along that dark road will ever forget." Stevens was buried at Peronne in North- eastern France. Irving Thayer Boardman, 1914, Private, 9th Company, 3rd Battalion, 152nd Depot Brigade, Camp Upton, N. Y., died of in- fluenza on September 27, 1918. Boardman was born in Providence on March 17, 1891. He received his early education in the Providence public schools and was a mem- ber of the boys' class at the Y. M. C. A. He Irving Thayer Boardman graduated from Classical High School in 1910 and entered Brown University, receiving the degree of A.B. in 1914 and that of A.M. in 1915. He was a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon. After leaving Brown, he continued his studies at Clark University, doing special research work in psychology and pedagogy and would have received his Ph.D. in June, 1919. During his stay at Clark he was superintendent of Lithabo Farm at Leicester, Mass. In the summer of 1918 he accepted a call to become an instructor at the Redding Ridge School in Connecticut. Shortly after this he was inducted into the service through the draft and was assigned to Camp Upton. While there he did Y. M. C. A. work in addition to his military duties and served as an assistant to the chaplain. He was in line for promotion when he was stricken with influenza from which he died on Septem- ber 27, 1918. Burial was at East Greenwich. Boardman was a mernber of the Piedmont Con- gregational Church at Worcester, Mass. 26 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR David Edward Henry, 1914, 1st Lieutenant of the 301st Infantry, died of pneumonia at St. Nazaire, France, on February 14, 1919. D.A.VID Edward Henry David Henry was born on May 23, 1890, in Dorchester, Mass. He transferred from Tufts College to Brown during the collegiate year 1911-12. He was prominent in undergrad- uate affairs. He played 'varsity baseball for three years and 'varsity football for two years. He was Captain of the football team in his Senior year. Henry graduated from Brown in 1914. After his graduation he became a teacher and athletic instructor at the Country Day School in Newton, Mass., until the fall of 1916, when he was employed by a rubber concern in New York City. He entered the first Plattsburg camp in May, 1917, and was commissioned a 1st Lieu- tenant' on August 15, 1917. In September he was assigned to Camp Devens, Mass., where he was promoted to Senior Lieutenant in the Headquarters Intelligence Company of the 301st Infantry. He sailed for France on July 4, 1918. Henry died on February 4, 1919, at St. Nazaire. He was buried in Motor Re- ception Park on February 15, 1919. He was a member of the Delta Upisilon Fraternity. Russell Lowell Bateman, a non-graduate of the class of 1915, private in the 10th, South Dakota Regiment, died of pneumonia in France on June 28, 1918. Bateman was born in Wilkinsburg, Pa., on May 24, 1892. He attended the public schools, then entered Perkiomen Seminary, where he graduated with honors. Afterwards he en- tered Brown University and spent two years in that College, and then, going West, taught school in Crawford County, near Foreman, North Dakota. In school vacation he served with an Engineering Corps. He was engaged in the latter occupation when the United States entered the war against Germany, when he enlisted as a private in the 10th, South Dakota Regiment. He sailed for France with his regiment in the fall of 1917. On his arrival in France, he was transferred as a Clerk to the Labor Bureau. He contracted pneumonia and died on June 28, 1918. He is buried in Suresnes, near Paris. Russell Lowell Bateman Joseph Brown Bowen, 1915, 2nd Lieutenant Aviation Service, U. S. A., was killed in action on September 7, 1918, while engaged on the Allied side of the lines in combat with a Fokker scout. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 27 Bowen was born in Providence on April 15, 1891, the son of Edward Steere Bowen and Elma Sophia (Brown). He was educated Joseph Brown Bowen in the public schools of Pawtucket and gradu- ated from Brown University in 1915 with the degree of Ph.B. In September, 1915, he entered the Yale Forest School for a course of two years, which comprised practical forestry work in Oregon and Louisiana. In June, 1917, having received from Yale the degree of Master of Forestry, he immediately volunteered for service in aviation, and while awaiting the call to the colors, spent some weeks in investigating the methods of a model lumber company in Ala- bama, and the rest of the time at his summer home in the Maine woods. Orders came in September to proceed to the ground school for aviators at Princeton, N. J., and after completing his training there, he was sent to Fort Worth, Texas, where he qualified as a military pilot, and on February 19, 1918, was commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the Aviation Section, Signal Reserve Corps. Within ten days he went abroad as a member of the 148th Aero Squad- ron, A. E. F. On reaching England, he was detached from this squadron and sent to a camp of the Royal Flying Corps for special instruction as a fight- ing scout, a tribute to his skill, for only the most promising aviators are taught to fly the single-seated fast combat planes. His record in the English school was such that the British authorities wished to retain him as a perma- nent staff officer, but the United States head- quarters refused, and he was assigned to active service with the 32nd Aero Squadron of the Royal Air Force, being one of the few Ameri- can flying officers attached to British squadrons. On July 22, 1918, he made his first trip over the lines, escorting bombing planes, and from that time he was in the thick of the fighting in the vicinity of Cambrai, Fismes and Douai, acting as protecting escort to the slower bom- bers, or engaged in combat with enemy air- craft, including Richthofen's crack "circus." From one of these encounters he returned with twenty-two bullets through his plane, and of another particularly fierce fight he wrote: "I think I got a Hun in the scrap, but was too busy to see what happened to him." On September 7th, volunteers were asked for a special patrol, and Lieutenant Bowen offered to go, — not, as his flight-book shows, — the first time he had chosen to do more than duty required. That evening he was jsosted as missing and later it was ascertained that he had been killed in the air. He rests where the hands of his English comrades laid him, near the little village of Pronville, west of Bourlon Wood and Cambrai. Above his grave, his squadron placed a cross, inscribed to his memory and made from the broken propeller of his plane. The war has produced few utterances more noble than this, quoted from one of his letters home: "It does not matter when a man dies, but hoiv." Wilmer Hughes Eicke, a graduate of the class of 1915, private in Battery C, 103rd Field Artillery, 26th Division, was killed in action on October 24, 1918. Eicke was born in East Providence on October 5, 1892, the only child of W. F. and Lillie M. Eicke. His early education was ob- tained in the public schools of New York, until his tenth year, when he entered the grammar school at Narragansett Pier, R. I. 28 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR He prepared himself for college at the South Kingston High School, and entered Brown University in 1911. He was active in under- was an inspiration for those who knew him. His example was one which his comrades will not forget." WiLMER Hughes Eicke ' graduate affairs in college, particularly In modern language societies and dramatics. Upon his graduation from the University in 1915, he taught at South Kingston for a year, resigning to take a post graduate course in the University of Wisconsin, from which he had been awarded a scholarship. He received the degree of A. M. in 1917 and was awarded a fellowship for the next year, as he intended to continue his studies for the degree of Ph. D. The war, however, interrupted his plans, and he enlisted at Quonset Camp with Battery C on July 30, 1917. The Battery left for France in October and went into action early in Feb ruary of the following year. Eicke took part in every important engagement up to the time of his death. He never had even a twenty- four hours leave of absence, nor was he absent from his duties through illness from the time he went into action until he died. Lieut. \Villiam H. Taylor, his commanding officer, writes: "Your son had the respect and love of the officers and men of his battery. Unselfish, an energetic worker and a cultured gentleman, he Rowland Hazard McLaughlin, 1915, former Executive Secretary of the University, and Captain in the 314th Field Artillery, died of wounds received in action October 14, 1918, near the Meuse. McLaughlin was born on January 4, 1894, the son of Professor A. C. McLaughlin of the University of Chicago, and a grandson of President James B. Angell, Brown, '49, of the University' of Michigan. He matriculated at Brown University in September, 1911. He was a leader in nearly every branch of undergrad- uate life. A student of high rank, captain of the 'varsity debating team and a participant in every phase of the intellectual life of the college, he was also a member of the football and track teams and captain of the swimming team. In his Senior year, he had the honor of being president of his class and a member of the Camarian Club. He was a member of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. Rowland Hazard McLaughlin His appointment as Executive Secretary of the University came immediately after his graduation. To this work he carried the same BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 29 enthusiasm and leadership which he had shown as an undergraduate. For two years, he ren- dered valuable service in developing and or- ganizing alumni sentiment. He resigned in the Spring of 1917 to accept an important position in Syracuse with the Solvay Process Company. But before he could take up his new work the war came, and McLaughlin enlisted in the officers' training camp at Fort Sheridan, 111. from which he re- ceived a commission as First Lieutenant of Field Artillery, later being promoted to a Captain. He went overseas with the 314th Field Artillery. A letter from his brother describes his last days: "About the 12th of October the battalion was ready to move forward again. The major was gassed, the adjutant also. Captain Brown was ruptured and had the 'Flu' but was still keeping on duty. Regimental Headquarters called him by 'phone and told him he was Battalion Commander. He said 'All right,' and fainted. He was evacuated. "On the 13th of October the order came to move up. Rowland, the junior Captain, was left in charge of the actual conduct of the bat- teries to the new position. Regimental Head- quarters ordered that the battalion be brought up by road by daylight. Forward agents re- ported it impossible. Lieut. Harrison was ordered back from the front at this juncture and last saw Capt. McLaughlin riding forward on horseback with a detail to make a personal reconnaisance. Lieut. Harrison later learned that Rowland was hit in the stomach with a shell fragment, taken back to a dressing sta- tion near a place called Fleury and died within twenty-four hours after he was hit." McLaughlin was married on April 11, 1917, to Dorothy Elizabeth Dielheim, who, with a son, survives him. Frederick William Addison Miller, 1915, Private, Company M, 313th Infantry, died of pneumonia in France on September 23rd, 1918. Miller was born in Ivoryton, Conn., April 13, 1892. He spent all his early life there, attending the local school through the eighth grade. He then went to Bristol, Conn., for his high school work, graduating from Bristol High School in 1910. He entered Brown Uni- yersity in 1912. During his college course he specialized in philosophy, supplemented by psy- chology, and graduated in 1915. He returned to Brown in 1916, assisting in the psychology Frederick William Addison Miller department of the University, and receiving his A. M. degree in June of that year. Cornell offered him a fellowship to come there and continue his study of philosophy, which he accepted, entering the college in the fall of 1916. He studied at Cornell for two years and was within two months of receiving his Ph. D. degree when he was drafted into the National Army on May 23, 1918. He was trained at Camp Upton for three weeks, and at Camp Meade for one week, when he was sent to France as a member of Co. M, 313th Infantry. His regiment was trained in France for two months back of the lines and then went into the trenches on September 13, 1918. After five days of hard fighting in the Argonne, they were relieved on September 18. Miller came out of the fighting ill, but uninjured. He was treated for two days in the regiment by the battalion surgeon and then, as he showed no improvement, he was sent to a hospital. Here he died in two days with lobar pneumonia, September 23rd. He was buried near the hospital in Souilly, Meuse, France. 30 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Howard Lewis Quimby, 1915, a private in Battery A, 304th Field Artillery, 77th Divi- sion, American Expeditionary Forces, died of September 25th to October 15th; Argonne- Meuse — November 1st to November 11th. He died while his battery was awaiting orders to return to America. William Morris Sistare, Jr., a non-graduate of the class of 1915, Captain of the 17th Field' Artillery and six months at the front with the American Expeditionary Force, died of influenza at New London, Conn., on No- vember 29, 1918. Captain Sistare was born on November 28, 1890. He graduated from the Bulkeley School at New London, Conn., in 1908, and then worked for three years, in order that he might save money to pay his education through college. He entered Brown University in 1911 with the class of 1915. He was a member of the Chi Phi fraternity. In 1912 he transferred to Middlebury College, from which he gradu- ated in 1915. While there he was a member of Delta Upsilon, President of his Senior class, and active in undergraduate activities. Sistare was Assistant Professor in Chemistry and Ma- thematics at St. Stephen's College at Annan- HowARD Lewis Quimby sickness in the Le Man's sector, France, on March 11, 1919. Quimby was born at Boscawen, N. H., Sep- tember 6, 1892. When about five years of age he went to South Acton, Mass., to live. He received his elementary education in the graded schools of that town and fitted for college at the Concord, Mass., High School, from which he was graduated in June, 1911. He entered Brown University in the fall of 1911, and after a four years' course of study was grad- uated as a civil engineer. He soon found employment with the Pennsylvania Railroad and for a time was located at Pittsburg, Pa. and later transferred to Dennison, Ohio. March 14, 1918, he enlisted as a private in the 33rd Engineering Corps at Camp Devens. He was almost immediately transferred to Camp Upton and reassigned to Battery A, 304th Field Artillery, 77th Division, going overseas at once. He took part in the following campaigns without receiving a wound: Voges Front ^ July 12th, 1918, to August 1st; Vesle-Aisne — August 15th to September 14tli; Argonne — William Mollis Sistare, Jr. dale-on-Hudson, N. Y., from his graduation until 1917. In May of that year he entered the Officers' Training Camp at Plattsburg, BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 31 from which he was commissioned as Second Lieutenant. He went overseas in August, 1917. He was attached to the 17th Field Ar- tillery and spent six months at the front lines, under almost continuous fire. After one at- tack Capt. Sistare had one side of his field glass case torn loose, one puttee blown off, the crown cut from his helmet, and shrapnel wounds in his right leg, but escaped without further injury, returning immediately to his duties. He was ordered back to the United States as an Instructor, sailing from La Havre on April 10. He was made Instructor in Field Artillery at Camp Jackson, S. C, where he remained until the time of his death. He was made a 1st Lieutenant in August and a ,Cap- tain in October, 1918. His commanding officer pays him a splendid tribute in a letter recently received by Mrs. Sistare. "The Captain's record for clean living and fair play, his interest in and concern for each and every one of his men, his unselfishness and kindness combined with his fearlessness, made him loved by all. If ever there was a dangerous errand, any heavy work, or disagreeable job to be done, it was he who always ofTered him- self, or went ahead and did it. "His bravery and manliness under most severe fire and strain are things of which we are proud and thankful and which have made every one of us who knew him better men and soldiers." Captain Sistare was married on July 20, 1918, to Miss Pauline Rowland, a graduate of Middle- bury College in the class of 1916, who survives him. George Burton Cumerford, a non-graduate of the class of 1916, private in Machine Gun Company of the 101st Infantry, 26th Division, was killed in action on July 15, 1918, near Chateau Thierry, France. Cumerford was born in Providence on June 6, 1892. He received his early education in the public schools of Providence, graduating from the Technical High School in 1912. He en- tered Brown with the class of 1916. He was a member of the Lambda Chi Alpha frater- nity. Cumerford was appointed a member of the Providence police force on February 9, 1917, and was assigned to Station 4 in the Federal Hill section. He was inducted into the selec- tive service on January 21, 1918, and was as- signed to the 4th Company, 1st Battalion, 121st Depot Brigade, Camp Devens, Mass. On March 31st he was transferred to Camp Merritt, where he left for overseas, arriving in George Burton Cumerford France April 28, with the April replacement draft from Camp Devens. His first overseas assignment was Company D of the 163rd Infantry. On May 15th he joined the Ma- chine Gun Company of the 101st Infantry. During a severe bombardment in the vicinity of Chateau Thierry on July 15, his company was advancing to take a difficult position. A shell struck in the midst of his squad, instantly killing five men and wounding Cumerford so severely that he died shortly afterwards. He was buried by his comrades on the field of battle. His commanding officer since has sent his family this impressive tribute: "George was one of the most faithful soldiers in the company, always ready and willing to put up with any hardship and sacrifice in fulfillment of his duty, and I could always rely upon him to do his full duty in any crisis." Earl Russell Fretz, 1916, 1st Lieutenant of the 12th Machine Gun Battalion, 4th Division, American Expeditionary Force, died of pneu- monia in Hospital No. 115, Vichy, France, on November 7, 1918. 32 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Fretz was born on July 2, 1895, at Ottsville, Pa. He was a graduate of the Doylstown High School, from which he entered Pennyslvania State College. He transferred to Brown Uni- versity in 1914, graduating with the class of 1916. He then went to Harvard University to study law. was severely injured by a machine gun bullet. He bravely insited on seeing that his men were properly taken care of by the officers taking over the command before being removed to the hospital." He died in Hospital No. 1 15, at Vichy, France, of pneumonia, on November 7, 1918. Earl Russell Fretz He enlisted in the first Plattsburg Camp on May 12, 1917, graduating with" a Second Lieu- tenant's Commission at the conclusion of the course. He was assigned to the 39th Regiment of the regular army and was with this assign- ment at Syracuse and at Camp Greene, Char- lotte, N. C. He was transferred to the 11th Machine Gun Battalion with which he reached France in May, 1918. Fretz was transferred again in France to the 12th Machine Gun Battalion of the 4th Division. On July 18th he was in command of a platoon of machine guns in this battalion. At seven in the morning he led his platoon in an attack on the enemy at the right of Cour Champs in the face of terrific machine-gun and artillery fire. Because of severe casualties among the officers of Company E of the 59th Infantry, he was forced also to take command of this company. He led his men forward, and captured his objective. Fretz held this position until relieved by infantry officers on the afternoon of the 19th. An officer writes: "His initiative, courage, and bravery was an inspiration to men under his command." For bravery during the second battle of the Marne, he was promoted to a First Lieutenant. In September he participated in the St. Mihiel drive. During the St. Mihiel drive of the Meuse- Argonne offensive, in October, 1918, "he was placed in command of one of the companies and while gallantly leading them forward he Jacob Rosenberg, 1916, 2nd Lieutenant at Camp Devens, Mass., died of lobar pneumonia at Camp Devens on September 21, 1918. Rosenberg was born on September 27, 1894. He graduated from the B. M. C. Durfee High School at Fall River, Mass., in 1912. He was prominent in debating and public speaking at high school. He entered Brown University with the class of 1916. After his graduation he began the study of law at Georgetown Uni- versity. He interrupted his course to enter the service after a year and a half of study. At his departure he was leading his class in Georgetown. Rosenberg entrained for Camp Devens in November, 1917. In April, 1918, he was promoted to a sergeant and a month Jacob Rosenberg later was selected for the officers' school at Camp Lee. He received his commission as 2nd Lieutenant in September, 1918. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 33 Rosenberg was sent to Camp Devens as an instructor. He had hardly arrived when he was taken with pneumonia, from which he died a week later. On Sunday, September 22nd, 1918, he was buried with full military honors at Fall River. A platoon of the State Guard formed an escort. Three volleys were fired and taps were sounded as he was laid to rest. Abraham William Sidkowsky, a non-gradu- ate of the class of 1916, a private in Evacua- tion Hospital No. 5, Dunkirk, died of meningi- tis, at 5:30 on the morning of December 19, 1918. Abraham William Sidkowsky Sidkowsky was born on September U, 1894. He received his early education in the Providence public schools. He entered Brown University in September, 1912, but left at the end of his Junior year. In June, 1916, he was appointed as physicist in the Department of Agriculture at Washington. In January, 1917, he enrolled for a course in Medicine at George- town University. He enlisted in the United States Army on December 17, 1917, and was assigned to duty in the X-ray service of the Medical Corps, being detailed to a hospital for preliminary training. In February, 1918, he embarked for France. From J uly 27, 1918, to August 25, 1918, he was on duty at an evacuation hospital at Chateau- Thierry. It is characteristic that he never mentioned his closeness to the front in his letters. Between August .25th and December 11th, his evacuation hospital had the following assignments: Villiers, Caterett, Ville-Sur- Couzances near Verdun, La Veuve, and Staden, Belgium. On December 11th they moved to Dunkirk, where he died a week later, after an illness of two days. It was the pride of his hospital that it had never lost a patient. Sidkowsky was the only exception. Captain R. P. Capwell wrote to his family: "I am very intimately acquainted with his commanding officer having lived with him in tent, barracks, and rooms for many weeks, and I know how valuable your son had made him- self to him by his quiet, unassuming manner, his devotion to duty and his ability to always do whatever he had to do in the best possible manner. He is one soldier who will be missed by all with whom he came in contact, whether it be officer or enlisted man." Sidkowsky was buried at Rosendale, a small village a few miles east of Dunkirk. With a platoon of the company standing at attention, the Jewish burial ceremony was read by a member of his faith. Frank Elmer Starrett, 1916, eleve pilote, Ecole d'Aviation, Tours, was instantly killed near Pontlevoy, France, on the afternoon of January 3, 1918. He had left the school for his first cross-country flight. About two- thirty, the mecanicien saw his machine ap- proaching at a height of about seven hundred fcot. Suddenly, the plane started to fall to the earth sideways as though hit by a heavy gust of wind under one wing, and then, turn- ing, hit the earth nose down. Death came in- stantly, leaving both his body and face un- disfigured. Starrett was born on July 16, 1892. He was a graduate of Worcester Academy in the class of 1912 and of Brown University in the class of 1916. At college he was a member of the Beta Theta Pi and the Pi Kappa fraternity. Sergt. E. G. Hamilton, chief of instruction at the Aviation School of Tours, writes: 34 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR "I know that it is hard to lose one's loved ones so far from home, but surely a man could die no better than Frank, fighting for his ideals. Frank Elmer Starrett His death is hallowed by the cause for which he gave his life. As did the Christ, he died for humanity, and what more can one do than give his life for such an ideal? What supremer sacrifice and what more glorious achievement can one attain? And on what a roll is his name enshrined! What an honor to be included with those other American crusaders, such as Seeger, Chadwick, Chapman, McConnell, Rockwell, and the rest, who have earned the great epitaph, Mort pour la Francel" Starrett was buried in the military section of the cemetery at Tours. The entire camp, including all the commanding officers, marched behind the hearse, an armed guard going be- fore. After the short service, conducted by Bishop.^Israel of the Episcopal Church, a salute was fired and taps were sounded. Egbert Foster Tetley, 1916, former instruc- tor of English at Brown University, Lieuten- ant in Co. C, 47th Infantry, was killed in action during an attack on machine gun nests at Bayoches, France, on August 10, 1918. Tetley was born in Methuen, Mass., on December 8, 1893. He attended the Methuen and later the North Chelmsford Grammar Schools. He graduated from Phillips Andover Academy in 1913 and Brown University in 1916. He accepted a position as English In- structor at Brown and held that position when, with the permission of the Faculty, he entered the Officers' Training Camp at Plattsburg in May, 1917. He received a 2nd Lieutenant's commission in August, and was assigned to the 47th Regiment, Co. C, U. S. Infantry. He joined the Regiment at Syracuse, N. Y., the end of August. In October they moved from Syracuse to Camp Greene, N. C, and sailed for France May 8th, 1918. His father received his commission as 1st Lieutenant from the War Department dated August 17, seven days after he was killed. A letter from 1st Lieutenant Edward A. O'Malley of the same regiment gives an ac- count of his death: "You should be proud of the way he met his Egbert Foster Tetley death as a good and loyal soldier. After he was wounded he lay and smoked a cigarette while waiting for the stretcher bearers. As he was being lifted upon the stretcher he was hit BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 35 again, all along the side by machine gun bullets. He was asked by one of the men near him what they would do, and he told them to 'Stick to the last.' He died shortly after." Joel Mead Austin, 1917, a private, 1st class, in Company E, 418th Telegraph Battalion, died of pneumonia at Brest, France, on Sep- tember 30, 1918. Austin was born at Cairo, N. Y., on Janu- JoEL Mead Austin ary 25, 1893, the only child of Richard A. and Edith Mead Austin. Both parents were of old New England stock. His early education was received in the public schools of Cairo. He had a lively interest in athletics, particu- larly baseball and basket ball, in both of which he excelled, although handicapped by stature and weight. He was captain of his high school basket ball team, manager of its baseball team, and president of the Senior class at the Cairo High School, from which he graduated in 1911. He also attended Riverview Academy at Pough- keepsie, N. Y., from which he graduated in 1913. Austin entered Brown in 1913, graduat- iaff in the class of 1917 with the degree of Ph. B. During his college course he did not go out for athletics, except as a member of his class and fraternity baseball teams, devoting all his time to his studies. He was a member of Delta Tau Delta and served as treasurer and house manager in 1916. After leaving college he returned to his home and assisted in his father's store during the summer of 1917, and in September of that year accepted the position of Instructor in Physical Training in the rural schools of the first Super- visory district of Greene county, also devoting two days a week to the same work in Catskill High School. In this work he was eminently successful, winning the love and respect of the children as well as that of the teachers under his supervision and receiving high commenda- tion from the state authorities. When America entered the war, he desired above all else to give his services to his coun- try, but was unable to enlist because of under- weight. He was finally accepted under the selective draft, his number placing him in the quota to be called in August, 1918, but he was unwilling to wait for the call and through aid of the local board succeeded in entering the service by voluntary induction on June 6, 1918, as a member of the Signal Corps, being assigned to Co. E, 418th Telegraph Battalion stationed at Camp Alfred Vail, N. J. On September 11, he embarked with his company for France, arriving at Brest on the 25th, suffering from an attack of influenza contracted en route; bronchial pneumonia developed, and five days later he passed away. A letter from his commanding officer, written to his parents, contained this tribute to his soldierly qualities: "He was one of the most capable and commendable members of the Company and in line for speedy promotion." Paul Cartwright, a non-graduate of the class of 1917, 2nd Lieutenant in the American Aviation service, died of pneumonia at Base Hospital No. 1, Brest, France, on October 8, 1918. Cartwright was born in Harwich, Mass. February 3, 1895. He graduated from the Wakefield, Massachusetts, High School in June, 1912, and from the Huntington School, Boston, in June, 1913, entering Brown Uni- versity in September, 1913. After leaving Brown he entered the employ of the B. & M. railroad in the Engineering Department, re- ceiving three promotions while there. He enlisted in the Aviation Service Decem- ber 1, 1917, studying at Boston Technology 36 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR and Princeton University. From Princeton he was sent to Dallas, Texas, and from there to Chanute Field, Rantool, 111. where he re- Paul Cartwright ceived a commission as 2nd Lieutenant on May 29, 1918. He was sent back to Dallas, Texas, for a time, then to Payne Field, West Point, Miss., where he qualified as Pilot. He received overseas orders and sailed from Ho- boken, N. J., September 26, 1918. Lieutenant Cartwright died shortly after he had landed in France. He was a member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. John Greene Rice, a non-graduate of the class of 1917, a member of Battery B, 101st Field Artillery, 26th Division, was killed in action on November 1st, 1918. Rice was born on October 3, 1895. He is a graduate of Pawtucket High School. He en- tered Brown University in 1914, specializing in Chemistry. The death of his father in 1915 interrupted his studies and brought him new cares and hardships. He found it necessary to become a special student. In addition to his studies he helped a younger brother carry on his father's business and taught in the Paw- tucket evening school in order to pay his col- lege expenses. This he did for two years. In June, 1917, he enlisted in the 9th Company of the Rhode Island Coast Artillery. He was sent at once to Fort Standish. He was then transferred to the Supply Company of the 101st Field Artillery at Boxford, Mass. In July he sailed from Newport News for France. He attempted several times to obtain a transfer to the Battery, and was at last successful in being assigned to Battery B. His battery was in constant action from the first. Rice was at the front continuously until his death. Captain Weeks of the 101st Field Artillery has written to his mother as follows: "Your son was killed on the morning of November 1st by a shell which hit him directly. . . . He died instantly. . . . He was at the time carrying a message from the battery to John Greene Rice the battalion P. C." The Red Cross gives the date of his death as October 31st. He was buried at Hammont, north of Verdun and three kilometers east of the Meuse River. Carlton Merrill Bliss, a non-graduate of the class of 1918, a Lieutenant in American Avia- tion, was killed by accident at Ford Junction Aerdrome No. l,at Sussex, England, on Novem- ber 14, 1918. Bliss was born on June 9, 1895. He received BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 3i7 his early education in the public schools of Attleboro, Mass., graduating from the Attle- boro High School in 1914. That fall he entered MJl^ Carlton Merrill Bliss Colby College, where he remained one year. He transferred to Brown in 1915, with the class of 1918. He left Brown in the same collegiate year to enter the employ of the Attleboro Manufacturing Company, where he remained until his enlistment in the Plattsburg Train- ing Camp on April 25, 1917. While there he volunteered for aviation. He was sent to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for his ground school work, transferring later to Kelley Field, San Antonio, Texas. Here he received his commission as a 2nd Lieutenant in Aviation on March 9, 1918. He completed his course at Ellington Field, Houston, Texas. In September, 1918, he sailed from Hoboken. He was located abroad at Ford Junction Aer- drome No. 1, Sussex, England, where, while in- structing a pupil, he was killed on November 14, 1918. He was buried with military hon- ors at Morn Hill Cemetery, Winchester, England. Bliss was a member of Phi Kappa Psi at Brown. George Wheaton Carr Vaughan, a non-grad- uate of the class of 1918, 1st Lieutenant in Company E, 168th Infantry, 42nd Division, died of wounds in Base Hospital No. 68, at Mars, near Nevers, France, on November 11, 1918, the day of the Armistice. Vaughan was born in Providence on April 5, 1895. He received his early education at the Collegiate School in New York and later returned to Providence, graduating from the Hope Street High School in June, 1914. He entered Brown University in September of that year with the class of 1918. He was active in student activities, being assistant manager of the track team and a member of the Musical and the Cammarian Clubs. He was a member of the Pi Kappa and the Psi Upsilon fraternity. In the summer of 1916 he attended the first Plattsburg Training Camp and again in the summer of 1917 when he received his com- mission of 2nd Lieutenant, Infantry. On Aug- ust 30th he was ordered to Camp Devens and four days later was sent with seventy other officers, to Camp Mill, Mineola, to join the 42nd (Rainbow) Division, being detailed to Co. E, 168th Regiment, Infantry. He sailed overseas in November, landing in France where, after numerous billetings, he George Wheaton Carr Vaughan finally reached the Lorraine sector. For several months preceding the Battle of the Marne he was actively engaged in day and night patrol work. 3B BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR In July, 1918, his regiment was in action at the Battle of the Marne, and his own Company under his command captured the town of Sergy. Following this engagement Lieut. Vaughan was almost continuously in action, including such points as Lorraine, St. Mihiel and the Argonne, at which latter place he was seriously wounded on Oct. 12th, two months after re- ceiving his promotion to a First Lieutenant. He died on the day that the Armistice was signed, happy in the knowledge that the task he had shared was done. He was buried with full military honors in the officers' cemetery at Mars-Sur-Allier, France. James Joseph Gray James Joseph Gray, Naval Aviation Cadet and a former member of the class of 1919, together with an officer and another student, was instantly killed at Pensacola, Florida, on the morning of January 18, 1919. Cadet Gray was in an H. S. 1 type bombing plane. At an altitude of about 1500 feet, the machine was seen to go into a tail spin, from which it never recovered. Gray was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., on July 6, 1896. His education was received in the pub- lic schools, Mercersburg Academy, and Brown University. He enlisted as a Chief Quartermaster, Avia- tion, U. S. N. R. F., on June 2, 1918. On August 20, 1918, after completing the Ground School at the Boston Institute of Technology, he was transferred to the Bay Shore Naval Air Station, Long Island. He was considered one of the most conservative and yet successful of flyers. After the Armistice, Cadet Gray believed it his duty to finish his course, which was so nearly completed. On December 1st, he was sent to Pensacola, where, after six weeks further training, he passed his examinations with un- usual honor and was recommended by the Commandant for a commission as Ensign in the Naval Reserve Flying Corp. He met his death while awaiting his commission papers from Washington. A letter from the Hon. Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy, states, "It is a matter of regret to me that the law does not permit the award of posthumous commis- sions to those young men who have given their lives in the service of their country." Cadet Gray was buried with military honors at Pittsburgh, Pa. George West Berriman, 1920, 2nd Lieut., 167th Infantry, 42nd Rainbow Division, was instantly killed by shell explosion in the trenches near Snipper on the Champagne front at 6:20 on the morning of July 15, 1918. His death occurred while his platoon was success- fully defending their position against terrific artillery bombardment and attack by German Infantry and tanks. George Berriman was born August 13, 1897, in Chicago, 111. He was a graduate of Laurence- ville in the class of 1916. In September of the same year he matriculated at Brown Univer- sity with the class of 1920. Berriman entered the first Plattsburg camp where he was com- missioned a Second Lieutenant on August 15, 1917. He went overseas with the Rain- bow Division on September 12, 1917. His comrades write that there was no braver man in France. One says: "He was very young and energetic and an expert in grenade work, an excellent patrol officer, very fearless, and always wanted to be in everything." Berriman, in a letter written shortly before his death, describes what was evidently a char- acteristic exploit. "I set out that night to get me a Boche. I got 800 yards behind their first lines before I was caught, and when they got me they sure had me in a tight place. They (the Germans) BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 39 opened up with two machine guns, three rifles, pistols and hand grenades. Six of us were clean across two strands of wire when it hap- pened. We blew one man to hunks with two George West Berrima.n shot guns but could not get him although he was only 12 feet from us. I crossed the wire with bullets whanging all around me and got six men I had left on the other side into a skirmish line and opened fire. We gained a fire superiority and I managed to get the other five men across the wire O. K. I then sent every one down a road and covered them (alone) with my pistols and three hand gren- ades. When they had about a 30 yard start I went after them. We all got out O. K. Three of us were hit. ... I got a piece of grenade in my hand. I didn't have to leave off patrolling as I went out the next night." No wonder a fellow officer writes, "he was a lovable boy who played this man's game of war with every ounce of energy he possessed. He was the very type of lad — enthusiastic — loyal — well trained and with a big heart within his breast — which formed the back- bone of our Army and made possible its glori- ous achievement." Edward Clifton Burnham, Jr., 1920, 2nd Lieutenant, Infantry, U. S. A., was killed by accident at the Machine Gun Range, Camp Johnson, Augusta, Ga., on December 13, 1918. Burnham was born in Pawtucket, R. I., June 9, 1897. His father was a member of the Brown faculty, in the Mechanical Engineer- ing Department, from 1892 to 1902. His mother's maiden name was Mary E. Wright. He was educated in the schools of Pawtucket, R. I. and Hopedale, Mass. He prepared for college in the Hopedale High School and won prizes in essay writing and public speaking. At the time he entered Brown, his two brothers, Malcolm and Kenneth, were both undergradu- ates and both members of the Brown Chapter of Delta Upsilon. He also joined the same fraternity. He was fond gf athletics and had some minor parts in swimming contestsat Brown. He spent the summer of 1917 in farming work for the purpose of increasing food supply. In his Sophomore year he entered the college courses preparatory to the Officers' Training School, and was chosen among Brown's dele- gation in May 1918. He enlisted at Camp Devens, Mass. and was assigned to the in- fantry. In June he was transferred to Camp Hancock, Georgia, for special training in ma- chine gun work. Edward Clifton Burnham, Jr. After a strenuous summer's work, he passed the requirements and obtained his commission as 2nd Lieutenant, Infantry, about Septem- ber 16. He was immediately detailed to in- 40 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR struct recruits. This work, however, was in- terrupted in October by the influenza epidemic, and when the epidemic subsided he was trans- ferred to the headquarters staff of Camp John- son, a short distance trom Camp Hancock. In his last station 1.2 ssrved as construction officer and in other staff work. It was here that he met his death. John Stanley Hardman John Stanley Hardman, 1920, First Medical Assistant, U. S. N. R. F., died of influenza on September 21, 1918, at Newport, R. I. Hardman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, on March 29, 1895. He was educated in the Public Schools of Denver and Trinidad, Colorado, graduating from the Trinidad High School in 1914. After his graduation and un- til September, 1916, he was employed in the office of the Colorado Southern Railway. In the fall of 1916 he entered Brown University with the class of 1920. He was one of the many Brown students who, during the spring and summer of 1917, served their country on New England farms. Hardman was employed in this work at Westerly, R. I. In May, 1918, he enlisted in the United States Naval Reserve Force and was called to active service on June 6, 1918. He was made a First Medical Assistant at Back Bay, Newport, R. I. His death occurred there on September 21, 1918. Hardman was a member of the Delta Tau Delta Society and of the Christian Science Church. James Hemphill, 1920, a private in Battery C, 103rd Field Artillery, 26th Division, was killed by accident in France during the March drive of 1918. Hemphill was born in Chester, S. C, on April 27th, 1897, the son of the late James Hemphill, who served with distinction in the Beaufort Artillery, Confederate States Army, and was a Major in the American Army in the Spanish-American war. He received his preparatory education in the Porter Mili- tary Academy, Charlestown, where he was a captain and president of his class. He entered Brown University in September, 1916. He went overseas as a private with Battery C, although, had he wished, his training would have fitted him for an officers' training school. James Hemphill It was while his battery was moving to the front during the March drive of 1918 that Hemphill was killed. He was only twenty when he died. Hemphill was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 41 George Gilchrist Luckey, a non-graduate of the class of 1920, and a private in the Medical Corps, died February 11, 1918, at, Jefferson Barracks, Mo., of influenza-pneumonia. George Gilchrist Luckey Luckey was born August 9, 1897, at Vinton, Iowa. He was the oldest child of Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Luckey. He graduated from the Vinton High School in 1916 and the following fall entered Brown University. He withdrew in 1917 to take up premedical work at the State University of Iowa. On January 7, 1918, he enlisted in the Army Medical Corps. Before this country entered the war he anxiously desired to go abroad in the service of France, and under protest took up his premedical course at a time when he believed that he should be in the military service of his own country. He was the first student from the University of Iowa to make the supreme sacrifice. Roland Herbert Sargent The death of Roland Herbert Sargent, a Special Student, with the Class of 1921, has been reported. Sargent was born on May 7, 1899. He was a graduate of the Central High School in Grand Rapids, Mich. In February, 1918, he entered Brown University as a special student. He left college to enlist on April 11, 1918. George Lyman Stratton, 1922, a member of the Brown Naval Training Unit, died of pneu- monia at St. Joseph's Hospital, Providence, on December 6, 1918. Stratton was born on April 21, 1898. He was educated in the public schools of East Jaffrey, N. H. He was salutatorian of his class in grammar school. After two years at Conant High, he entered Dean Academy, Franklin, Mass., where he was graduated with the class of 1917. He was very fond of athletics, particularly basket ball and baseball, and was also interested in music. He was an excellent violin player and leader of his school or- chestra at Dean. After his graduation he was employed at West Brookfield, Mass., and in Winter Haven, Florida, returning in the spring of 1918 to assist his father in his business. In September he entered Brown and was inducted into the George Lyman Stratton Naval Training Unit, where he died on De- cember 6th at the age of 20. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Stratton, and by a married sister, Mrs. Ola O'Neil. STATISTICS OF SERVICE DISTRIBUTION ARMY COMMISSIONS Army Navy 1469 448 Colonel ...... Lieutenant- Colonel. 4 7 Marines . Foreign Armies Militarized Service 12 13 32 Mai or Captain 1st Lieutenant . . 2nd Lieutenant .... 37 114 154 218 1974 Lieutenant (grade not stated). Non-commissioned and Privates Student Army Training Corps 18 453 391 ARMY DISTRIBUTION Rank Unknown .... 73 Field Artillery Medical . 209 153 NAVY COMMISSIONS 1469 Infantry . 148 Commander 2 Coast Artillery 87 Lieutenant Commander 4 Signal 86 Lieutenant (S. G.) ... 8 Engineers 69 Lieutenant (J. G.) .... 14 Ordnance 50 Lieutenant (grade not stated) 4 Quartermaster. 31 Ensign ...... 64 Cavalry . 5 Non-commissioned and Privates 127 Student Army Training Corps 391 Brown Naval Training Unit. 202 Unclassified 240 Rank Unknown .... 23 NOTICE OF ERROR OR OMISSION Editor, Brown War Records, Brown University, Providence, R. I. Dear Sir : The service of of the class of is • ■, He enUsted or was inducted ; incorrect. ^^^^^^ his rank at entry was ; his assignment at entry (Branch of service, unit, etc.) was , ; the location of this assignment was His rank at discharge was (if not discharged give present rank and assignment) ; he was discharged with (Branch of service, unit, etc.) He was discharged (Date) at :.. (Place) Additional remarks in regard to overseas service, battles, wounds and decorations, will be found on the back of this blank. , Yours truly, Name Class Address A DIRECTORY OF MILITARY SERVICE In which are inckided the following : "i. Men who have voluntarily enlisted or who have been drafted and mustered into the service ; and Men who have been commissioned and who have accepted the commission and have been called into service. " 2. Men who are actually engaged in service in Europe with the army or navy as workers under the direction of the Y. M. C. A., the Knights of Columbus, the Hebrew Y. M. A., or the Red Cross. This is to be interpreted as including men engaged in ambulance service, whether serving directly as part of the military organization or in some independent unit, as the Norton-Harjes unit." 1859 GRADUATES William W. Keen, Maj., Med., U. S. A., Phil., Pa. 1880 GRADUATES William Hale, M. D., Surgeon, Military Hospital, Menton, France. 1887 NON-GRADUATES Harry L. Burdick, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., with French Army, France. 1888 GRADUATES Ernest H. Brownell, Commander U. S. N., Bureau of Yards and Docks, Wash., D. C. 1888 NON-GRADUATES Frank R. Jenks, Capt., Med., U. S. A., 7th Bn., 153rd Depot Brig., Camp Dix, N. J. 1889 GRADUATE George E. Warren, Col., Q. M. C, U. S. A., 1109-16th St., Wash., D. C. 1890 GRADUATES Harry L. Grant, M. D., Capt., Amer. Red Cross, Amer. Red Cross hdqrs., 4 Cours de Gourque, Bordeaux, France. George H. Webb, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., Rhode Island Draft Executive, State House, Prov., R. I. 1891 GRADUATES Edward O. Bartlett, Maj., Amer. Red Cross, Assistant Director, Civil Affairs, 14 via Sardegna, Rome, Italy. James L. Wheaton, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp., 77th Div., Camp Upton, N. Y. 1892 GRADUATES Neil Andrews, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 127, Camp McClellan, Ala. James C. Collins, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, France. Frank M. Smith, Capt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Motor Transport Corps, France. 1893 NON-GRADUATES Clarence E. Ide, Capt., Hosp., Camp Kearney, charged, Aug. 4, 1918. Frank J. Sexton, Capt., Greenleaf, Ga. Med., Calif. U. S. A., Base Honorably dis- Med., U. S. A., Camp 1894 GRADUATES Russell H. Birge, Maj., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp., Camp Sherman, Ohio. George W. Gardner, Maj., Med., U. S. A., Evac- uation Hosp. No. 48, Camp Greenleaf, Ga. 1894 NON-GRADUATES Clarence H. Greene, Maj., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Camp Greene, N. C. 1895 GRADUATES William McDonald, Jr., Capt., Med., U. S. A., Evacuation Hosp. No. 8, Briey, France. Frank W. Sleeper, Assistant Surgeon, Med., U. S. N., First Naval Dist., Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. 1895 NON-GRADUATES Louis L. Syman, Surgeon, S. A. T. C, Wittenburg, Springfield, Ohio. William G. Tarbox, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., Co. B., 43rd Bn., U. S. Guards, Camp Fremont, Calif. Honorably discharged, Dec. 26, 1918. 1896 GRADUATES John H. H. Alden, Capt., Sig., U. S. A., Com- manding Officer, Air Service for Radio Mechanics, Carnegie Inst, of Technology, Pittsburgh, Pa. Robert W. Drawbridge, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris, France. Daniel M. Hoyt, Major, Med., U. S. A., Chiet of Med. Service, Base Hosp. No. 55, France. S. A. McCoMBER, Director, Physical, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris, France. Harry S. Mabie, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., Camp Knox, Ky. George A. Matteson, Lieut. Commander, Med., U. S. N., Director Naval Base Hosp. No. 4, France. Theodore C. Merrill, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., Y. M. C. A. hdqrs., France. George B. Van Dorn, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Evacuation Hosp. No. 40, Camp Greenleaf, Ga. 1896 NON-GRADUATES Robert Bonner, Maj., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Construc- tion Div., Camp Upton, N. Y. 46 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 1897 GRADUATES Raymond C. Allen, Capt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Construction Div., Q. M. C, Terminal, Boston, Mass. Edwin C. Broome, General Field Supt., Education Comm., Y. M. C. A., France. Everett Colby, Maj., Tank Corps, U. S. A., New York, N. Y. E. W. Bagster-Collins, Capt., Mil. Intell., U. S. A., Wash., D. C. Herlwyn R. Green, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Field Hosp. No. 168, 42nd Div., A. E. F., Germany. Marcus W. Lyon, Jr., Capt., Med., U. S. A., Acting Laboratory Chief, Walter Reed General Hosp., Wash., D. C. Marcus H. Merchant, Maj., Med., U. S. A., Surgeon, 66th Reg., C. A. C, France. Charles L. F. Paull, Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. A, 157th Reg. Honorably discharged Aug. 22, 1917. Francis A. Rugg, Secretary, Educational, Y. M. C. A., Aix-les- Bains, France, 31 Ave., Montaigne, Paris. Franklin P. Sackett, Commander, Pay Corps, U. S. N., 3rd Naval Dist., New York. Harris E. Starr, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., Camp Meade, Md. Charles W. Towne, Dramatic Director, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. Roswell S. Wilcox, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hospital, Camp Logan, Texas. 1897 NON-GRADUATES Dennis J. Lowney, 1st- Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Co. 337, Ambulance, Camp Custer, Mich. Jairus a. Moore, Col., C. A. C, U. S. A., France. Commander, Camp Hancock, Ga. 1898 GRADUATES Edward L. Adams, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Hdq. II Corps, France. Harlan J. Ballentine, 1st. Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., Fourth Pioneer Reg., France. A. A. Barrows, Lieut. (S. G.), Med., U. S. N., Assist. Surgeon, Naval Base Hospital No. 4. William H. Buffum, Lieut. (S. G.), Med., U. S. N., Naval Base Hosp. No. 4. Died Oct. 13, 1918, in U. S. Naval Hosp., Liverpool, Eng. Thomas J. Burrage, Lieut. Col., Med., U. S. A., Chief Medical Staff, Base Hosp. No. 54, France. John B. Ferguson, Maj., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 48, Toul, France. Warren E. Greene, Maj., Judge Advocate Gen- eral's Dept., U.S.A., 1530 K St., N. W., Wash., D. C. Arthur M. Greenwood, Lieut. Col., Med., U. S. A., Field Hosp. No. 324, A. P. O. No. 791, France. E. LeRoY Hart, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Officers' Train- ing School, Camp Lee, Va. Honorable discharged Nov. 11, 1918. Frank E. Hopkins, Col., F. A., U. S. A., Camp Custer, Mich. 1898 NON-GRADUATES Russell C. Graves, Capt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., France. Elam W. Olney, Ordnance Reserve Corps, Wash., D. C. Robert P. Zebley, Director, Religious Work, Y. M. C. A. With 28th Combat Div., France. Honorably discharged Dec, 1918. 1899 GRADUATES Charles B. Allen, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Med. Officers' Training Corps., Fort Riley, Kansas. Warren Bigelow, Capt., U. S. A., 160th Depot Brig., Camp Custer, Mich. Arthur H. Blanchard, Director, Public Works, Y. M. C. A., France. Charles B. Dana, Lieut., U. S. N., Assist. Naval Attache, Buenos Aires, Argentine, So. Airier. Gordon D. Hale, Lieut. Com., Med., U. S. N., Brig. Surgeon, 3rd Prov. Brig., U. S. Marines, Galveston, Texas. Asa E. Kelsey, Capt., Amer. Red Cross, Director of Agriculture, Jerusalem, Palestine. James M. Kent, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 9, France. Raymond B. Weeden, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A., 103rd F. A., France. 1899 NON-GRADUATES David H. Atwater, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., France. Howard L. Corthell, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Camp Humphreys, Va. 1900 GRADUATES Herbert H. Armington, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Surgeon, Ft. Standish. Honorably discharged May 17, 1918. John M. Capron, Secretary, Physical Work, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. Herbert R. Cross, Amer. Red Cross, Italian Hdqrs., Rome. Dana F. Downing, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Ward Surgeon, Neuropsychiatric Service, General Hosp. No. 30, Plattsburg Barracks, Plattsbtirg, N. Y. Frederic V. Hussey, U. S. N., Navy Base Hospital No. 4, France. Harold Lee McAuslan, Y. M. C. A. Seivice, France- Charles K. Stillman, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp., Camp Wheeler, Ga. H. Lammont Youtz, Contrexeville, France. 1900 NON-GRADUATES Thomas A. Coffey, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., 20th Train Hdqrs., and Mil. Police, Camp Sevier, S. C. Died of pneumonia Jan. 5, 1919, at St. Joseph's Hospital, Prov., R. I. 1900 SPECIAL STUDENTS Albert B. Cole, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Assist, to Chief Eng. Ill Corps, France. Walter B. H. Currier, Lieut. Col., F. A., U. S. A., 144th Reg. Francis M. Dwyer, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Camp Greenleaf, Ga. 1901 GRADUATES Charles B. Dugan, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Co. 28a, Bn. 7, Camp Greenleaf, Ga. David C. Hall, Lieut. Col., Med., U. S. A., Ad- vance Base, Ambulance Service, Italy. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 47 C. Sherman Hoyt, Lieut., U. S. N., Assistant to Superintendent of Constructioti, 411 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Roy H. Smith, Maj., Ord., U. S. A., Chief Oper- ator, Chicago Dist., 155 E. Superior St., Chicago, ' III. George A. Taylor, Col., F. A., U. S. A., 128th Field .A.rt., 2nd Army, A. E. F. Germany. Hunter C. White, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A. 1901 NON-GRADUATES W. F-. Parker, Maj. Q. M. C, U. S. Marines, Post Q' Master, Norfolk, Va. Died at Naval Hosp. March 22, 1918. Cari-ETON J. P.'^tton, Director, Physical, Y. M. C. A., Bologna, Italy. 1902 GRADUATES G. E-DVkfARD Buxton, Lieut. Col., Inf., U. S. A., 82nd Div., France. Windsor P. Daggett, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Personnel Officer, S. A. T. C, University of Mis- souri. Charles H. Holt, Mai., Med., LT. S. A., Command- ing Mobile Hosp. Unit No. 9, France. James B. Littlefield, Maj., C. A. C, U. S. A., 38th Art., Camp Eustis, Va. Lewis S. Milner, Maj., Amer. Red Cross, Assist- ant to Director, Civilian Relief, Atlantic Div., 44 East 23rd St., New York, N. Y. Charles A. Reese, Director, Hospital Auxiliaire No. 16, France. 1902 NON-GRADUATES LeRoY Bartlett, Lieut. Col., C. A. C, U. S. A., Commanding 7th Ammunition Train, 7th Div., France. Frederick P. Drowne, Capt., Med., U. S. A., 340th Field Hosp., 310 San. Trn., 85th Div., Camp Custer, Mich. Stephen D. Knowles, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd Reg., 26th Div. Transferred to Amer. Post Office, Paris, France. George A. Lawry, Amer. Red Cross, 4 Place de la Concorde, Paris. Joseph F. Russell, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky., U. S. Reserves. Henry W. Stiness, Maj., Judge Advocate Gen- eral's Dept., U. S. A., Hdqrs. 41st Div., A. P. O. No. 727, France. 1903 GRADUATES Alexander H. Abbott, Chaplain, 152d Depot Brig., Camp Upton, N. Y. Robert Aldrich, Boatswain, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Connecticut." Charles H. Bailey, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Camp Travis, Texas. Retired to Inactive list, physical disability, Nov. 25, 1917. John E. Bullard, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. John H. Cady, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., F. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Dec. 6, 1918. Charles O. Chase, Lieut. (J. G.), Med., U. S. N., Assist. Surgeon, 1st Naval Dist. Hdqrs., Boston, Mass. Clarence C. Gleason, Y. M. C. A. Secretary with Navy, Ireland, 47 Russell Sq., London. Arthur L. Philbrick, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Staff Duty, c/o Engineer Disbursing Officer, Paris. M. E. Van Nostrand, Secretary, Religious Work, Y. M. C. A., 31 Ave. Montaigue, Paris. 1903 NON-GRADUATES Leo G. Hanna, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. A, 341 Reg., France. Ernest K. Tanner, Maj., Med., U. S. A., Evacua- tion Hosp. No. 25, France. Paul M. Wiswall, 1st Lieut., Sanitary Corps, U. S. A., Wash., D. C. 1903 SPECIAL STUDENTS Edward A. Batchelor, Y.M.C.A., 12 Rue d'Agues- seau, Paris. Samuel A. Halsey, Chief Yeoman, U. S. N., in charge of garages, trucks, etc., of U. S. N., Navy Yard, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1904 GRADUATES Bertram H. Buxton, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Sanitary Det., 103d M. G. Bn., 26th Div., France. Wounded at Chateau-Thierry, July 20, 1918. Twice cited for bravery. G. B. CoLBURN, Director, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. William Y. Easterbrooks, Storekeeper, 1st CI., U. S. N., Supply Office, Receiving Barracks, Newport, R. I. Noble B. Judah, Jr., Lieut. Col., F. A., U. S. A., 149th F. A., 42nd Div., France. Promoted to General Staff. Awarded Croix de Guerre. Herbert A. Kenyon, Capt., U. S. A., Mil. Intel. Div., Gen. Staff, Wash., D. C. Robert G. Martin, Capt., Mil. Intel., U. S. A., 1918 F St., N. W., Wash., D. C. Stephen W. M.^son, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 167th Reg., France. Lucius A. Salisbury, Maj., Med., U. S. A., 106th Reg., Inf., Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Clarence McG. Thompson, Maj., Inf., U. S. A., 102d Reg., 1st Bn., 26th Div., France. San Mihiel, Chateau-Thierry. 1904 NON-GRADUATES Dan B. Crane, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. C. Arnold Slade, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., In- structor in Camouflage, Chatillion-sur-Seine, France. 1904 SPECIAL STUDENTS James R. Barry, Lieut., U. S. N., U. S. S. "Pam- panga," Asiatic Station, San Francisco, Calif. Donald MacLean, Capt., Sig., U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 730, France. 1904 GRADUATE STUDENT Henri A. Morgan, Lieut., Barracks 10, L. L. 1, Camp Merritt, N. J. 1905 GRADUATES F. Webster Cook, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., Com- manding 17th Co., Coast Defense, Narragansett Bay, Ft. Greble. 48 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Fred H. Freeman, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Camp Greenleaf, Ga. Philip T. Gleason, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. E, 132nd F. A., A. E. F., Germany. Theodore C. Hascall, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., with Batt. A, B and C, 103rd F. A., 26tii Div., France. William C. Hascall, Maj., Inf., U. S. A., 1st Bn., 58th Pioneer Inf., Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Colgate Hoyt, Jr., 1st Lieut., Cav., U. S. A., 309th Cavalry, Ft. Sam Houston, Texas. Alfred W. Ingalls, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. M, 58th Pioneer Inf., Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Frank N. Mandeville, Maj., Med., U. S. A., 303rd Sanitary Train, France. Charles H. Seddon, Sergt., 1st CI., U. S. A., 104th Ambulance Co., 26th Div., France. 1905 NON-GRADUATES Joseph Coulter, Physical Diector, Y. M. C. A., Bologna, Italy. Charles H. Hull, Capt., F. A., LT.S.A., 68th Reg., Ft. Terry, N. Y. George F. Keene, Lieut. (J.G.), U. S. N., U. S. S. "Emeline" (S. P. 175). Carl D. Lytle, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, Foyer du Soldat, IV French Army, Chemin des Dames, France. Prisoner in Germany from May 27, 1918, to Jan. 10, 1919. F. B. Thurber, Lieut. (S. G.), U. S. N., Command- ing Mine Force, 2nd Naval Dist. 1905 SPECIAL STUDENT Marion E. Mitchell, Master Gunner, C. A. C, - U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 6th Reg., A.E. F., France. 1906 GRADUATES Howard W. Brayton, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., General Hosp. No. 16, New Haven, Conn. Ray Brown, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 12th Batt., F. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Taylor, Ky. Discharged into Reserve. Alexander M. Burgess, Lieut. (S. G.), Med., U. S. N., Naval Base Hosp., Unit No. 4, European Waters. Peter P. Chase, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Toot- ing Military Hospital, London. George B. Corcoran, Lieut. (J. G.), Med., U. S. N., Recruiting Duty, 1st Naval Dist., Boston, Mass. Lester L. Falk, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 309th Heavy F. A., France. John E. Flemming, Divisional Secretary, Y. M. C. A., Tounerre, France, 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. James Hamilton, Jr., Capt., Med., U. S. A., Hosp. Unit No. 47, Camp Fremont, Calif. Vincent C. Hoye, Candidate, F. A., U. S. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor. Honorably discharged Dec. 1, 1918. Emery M. Porter, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Base Hospital, Camp Dix, N. J. Florence J. H. Price, Sergt., Inf., Canadian Ar- my, Princess Patricia Reg., 42nd Bn., Canadian Expeditionary Force. Killed in action near Ypres, May 30, 1916. George G. Shor, 1st Lieut., A. G. O., U. S. A., Division Statistical Officer 33d Div., Camp Logan, Texas. Everett H. Swett, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Camp A. A. Humphreys. Honorably discharged Dec. 18, 1918. Leeson O. Tarleton, Maj., Med., U. S. A., Com- manding Camp Hospital, Camp Merritt, N. J. 1906 NON-GRADUATES Henry T. Beckwith, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., 312th Eng. Reg., Camp Pike, Ark. F. R. Belding, Corp., Inf., U. S. A., Co. K, 107th Reg., A. E. F., France. Killed in action near La Catelet on Sept. 19, 1918. LeRoY O. Clark, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 3, A. P. O. No. 705, Bordeaux, France. George R. W. French, Post Assistant Surgeon, Med., U. S. N., Torpedo Station, Newport, R. I. A. J. Hamilton, Lieut. (J. G.), Med., U. S. N., Naval Hospital, Chelsea, Mass. John H. Joyce, Candidate, Heavy Artillery, U. S. A., Central Officers' Training School, Ft. McAr- thur, Calif. Honorably discharged Dec. 23, 1918. Philip E. Langworthy, 1st Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Construction Div., Kelley Field, Texas. 1906 SPECIAL STUDENTS Crawford M. James, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp., No. 28, Limoges, France. Victor B. Seidler, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Mobile Operating Unit, No. 9, France. 1907 GRADUATES James H. Baugh, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 15th Bn., Depot Brig., Camp Travis, Texas. Arthur G. Bruce, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Camp American University, Wash. D. C. Resigned Dec, 1917. Henry G. Clark, U. S. N. R. F., Pelham Bay, N. Y. Retired to Inactive List. H. W. Corp, Candidate, Eng., U. S. A., Co. 5, Engineer Officers' Training School, Camp Hum- phreys, Va. P. B. Covell, Chaplain, 2nd Bn., French Artillery, A. P. O. 903, France. George W. Davis, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., 318th Eng., Camp Humphreys, Va. Lloyd C. Eddy, Jr., Ensign, Eng., U. S. N., Re- ceiving Ship, Norfolk, Va. Charles Fowler, Jr., 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Fortress Monroe, Va. H. C. Funk, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., Reserve F. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky, Honorably discharged March 3, 1919. Dana T. Gallup. Maj., M.G., U.S.A., 102nd M. G. Bn., France. Now Commandant Schools, Camp Custer, Mich. Thomas L. Heffernan, 1st Lieut., Int., U. S. A., 303d Reg., France. William F. Huntley, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., France. J. Courtland Knowles, Ensign, U. S. N., S. P. 563, Harbor Patrol, 2nd Naval Dist., Newport, R. I. Charles D. McCann, Capt., Med., U. S. A., A. E. F., Germany. Royal McK. Merritt, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. Richard H. Miller, Lieut. Commander, Med., U. S. N., U. S. Marines, Camp Haitien, Haiti, BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 49 Richard A. Sanders, Chief Yeoman, U. S. N., 2nd Naval Dist. Albert E. White, Maj., Ord., U. S. A., Inspection Sect., Gun Div., Ord. Dept., New York, N. Y. 1907 NON-GRADUATES Richard S. Austin, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A. For- merly with British Army in France. Franklin E. Edgecomu, Maj., C. A. C, U. S. A., Ft. Adams, R. I. Alfred H. Gurney, Associate Secretary, Y. M. C. A. With French Army, 41 Rue de Province, Paris. Forrest S. Harvey, Maj., Eng., U. S. A., Construc- tion Engineer, Charlestown, S. C. William F. Otis, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 10th Co., N. B., C. A. C, Ft. Wetherill, R. L Herbert B. Shearer, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Assist. Med. Examiner, Camp Grant, 111. Charles R. Stark, Jr., Capt. Mil. Intell., U. S. A., Room 2032 Commercial Trust Bldg., Phil., Pa. GRIFFITH E. Thomas, Surgeon, Med., U. S. N., U. S. "Tallahassee," c /o P. M., New York, N. Y. Clarence W. Way, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Amer. Red Cross, Mil. Hosp. No. 1, France. 1907 SPECIAL STUDENTS W. H. Butler, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 101st San. Train., 26th Div., France. George R. Hill, 1st Lieut., A. S. S. C, U. S. A., Air Service, Paris, France. Robert P. MacKNiCHT, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 69, France. 1908 GRADUATES Robert W. Burgess, Capt., Ord., U. S. A., Sta- tistics Branch, General Staff, 4127 Harrison St., Wash., D. C. Walter H. Burnham, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Office Chief of Ordnance, Wash., D. C. Norman S. Case, Capt., Cav., U. S. A., General Staff (G-n Hdqrs. Service of Supply, Tours, France, A. P. O. No. 717. Robert R. Gleason, Ensign, U. S. N., Submarine Base, New London, Conn. Sheldon J. Howe, Sergt. Maj., Mil. Intell., U. S. A., 1st Bn., 301st Inf., France. Alfred H. Lake, Candidate, Inf., U. S. A., Offi- cers' Training School, Camp Devens, Mass. Hunter S. Marston, Maj., Mil. Intell., U. S. A., Assistant to Director, Mil. Intell. Div., General Staff, 1330 F St., N. W., Wash., D. C. Roland C. Ormsbee, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., Reserve, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged. Accepted for Y. M. C. A. overseas service. Henry T. Peace, Master Electrician, Art., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Det., 3d Bn., 73rd Art., France. Eerle W. Pkckham, 1st Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Ft Monroe, Va., Reserve. Charles S. Plummer, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Sig., LT. S. A., Commanding Gunnery School, Love Field, Dallas, Texas. Honorably discharged Jan. 11, 1919. Harry W. Robbins, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Supply Officer, 2nd Bn., 163rd Dep. Brig., Camp Dodge, Iowa. Wilmarth Y. Seymour, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Board of Examiners, Camp Beauregard, La. Albert C. Thomas, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., 306th F. A., France. Lorraine, Marne, Vesle, Argonne Forest, Meuse. Frank A. Walker, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. R. Wade C. West, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., .Sth Eng. Training Reg., Camp Humphreys, Va. Sydney S. Winslow, Maj., C. A. C, U. S. A., Commanding Fort Mills, Corregidor, P. I. Grey H. Wyman, F. A., U. S. A. Hdqrs. Co., 306th F. A., Camp Upton, N. Y. France (?) 1908 NON-GRADUATES Earl C. Bullock, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Co. C, 103rd F. A., 26th Div. France. Harold C. Burdick, Lieut. Commander, Eng.,^U. S. N., Commanding Sth Naval Dist. Naval Sta- tion, New Orleans, La. Died of pneumonia, Jan. 16, 1919. C. H. Griffith, Capt., U. S. A., Camp Meade, Md. Alvin I. Marshall, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., 27th Div., Camp Wadsworth, S.C. Alvin I. Marshall, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., 27th Div., Camp Wadsworth, S. C. LaRoY A. Mehan, Capt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Assistant to Chief of Construction, c 'o United Service Club, Dupont Circle, Wash., D. C. Conrad F. Sjoberg, Aviation, U. S. A., France. W. S. Stowell, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Hdq. Co., 60th Inf., Sth Div., Camp Greene, N. C. Ray B. Thomas, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Chief, X-ray Staff, Base Hosp., Camp McClellan, Ala. 1908 SPECIAL STUDENTS David S. Barry, Jr., Capt., U. S. Marines, U. S. Marine Barracks, Quantico, Va. Andrew D. White, Ensign, U. S. N., Receiving Ship, Mare Island. 1909 GRADUATES H. P. Babcock, 1st Lieut., Balloon, U. S. A., In- structor, Balloon School, France. Fred R. Budlong, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Supply Co., 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. William P. Buffum, Jr., Lieut. (J. G.), Med., U. S. N., Naval Base Hosp. LInit No. 4, Queens- town, Ireland. Philip Burbank, 2nd Lieut., Heavy Tank Corps, LT. S. A., France. Walter H. Butler, Sergt., Med., L^. S. A.. 101st Sanitary Train, 26th Div., France. Charles F. Butterworth, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Reserve, Ft. Monroe, \'a. Honorably discharged Nov. 23, 1918. Hugh F. Cameron, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., De- tached Service, A. P. O. No. 717, France. Malcolm D. Champlin, C. P. O., V. S. N., Naval Intell. Office, Newport, R. I. Honorably dis- charged. Newton G. Chase, Corp., Inf., U. S. A., Co. A, 305th Inf., 77th Div., France. Joseph Church, Jr., 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Acting Zone Major, A. P. O. No. 757, France. William M. Conroy, Chief Yeoman. U. S. N., Aid for Information, 2nd Naval Dist., New Bed ford, Mass. Inactive Duty Dec. 20, 1918. Frank E. Dennie, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. C, 314th Eng., 89th Div., A. P. O. No. 761, France. William P. Dodge, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Ord. Dept., Wash., D. C. 50 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Harold M. Frost, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Chief Surgeon, Amer. Red Cross Hosp. No. 21, Paignton, Eng. Charles E. Hughes, Jr., Major, F. A., U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 718, France. Milton B. Hunt, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, France. Howard K. Jackson, Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., 60th Eng., Fort Benj. Harrison, Ind. Clarence R. Johnson, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., Prison Camp Work, France. Returned to U. S. Jan., 1918. Edwin B. Mayer, Capt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Hous- ing and Health Div. Office, Assist. Sec'y of War, War Dept., Wash., D. C. William D. Miller, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Louisiana." Lawrence Richmond, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Intell. Dept., General Hdqrs., Siberia. Alberti Roberts, Supply Sergeant, Inf., U. S. A., Co. M, 302nd Inf., France. Henry M. Sherwood, Capt., F. A., U.S.A., 303rd F. A., France. Harold B. Smith, Pvt., 20th M. G. Co., Canadian Expeditionary Forces, Siberia. Harry F. Smith, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Ord. Depot, Watervliet Arsenal, N. Y. Harry B. Stearns, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Ord. Dept., Wash., D. C. Donald L. Stone, Capt., U. S. A., Assistant Chief of Censorship, A. E. F., General Hdqrs., Cliaumont, France. Herbert K. Sturdy, Jr., American Field Service, 21 Rue Raynaurd, Paris. Robert J. B. Sullivan, Capt., Ord., U. S. A., France. Robert H. Whitmarsh, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., General Hosp. No. 5, Ft. Ontario, N. Y. F. A. Wightman, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., Com- manding Co. K, 19th Reg., Transportation Corps, Paris. 1909 NON-GRADUATES WiNTHROP Adams, Med., U. S. N., Navy Yard, Boston. Reginald B. Cocroft, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., West Point, N. Y. Robert Coker, Maj., Sig., U. S. A., Acting Col., 4th Reg., Motor Mechanics Train, Nice, France. Henry H. Keough, Candidate, Reserve Officers' Training School, Ft. Myer, Va. Honorably dis- charged. Roland F. King, Pvt., U. S. Marines, Paris Island, S. C. H. H. Payne, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Motor Sect., Carriage Div., Ord. Dept., France. Dana L. Southworth, Pvt., U. S. A., Artillery Observer, Hdqrs. Co., 34th F.A., Camp McClellan, Ala., Henry A. Weil, Lieut., U. S. A., Asst. to Chief, Mfg. Sub-Division, Ofilice of Director of Purchase and Storage, Wash., D. C. 1910 GRADUATES Donald S. Babcock, Maj., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 26th Div. France. Maxwell Barus, Chief Quartermaster, U. S. N., Ground Aviation, Officers' Schaol, Great Lakes Naval Training Station, 111. Albert A. Bennett, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., Fort San Jacinto, Texas. Harold S. Bucklin, Candidate, 23rd Co., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Lee, Va. Honor- ably discharged. Arthur D. Draper, Pvt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Motor Truck 399, France, A. P. O. No. 735. William B. Freeman, Chief Yeoman, U. S. N., Aid for Information, Providence. John P. Hartigan, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. F, 304th Reg., Camp Devens, Mass. W. Brooks Henderson, 2nd Lieut., R. H. A., British, No. 8 Reserve Brigade, R. H. A., Bulford, Wilts. Norman E. Holt, Capt., Ord., U. S. A., Chief Operating Office, Cliemical Plant, No. 4, SaltviUe, Va. Harold S. McIntosh, Chief Yeoman, U. S. N., Civil Engineering Duties, France, U. S. S. "Car- ola." Edward H. Mason, Jr., 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Sanitary Corps, 103rd F. A., 16th Div., France. Ernest M. Morris, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Field Hospital, France. Alexander W. Mitir, Corp., Eng., U. S. A., Co. M, 23rd Eng., France. Harry L. Oldfield, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., Chaplain Training School, Camp Taylor, Ky. Stephen D. Paddock, C. P. O., U. S. N., Newport. Albert N. Peterson, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Feb. 26, 1919. Adrien E. Regnier, Corp., M. G., U. S. A., Co. C, 102nd M. G. Bn., France. Slightly wounded Apr. 20, 1918. Bertram Smith, Corp., Inf., U. S. A., Co. C, 159th Inf., Camp Kearney, Cal. Edward S. Spicer, Gunner's Mate, 2nd cl., U. S. N., Equip. Div., 2nd Naval Dist., Newport, Oct., 1918, with Q. M. Dept., Bureau of Standards, Wash. Lawrence S. Walker, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., 10th Co., C. A. C, Ft. Wetherill, R. I. Ralph H. Wilmarth, 2nd Lieut., M. G., U. S. A., Machine Gun School, Camp Hancock, Ga. 1910 NON-GRADUATES Max .a.. Almy, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp. Unit No. 19, Vichy, France. Morris F'. Conant, Capt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Chief Inspector, Textile Equip. Clothing and Equip. Div., Washington. Allan D. Creelman, Athletic Director, Y. M. C. A., Gievres, France, 12 Rue d'.\guesseau, Paris. Robert E. McGough, Pvt., U. S. Marines, Co. L, 13th Reg., U. S. Marines. Died, ea route to France, of influenza, Sept. 25, 1918. Harold T. Phinney, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd F. A., 26th Div. Cited for valor, second Battle of Marne. Israel R. Sheldon, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Personnel Officer, 31st Construction Officer, Lang- ley Field, Va. 1910 SPECIAL Leon N. McKenzie, Sig., U. S. A., 3rd Prov. Dat., Avia. Sect., Signal Corps, Madison Bar- racks, N. Y. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 51 1910 ADVANCED DEGREES Benjamin L. A. Henin, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., New York Coast. 1911 GRADUATES Edward B. Ali.en, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Orthopaedic Surgeon, Base Hosp. No. 80, France, A. P. O. No. 909. John A. Anderson, Candidate, F. A., U. S. A., 24th Training Battery, Officers' Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Paul Appleton, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Surgical Staff, Walter Reed General Hosp., Washington. Honorably discharged Feb. 20, 1919. Vernon E. Babington, Ensign, Med., U. S. N. Earl F. Bliss, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 331st F. A., France. Harold B. Bliss, Capt., Ord., U. S. A., Staff Officer. Andrew L. Breckenridge, Chief Mach. Mate, U. S. N., Construction Unit, Mine Filling Plant, Yorktown, Va. Chester T. Calder, Pvt., Amb., U. S. A., Section 579, U. S. Army Amb. Service, Allentown, Pa. Died of pneumonia at Allentown Feb. 4, 1918. Everett S. Carpenter, Sergt., U. S. A., 6th Co., O. R. S. D., A. P. O. No. 741, France. Clifford J. Cawley, Sergt., Q. M. C, U. S. A, 302nd Co., Motor Supply Train No. 401, France. John O. Chesley, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. N. Steam Eng. School, Hoboken, one and one-half months in War Zone. Silas B. Dishman, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 85th Div., Camp Custer, Mich. John Ervin, Jr., Seaman, U. S. N., Naval Intelli- gence Dept., Newport, R. I. Ernest S. Fitz, 1st Sergt., Aero Signal, U. S. A., 480th Aero Constr. Squadron, France. Wright D. Heydon, Candidate, F. A., U. S. A., F. A., O. T. School, Camp Taylor, Ky. John S. Hodgson, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Base Hosp., France. J.\coB M. How.'VRTH, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 242nd Inf., 86th Div., France. Henry R. Howe, Capt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 101st Eng., 26th Div., France. Chateau Thierry, St. Mihiel, Verdun. Wounded at Chateau Thierry July 15, 1918. Decorated with D. S. C. and cited in Divisional Orders. John V. Keily, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., American University, Washington. 1911 GRADUATES James C. Larkin, Chief Electrician, U. S. N., Bureau of Steam Engineering, Brooklyn, N. Y. John McGill Montz, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 17th (Ry) Eng., France. Joseph S. Neves, Seaman, U. S. N. Lewis A. Newfield, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Med. Det., 344th Inf., France. Arthur Palmer, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., No. 1 General Hospital, British Expeditionary Force, France. Irving W. Pettengill, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Ord. Dept., Washington. Thomas H. Quigley, Candidate, F. A., U. S. A., 18th Obs. Batt., C.O.T. S., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Joseph E. Raia, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Evacua- tion Hosp., No. 4, France. Fremont E. Roper, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., 109th Eng., Brest, France. Julius A. Saacke, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Russell E. Sisson, 1st Lieut., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Office of Zone Supply Officer, Baltimore, Md. S. Merritt Skelding, 2nd Lieut., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Motor Div., 469 Fifth Ave., New York. Brenton G. Smith, Major, Sig., U, S. A., Division Research and Inspection Signal Corps, A. P. O. No. 702, France. Albert W. Sweet, 1st Lieut., San., U. S. A., Sanitary Corps, 4th Divisional Lab., Field Hosp. No. 21, France. Harold Wallace, Ensign, U. S. N., Assist. Pay- master, 1st Naval District. David F. Watson, Jr., Seaman, 2 cl., U. S. N. Officers' Material School, Great Lakes Nav.. Tr. Sta., 111. Alan A. Wood, 1st Lieut. Ord., U. S. A., Water- town Arsenal, Mass. 1911 NON-GRADUATES Raymond W. Bissell, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., F. a.. Replacement Depot, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. John J. Brown, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 706, G. 2, France. J. Lloyd Crawshaw, Capt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Assist, to Camp Q. M., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Edward F. Dalton, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. 26, D. B., Camp Devens, Mass. Earle B. Dane, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., A. E. F., France. Laurel Fellman, Chief Boatswain's Mate, U. S. N., Norfolk, Va. Honorably discharged, physi- cal disability, on Sept. 22, 1917. William I. H.\stie, Secretary, Y. M. C. A., France, 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. Paul D. Howe, Candidate, Eng., U. S. A., Eng. O. T. S., Camp Humphreys, Va. Walter E. Kelley, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Edgar J. Marston, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Asst. Mil. Attache, Embassy, London. F. Russell Moseley, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., M. G. Co., 302nd Inf., France. Edward J. Rankin, Sergt., Ord., U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 717, France. George Richardson, Machinist's Mate, 2nd cl., U. S. N., Ground Aviation Service, Great Lakes Nav. Tr. Sta., III. Died of influenza, Oct. 7, 1918, at Great Lakes. Maurice S. Ricker, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 26th Div., A. P. O. No. 745, France. Jphn W. Seaton, 1st Lieut. Sig., U. S. A., Air Ser- vice, A. E. F., France. Shirley A. Wilson, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Delaware." Warren H. Smith, Chief Mach. Mate, U. S. N., Pelham Bay, N. Y. G. Fred Swanson, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 713, France. 1911 SPECIAL Sanford S. Burton, Jr., Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Whippet," S. P. No. 89. 52 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 1911 ADVANCED DEGREES Sumner W. Gushing, Capt-, Mil. Intell., U. S. A., Monograph Sub. Section, Mil. Intell. Dept., General Staff, Wash. George B. Obear, Capt., Med., U. S. A., Med. Re- search Laboratory, Hazelhurst Field, Mineolo, N. Y. 1912 GRADUATES Edward A. Adams, Candidate, 14th Observation Batt., Camp Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Dec. 6, 1918. Ryland B. Andrews, 1st Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviation Section, Signal Corps, attached to U. S. Legation, Jassy, Roumania. Daniel L. Brown, Junior Officer, U. S. N., U. S. A. T., "Nansemone." Honorably discharged Dec. 4, 1918. Arthur F. Buddington, Sergt., 1st class, U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Research Div. Hermon C. Bumpus, Jr., 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Co. 23, Ft. Riley, Kansas. Honorably discharged. George S. Burgess, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Inf., 129th Co., 1st Bn., A. E. F., France. W. Randolph Burgess, Major, U. S. A., Statisti- cal Div., Rm. 126, War and Navy Bldg., Wash- ington. Hudson C. Burr, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., R. C. A. S., M. I. T., Cambridge, Mass. LeRoY F. Burroughs, 1st class Pvt., U. S. A., Sect. 579, War Zone, Italy. Awarded Croce al Merito. Sheldon C. Collins, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 9th Dvlp. Co., 154 D. B., Camp Meade, Md. Joseph H. Conzelman, Pvt., Cadet, Sig., U. S. A, 5th Cadet Squadron, Camp Dick, Dallas, Texas. Lawton V. Crocker, Master Engineer, U. S. A., Northeastern Detachment, 472nd Eng., Hdqrs. N. E. Dept., Boston. William W. Cummings, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., 16th Co., 4th Brig., Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Wilbur S. Deming, U. S. A., Camp Up- ton, N. Y. William H. Dinkins, 1st. Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. D, 366th Reg., A. E. F., France. Daniel G. Donovan, Maj., F. A., U. S. A., In- structor, Fort Sill, Okla. Adelbert C. Eastburn, 1st. Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., Gen. Eng. Depot, 1438 U St., N. W., Wash- ington. James C. Elms, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Army Transport Service, Hoboken, N. J. Orrin R. Ferry, 1st. Lieut., U. S. A., 2nd Co., 2nd P. R. Training Camp, San Juan, P. R. Thomas L. Fletcher, Capt., U. S. A., General Hosp. No. 9, A. E. F., France. Matthew E. Gormly, Ensign, U. S. N., Supply Officer, U. S. S. "Lake Superior." J. Dydime Guillemette, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Air Service, France. Honorably discharged Jan. 7, 1919. Raymond P. Hawes, U. S. A., Psychological Co., No. 1, M. O. T. G., Camp Greenleaf, Ga. Clifford D. Hindle, 1st Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Fort Randolph, Canal Zone, Cristobal, Panama. Ralph G. Hurlin, Capt., U. S. A., Statistic Branch, General Staff, Washington, D. C. Howard P. Jones, Pvt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 713, A. E. F., France, Food convoy duty into Germany. George V. Kendall, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 15th F. A., 2nd Divisional Hdqrs., Besancon. Lowell C. Kendrick, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., 7th Co., 2nd Bn., D. B., Camp Devens, Mass. A. Collins Ladner, Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Cleveland, Ohio. Nicholas V. S. Mumford, 1st. Lieut., U. S. A., Ordnance O. R. C, Frankford Arsenal, Philadel- phia, Pa. Walter C. Nelson, 1st Lieut., San. Corps, U. S. A., Hdqrs., San. Train, 81st Div.,. A. P. O. No. 791, France. Arthur F. Newell, Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris. Edward B. Peck, U. S. A., Ordnance, Wash- ington, D. C. Mellen H. Pingree, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Siboney." James V. Ricci, M. D., 1st. Lieut., With the Brit- ish Army in Italy, No. 39, C. C. S. Pearce C. Rodey, 2nd class Seaman, U. S. N., Submarine Chaser No. 336. Harold P. Salisbury, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Hdqrs. 1st American Army, G-4-Staff, France. Honor- ably discharged. Kenneth J. Tanner, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. 39, 10th Bn., 153rd D. B., Camp Dix, N. J. Honorably discharged Nov. 16, 1918. Robert S. Thomson, Pvt., U. S. A., S. S. U. 512, Convois Automobile par B. C. M., Paris. John T. Winterich, Pvt., U. S. A., Editorial Staff, Stars and Stripes, Paris, France. 1912 NON-GRADUATES Walter L. Allen, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 302nd Am. Train, Co. G., France. Howard B. Andrews, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Balloon Set., San Antonio, Texas. Eastwood H. Boardman, 2nd Lieut., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Camp Logan, Texas. George W. Brewster, U. S. N., Section Base No. 3, 3rd Naval Dist., Port Jefferson, N. Y. Phillip E. Bronson, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Conn. Coast Art., Plum Island, N. Y. KiPP I. Chace, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 113th F. A., A. E. F., France. William E. Dodge, 2nd Lieut., U. S. N., Newport. Victor D. Howard, Sergt., U. S. A., 2nd Co., 101st Supply Train, A. E. F., France. George W. Langdon, Jr., Capt., U. S. A., 102nd F. A., France. Ordered home as instructor. Joseph H. McCormick, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., Co. C, 117th Eng., 42nd "Rainbow" Division, Germany. Wiley H. Marble, Lieut., Co. D, 6th Eng., U. S. . A., A. P. O. No. 740. With Army of Occupation. Henry G. Marsh, Color Sergt., Eng., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Detachment 301st Eng., A. E. F., France. Walter P. Misch, 2nd Lieut., Q. M. C, U. S. A., 526 Hudson St., Hoboken, N. J. Chester W. Spaulding, U. S. A., Flower Hosp., Unit, Fort Ontario, Oswego, N. Y. 1912 ADVANCED DEGREES C. Edward Fisher, U. S. A., Fort Warren. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 53 1913 GRADUATES Charles H. Abbott, 2nd Lieut., Sanitary Corps, U. S. A., Rockefeller Inst, for Medical Research, N. Y. City. Preston F. Arnold, Corp., Inf., U. S. A., 36th Co., 9th Bn., D. B., Camp Devens, Mass. Honor- ably discharged. Russell T. Ashbaugh, Corp., U. S. A., 2 7th Mach. Gun Bn., Co. D, Camp Sheridan, .\la. William E. Bailey, U. S. N. John R. Blair, Capt., Inf., U. S. A.. 45th Inf., Camp Sheridan, Ala. George Boas, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Aide de camp to Brig. Gen. C. E. Kilbourne, 3rd Inf. Bri., 2nd Div., Benorf, Germany. Leighton T. Bohl, Capt., U. S. A., 310th Cavalry, Fort Ethan Allen, Vt. Joseph K. Burwell, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., Medical Supply Depot, New York City. John Casey, Jr., Cadet Lieut., U. S. N., U. S. Naval Aviation Detachment, Key West, Fla. Raymond C. Colwell, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Sani- tary Corps, Base Hospital No. 58, A. E. F., France. Frederick E. Cooper, Capt., Ord., U. S. A., Water- town Arsenal, Mass. Died of influenza Sept. 24, 1918- Francis p. Davis, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 2nd Ammunition Train, France. William L. Dealey, U. S. A., Psychological Co. No. 1, Camp Greenleaf, Ga. William R. Eastwood, Corp., Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 101st Reg., France. Jeffrey S. Goldberg, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Harold A. Grout, Sergt., Med., U. S. A., Camp Hospital No. 30, A. P. O. No. 725, France. Frederick H. Guild, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., R. I. Detachment, Provost Marshal General's Dept., State Draft Hdqrs., Providence, R. I. Kenneth S. Hall, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., lS8th Aero Squadron, France. George N. Hazard, Ordnance Sergt., U. S. A., Ordnance Detachment, Hdqrs., S. O. S., Tours, France. Leon C. High, U. S. A., Navy Air Station, Pensacola, Fla. Arthur W. Howe, Jr., Ensign, LT. S. N. Wm. M. Howe, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., 314th Eng., A. P. O. No. 761, France. Cedric F. Joslin, Pvt., U. S. A., 2nd Co., P. R. Training Camp, San Juan, Porto Rico. Honor- ably discharged May, 1918. Karl H. Koopman, 2nd Lieut., C. A. R. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged Dec. 20, 1918. Duncan Langdon, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd Reg., A. E. F., France. LeRoY E. Loxley, Pvt., U. S. A., Battery A, 67th C. A. C, France. Daniel L. Mahoney, Pvt., U. S. A. Discharged as a candidate Dec. 3, 1918, from Officers' Train- ing School, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Albert P. Martin, 2nd Lieut., Ordnance, U. S. A., Camp Ordnance Depot, Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Honorably discharged Feb. 28, 1919. Joseph A. McCaull, U. S. A., 75th Aero Squadron, Kelley Field, Texas. George T. Metcalf, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd Reg., A. E. F., France. Carleton D. Morse, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. H, 301st Reg., A. E. F., Germany. Cecil C. Parker, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 740, A. E. F., France. Clarence H. Philbrick, Hosp. Appr., U. S. N., Naval Base Hosp., U. S. Naval Base No. 6. Wm. J. Reed, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., A. S. A. P., Montesano, Wash. Richard D. Robinson, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. M, 47th Reg., A. E. F., France. Killed by shell Sept. 12, 1918. John E. Rouse, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., C. O. T. S., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Marshall K. Sheldon, Pvt., U. S. A., 2nd Co., 151st D. B., Camp Devens, Mass. Clifford J. Stevens, Corp., Inf., U. S. A., Co. F, 168th Reg., 84th Bri., 42nd Div., France. Died of accident on Mar. 9, 1918. Earl W. Tucker, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., Med. Div., Chemical Warfare Service, Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio. John T. Walker, Jr., Pvt., S. S. U. No. 625, Convois Automobiles par B. C. M., Paris, France. Awarded Croix de Guerre. Elisha C. Wattles, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 2nd Cavalry, France, Mach. Gun Troop. Frederick H. Wilke, Pvt., U. S. A., Ambulance Co. No. 33, 4th Div., A. P. O. No. 746, France. Maynard E. Wright, Honorably discharged from Camp Devens, Mass. 1913 NON-GRADUATES Wm. W. Blodgett, Pvt., U. S. A., 103rd F. A., Battery C, 51st Bri., 26th Div., France. King Collins, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A. Raymond B. Scranton, U. S. A. Died in hospital at Nevers, France, Nov. 8, 1918. Carlton F. Sims, Pvt., Sect. 579, U. S. A. Amb. Service, 6th Italian Army Corps. Awarded Croce al Merito. Lyndon R. Story, Eng., U. S. A., 109th Eng., Co. F, France. Merton P. Young, Corp., U. S. A., Co. A, 302nd Mach. Gun. Batt., Camp Devens, Mass. 1913 ADVANCED DEGREES Sabin C. Percefull, Sergt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Co. H, 3rd Chem. Bat., Edge- wood, Md. 1914 GRADUATES David C. Adelman, 1st Sergt., U. S. A., Co. L, 2nd Reg., Camp Humphreys, Va. James G. Affleck, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Camp Upton, N. Y. Charles L. Bagnall, 1st Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Batt. A, 66th Art., A. P. O. No. 705, France. Arthur E. Bartlett, Ensign, U. S. N., Submarine Base, Cavite, P. I. Stephen S. Bean, Sergt., U. S. A., Army Intelli- gence Dept., Bordeaux, France. Irving T. Boardman, Pvt., U. S. A., 9th Co., 3rd Bn., 252nd D. B., Camp Upton, N. Y. Died of influenza at Camp Upton, N. Y., Sept. 27, 1918. Edward T. Brackett, Pilot, U. S. A., Aviation Section, Selfridge Field, Mt. Clemens, Mich. Charles E. Brady, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 40th Art., Camp Upton, N. Y. 54 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Howard A. Brown, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Air Ser- vice, Aircraft Production, Pittsburgh, Pa. Elliot T. Bugbee, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Q. M. C, Camp Jackson, S. C. Arthur W. Gate, Sergt., U. S. A., Corps of In- terpreters, Hdqrs. Det. 38th Division, France. Ernest R. Cleaveland, Pvt., U. S. A., Battery A, 103rd F. A., France. Edwin P. Cook, 2nd Lieut., Ord., U. S. A-., Sandy Hook Proving Ground, N. J. Honorably dis- charged Feb. 21, 1919. Joseph E. Cook, Sergt., U. S. A., Machine Gun Corps, 157th Inf., Camp Kearny, CaL James L. Cummincs, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Camp Hancock, Ga. Honorably discharged Jan. 10, 1919. Harold L. Gushing, Non Com. Officer, U. S. A., C. A. C, Fort Adams, R. I. Peter F. Dugan, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged. Eugene R. Dukette, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 76th Reg., 13th Div., Camp Lewis, Wash. Honorably discharged March 7, 1919. Joseph H. Farnham, 1st Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Air Service, A. P. O. No. 717, France. Chester A. Files, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd Reg., 51st Bri., 26th Div., France. H. Elliott Foote, 2nd Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., War Dept., Office of Chief of Ord., Nitrate Div., Wash- ington, D. C. M. Kenneth Forward, Bn. Sergt. Maj., U. S. A., Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. C. George S. Goodspeed, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 4th Reg., Corpus Christi, Texas. Frederick R. Hazard, Jr., 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. .A.,, 54th Art., C. A. C, France. Honorably dis- charged March 4, 1919. David E. Henry, 1st Lieut., Inf., LT. S. A., France. Died of pneumonia at hospital at St. Nazaire, France, on Feb. 1, 1919. Arnold S. Hoffman, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. C. No. 242. Robert S. Holding, Ensign, .U. S. N., c/o U. S. Naval Aviation, 4 Place DTena, Paris, France. Edward J. Horrigan, U. S. Army. Reber N. Johnson, Casualty Searcher, American Red Cross, 4 Rue de L'Elysee, Paris, France. Thomas L. Keily, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Air Service Pilot for observation planes, Post Field, Fort Sill, Okla. Robert M. Lord, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., France. Frederick L. Loucks, 2nd Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Advance Ord. Dep. No. 1, 9s-sur-Tille, France. Elmer G. MacDowELL, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., I. O. D. No. 1, Nevers, France. Honorably dis-, charged Feb. 4, 1919. BenjI H. Marshall, Bugler, Eng., U. S. A., Hg. Co., 313th Eng., A. P. O. No. 795, France. Melville C. Mason, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. A, 163rd Reg., France. Robert E. Mitchell, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., 9th Co., Fort Adams, R. I. Halsey R. Nash, Pvt., U. S. A., Sch. of Mil. Aeronautics, Cornell, N. Y. Joseph G. Nathanson, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. C, 303rd Inf. Sylvanus H. H. Parsons, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., Ord. Inspection, Toledo, Ohio. Reginald Poland, 1st Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Battery E, 55th C. A. C., France. Honorably discharged Feb. 12, 1919. Raymond A. Preston, Pvt., U. S. A., .Amb. Ser- vice, Sect. 570, War Zone, France. Albert W. Protheroe, Pvt., U. S. A., A. S. A., School of Aerial Photography, Cornell Univ., Ith- aca, N. Y. Arthur F. Ranger, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., R. I. Detachment, Provost Marshal General's Dept., State House, Prov., R. I. Henry P. Reynolds, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., France. Heavily gassed, but recovered. George E. Ronne, Pvt., Med., U. S. A. Stanley J. Rowland, • U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 15, France. , Melvin E. Sawin, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A. J.\MES I. Shepard, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 304th Inf., A. P. O. No. 7 73, France. Cyril C. Smith, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Honor- ably discharged Dec. 3, 1918. John L. Sperry, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. 6, Sect. B, Eng., O. T. S., Camp A. A. Humphries, Va. Harold H. Sprague, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., K, 303rd Inf., 76th Div., Camp Devens, Mass. Walter H. Sprague, U. S. N., Wakefield, Mass. Eli M. Viner, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 302nd F. A. Earl H. Walker, Capt., Ord., U. S. A., Ord. Dept., A. P. O. No. 706, France. NoRM.\N H. Whitehead, Pvt., U. S. A., Army Service Corps, West Point, N. Y. Maurice A. Wolf, Maj., Inf., U. S. A., 3rd Bn., 151st Dep. Brig., Camp Devens, Mass. Honor- ably discharged. Charles L. Woolley, Master Eng., U. S. A., 1st Batt., Hdqrs., 14th Eng. Ry., France. Sidney W. Wray, Hosp. App., 2nd cl., U. S. N., Base Hosp. No. 6, U. S. Naval Forces, Europe. 1914 NON-GRADUATES Walter E. Boyd, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. M, 102nd Reg., 26th Div., 51st Brig., France. Jonathan P. Hadfield, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., American Military Mission, A. P. O. No. 946, Berlin, Germany. Albert B. Hildebrecht, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., Camp Jackson, .S. C. Honorably discharged. Murray L. Jones, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 78th Div., Replacement Sect., France. Richard J. O'Brien, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Harry S. Stanton, 2nd class Mach. Mate, U. S. N., Construction Unit, Mine Filling Plant, U. S. Navy, Yorktown, Va. LUMAN T. Thurber, Capt., U. S. A., 2nd Bn., 2nd M. M. Regt., A. P. O. No. 702, France. Grafton L. Wilson, Capt., U. S. A. Clayton E. Fisher, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Mil. Intell. Dept., France. LoRiNG S. Hemenway, 2nd Lieut., Art., U. S. A., 71st Art., France. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 55 1914 ADVANCED DEGREES Marion E. Bratcher, Candidate for Chaplain, U. S. A., Camp Taylor, Ky. 1915 GRADUATES John B. Abbott, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 757, Nogeht, France. Edgar Allen, 1st Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Med. Dept., Lab., Dejon, France. Sewell W. Allison, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Com- manding Officer, .Srd Casual Co., Camp Hancock, Ga. Alfred W. Anthony, Jr., Ensign, U. S. N., Sub- marine School, Pelham Bay, N. Y. Wm. E. Bee HAN, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., U. S. S. "Hazelwood." Ralph L. Blanchard, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A., 60th C. A. C, France. Honorably discharged Dec. 6, 1918. George F. Bliven, Pay Clerk, U. S. N., Naval Base Hosp., Unit No. 4, Newport, R. I. Joseph B. Bowen, 2nd Lieut. Sig., U. S. A., Dept. S. R., C. A. C, Air Service, France. Killed in action Sept. 7, 1918. John H. Bower, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. E, 319th F. A., Camp Gordon, Ga. Sharon O. Brown, Sergt., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Troop, 12th Div., Camp Devens, Mass. Honorably dis- charged Jan. 31, 1919. Leonard B. Campbell, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Pur- chase Storage and Traffic Div., General Staff, Washington, D. C. John R. Carlson, 2nd Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., 301st Eng., France. Sidney Clifford, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Rifle Instructor, 26th Div., France. Roland E. Copeland, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. T. A. S., A. P. O. No. 702, France. Ralph W. Cram, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 45th F. A., 15th Div., Camp Stanley, Texas. Honor- ably discharged Dec. 24, 1918. Frank B. Crocker, Pvt., U. S. A., 4th Co., Cen- tral Mach. Gun., O. T. S., Camp Hancock, Ga. Cecil M. P. Cross, Field Clerk, U. S. A., Washing- ton, D. C. Minot J. Crowell, 1st Lieut., San. Corps, U. S. A., 26th Eng., France. Shirley E. Culver, Sergt., U. S. A., Q. M. C- Boat Repairing Unit 303, Camp Meigs, Washing, ton, D. C. Donald Dike, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Heavy Art. vSchool, France. Norman L. Duncan, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., 3rd Batt., 302nd F. A., Camp Devens, Mass. Harold T. Eaton, Seaman, 1st cl., U. vS. N., Edito- rial Officer, Pelham Broadside, N. Y. McDonald L. Edinger, 2d Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd F. A., France. Wtlmer Eicke, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Killed in action Oct. 24, 1918. Carl D. Everingham, Ensign, V. S. N., Pay Corps, Supply Officer, U. S. Submarine Base, Key West, Fla. Elliot H. Falk, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 309th F. A., 153rd Brig., 78th Div., France. Silas W. Foss, Brig. Sergt. Maj., U. S. A., 303rd H. F. A., France. Frank B. Frost, 2nd Lieut., Q. M. C, U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 70S, Bordeaux, France. Wallace L. Gallup, 1st Lieut., Chaplain, U. S. A., 30th Inf., France. Wallace A. Gannon, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, \J. S. A., Hdqrs Co., 50th C. A. C, France. Ralph B. Graham, 1st Lieut., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Hdqrs., 76th Div., Camp Devens, Mass. Joseph I. Greene, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Transpor- tation Corps, H. Q. S. O. S., A. E. F., Tours, France. John R. Haire, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Okla- homa." Lawrence L. Hall, Sergt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Salvage Co., Camp Mills, N. Y. Herman N. Harcourt, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 1st Co., Dep. Brig., Camp Upton, N. Y. Schuyler V. Hayward, Musician, U. S. N., Navy Band, Great Lakes, 111. Prescott W. Hill, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., 150th F. A., Hdqrs. Co., 67th Bri., 42d Div., A. E. F., Army of Occupation, Bad Neuenahr, Germany. Edward J. Horrigan, U. S. A. Dan.a. Hubbard, 2nd Lieut., F. A., LT. S. A., Regi- mental Gas Officer, 103rd F. A., France. Harley C. Hyde, Corp., C. A. C, U. S. A., Batt. F, 72nd C. A. C, France. Harold M. Jackson, Pay Clerk, U. S. N., Little Bldg., Boston, Mass. John L. Jenney, 1st Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 57th C. A. C, France. Wm. T. Joyce, 2nd Lieut. Sig., U. S. A., Aviation Sec, Sig., R. C. John E. Kelley, 2nd Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., Co. 2, Eng., O. T. S., Camp Humphreys, Va. Paul J. Kingsley, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 305th Inf., France. Harold C. Kinne, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Air Service, Rockwell Field, Cal. Clarence J. Lamb, Chief Clerk of Finance, Q. M. C, LI. S. A., Camp Supply Office, Camp Sevier, S. C. Leslie T. Little, Aviation Sect., U. S. A., 1st T. B., Line 106, Kelly Field No. 1, San Antonio, Texas. Wm. F. Littlejohn, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Camp Di.x, N. J. Earl F. Luther, 2nd Lieut., F. A., LI. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 51st Bri., 26th Div., France. Roland H. McLaughlin, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 314th F. A., France. Died of wounds received Oct. 14, 1918. Colin G. MacLEOD, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd Reg., A. P. O. No. 709, France. Frederick W. A. Miller, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. M, 313th Inf., France. Died of pneumonia Sept. 23, 1918. Joseph H. Miller, 1st Lieut., Inf., LT. S. A., 73rd Inf., 12th Div., Camp Devens, Mass. Honorably discharged. Seth K. Mitchell, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Instruc- tor in Non-Commissioned Officers' School, Camp Lee, Va. Harold L. Myers, 2nd Lieut., Sanitary Corps, U. S. A. 56 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Wm. a. Needham, Lieut, (s. g.), U. S. N., Asst. Naval Inspector of Ordnance, Boston. Hendrik G. Nelson, Capt., F. A., U.S.A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Honorably dis- charged. Herbert N. Nicholas, Pvt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 101st Reg., 26th Div., France. John H. Nolan, Gunner's Mate, 2nd cL, U. S. N., Newport, R. I. Warren P. Norton, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Dec. 10, 1918. James F. O'Donoghue, 1st Lieut., Inf., LT. S. A., 301st Inf., Mach. Gun Co., 7Sth Div., France. John A. Owen, Jr., 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Persh- ing's Staff, France. George T. Paine, Lieut, (s. g.), U. S. N., Construc- tion Corps, Union Iron Works, San Francisco. John A. W. Pearce, Pvt., U. S. A., 212th Eng. C. Stuart Phelps, U. S. A., Aviation Alumi- num Service. Roy C. Phillips, Maj., U. S. A., Executive, Postal Censorship, New York, N. Y., Sergt., F. A., U. S. A. Honorably discharged. Wilbur J. Phillips, Assist. Chief Army Inspector, Ord. Dept., Youngstown, Ohio. Howard L. Quimby, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A., 304th F. A., France. Died overseas March 11, 1919. Robert E. Quinn, U. S. A., in London. William K. Rice, Hosp. Apprentice, 2nd cl., U. S. N., U. S. Naval Hosp., Pelham Bay Park, N. Y. Frederick J. Rogers, 1st Class Seaman, U. S. N., Torpedo Station, Newport, R. I. Samuel G. A. Rogers, Pvt., San. Service, U. S. A., Unit 628, France. Wm. p. Sheffield, Jr., 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 17th Reg., A. P. O. No. 704, France. Honorably discharged. John J. Skolnick, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 79t.h F. A., Camp Logan, Texas. Edward R. Smith, Corp., Eng., U. S. A., Co. D, 4th Reg., France. Edgar J. Staff, Hosp. Apprentice, 1st cl., U. S. N. Base PIosp. No. 6, U. -S. Naval Forces, Europe. Richard B. Stanley, Ensign, U. S. N., Air Ser- vice, Patrol Work, Hampton Roads, Va. Milton H. Stansbury, Pvt., 1st cl., U. S. A., Sec- tion Interpreter, French Instructor. Eliot S. Staples, Pvt., 1st cl., U. S. A., Aviation Sect., 2nd Squad, Camp Dick, Texas. Wallace G. Stewart, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Water- bury, Conn. Sherman M. Strong, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., 161st Dep. Brig., Camp Grant, 111. Parke H. Struthers, U. S. A., Photographic Obseirver, Langley Field, Hampton, Va. Elias C. Sydney, Corp., Gas Defense Div., LT. S. A., Springfield Gas Co., Springfield, Mass. Harold M. Taylor, U. S. N., 7th Reg., 11th Co., U. S. Naval Training Sta., Pelham Bay Park, N. Y. Harold W. Tucker, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 51st Bri., 26th Div., France. Taken prisoner April, 1918. Honorably dis- charged Apr. 29, 1919. George C. Valentine, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 321st Reg., France. Homer E. Van Derwerken, Sergt., U. S. A., Co. C, 2nd Balloon Squadron, France. Edward R. Walsh, Jr., Chief Mach. Mate, U. S. N., U. S. S. "America." Edward H. Winsor, Pvt., Ord., U. S. A., E. O. C, Watertown Arsenal, Mass. 1915 NON-GRADUATES Cyrus G. Allen, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Co. B, Hdqrs. Base, Gen. Hdqrs., France. Carl H. Angell, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., O. T. C, Camp Jackson, S. C. Russell L. Bateman, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. F, 147th F. A., 41st Div., France. Died in France, June 28, 1918. Ray L. Burnell, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 79th F. A., School of Fire, Fort Sill, Okla. Frederick Burns, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 302nd Inf., Camp Devens, Mass. Byron E. Chapman, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Evacua- tion Hosp. No. 15, France. Monroe E. Fagan, U. S. N. Walter P. Gunn, Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical War- fare Service, Lakehurst Proving Grounds, Lake- hurst, N. J. J. Eugene Hart, Med., U. S. A., U. S. Army Base Hosp. No. 15, France. Morgan B. Haven, Seaman, U. S. N., Receiving Ship "Annes," Framingham, Mass. Clifford H. Higgins, Sergt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. C, 14th Railway Eng., France. Edward W. Hill, Engine Man, 2nd cl., U. S. N. Geo. B. Johnston U. S. A., O. T. S., Camp Taylor, Ky. Harley Josun, Sharpshooter, U. S. Marines, Snipers' Detail, Overseas Depot, France. Carl F. Lauer, U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 316th Inf., Camp Meade, Md. Herbert J. Lawson, Pvt., U. S. A. "Maryland." Arthur Michelin, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 301st F. A., Camp Devens, Mass. Percival Miller, Corp., U. S. A., 1st Batt., Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Emlyn V. Mitchell, U. S. A., Hdqrs. Troop, 26th Div., France. Roy L. Parker, U. S. A., School of Aero- nautics, Cornell, N. Y. Basil H. Perry, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 7th F. A., Hdqrs., France. Whiting H. Preston, Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 321st F. A., Camp Gordon, Ga. James C. Rickner, 1st Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., Co. D, 217th Eng., Camp Humphrey, Ga. John S. Roney, Master Senior Eng., U. S. A., 412th Eng. Det., Camp Sherman, Ohio. George Silverman, Act. Mess Sergt., U. S. A., Fort Getty, R. I. Wm. M. Sistare, Jr., Capt. F. A., U. S. A., 17th F. A., France. Died of influenza, New London, Conn., Nov. 29, 1918. Adams A. Sutcliff, Supply Oiificer, U. S. N., Newport, R. I. Harold B. Taft, Lieut., U. S. A. Reported miss- ing in action, Aug. 3, 1918. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 57 Parker G. Tenney, Maj., F. A., U. S. A., 77th F. A., 4th Div., Army of Occupation, A. P. O. No. 746. Everett L. Thornton, Wagoner, U. S. A., Batt. E, 55th Art., France. Wm. G. Ward, U. S. A., School of Mil. Aero- nautics, Princeton, N. J. Grenville Whitney, Orel., U. S. A., Advance Ord., Depot No. 1, U. S. P. O. No. 712, France. Leonard M. Wright, Paymaster, U. S. N., Pro- vincetown, Mass. 1916 GRADUATES Frank R. Abbott, Chief Storekeeper, U. S. N., Officers' Material School, Princeton, N. J. George R. Arnold, Corp., U. S. A., Felt Section Procurement Dept., C. W. S., G. D. D., Boston, Mass. Jesse M. Bailey, Pvt., 1st cl., San. Det., U. S. .'\., 103rd Mach. Gun. Bn., France. Croix de Guerre July, 1918. Distinguished Service Cross. Frederick A. Ballou, Jr., 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Batt. A, 301st F. A., France. Francis J. Brady, Pvt., U. S. A., I-Idqrs. Supply Co., Ord. Training Camp, Camp Hancock, Ga. Honorably discharged. Bancroft H. Brown, Sergt., 1st cl., U. S. A., Med. Dept., Laboratory, Base Hosp., Camp Devens, Mass. Joseph R. Brown, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 388th Inf., 97th Div., Camp Cady, Deming, N. Mex. Harry H. Burton, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Camp Hancock, Ga. George J. A. Cairns, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. John J. Cashman, 2nd cl. Seaman, U. S. N., 5th Reg., 7th Co., Naval Training Sta., Newport, R. I. Wallace R. Chandler, Ensign, U. S. N., Trans- port Service. William C. Chase, Capt., Cav., U. S. A., 11th Mach. Gun Bn., 4th Div., A. E. F., Coblenz, Germany. Joseph M. Couse, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. K, 107th Inf., Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Edward I. Cristy, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. M, 48th Reg., Newport News, Va. Samuel R. Damon, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 103rd F. A., A. P. O. No. 709, France. Elmer F. Davenport, Pvt., U. S. A., Training Detachment, Wentworth Inst., Boston, Mass. Herman M. Davis, U. S. A., Chemical War- fare Lab., New York City. John B. Dunn, Ensign, U. S. N., Overseas Duty. Francis M. Dwyer, Pvt., U. S. A., U. S. A. Hosp., Fort Logan, Ark. John L. Eddy, Electrician, 1st cl., U. S. N., U. S. S. "Leviathan." C. Emanuel Ekstrom, Capt., U. S. A., Regimental Adj., 74th Inf., Camp Devens, Mass. Gordon B. Ewing, Capt., C. A. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged Jan. 30, 1919. Arthur W. Fairchield, U. S. A., San. Dept., 183rd Mach. Gun Bn., 52nd Bri., 26th Div., France. Willard W. Ferguson, Sergt., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 301st Eng., Army of Occupation, Brohle, Germany. Frederick L. Ferris, 2nd cl. Seaman, U. S. N., Naval Overseas Transportation Service. E. Russell Fretz, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 11th Mach. Gun Bn., 9th Reg., France. Died of wounds Nov., 1918. Irving T. Gumb, C. P. O., U. S. N., Assist, to Chaplain, Naval Training Camp, Pelham Bay, N. Y. Ernest Halliwell, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, LT. S. A., 3rd Co., Coast Defense of New Bedford, Mass. Joseph Halloran, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., Assist. Paymaster (sea- duty). Charles J. Hill, Petty Officer, U. S. N., Pelham Bay Pk., N. Y. Ployer p. Hill, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Reserve Military Aviator, Ellingworth Field, Houston, Texas. GusTAVE D. Houtm.\n, Machinist, 2nd cl., U. S. N., U. S. S. "Chester." William H. Hurlin, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 1st Bn., Dep. Brig., Camp Devens, Mass. Willis H. Jeffery, Corp., U. S. A., Co. 3, Camp Pontavezen, France. Herbert R. Lindblom, 2nd Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., 315th Eng., Daun, Germany. Harold I. Long, 2d Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Avia- tion Dept., Camp Dix, N. J. Honorably dis- charged. Burton L. Lucas, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 38th Inf., A. P. O. No. 740, France. Paul C. Lyall, Pvt., U. S. A., Inf., Aviation Concentration Camp, Camp Dick, Texas. Wm. R. L. McBee, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., A. E. F. Returned from France. Instructor at West Point, Ky. James J. McGinn, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Fort Adams, R. I. H. Stanford McLeod, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 303rd F. A., Camp de Souge, France. Charles B. MacKAY, Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Gas Defense Div., Akron, Ohio. Albert E. Mayoh, Translator, Sig., LT. S. A., Lecturer, Rockefeller Foundation, Brittany. Wm. H. Managan, Jr., Sergt., U. S. A., 1st Bn., Truck Co. No. 1, 23rd Eng., France. Allen G. Maxwell, 1st Lieut., Sig., LT. S. A., Instructor in Gas Defense Carnegie Inst, of Tech., Pittsburgh, Pa. Harold M. Messer, Pvt., Sig., U. S. A., Aviation Section, Signal Corps, Waco, Texas. Honorably discharged Mar. 19, 1918. Henry A. Morgan, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 304th F. A., Camp Upton, N. Y. James A. Murphy, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, Batt. B, 73rd C. A. C, U. S. A., France. Honorably dis- charged Dec. 28, 1918. Walter V. Murphy, U. S. A., Co. Q, 4th Reg., Camp Perry, Great Lakes, 111. Jacob Rosenberg, Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. B, 302nd Inf., 76th Div., Camp Devens, Mass. Died of pneumonia Sept. 19, 1918. Paul L. Russell, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., 12th Bn., Inf., Replacement and Training Camp, Camp Lee, Va. John A. Ryrie, Sergt., LT. S. A., Co. G, 1st Pv. Tr. Reg., American Embark. Center., A. P. O. No. 762, France. 58 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Percy W. Sarle, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Avia- tion Sect. Harold G. Saxton, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., In- structor of flying, Eberts Field, Sonoke, Ark. Earl W. Schoonmaker, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Signal, E. R. C, Aviat. Sec, U. S. A., Call Field, Wichita Falls, Texas. Franklin C. Smith, 2nd Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., Pioneer School, Camp A. A. Humphreys, Va. Honorably discharged Dec. 4, 1918. F. Russell Smith, Pvt., U. S. A., American Army Ambulance Service in France. Awarded French Croix de Guerre Nov. 15, 1918. Frank E. Starrett, Eleve Pilote, L'Ecole d'Avia- tion, Tours, France. Killed by accident at avia- tion school, France, Jan. 2nd, 1918. Edmund J. Sullivan, Q'Master, 2nd class, LT. S. N., U. S. S. "Kingfisher," S. P. 76. Egbert T. Tetley, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. C, 47th Inf., France. Killed in action. Irving C. White, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., 26th Co. Fort McKinley, Portland, Maine. Amasa F. Williston, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 74th Inf., 12th Div., Camp Devens, Mass. Edward T. Willson, 1st Lieut., LT. S. A., Replace- ment Office, 1st Dep. Div., A. P. O. No. 727, France. George H. Wood, Jr., Sergt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, American LTniversity, Wash- ington, D. C. 1916 NON-GRADUATES Arvid a. Alm, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., France. Richard D. Banigan, Q. M. Sergt., U. S. A., Arrontiers, France, M. S. P. No. 418, A. P. O. No. 775, France. George S. Bearse, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A. 59th Ammunition Train, Fort Adams, R. I. Robert E. Briggs, U. S. A., Cadet School, Harvard Univ., Cambridge, Mass. Wm. J. Clark, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., A. S. S. C, Aeronautic Eng. School, M. I. T., Cambridge, Mass. Honorably discharged Jan. 27, 1919. Geo. B. Cumerford, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Mch. Gun. Co., 101st Inf. Killed in action July 15, 1918. Frank A. Farnham, 2nd, U. S. A., Section No. 1, American Field Ambulance, S. S. LT., 1 (625). War Cross Dec. 3, 1917, Croix de Guerre June 1918. Gassed. Philip A. Feiner, Pvt., Sig., U. S. A., Sch. of Mil. Aeronautics, Cornell, N. Y. John L. Gammell, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Staff, 3rd Brig., France. John H. Ghodey, Pvt., Inf., 27th Bn. Canadians, A Co., B. E. F., France. Harold R. Hall, Editor of Balloon Pilot, U. S. A., Camp-'John Wise, San Antonio, Texas. Alfred C. Hawkins, Sergt., U. S. A., 17th Service Co., Meteorological Sect., Signal Corps. Hon- orably discharged Feb. 17, 1919. Thomas M. Hull, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Battery C, 103rd Reg., 26th Div., France. Paul B. Metcalf, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Honorably discharged. Abraham W. Sidkowsky, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., Surgical Unit. Died of meningitis in Belgium, Dec. 14, 1918. Wm. R. Wirtner, U. S. A., U. S. Aero Squad. No. 1, Fort Worth, Texas. William H. Young, Sergt., U. S. A., Batt. C, 101st F. A. 1916 GRADUATE STUDENTS Carleton W. Short, U. S. A., 103rd F. A., France. 1917 GRADUATES Abraham L. Abel, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., Co. I, Harvard S. A. T. C. Honorably discharged Dec. 4, 1918. W. Russell Affleck, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Aviation, France. Roger Upham Allard, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 304th Supply Train, 79th Div., Verdun, France. Ralph C. Allen, Pvt., U. S. A., 10th Co., Fort Wetherill, R. I. Thomas B. Appleget, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., R. I. Detachment, Provost Marshal General's Dept., Providence. Honorably discharged Dec. 9, 1918. Ralph A. Armstrong, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., France. Honorably discharged. Joel M. Austin, Pvt., Sig., U. S. A., France. Died overseas of pneumonia, Sept. 30, 1918. Hugh Bain, Major, F. A., U. S. A., 349th F. A., France. Honorably discharged. Nelson Barlow, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Aerial Armament, France. Honorably discharged March 21, 1919. John F. Brown, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., Aviation. John R. Brown, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., U. S. S. "Lake Ypsilanti, " Naval Base 29, Cardiff, Wales. Angelo Caldarone, Yeoman, U. S. N., c/o U. S. Navy Cost Inspector, Bethlehem Steel Corp., Field's Point, R. I. Frank C. Cambio, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., 32nd Co., C. A. N. G., Fort Getty, R. I. Honorably discharged Dec. 19, 1917. Anthony Caputi, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. Naval Experimental Sta., New London, Conn. Frederick W. Conover, Pvt., U. S. A., Sanitary Squad, No. 67, Hdqrs., Justice Hosp. Group, Toul, France, A. P. O. No. 784. John J. Conway, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "West- mount." Walter A. Cooper, Pvt., U. S. A., Regimental Intelligence Staff, C. O. Student Detachment, Montpellier Univ., Montpellier, France. Bert M. Cromach, Jr., 1st Lieut., C. A., U. S. A., 36th Art., Camp Eustis, Va. Honorably discharged Jan. 2, 1919. Carlton H. Day, U. S. A., Assist. Inspector, Camp A. A. Humphreys, Va. Arthur J. DbNomme, Pvt., U. S. A., 23rd Co., 6th Bn., Camp Upton, N. Y. William B. Farnsworth, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 127th F. A., France. Honorably discharged Jan. 22, 1919. Barney D. Feinberg, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, LT. S. A., France. James G. Fern.\ld, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Air Service, A. E. F., University of Lyon, Lyon, France. Arthur B. Finch, 2nd Lieut., Art., U. S. A., 45th Art., C. A. C. Honorably discharged. Norman L. Fishel, 2nd Lieut., Art., U. S. A., 112th H. F. A., 29th Div., France. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 59 Lory T. Gardner, 2nd., Ensign (T), U. S. N., U. S. S. "Kroonland." Henry T. Hagstrom, Pvt., U. S. A., Mach. Gun Co., 332nd Inf., Camp Sherman, Ohio. Honor- ably discharged March 19, 1919. BiCKNELL Hall, Jr., 1st Lieut., Air Service Aero- nautics, U. S. A., France. Honorably discharged Jan. 8, 1919. John R. W. Hall, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., R. R. and C. Service, France. Arthur B. Homer, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., Inspec- tor of Machinery's Office, Quincy, Mass. Arthur A. Hopkins, Corp., U. S. A. Honorably discharged April 15, 1919. Harry A. Hughes, Pvt., U. S. A., Section 579, Army Amb. Service, Italy. Honorably discharged. Raymond E. Jordan, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd Reg., 26th Div., 51st Brig., France. Severely wounded at Seichprey, April 20, 1918. Returned to Battery latter part of July, 1918. Honorably discharged. Solon C. Kelley, Jr., 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., F. A. R. D., Camp Jackson, S. C. Paul H. Keough, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Robinson." Edwin M. Knights, Corp., Chemical Warfare Service, U. S. A., Chinon, France. James W. Leighton, Pvt., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Dec. 4, 1918. Victor R. LeValley, Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., 311th Reg., Co. B, 78th Div., Camp Dix, N. J. Honor- ably discharged for injuries incurred in line of duty. Melville M. Lowe, Pvt., C. A. C; U. S. A., Fort McKinley, Maine. Edward C. Loud, Ensign, U. S. N. F. C, U. S. Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Fla. Hugh W. MacNAiR, Pvt., 1st class, U. S. A., American Amb. Field Service, Wounded Casual, Mil. Hospital, Rahway, N. J. For individual acts done on the 14th and 16th of May, 1918, awarded the Croix de Guerre "with silver star." For "extraordinary heroism" Oct. 5, 1918, awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. Albert R. Nichols, Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Research Div., American Univ. Exp. Sta., Wash., D. C. Honorably discharged Dec. 10, 1918. Geo. A. Northup, Jr., Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Chem. Lab., Edgewood Arsenal, Edgewood, Md. Honorably discharged Jan. 10, 1919. Wm. N. Ormsby, Lieut, (s. g.), U. S. N., Assist. Naval Attache, American Embassy, Madrid, Spain. Leslie L. Perry, Pvt., U. S. A., Research Div., Chemical Warfare Service, American Univ. Exp. Sta., Wash., D. C. Honorably discharged Dec. 10, 1918. John G. Peterson, 2nd Lieut., San. Corps, U. S. A., U. S. General Hosp. No. 19, Azelea, N. C. James S. Powers, Pvt., C. A. C, 3rd Co., Fort Wetherill, R. I. Honorably discharged — physi- cal disability. Lester W. Preston, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. Wayland W. Rice, 2nd Lieut., C. W. S., U. S. A., Development Div., Chemical Warfare Service, Nela Park, Cleveland, Ohio. Honorably dis- charged March 7, 1919. Paul C. Richards, Seaman, U. S. N., "The Raeo," Number S. P. 588, Newport, R. I. John W. Rhoads, Sergt., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 1st Reg., F. A., France. Instructor in French Art., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Harold W. Ryley, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. K, Harvard S. A. T. C. Honorably discharged. Rust Scott, 1st Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Hdqrs., Re- placements, Training Center, Camp Lee, Va. Harvey Sheahan, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 1st F. A., Fort Sill, Okla. Edmund L. Sheridan, Corp., Ord., U. S. A., 128th Ordnance Depot Co., Camp Sheridan, Ala. Hon- orably discharged March 3, 1919. Philip R. Sisson, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., I7th Co., C. A. C, Fort Greble, R. I. Thomas B. Smith, Corp., Co. C, 309th Mach. Gun Bn., France. Richard H. Spear, 1st Lieut., Air Service, U. S. A., A. P. O. No. 717, Tours, France. Robert T. Staples, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 4th F. A., Camp Stanley, Texas. John Storer, Jr., 2nd Lieuft., F. A., U. S. A., 48th F. A., Camp Kearny, Calif. Richard H. Van Horn, Corp., Inf., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 311th Inf., 78th Div., Flavigny, France. William W. Wade, Capt., Cav., U. S. A., 306th Cavalry, Fort Clark, Texas. Edward F. Waldron, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. Torpedo Boat No. 5, San Francisco, Calif. Raymond J. Walsh, Capt. F. A., U. S. A., 15th F. A., U. S. P. O. No. 704, France. Raymond B. Ward, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Batt. C, 3rd F. A., 6th Div., France. Stanley A. Ward, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 51st Brig., 26th Div., France. Robert M. Watson, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. B, 74th Eng., France. Wm. L. Wedemeyer, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A. Honorably discharged. John F. Wendt, Pvt., U. S. A., Overseas Casual, Base Hosp., Camp Devens, Mass. Wounded on Sept. 28, 1918, in the Argonne Salient. Jasper Wight, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Nov. 29, 1918. Rouse B. Wilcox, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 302nd F. A., France. Frank V. Willard, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 34th F. A., Camp McClellan, Ala. Honorably discharged. Howard D. Williams, Sergt., U. S. A., Surgeon General's Office, Wash., D. C. Honorably dis- charged Apr. 23, 1919. Harding DeC. Williams, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Key West Barracks, Key West, Fla. Clarence H. Woodmansee, 2nd Lieut., Eng., U. S. A., 213th Eng., Camp Lewis, Wash. William D. Wylie, Ensign, U. S. N., Hydrophone duty, 4th Naval Dist., Cramp's Shipyard and Phila. Navy Yard. 1917 NON-GRADUATES Kenneth N. Atwater, Pvt., 1st CI., U. S. A., Batt. A, 112th H. F. A., France. 6o BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Walter Bahnsen, Pvt., U. S. A., Camp John Wise (Line 40), Texas. Dept. of Aeronautics. Alfred W. Baker, Pvt., U. S. A., 3rd Reg., Motor Mechanics, 7th Co., 2nd Battalion, France. Elmer E. Barnes, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., U. S. Mili- tary Academy, West Point, N. Y. Edgar P. Black, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd Reg., F. A., France. Peter Blassberg, Pvt., U. S. A., R. L State Col- lege, S. A. T. C, Kingstown, R. L Frederick H. Bontecon, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., F. A. Edwin L. Brown, Pvt., U. S. A., Echelon Amer. Convois Automobilis, Par., B-C-M, Paris. Malcolm W. Burnham, Corp., U. S. A., 1st Depot Division, Hdqrs. Co., St. Aignan-Noyers, France. Ward E. Butler, Ensign, U. S. N., Section No. 2, Bridgeport, Conn. Richard B. Carter, Capt., Q. M. R. C, U. S. A., Camp Dix, Wrightstown, N. J. Paul Cartwright, Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviation Service (pilot), Camp Dick, Texas. Died Oct. 7, 1918, en route to France. Perry M. Chadwick, Corp., Ord., U. S. A., Co. F, Supply School, Ord. Training School, Camp Han- cock, Ga. ASAHEL S. Dillon, Capt., U. S. A., 112th Trench Mortar Battery, 37th Div., France. Lorimer H. Dixon, Corp. Sig., U. S. A., 493rd Aero Squadron, France. John J. A. Ely, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., 12th Field Art., 2nd Brig., France. Robert W. Foote, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Inf. (Mach. Guns). Honorably discharged. Walter G. Frauenheim, Seaman, University of Pa., Officers' Material School, Phil., Pa. Oliver A. Fuller, Lieut., U. S. A., Heavy Art., France. William J. Grace, Corp., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., France. Herbert P. Halvorson, Lieut., U. S. A., Amer. Red Cross Commission to Palestine. Won French War Cross, Aug., 1917. Charles B. Higgins, Pvt., U. S. A., 37th Eng., 2nd Bn., Hdqrs. Dept., France. Calvert Holt, Chief Machinist's Mate, U. S. N. R., 14 W. S5th St., New York, N. Y. W. P. HouCHiN, Pvt., Ord., U. S. A., Camp Ord. Dept., Camp Dix, N. J. Leroy J. Irons, Corp., U. S. A., 303d Eng. 78th Div., France. Wendell E. James, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., San. Corps, General Hosp. No. 8, Otisville, N. Y. Bruce M. Jeffris, Ensign, U. S. N. R. F., New- port, R. I., Harbor Patrol. Retired to inactive duty. Charles B. Keach, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., lOlst Inf., 26th Div., France. Francis A. King, Pvt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. E, 33d Eng., France. Chauncey B. Ladd, Electrician, 3rd CI. (Radio), U. S. N., U. S. S. C. No. 421, Newport News, Va. Wilfred J. LaPiERRE, Sergt., U. S. A., Med. Dept., Camp Medical Supply Depot, Base Hosp., Camp Devens, Mass. Theophilus P. McClory, Corp., Marine Corps, Marine Barracks, Norfolk, Va. Donald E. McIntire, Naval Detachment, Avia- tion, M. I. T., Cambridge, Mass. John H. Maginn, Ordnance Machine Gun School, Camp Hancock, Ga. Joseph E. Maguire, Capt., U. S- A., Adjt., 307th Brig., Heavy Tank Corps, France. Edward S. Marks, Honorably discharged from service as unfit for military duty. Alfred J. Marron, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Ord. Dept., Watertown Arsenal, Mass. William B. Miller, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 1st Bn., Hdqr. Co., 7th F. A., Germany. Gassed in Argonne Forest. H. C. Moses, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. G, 316th Inf., France. James P. Murphy, Pvt., 1st CI., LT. S. A., General Hosp. No. 5, Ft. Ontario, N. Y. John J. O'Neill, Detention Camp, Bn. 15, Co. 27, Camp Greenleaf, Ga. Alfred A. Overbagh, Cadet Aviator, U. S. A., Military School of Aeronautics, B-201, Texas. Earl M. Pearce, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 66th Art., C. A. C, France. Honorably dis- charged March 20, 1918. Harold L. Porter, Lieut., U. S. A., Machine Gun, Atlanta, Ga. John G. Rice, Pvt., LT. S. A., Supply Co., 101st F. A. Reg., France. Killed in action Nov., 1918. Reginald M. Pease, Electrician, 2d CI., U. S. N., (Radio), N. J. Ralph L. Robinson, Machinist's Mate, 2nd CI., U. S. Naval Auxiliary Reserves, Special Training Sect., Pelham Bay Park, N. Y. Walter E. Rowland, Pvt., Ord., U. S. A. Walter K. Sprague, Sergt., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 4th Mech. Reg. Air Service, France. James C. Springer, Corp., U. S. A., 103rd F. A., 51st Reg., 26th Div., France. Roland S. Stickney, Pvt., Sig., U. S. A. (Aero- nautics), Photographic Detachment, U. S. School of Aerial Photography, Rochester, N. Y., and Cor- nell Univ., N. Y. Discharged Jan. 11, 1919. Leslie R. Taber, Ensign, U. S. N. R., British Handly Page Squadron, No. 214, France. Re- tired to Inactive Duty. Also served in -Amer. Ambulance Field Service firom Feb., 1917, to July, 1917; Lafayette Flying Corps from July, 1917, to March, 1918. Martin T. Tevlin, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Muscatine." Herbert T. Tinker, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd Reg., F. A., France. Gustave H. Tobelman, Flying Cadet, U. S. A., Cadet Squadron, Kelley Field, Texas. Russell L. Tomlinson, Regimental Supply Sergt., U. S. A., 302nd F. A., France. David N. Torrance, Seaman, U. S. N., Lockwood Pier, Boston, Mass. William P. Trask, Pvt., U. S. A., Unit No. 2, Organization Park School Sect., A. P. O. No. 735, France. Bertrand E. Tremblay, Sergt., U. S. A., S. S. U. 623, Convois Automobile Par, B-C-M, Paris. GiRARD B. Troland, Capt., U. S. A., 602nd Eng., France. BissELL L. Wade, Pvt., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 6i Arthur H. Wilkinson, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviat. Sect., School of Military Aeronautics, Berkeley, Calif. Edward T. Williams, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Co. 9, 1st Replacement Reg., Camp Gordon, Ga. Walter L. Williams, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. L, 107th Inf., France. George A. Williamson, Sergt., U. S. A., 104th Military Police, Troop B, 29th Div., France. 1917 SPECIALS Davis T. Gallison, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Base Hospital No. 82, France. Maurice W. Holton, Pvt., 1st CI., U. S. A., Casual, Office of the Judge Advocate, Hdqrs., Base Section No. 2, Bordeaux, France. Frederick J. Weismiller, Top Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., 31st Co., 8th Bn., 152nd Depot Brig., Camp Upton, N. Y. Honorably discharged Dec. 5, 1918. Benj. H. Yerxa, Petty Officer, U. S. N., Boston to Norfolk, Va. 1918 GRADUATES Walter Adler, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., 9th Co., Fort Adams, R. I. Honorably discharged Dec. 16, 1918. Elijah Anthony, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A. Hon- orably discharged Feb. 3, 1919. Charles W. Arthur, Sergt., 1st class, LT. S. A., Base Section No. 6, Base Laboratory No. 6, Camp Hosp. No. 53, A. P. O. No. 752, Marseilles, France. James V. Bennett, Pvt., 1st cl., U. S. A., Cadet Aviator, Princeton, N. J. Honorably discharged. Roy W. Benton, Pvt., U. S. A., M. E. R. C, Harvard Medical School. Honorably discharged Dec, 23, 1918. Vernon A. Bowman, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Instruc- tor, C. A. C. School, Fort Monroe, Va. FR.A.NKLIN C. Brooks, 1st Lieut., F. A., LT. S. A. Honorably discharged Jan. 15, 1919. Kenneth L. Burdon, Pvt., U. S. A., Base Labora- tory, Hospital Center, Hdqrs. Co., Vichy, France. Charles G. Edw.\rds, Corp., Inf., U. S. A. Hon- orably discharged Dec. 4, 1918. Floyd C. Fay, Jr., Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., G. Co., 42nd Inf., 12th Div., Camp Upton, N. Y. Hon- orably discharged Jan. 25, 1919. William M. Fay, Pvt., U. S. A., Sanitary Squad. No. 67, c/o Justice Hospital Group, A. P. O. No. 784, France. Cyrus G. Flanders, Pvt., Ord., U. S. A., Charles- ton General Supply Ord. Depot, Port Terminal, Charleston, S. C. Honorably discharged April 14, 1919. Rodolphe a. Gladue, Pvt., U. S. A., U. S. Ni- trate Plant No. 1, Sheffield Detachment, Ord- nance Dept., Sheffield, Ala. Honorably discharged Jan. 29, 1919. Paul J. Grimes, Ensign, U. S. N. Inactive duty. Reginald G. Harris, 2nd Lieut., Art., U. S. A., 38th T. B., Camp Taylor, Ky. Ernest C. Hathaway, Pvt., Engineer's Enlisted Reserve Corps, U. S. A. Honorably discharged May 29, 1918. James B. Hobbs, Sergt., U. S. A., Co. 1, 314th Inf., 79th Div., France. University of Toulouse, Toulouse, France. Malcolm C. Hylan, Sergt., 2nd Co., 3rd Bn., Inf., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Grant, 111. Honorably discharged Nov. 30, 1918. Horace C. Jeffers, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Jan. 15, 1919. Bertil a. Johnson, 1st Sergt., U. S. A., 168th Co., Trans. Corps, North Russia Exped. Force. Wardwell C. Leonard, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Fort Adjutant, Fort Adams, R. I. Honor- ably discharged Feb. 28, 1919. James I. McDowell, Chief Quartermaster, U. S. N., Naval Air Station, Bay Shore, Long Island. H. Russell Mannex, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 120th F. A., U. S. A., France. Julian B. Marshall, Ensign, U. S. N., 5th Reg., Div. 14, Pelham Bay, N. Y. Robert C. Moore, Chief Quartermaster (Avia- tion), U. S. N., Ground School, M. I. T., Cambridge, Mass. Retired to inactive duty. Clifton I. Munroe, Ensign, U. S. N. Retired to inactive duty. James R. Murphy, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 44th F. A., Camp Stanley, Texas. Honorably dis- charged Feb. 21, 1919. James E. Paige, Pvt., U. S. A., Laboratory, Base Hosp., Camp Gordon, Ga. Gordon L. Parker, 1st Lieut., F. A. R. C, U. S. A. Retired to inactive duty. Raymond H. Parker, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Auxiliary Reserve, N. Y. City. Ralph L. Robinson, Ensign Engineer, U. S. N., U. S. S., West Haven, France. Irving G. Smith, Sergt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 101st Eng., 26th Div., France. Frederick N. Tompkins, Warrant Gunner (Elec- trical), U. S. N. Retired to inactive duty. Harleigh V. S. Tingley, C. Q. M. (A), U. S. N., Naval Air Service, U. S. Naval Air Station, Miami, Fla. G. Wheaton C. Vaughan, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Co. E, 168th Inf., France. Died of wounds in France, Nov. 11, 1918. Charles H. Vehse, 2nd Lieut., Eng., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Dec. 27, 1918. John P. Verity, Radio Electrician, 2nd cl., U. S. N. Retired to inactive duty Feb. 15, 1919. Harold F. C. Wilcox, 2nd Lieut., Inf., LI. S. A., 151st Dep. Brig., Camp Devens, Mass. Honor- ably discharged Dec. 13, 1918. 1918 NON-GRADUATES Howard H. Allsopp, Sergt., U. S. A., Vancouver Barracks, Vancouver, Wash., c/o Spruce Div. Frank R. Ames, Jr., Army Field Clerk, LT. S. A., Overseas Casual Detachment, Camp Merritt, N. J. Robert J. Ames, Pvt., Ord., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Jan., 1919. Herman M. Battey, 1st class Seaman, U. S. N., European Waters. Octave P. Beauvais, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviation Section. Honorably discharged Dec. 7, 1919. Carlton M. Bliss, Aviation, U. S. A. Killed by accident, Nov., 1918. Edward C. Brown, Pvt., U. S. A., 27th Co., De- tach., 7th Tng. Bn., 151st D. B., Camp Devens, Mass. 62 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Herbert Butterfield, Corp., Eiig., U. S. A., Co. A, 301st Eng., U. S. A., Camp Devens, Mass. Peter L. Cannon, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., 353rd Inf., 89th Div., France. Armand L. Caron, Sergt., U. S. A., 103rd Mach. Gun Bn. (Sanitary Detachment), 26th Div., Brest, France. John S. Chafee, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A. Hon- orably discharged Dec. 5, 1918. Also in Am Ambulance Field Service in French Army. Albert H. Chamberlin, Pvt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. F, 101st Eng., France. Christopher A. Champi.in, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviat. Sect., France. William W. Chaplin, Bn. Sergt. Major, U. S. A., 2nd Bn., 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Regi- mental citation for bravery and devotion in act- ing as volunteer runner under shell fire when telephone communication was destroyed. Reuben R. Chase, Jr., Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd F. A., 26th Div. Casual from Base Hosp. No. 20, Beaudesert, France. Gassed Oct. 24, in the Argonne Forest. Eben S. Cleveland, Top Sergt., U. S. A., Motor Truck Co. 350, Camp Cody, Deming, N. Mex. DwiGHT T. CoLLEY, Capt. Co. E, 104th Inf., 26th Div., France. Awarded Distinguished Service Cross. Wm. H. Collins, U. S. A. Dental Corps, Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Henry C. Cramer, Jr., Lieut., Royal Air Force. Paul S. Crandall, Ensign, U. S. N., Watch and Division Officer on U. S. S. "Tuscarora." Edward J. Dilts, Pvt., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd Reg., F. A., France. Donald K. Dobbs, Pvt., U. S. A., Intelligence Dept., Peace Conference, Paris, France. John M. Dowe, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd Ref., F. A., France. Charles H. Eden, Jr., 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Casual. Clifton R. Entwistle, Radio Student, U. S. N., 2nd Dist., Naval Distributing Barracks, Radio School 1, Barracks 12, Newport, R. I. Daniel H. Erickson, Jr., Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. a, 315th Inf., France. Raymond E. F.arnsworth, Ensign (T), U. S. N., Watch Officer, U. S. S. "Badger," U. S. Waters. Five months overseas duty. Mark Farnum, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. A, 47th Inf., 4th Div., U. S. A., France. Albert H. Flint, Jr., Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Charles Whittemore" called "Mystery Ship." Albert M. Freeman, Corp., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 103rd F. A., France. Wm. McK. Gafafer, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. e, 146th F. A., A. E. F., Army of Occupa- tion, Germany. Sidney R. Gair, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Camp 1, P. O. No. 701, St. Nazaire, 90 Boulevard du Montparnasee, Paris. Paul F. Giles, 1st Lieut., C. A. C. Honorably discharged Mar. 20, 1919. Thomas W. Hall, Ensign, U. S. N. William H. Higgins, C. P. O., U. S. N. Alfred R. Holden, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Co. B, 210th Field Signal Bn., 10th Div., Camp Funston, Kans. Honorably discharged Jan. 25, 1919. George C. Hull, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 51st Brig., 26th Div., France. John F. Isaac, Cadet Officer, R. A. F., Camp Mo- hawk, Ont. Manuel J. Jemail, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., Officers' Torpedo Class, Torpedo Station, Newport, R. I. Morrill P. Josselyn, Sergt., U. S. A., Co. A, 1st Development Bn., 151st D. B., Camp Devens, Mass. Ronald M. Kimball, Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 36th Inf., Camp Devens, Mass. Honorably discharged Jan. 28, 1919. Joseph A. King, 2nd class Seaman, U. S. N., Radio School, Harvard. Chauncy T. Langdon, Corp., U. S. A., Ord. Det., Assist. Director of Munitions, 103rd Reg., F. A., France. Henry C. Lanpher, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Air Station, Hampton Roads Naval Base, Norfolk, Va. Before entering Naval Aviation, spent six months in France in the American Field Service. Hon- orably discharged Jan. IS, 1919. Carroll B. Larrabee, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd Reg., F. A., Batt. A, 26th Div., France. John R. Leeming, Jr., 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A. Clarence E. Lightfoot, 1st cl. Pvt., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 3, France. Leroy D. Lincoln, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd Regt., 51st Brig., 26th Div., France. Arthur B. Lloyd, Sergt., Q. M. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged Aug. 9, 1918. Charles W. McClellan, Cadet, Sig., U. S. A., Aviation, Love Field, Dallas, Texas. James I. McDowell, Student Aviator, U. S. N., Naval Air Station, Bay Shore, Long Island, N. Y. Walter R. McGinn, Sergt., U. S. A., S. S. U., 543, Convois Autos, Par. B. C. M., France. Thomas A. McGuire, Sergt., U. S. A., Hdqrs., Detachment Peace Commission, Paris, France. Russell E. McKenzie, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Fort Ruger, Hawaii. Morton P. MacLEOD, Sergt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. B, 11th Eng., France. Herbert L. Manchester, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Aviation, Pensacola, Fla. Honorably dis- charged, Feb., 1919. Charles B. Malone, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd Reg., France. Vernon C. Manley, Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 302nd Reg., Camp Devens, Mass. Honorably discharged. Francis Metcalf, Flying Cadet, U. S. A., Camp Dick, Dallas, Texas. Allison Miller, 1st Classman, U. S. A., Military Academy, West Point, N. Y. Eric A. Monroe, Pvt., U. S. A., Hospital, France. Seriously ill Neuritis. John G. Moriarty, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 7th F. A., 1st Div., France, "Personnel of Battery Cited for bravery at Battle of Cantigny." William A. Murray, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Instructor, Artillery Officers' Training School, Camp Taylor, Ky. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 63 Waldon C. Nason, Corp., Eng., U. S. A., Co. D, 301st Eng., A. E. F., A. P. O. No. 775, Army of Occupation. Philip E. Newhall, Med., U. S. A., Service Co., M. O. T. C, Cliickamauga Park, Fort Ogle- tliorpe, Ga. Leonard H. Norcross, U. S. A., Co. C, 336th Mach. Gun Bn., Camp Dix, N. J. John C. Noyes, Mechanic, U. S. A., Mechanics Detachment, U. S. Army Ambulance Service, witli Italian Army, A. P. O. No. 901. Kenneth S. Parker, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Aviation, Instructor of Aviation, Pensacola, Fla. Roberts Parsons, 2nd Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., 3rd Prov. Ci. A, Ord., Supply School, Camp Hancock, Ga. Lyle M. Proiise, Capt., Inf., U. S. A., France. Wilbur L. Rice, Sergt., Q. M. C, U. S. A., Chief Clerk of Salvage Div., Office Camp Supply Offi- cer, Camp Greene, N. C. Honorably discharged March 14, 1919. Charles R. Richardson, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. C. No. 79, U. S. Naval Forces, European Waters, Base No. 25. John B. Riddock, Sergt., U. S. A., U. S. Army Ambulance Service, with Italian Army. Re- ceived Italian War Cross. Arthur Rothstein, Lieut., U. S. A., Carlstrom Field, Arcadia, Fla., Aviation Service. George C. .Scott, Sergt., U. S. A., 1st Provisional Labor Batt., 1st Depot Div., A. P. O. No. 727, Monthon Sur Cher, France. Dudley R. Sibley, U. S. A., Co. B, 3rd Pro- visional Ord., T. C. Ord. Supply Co., Camp Hancock, Ga. Paul M. Smith, Pvt., U. S. A., Camp Q. M. C, Co. B, Camp Sherman, Ohio. Frank C. Speck, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviation, West Point, Miss. Joseph W. Strout, Jr., Sergt., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. a., 26th Div., France. Harold R. Strauss, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Aux. Reserve, Pelham Bay, N. Y. Charles A. Stuart, ■ U. S. A., Brown Ambu- lance Unit. Honorably discharged for physical disability. George R. Sturtevant, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Camp Alfred Vail, Little Silver, N. J. Alfred J. Sullivan, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviation, France. Honorably discharged. Henry C. Sweet, Boatswain's Mate, 1st class, U. I S. N., U. S. S. "Marguerite," S. P. 193, Key West, Fla. John Sweetland, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Sib- oney" (transport). Charles B. Waddell, Jr., Pvt., U. S. A., 101st Reg., Co. A, Eng., France. Wm. L. Waddell, U. S. A., Co. 51st Shop Reg., Camp Josephine E. Johnston, Jacksonville, Fla. Raymond B. West, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd F. A., France. Raymond L. Wilder, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. Naval Detention Training Camp, Deer Island, Mass. Hiram H. Williams, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., France. Honorably discharged March 20, 1919. Roger Williams, Corp., C. A. C, U. S. A., 66th Art., C. A. C, France. Honorably discharged March 20, 1919. J. Walter Wilson, Sergt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. B, 73rd Eng. Honorably discharged Dec. 19, 1918. Luke A. Woodbury, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., 30th T. B., F. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Nov. 29, 1918. Harold P. Wright, Cadet, U. S. A., School of Military Aeronautics. George H. Yereck, Corp., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co,, 103rd Reg., F. A., France. William H. Young, Sergt., U. S. A., Batt. C, 101st F. A., France. 1918 SPECIALS Winn W. Chase, Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, 103rd Field Hospital, France. Honorably discharged Jan. 16, 1919. Lawrence G. Flick, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Assist. Provost Marshal, Military Police, Nevers, France. Frank C. Haddleton, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., 58th Ammunition Train, Fort Greble, R. I. John L. McCormick, Chief Yeoman, U. S. N., U. S S. "Salem," Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. 1919 Preston O. Abbott, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., A. E. F., School of Economics, Univ. of London, England. William H. Albrecht, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Camp Upton, N. Y. F. Richmond Allen, Quartermaster, U. S. N., U. S. Submarine Chaser No. 164, Naval Forces, For- eign Waters. John H. Almy, Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Balloon Div., Fort Omaha, Neb. Honorably discharged Jan. 4, 1919. George C. Ames, Sergt., U. S. A., Sec. 579, U. S. A., A. C, Italy. John D. Avery, 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. Air Service. Honorably discharged Nov. 27, 1918. Raymond F. Bagley, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., France. Reginald Barry, U. S. A., Hospital Unit, Camp Dix, N. J. William C. Beard, Sergt., Ord., U. S. A. Honor- ably discharged March 7, 1919. William H. Beattie, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 7th Reg., Camp Jackson, S. C. Honorably discharged Dec. 31, 1918. Robert H. Beekman, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. 36, Batt. 9. Honorably discharged. Richard C. Belden, Sergt., U. S. A., 3rd Batt. F. A. R. R., France. Merrill K. Bennett, Pvt., U. S. A., Ildqrs. Casual Camp, A. P. O. No. 909, France. Lawrence B. Bixby, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Military Academy, West Point, N. Y. Edwin L. Blewer, Jr., Pvt., U. S. A., France. Honorably discharged .\pril 9, 1919. Pelham W. Bogert, Torpedo Gunner's Mate, U. S. N., Submarine Base, New London, Conn. William E. Boyle, Pvt., U. S. A., Army Ambulance Service, with the Italian Army. 64 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR George W. Brace, Corp., U. S. A., 102nd Supply Train, 1st Quartermaster's Div., 2 7th, Camp Merritt, N. J. Edward D. Brady, Top Sergt., U. S. A., Camp Greenleaf, M. O. T. C, Chickamauga Park, Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Paul Brady, Jr., Aviation Service, U. S. A., California. Victor A. Brassard, U. S. N., U. S. Naval Hospital, Newport, R. I. Retired to inactive duty Dec. 20, 1918. Malcolm C. Brown, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd Reg., F. A., Beaune Univ., Cote d'Or, France. Morris H. Brown, Corp., U. S. A., Motor Truck driver at St. Nazaires, France. Philip F. Brown, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Co. G, C. A. C. School, Fort Monroe, Va. Honor- ably discharged Jan., 1919. Alan S. Browne, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Motor Transport Corps, A. E. F., Advance Sector, Army of Occupation. George R. Burgess, 2nd Lieut., U. S. Military Academy, West Point, N. Y. Kenneth N. Burnham, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., France. Glenn B. Burt, U. S. N. Training Camp, Pelham Bay, N. Y., 1st Reg. Ceasar T. Cambio, Corp., Eng., U. S. A., 301st Eng., Co. C, Camp Devens, Mass. Warren R. Campbell, Chief Quartermaster, Avi- ation, U. S. N., Student Officer, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Fla. Louis E. Caster, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Train- ing School, Chicago, 111. Frederick R. Chamberlain, Jr., 1st Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 49th C. A. C, France. Now at Camp Grant, 111. Frank L. Chesley, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged Feb. 6, 1919. Alton C. Chick, Warrant Officer, U. S. N., S. S. "Montpelier." Roger T. Clapp, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 69th Art. Honorably discharged March 13, 1919. Daniel W. Coggeshall, Pvt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 101st Reg., 26th Div., France. Joseph Cohen, Ensign, U. S. N., Reserve Officers' Quarters, Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. Harry F. Coleman, — t— U. S. A., Aviation Corps, School of Military Aeronautics, Urbana, 111. Lawrence M. Corcoran, Ensign, U. S. N., In- structor in Naval Aviation, Pensacola, Fla. Thomas M. Conroy, Lieut, (j. g.), U. S. N., Medi- terranean Squadron in Europe. Decorated by the King of Greece with the "Order of the Redeemer." James B. Corey, Chief Quartermaster, U. S. N., Aviation, inactive duty. Lester R. Craig, Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Research Div., Washington, D. C. Hon- orably discharged Jan. 6, 1919. William D. Critcherson, Pvt., Med., U. S. A., 36th Co., 9th Reg., Guantenamo Bay, Cuba. Matthew J. Cummings, Jr., Capt., F. A., U. S. A., Reserve. George T. Curry, Ensign, U. S. N., American Peace Commission, Paris, France. R. B. Daggett, Midshipman, U. S. Naval Acad- emy, Annapolis, Md. Chester I. Dennis, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A. (inactive). George O. Dexter, Jr., Corp., Inf., LT. S. A., Co. A, 302nd Mach. Gun Bn., 151st Inf. Bri., 76th Div., France. Martin J. Donovan, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Camp Devens, Mass. Willis B. Downey, Pvt., Sec. 579, U. S. A. A. S., with the Italian Army, Brescia, Italy. Awarded Italian War Cross. Arthur J. Dows, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., with S. A. T. C. Unit at Clemson College, S. C. Hon- orably discharged Jan. 11, 1919. Clyde L. Driscoll, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., France. Arthur W. Duryea, Pharmacist's Mate, 1st class. Hospital Corps, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Panaman." Retired to inactive lists March 20, 1919. Henry R. Dutton, Quartermaster, 2nd class, U. S. N., Torpedo Testing Barge No. 2, Torpedo Sta- tion, Newport, R. I. James S. Eastham, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., In- fantry Reserve Corps. GuYTON S. Eddy, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Dec, 1918. Wm. H. Edwards, 2nd, Pvt., U. S. A., 8th Co., Central Mach. Gun. Officers' Training School, Camp Hancock, Ga. Honorably discharged Dec. 16, 1918. Herman L. Emidy, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd Reg., 26th Div. Honorably discharged Jan. 30, 1919. Charles M. Fort, Corp., F. A., U. S. A. Honor- ably discharged Mar. 20, 1919. Oliver A. Fuller, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 15th F. A., A. E. F., Germany. RuFus C. Fuller, Jr., Quartermaster, 2nd class, U. S. N. R. F., U. S. S. C. No. 22. Vincent A. Gallagher, Pvt., Eng., U. S. A., Co. C, 29th Eng., France. Edward E. Gardner, Jr., Quartermaster, U. S. N., U. S. S. C. No. 40, Base No. 18, Inverness, Scot- land. Henry G. Gilbert, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Camp Devens, Mass. David D. Gilchrist, Jr., Corp., Eng., U. S. A., Mounted Co., Co. A, 6th Eng., 3rd Div., Army of Occupation, Germany. Mark A. Golrich, Jr., Seaman, U. S. Merchant Marine. Beale M. Gordon, 3rd class Radio Operator, U. S. N., Nantuck Lightship, Relief Vessel No. 90, Chief Radio Operator. James J. Gray, Cadet, U. S. N., Naval Aviation. Killed in accident, Pensacola, Fla., Jan. 18, 1919. Maurice I. Green, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 36th Art., C. A. C, Port of Embarkation, Camp Stuart, Va. Herbert W. Greenhalgh, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A. Honorably discharged for physical disability. Harold E. Grover, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Reg. Sect., 103rd F. A., 26th Div., The American BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 65 Univ. Union of Europe, 8 Rue de Richelieu, Paris, France. John W. Haley, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Inf. Replacement and Training Camp, Camp Lee, Va. Honorably discharged Dec. 23, 1918. Donald P. Hall, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Fort Constitution. Honorably discharged Jan. 1, 1919. Whitman H. Harold, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., O. R. C. F. Burton Harrington, F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., France. Honorably dis- charged. Henry G. Harris, Pvt., U. S. A. A. S., with the Italian Army, Sect. No. 579. Awarded Italian War Cross. Samuel M. Harris, Pvt., U. S. A. A. S., with the Italian Army, Sect. No. 579, Montova, Italy. Awarded Italian War Cross. Frederick B. Heath, Jr., Ensign, U. S. N., New- port, R. I. Elmer R. Hering, 1st class Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Andrew F. Hillhouse, Sergt., M. T. C, U. S. A., Camp Bragg, N. C. Honorably discharged March 14, 1919. Douglas A. Holyoke, 1st Lieut., U. S. A., Gas Dept., Fort Monroe, Va. Honorably discharged Dec. 20, 1918. Edward Howell, Jr., Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd Reg., France. Standish Howland, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Donald W. Hurd, 2nd class Musician, Hdqrs. Co., 56th Pioneer Inf., U. S. A., Winnengett, Germany. Leroy J. Irons, Corp., U. S. A., Co. C, 303rd Reg., 78th Div., France. James L. Jenks, Jr., 2nd class Radio Electrician, U. S. A. Released from active duty. Kenneth D. Johnson, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 5 1st Brig., 26th Div., France. Cited for gallantry in action at the Second Battle of the Marne, July 25, 1918. Lawrence H. Johnson, Ensign, U. S. N. Retired to inactive duty. Norman L. Keller, Lieut., Ord., U. S. A. Retired to inactive list. Edward R. Kent, Corp., Eng., U. S. A., Co. B, 101st Eng., France. Universite de Caen, Caen, Calvados, France. Francis J. King, Pvt., U. S. A., Bowdoin S. A. T. C, Brunswick, Maine. Honorably discharged. William A. King, Pvt., U. S. A., Harvard S. A. .T C, Boston, Mass. Honorably discharged. Herbert P. Knowles, Midshipman, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Wisconsin." Frederick R. Kroener, Warrant Machinist, U. S. Navy Steam Engineering School, Stevens Inst., Hoboken, N. J. David Ladd, Warrant Machinist, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Bali." Frederic W. Lathrop, 1st class Pvt., Hdqrs. 7th French Army, Army of Occupation, Lorraine. Awarded Croix de Guerre Jan. 26, 1919. John R. Leeming, Jr., 2nd Lieut., C. .'\.. C, U. S. A., 56th Art., C. A. C, France. Honorably dis- charged Jan. 29, 1919. Arthur J. Levy, Sergt., U. S. A., Officers' Train- ing Camp, Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Dec. 14, 1918. Lester T. Lewis, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 102nd Reg., France. Robert S. Long, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., C. O. D., S. O. S., A. P. O. No. 726, France. George Lubinsky, Lieut., U. S. A., Co. 24, 159th D. B., Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky. Thomas McGovern, 2nd class Pharm., U. S. N., U. S. S. "North Carolina." Harvey D. McGray, Jr., Pvt., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 44, France. Howard R. McPeck, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Dec. 26, 1918. William M. McSweeney, Sergt., U. S. A. Uni- versity of Caen, Caen, Calvados, France. Webster C. MacMiLLAN, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd F. A., Batt. A, 26th Div., France. Daniel A. MacPHERSON, Pvt., 1st class, U. S. A., Laboratory, Base Hosp., Med. Attachment, Camp Gordon, Ga. George S. Magee, Sergt., Eng., U. S. A., 73rd Eng., Co. B, 1st Replacement Regimental Eng., Washington Barracks, D. C. Honorably dis- charged Feb. 17, 1919. Furber I. Marshall, 2nd Lieut., Aviation, U. S. A. Donald G. Millar, 1st class Pvt., U. S. A., School Detachment, Poitiers University, Poitiers, France. Charles E. Miller, 1st Lieut., Eng., \J. S. A., 3rd Reg., Corzal, Panama Canal Zone. Honorably discharged Jan. 22, 1919. Bradford V. Moore, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. E. 124th Reg., 33rd Div., Army of Occupation. Wallace A. Moyle, Sergt., U. S. A., France. Honorably discharged. Edwin M. Murphy, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., France. Elbert P. Nichols, Corp., M. T. C, U. S. A., Motor Transport Co. No. 606, Bordeaux, France. Ralph H. Nichols, 2nd Lieut., C. A., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Dec. 17, 1919. Harry Norcross, Pvt., M. C, U. S. A., 66th Co., 5th Reg., Army of Occupation, France. William E. Parmenter, Pvt., U. S. A., 91st Sani- tary Squad, 12th Div. Honorably discharged Jan. 31, 1919. Frederick R. Paty, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., Pontvallain, France. Herbert H. Pepler, Lds. for Quartermaster, Avia- tion, U. S. N. R. F. Fred B. Perkins, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Batt. A, 52nd Art., France. Honorably discharged Jan. 18, 1919. Harlow J. Peters, Chief Quartermaster, Aviation, U. S. N., Naval Aviation Detachment, M. I. T., Cambridge, Mass. Honorably discharged. Russell M. Peters, Capt., F. A., U. S. A., 124th F. A., 33rd Div., A. E. F., Germany. Clair J. Purdy, Ensign and Officer of Gunnery, Naval Aviation, U. S. N., Key West, Fla. Jacob J. Putnam, Mach. Mate, 2nd class, U. S. N., Lattle Bldg., Guard Room, Boston, Mass. Romeo F. Regnier, 2nd Lieut., F. A., LT. S. A., U. S. Military Academy, West Point, N. Y. Francis H. Rich, Pvt., U. S. A., University of Lyons, France. 66 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Hugh Robertson, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 103rd Reg., 26th Div., France. Edward B. Ryder, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., O. R. C. Henry T. Samson, 1st class Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., University of Poitiers, France. James C. Scott, Pay Clerk, U. S. Marines, Office of the District Paymaster, St. Nazaire, A. P. O. No. 701, France. Joseph F. Shea, 2d Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Camp Gordon, Ga. Retired to reserve. Samuel S. .Sheffield, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Depot Brigade, Camp Meade, Md. Honorably discharged Jan., 1919. William H. Sheldon, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Call Field, Wichita Falls, Te.Kas. George E. Shields, Corp., U. S. A., Acting Town Major, 101st Train Headquarters and Military Police, France. Slightly wounded on Oct. 14, 1918. Benjamin H. Slade, Sergt., 1st class, U. S. A., Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. C. Samuel W. Smith, Pvt., U. S. A., Depot Brigade, Camp Sherman, Ohio. Honorably discharged Dec. 26, 1918. Dwight Spencer, Lieut., U. S. M. C, Marine Bar- racks, Navy Yard, Norfolk, Va. Ernest L. Sperry, 2nd Lieut., R. M. A., Air Ser- vice, Field No. 2, Langmere, England. Honor- ably discharged Jan. 4, 1919. LouE E. Stockwell, Chief Boatswain's Mate, LT. S. N. R. F. Honorably discharged Jan. 25, 1919. Charles A. Stuart, Pvt., U. S. A., U. S. Ambulance Service, Sect. 579, AUentown, Pa. Honorably discharged for disability, Feb. 23, 1918. Pierre E. Teets, 1st Lieut., F. A. R. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged Jan. 7, 1919. Frederick W. Thomas, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Personnel Officer, Camp Joseph E. John- ston, Fla. Honorably discharged Dec. 29, 1918. Howard W. Tindall, 2nd Lieut., Aviation, LI. S. A., Langley Field, Va. Honorably discharged Dec. 14, 1918. Albert J. Tracy, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd F. A., France. Wounded July 19, in battle north of Chateau Thierry, 2nd Battle of the Marne. He was awarded two citations, signed by Gen. Ed- wards, for gallantry and meritorious service in rescuing his wounded comrades under heavy enemy fire. Charles L. Vaughan, Jr., Ensign, Naval Aviation, U. S. N. R. F. Retired to inactive duty. J. Preston Verity, U. S. N. R. F. Henry L. Vota, Ph. M — 1, U. S. N., Receiving Ship "New York," Bay Ridge Barracks, Brooklyn, N. Y. Thomas C. Watson, Jr., Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., 95th Div., Camp Sherman, Ohio. Ashley P. Westcott, 1st class Pvt., LT. S. A., Sparta, Wis. Edgar E. Wheeler, Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., 306th Inf., Hdqrs. Co., Light Trench Mortar Batt., 77th Div., Grez-en-Bouere, France. Henry. H. Whitman, 2nd Lieut., LT. S. A. Leland a. Wildes, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., Adjutant, Fort Wetherill, R. I. George E. Williams, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. B, 305th Bn., Camp Colt, Pa. John R. Williams, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., 351st F. A., France. Honorably discharged April 6, 1919. Daniel H. Wood, Pharmacist's Mate, 3rd class, U. S. N., U. S. Naval Hosp., New London, Conn. Carlos F. Wright, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., Pontvallain, Sarthe, France. 1919 SPECIALS Emilio N. Cappelli, 2nd class Machinist's Mate, U. S. N. Retired to inactive duty Dec. 3, 1918. Malcolm E. Carder, Pvt., U. S. A., Ambulance Service, Sect. 79, AUentown, Pa. Honorably dis- charged Dec. 8, 1917, for physical disability. Claude J. Farnsworth, Pvt., U. S. A., Provost Marshal General's Detachment, Draft Hdqrs., Providence, R. I. George S. McCormick, Corp., U. S. A., Camp de Souge, France, A. P O. No. 705. James C. Prosser, C. Q- M., Naval Aviation. Re- tired to inactive duty. Ralph E. Stanton, Pvt., U. S. A., Food Div. of the San. Corp, Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, Md. Honorably discharged. Louis C. Vanderstreet, Sanitary Detach- ment, U. S. A., 103rd Mach. Gun. Bn., France. Robert L. Weis, Corp., U. S. A., France. Harold B. White, Sergt., U. S. A., A. S., Sect. 541, Camp Crane, AUentown, Pa. 1920 Victor F. Adams, Pvt., U. S. A., Co. F, Candidate Training School, Heavy Art., Fortress Monroe, Va. John W. Albright, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 153rd D. B., Receiving Detachment, Camp Dix, N. J. Tracy W. Ames, 2nd Lieut., Heavy Art., C. A. R. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged. Duncan Annan, 2nd Lieut., Sig., LT. S. A., Aviat. .Sect., Camp Dick, Texas. Elmer G. Armstrong, Pvt., LT. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 48, St. Nazaire, France. Aaron A. Aronstam, Wardmaster, Med., LT. S. A., Medical Ward, Post Hospital, Fort Tilden, N. Y. Laurence P. Atkins, Pvt., 185th Co., 15th Reg.,- 2nd Prov. Brig., U. S. Marine Corps, St. Domingo City, Dominican Republic, West Indies. Herbert M. Bailey, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 76th Provisional Co., Prov. Trg. Group 6, Mach. Gun Training Centre, Camp Hancock, Ga. Leland S. Bannister, Pvt., 1st class, Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 101st Reg., 26th Div., Le Mans, France. Gassed in the Battle of Marne; in the hospital about two months. Robert K. Bard, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., Batt. D, 56th Reg., France. Honorably discharged Jan. 28, 1919. John M. Barnes, Seaman, U. S. N. R. Reginald Barry, Pvt., U. S. A., Camp Hospital No. 40, Liverpool, England. Williard L. Beaulac, 1st class Hosp. Apprentice, U. S. N., Pelham Bay, N. Y. Thomas Bennardo, Pvt., 1st class, LT. S. A., 152nd D. B., Camp LTpton, N. Y. Honorably discharged Dec. 2, 1918. George W. Berriman, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Co. I, 167th Inf., France. Killed in action July 15, 1918. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE AVAR 67 Russell W. Besser, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., C. O. T. S., 23rd Co., 5th Bn., Camp Lee, Va. Honorably discharged. Kenneth H. Bitting, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., Headquarters Co., 103rd F. A., .Slst Brig., 26th Div., France. Robert A. Bogi.e, 2nd Lieut., Heavy Art., U. S. A., Fort Monroe, Va. DiKRAN H. BoYAjiAN, Corp., Legion D'Orient, Etat Major, S. P. 601, Army of Occupation, Province of Adana, Cilicia. Fred A. Bragg, Sergt., Ambulance driver. Sect. 60, Norton Harjes Unit, with the French, Italian, and British Armies in France and Italy. Awarded distinguished Service Medal by Italian Army. Alfred C. Brooks, Pvt., U. S. A. Transferred from Base Hosp. No. 48 to Assembly Park, Paris, France, for Special Duty at Peace Conference. Frederick B. Brooks, Pvt., 1st class, Eng., U. S. A., Co. A, 101st Reg., 26th Div., France. Arthur W. Brown, Pvt., U. S. N. Retired to in- active duty. Philip M. Brown, Pvt., Art., U. S. A., France, for eleven months. Honorably discharged Feb. 5, 1919. Edward C. Burnham, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Killed by accident at Mach Gun Range, Camp Johnson, Ga., Dec. 14, 1918. W. Morrill Burse, Pvt., U. S. A., C. F. A. O. T. S., Camp Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Dec, 1918. Alexander D. Campbell, Pvt., 1st class, F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., France, Univ. of Poitiers, Poitiers, France. Cited by Gen. Edwards for meritorious service during drive out of Chateau Thierry, Second Battle of the Marne, July 18th to 25th, 1918. John R. Caldow, Corp., C. A., U. S. A., Fort Williams, Maine. Honorably discharged Jan. 28, 1919. Harley F. Carey, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A. Hon- orably discharged Dec. 21, 1918. Phillips D. Carleton, Pvt., U. S. Marines, Ma- chine Gun School, Quantico, Va. George H. Carr, Pvt., 1st class, U. S. Army Am- bulance Service, Sec. No. 579, A. P. O. No. 901, with the Italian Army. Awarded Italian War Cross. Stephen L. Child, Jr., 3rd cl. Mus., U. S. A., 20th C. A. C. Band, Fort Warren, Mass. Honorably discharged Dec. 21, 1918. Walter R. Cole, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 66th Brig., 146th Co., Army of Occupation, Ger- many. Herbert V. Cook, Pvt., 1st class, Med., U. S. A., Fortress Monroe, Va. Bruce N. Coulter, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., 35th Batt., F. A. C. O. T. S., Camp Taylor, Ky- Honorably discharged. William H. Crawford, Master Engineer, U. S. A., Fort Wetherill, R. I. Robert Y. Crasbie, LT. S. A. Ambulance Ser- vice, Sect. No. 579, with the Italian Army. Awarded Italian War Cross. William J. Crouch, Lds. El. Radio, U.S.N. Retired to inactive duty. Clifford T. Crowther, Pvt., U. S. A., Ambulance Unit, Sect. 5 79, with the Italian Army. Awarded Italian War Cross. Wesley L. Dedrich, Gunner's Mate, 2nd cl., U. S. N. Retired to inactive duty. Millard Demarest, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Head- quarters Co., 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Mario W. de Vitalis, 1st Lieut., F. A., U. S. A., France. Returned to U. S. as instructor in F. A. Honorably discharged Feb. 1, 1919. Wm. L. Dewart, Jr., Corp., U. S. Training Detach- ment, Pa. State College. Honorably discharged Dec. 10, 1918. Robert K. Dewey, 2nd Lieut., C. A. R. C., U. S. A. Honorably discharged Feb. 6, 1919. John W. DeWoLF, Jr., Gunner's Mate, 2nd cl., U. S. N., Naval Base No. 27, Plymouth, England. Stanley M. Dore, Pvt., C. A., U. S. A., Officers' Training School, Fort Monroe, Va. Honorably discharged Nov., 1918. Milton E. Earle, Ensign, U. S. N., U. S. S. " Winslow." Harold G. Eastman, Hospital Apprentice, 2nd class, U. S. N., Newport, R. I. Honorably dis- charged. Carl H. Ely, Pvt., U. S. A., S. A. T. C, Trinity. David J. Fspovich, Pvt., U. S. A., S. A. T. C, Boston University, Boston, Mass. Honorably dis- charged. Gardner L. Fassett, 2nd Lieut., Art., U. S. A., Batt. E, 73rd Art., C. A. C, France. Honorably discharged Jan. 1, 1919. Wm. J. FitzGibbon, Ensign, U. S. N., Naval Avia- tion, Squadron 3, Pensacola, Fla. Robert Forbis, Pvt., U.S. Marine Corps, 117th Co., Pearl Harbor, T. H., Marine Barracks. Willard H. Forristall, Seaman, U. S. N. Honor- ably discharged Jan. 3, 1919. Paul W. Francis, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd Reg., France. Delbert D. Fuller, 2nd Lieut., Heavy F. A., U. S. A., 324th Reg., 32nd Div., Army of Occupa- tion, Germany. Marshall N. Fulton, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., S. A. T. C, Bates College, Lewiston, Maine. Honorably discharged Dec. 23, 1918. Walter R. Gardner, Chief Quartermaster, U. S. N. R. F., Aviation Detachment, Mass. Inst, of Tech., Cambridge, Mass. Honorably discharged Nov. 16, 1918. Paul R. Gast, Pvt., U. S. A., Chemical Warfare Service, Gas Defense Division, Long Island City, N. Y. Honorably discharged Jan. 11, 1919. Alphonse GOgreve, Pvt., Art., U. S. A., Batt. D, 54th Art., C. A. C, France. Carl J. Grabd, 2nd Lieut., Med., U. S. A., Medi- cal Supply Depot, Mesves Hosp. Center, A. P. O. No. 798, France. Ray W. Greene, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Sig., U. S. A., Aviat. Sect. Honorably discharged. Edward J. Grimes, Armed Guard, Merchant Ma- rine, S. S. "Lakehurst," Boston, Mass. Flint Grinnell, Corp., U. S. A., Batt. B, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. DuTEE J. Hall, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A. Hon- orably discharged Feb. 6, 1919. 68 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR John J. Hall, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Mach. Gun Co., 42nd Inf., Dover, N. J. John S. Hardman, 1st Medical Assistant, U. S. N. R. F., Newport, R. I. Died of influenza Sept. 21, 1918. William C. Hay, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., S. A. T. C, Co. B, R. 1. State College, Kingston, R. I. Hon- orably discharged Dec. 13, 1918. Robert W. Hazlett, Pvt., Inf., U. S. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Lee, Va. Honor- ably discharged. James Hemphill, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Killed by accident in France, April, 1918. Paul Herriott, Pvt., C. A. C, U. S. A., Coast Art., Officers' School, Fortress Monroe, Va. Honorably discharged Nov. 22, 1918. Lyman G. Hill, Pvt., 1st class, U. S. A., Casual Det., A. P. O. No. 762, Le Mans, France. Harry A. Hoffman, Corp., Art., U. S. A., Batt. E, 44th Art., C. A. C, France. Slightly wounded July 25, 1918. Honorably discharged. Harold G. Hood, 2nd Lieut., Tank Corps, U. S. A. Honorably discharged. Willis C. Horan, Chief Quartermaster, U. S. Naval Aviation, M. I. T., Cambridge, Mass. Honorably discharged. Donald R. Hylan, Pvt., C. A., U. S. A., Officers' Training School, Fort Monroe, Va. Honorably discharged Dec. 18, 1918. Eric P. Jackson, Pvt., 1st cl., U. S. A., Central Officers' Training School, Replacement Troop, 6th Bn., 32nd Co., Camp Lee, Va. Honorably dis- charged Nov. 23, 1918. Newton J. Jackson, Sergt., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France, Instructor, Hdqrs., F. A. B. F. C, Camp Jackson, S. ( :. Hon- orably discharged Feb. 15, 1919. Raymond F. Kilroy, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., West Point Military Academy, West Point, N. Y. Elmer S. King, Pvt., U. S. A., Cand. Div., C. A. S., Fort Monroe, Va. Honorably discharged Nov. 30, 1918. Willard S. King, Corp., F. A., LI. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 51st Bri., 26th Div., France. Elwyn H. Kittredge, Radio Operator, U. S. N. Honorably discharged March 10, 1919. Russell E. Larkin, Sergt., F. A., V. S. A., Hdqrs. Co., 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Ira R. Laxton, Pvt., F. A., U. S. A., 103rd Reg., 26th Div., France. Jacob M. Linicus, Quartermaster, 2 cl., U. S. N., LT. S. S. "Guinnebaug," Philadelphia Navy Yard. Paul D. Loscalzo, Pharmacist's Mate, 2nd cl., U. S. N., U. S. Naval Dispensary, Washington, D. C. Honorably discharged March 1, 1919. Stanford L. Luce, Ensign, U. S. N. Released. George G. Luckey, Pvt., Med. Corps, U. S. A., Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Died of pneumonia Feb. 11, 1918. Kenneth A. Luther, Pvt., Naval Unit, Columbia University. Retired to inactive duty. Frank C. Lynch, 2nd cl. Electrician, U. S. N., U. S. N. Air Station, Cape May, N. J. Vincent C. McAlevy, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., West Point, N. Y. Robert S. MacFARLANE, Lieut, (j.g.), U. S. N. R. F., Head of the Dept. of Ordnance, Officers' Ma- terial School, Pelham Bay, N. Y. Willard G. Monroe, Sergt., U. S. A., Motor Truck Co., France. Honorably discharged. Philip D. Morrison, Pvt., Med. Enlisted Reserve Corps, U. S. A., Tufts Medical School. Honor- ably discharged. Robert R. Moyer, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A Honorably discharged. William J. Nairn, Candidate, U. S. A., O. T. S. Honorably discharged Nov. 11, 1918. Frank I. Noyes, Candidate, U. S. A., Field Art., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Taylor, Ky. Honorably discharged Nov. 29, 1918. Charles A. Nuttall, Corp., U. S. A., Ambulance Service, Sec. 579, A. P. O. No. 901, with the Italian Army. Awarded Italian War Cross. John C. Oram, Pvt., 1st cl., U. S. A., Ambulance Service, Sec. 5 79, with the Italian Army, .'^warded the Italian War Cross. Evariste Orteig, p. O., 1st class, LI. S. N. Released Jan. 14, 1919. Reuben T. Palmer, Acting Gunner's Mate, U. S. N., U. S. S. "Kestre," New London, Conn. Linden L. Perrine, Pvt., U. S. A. A. S., Sec. 579, A. P. O. No. 901, Italy. Awarded Italian War Cross. Horace Picard, Pvt., Canadian Officers' Training Corps, Laval Unit, Valcartien Camp, P. Q. Hon- orably discharged Sept. 12, 1918, due to illness. Wallace E. Randall, Pvt., U. S. A., U. S. School of Aerial Photography, Rochester, N. Y. Hon- orably discharged Dec. 13, 1918. Martin R. Reyder, Sergt. Major, U. S. A., G. 2, 6th Army Corps, A. P. O. No. 783, Army of Occu- pation, Luxemburg, Germany. Harrison D. Ricketson, Pvt., 1st cl., U. S. A. A. S., Sec. 579, A. P. O. No. 901, with the Italian Army. Awarded Italian War Cross. Donald E. Ryder, Pvt., 1st cl., U. S. A., Aerial Photographic Section 22, France. Honorably dis- charged March 6, 1919. Frederick E. Schoeneweiss, Candidate, Inf., U. S. A., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Lee, Va. Donald S. Shaw, U. S. N. R. F. Michael J. Shea, U. S. N., Radio School, Re- serve Receiving Barracks, Newport, R. 1. Wm. F. Sheehan, Sailor, U. S. N., Pelham Bay Park, Officers' Material School, Div. 7, N. Y. William H. Shupert, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 51st Bri., 26th Div., France. James Sinclair, Pilot, U. S. N., Naval Aviation, U. S. Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Fla. Myles Standish, Mechanic, U. S. A. A. S., Mechan- ics Div., with the Italian Army, Italy. George A. Steinhoff, Pvt., U. S. A., Tufts Train- ing Detachment, Boston, Mass. Honorably dis- charged Dec. 21, 1918. Earl R. Stephens, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., In- structor in Rifle Training, and Co. Commander of Co. F, Camp Buell, Lexington, Ky. Honorably discharged. Stanley A. vStevens, Radio Sergt., U. S. A., 55th Art., C. A. C, France. Honorably discharged Feb. 12, 1919. BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 69 T. Clarke Stuart, Sergt., Inf., U. S. A., Co. K, 51st Pioneer Inf., Camp Wadsworth, S. C. Gardner Swentzel, U. S. N. R. F. Honor- ably discharged. Edward H. Valance, U. S. N. R. F., Co. 259, Ord. Detention Camp, Great Lakes, 111. William M. Walch, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Maynard J. Wartman, Pvt., Co. C, 325th F. S. Bn., U. S. A., France. Honorably discharged. Thomas S. Weddell, 3rd class musician, Art., U. S. A. Band, 66th Art., C. A. C, France. Honorably discharged March 20, 1919. Chauncey D. Wentworth, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., C. A. O. R. C. Honorably discharged Jan. 30, 1919. Francis G. White, Chief Boatswain's Mate, U. S. N. Retired to inactive duty Dec. 18, 1918. Maynard P. White, 1st Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A., 43rd C. A. C, France. Honorably discharged Jan. 13, 1919. Raymond H. Whitehead, 1st class seaman, U. S. N., U. S. S. C. No. 84, Europe. Jay M. Williams, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., 7th Group, 77th Co., Mach. Gun Training Center, Main Training Depot, Camp Hancock, Ga. Marshall S. P. Williams, Jr., Ensign, U. S. N., New England Coast, Troop Transport Atlantic Fleet. Retired to inactive duty. George E. Wilcox, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U S. A., Re- serve. EsKE H. WiNDSBERG, 2nd Lieut., C. A., O. R. C, U. S. A. Donald B. Winter, Seaman, U. S. N. R. F., U. S. Mine Squadron One, U. S. S. " Housatonic." Honorably discharged Jan. 30, 1919. James L. Woodruff, Seaman, 2nd class, U. S. N. Released from active duty. John F. Yeilush, Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. A, 103rd F. A., 26th Div., France. Lloyd P. Zellers, Seaman, 1st, U. S. N., S. P. 728, Sakonnet Patrol. Retired to inactive duty Dec. 11, 1918. 1920 SPECIAL John F. Creamer, Jr., Corp., F. A., U. S. A., Batt. C, 103rd F. A., France. Ralph B. Creamer, Pvt., U. S. A. Ambulance Ser- vice, Section 579, with the Italian .Army, Italy. Awarded the Italian War Cross. George W. Kowalski, Pvt., U. S. A. Ambulance Service, Section 579, 21 Rue Raymond, Paris, France. Ray E. Palmer, 1st Sergt., U. S. A., J. A. G. Dept., 1st Replacement Depot, A. P. O. No. 727, St. Aignon, France. Gassed and severely wounded April 20, 1918. Harold J. Pearce, Corp., U. S. A., Office of the Chief of Art., Gen. Hdqrs., Chauniont, France. Confidential Secretary to Lt. Col. W. C. Koenig, C. A. C. Honorably discharged- Jan 29, 1919. Lawrence W. Tcwer, Iharmacist's Mate, U.S. N. U. S. S. "Vermont." Brest, France, and Hamp- ton Roads, \'a. 1921 Robert F. Allison, Seaman, 1st cl., U. S. N. Re- tired to inactive duty. Robert R. Baldridge, Candidate, U. S. A., O. T. C, Fort Monroe, Va. Honorably discharged Nov. 25, 1918. Harold S. Barker, Yeoman 3rd, U. S. N. R. F. Retired to inactive duty. W. Stanley Barrett, C. 0. M., Sig., U. S. N., Aviat. Dept., Mass. Inst, of Tech., Cambridge, Mass. Edward H. Barr, Sergt., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 7, Tours, France. Honorably discharged April 4, 1919. Roger Williams Brig ham, Cadet, Sig., U. S. A., Aviat. Sect., Kelly Field, No. 2, Texas. Frederick G. Brown, Candidate, U. S. A., 32nd Co., 6th Bn., Central Officers' Training School, Camp Lee, Va. Honorably discharged Nov. 23, 1918. Nelson S. Butera, Quartermaster, 2nd cl., U. S. N. Released March 7, 1919. John W. Chapman, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., O. R. C. Earl F. Connett, U. S. A., Camp Meade, Md. Wm. H. Crawford, Engineer, C. A. C, U. S. A., Fort Wetherill, R. I. Honorably discharged Jan. 11, 1919. Robert B. Cruise, Corp., U. S. A., S. A. T. C, Norwich University, Northfield, \'t. Honorably discharged Jan. 24, 1919. Benj. R. Curtis, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., O. R. C. Carlton L. Dunham, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Camp Grant, Rockford, 111. Nathan W. Edson, 2nd, Coxswain, U. S. N. Re- tired to inactive service Jan. 6, 1919. William B. Ellis, Candidate, Inf., O. T. S., Camp Grant, 111. Honorably discharged. Raymond N. Evans, Pvt., Canadian Army Den- tal Corps, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Honor- ably discharged Jan. 17, 1919. Lawrence R. Foote, 2nd Lieut., Inf., \J. S. A., Reserve Corps. Stuart Forstall, 2nd Lieut., F. A., U. S. A. Hon- orably discharged Feb. 1, 1919. Max Glaubman, Sergt., 39 Royal Fusiliers, British Expeditionary Forces, Palestine. Harold L. Grindle, Ensign, U. S. N. R. F. Re- tired to inactive duty. Francis T. Haley, Seaman, 2nd class, U. S. N. R. F., U. S. S. "Kearsarge." Honorably dis- charged. William W. Hall, Pvt., U. S. A., Officers' Training Camp, Fort Monroe, Va. Honorably discharged Nov. 30, 1918. Walter P. Hatch, Pvt., U. S. A., 102nd Ord., Camp Dix, N. J. Floriman M. Hathaway, Corp., U. S. A., 5th Co., 1st Cand. Bn., Inf., C. O. T. S., Camp Grant, 111. Clyde C. Hill, Machinist's Mate, 1st cl., Aviation, U. S. N., Testing Liberty Aviation Motors, U. S. Naval Air Station, Hampton Roads, Va. Arthur S. Kirk, Electrician, 3rd class radio, U. S. N., Radio Telephone School, Great Lakes, III. Herbert E. MacCoMBiE, Army Field Clerk, U. S. A., Hdqrs., Port of Embarkation, Hoboken, N. J- Robert C. McKenny, Candidate, C. A., U. S. A., Co. M., C. A. School, Fort Monroe, Va. Honor, ably discharged Nov. 24, 1918. 70 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Joel M. Nichols, Jr., 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. A., Infantry Training and Replacement Troops, Camp Grant, Illinois. Honorably discharged Dec. 6, 1918. Robert G. Noyes, 2nd Lieut., U. S. A., C. A. R. C, Inactive list. Ralph W. Miner, C. Q. M., U. S. N., U. S. Naval Air Station, Pensacola, Fla. Alfred Mochau, 2nd Lieut., C. A. R. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged Feb. 6, 1919. Daniel B. Murphy, Corp., U. S. A., 35th Co., 3rd Group, Main Training Depot, Mach. Gun Train- ing Center, Camp Hancock, Ga. Honorably dis- charged Jan. 2, 1919. Thomas A. Olney, Jr., Pvt., U. S. A., S. A. T. C, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, Ind. James H. Pierson, Midshipman, U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. Edwin W. Richardson, Corp., Art., U. S. A., Batt. E, 66th Art., C. A. C, France. Michael T. Prendergast, Candidate, U. S. N., Officers' School, Pelham Bay, N. Y. Honorably discharged. David P. Sanford, Junior Engineer Officer, U. S. N., S. S. "Yosemite," Army Transport Service. John C. Talbot, Jr., C. Q. M., Aviation, U. S. N., Dunwoody Inst., Minneapolis, Minn. Honorably discharged. Raymond H. Thayer, 1st Sergt., U. S. A., Base Hosp. No. 1, St. Nazaire, France. Herbert E. Van Hoesen, 2nd Lieut., Inf., U. S. R., inactive list. Earl Vinie, 3rd cl. Electrician, Radio Operator, U. S. N., U. S. Mine Force, U. S. S. "Lawrence" S. P. 838. Honorably discharged Jan. 23, 1919. Carl H. Wardwell, Pvt., U. S. A., Hdqrs. Troop. 76th Div., France. Honorably discharged Dec. 17, 1918. Harold B. Yeaton, 2nd Lieut., C. A. R. C, U. S. A. Honorably discharged Jan. 30, 1919. 1921 SPECIAL Roland II. Sargent, Killed in France. 1922 Milton M. Bates, 2nd Lieut., C. A. C, U. S. A. FACULTY AND OTHER OFFICERS NOT BROWN GRADUATES J. Ansel Brooks, Capt., Sig., U. S. A., Aviation, Camp Charles, Gretscher, La. Theodore F. Collier, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris, France. Nelson L. Greene, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, with French Army. Charles H. Hunkins, American Ambulance Field Service, France. Returned to the University. Charles H. Huggins, 1st Lieut., San., U. S. A., Mineola, L. I., N. Y. Henri F. Micoleau, Lieut., Reserve Officer, French Infantry. Killed in action, 1st Battle of Marne, Sept. 9, 1914. Albert E. Rand, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, France. Honorably discharged. Kendall K. Smith, Y. M. C. A. Secretary, Greece. W. N. Watson, 1st Lieut., Ord., U. S. A., Philadel- phia, Pa. BROWN STUDENTS' ARMY TRAINING CORPS The men indicated by * were recommended to Ofificers' Training Camp and liad completed part of tiie course when the armistice was signed 1918 Clarence R. Adams 1919 Wilbur R. Anderson *Benjamin W. Brown Harrison A. Brown William H. Edwards *Perry E. Faunce Rudolph J. C. Fisher Charles H. Huggins, Jr. *Edgar J. Lanpher *Lawrence W. Jordan *Robert A. Lawder Stanley H. Mason *Charles H. Peckham Edward S. Porter *John S. Prigge Manuel G. Robinson Anthony Russo Charles O. Ryon Louis Smith Solomon Tannenbaum Samuel Temkin James J. Walker Joshua H. Weeks 1920 Alexander Addeo Frank A. R. Allen Donald M. Aumack Henry C. Aylsworth Louis J. Balatow Edmund F. Beagan Donald C. Bowersock Frank D. Brigham Stanton A. Burdick Rodney A. Cook George H. Copeland Irving S. Crompton Donald H. Curtis 'Paul W. Davis *James Q. Dealey, Jr. *John Dorin Ralph Feinstein Harold M. Fleming George W. Grimm, Jr. Allen D. Hill Richard A. Hopkins *Ernest A. Jenckes Robert A. Kingsley y\lbert E. Lownes *Alan N. McDougall John A. McGhee, Jr. Bentley Mackintosh 'Harold E. Marr Jacob H. Miller Lorimer D. Milton Harry C. North Benton B. Orwig Frederick H. Paulson Adolf S. Perlow 'Harold A. Phelps Richard V. Ratigan George H. Rhodes William F. Rooney William Schwartz Joseph Smith William S. Spatcher 'Raymond S. Stites Ralph E. Stoddard Edward B. Stringham, Jr. 'Howard C. Sweet John B. Tasker, Jr. Elton H. Tucker Thomas F. Vance, Jr. Edward J. Walsh Byron J. Waterman Daniel E. Whitford Elmer S. Woodward Frank J. Zitserman 1921 Joseph Adam Everett M. Arnold George R. Ashbey Leopold J. Balatow Roland D. Beck 'Mars P. Bishop Carl A. Bjorkland Stanley T. Black Paul E. Boughton William T. Brightman, Jr. Earle M. Brown 'William R. Buerhaus Thomas F. Burke Gordon F. Burr Theodore H. Bush Floyd W. Buswell Chester W. Chinn Sidney S. Cline Morris L. Cohen 'Allan B. Colby 'Richard H. Coolidge Walter F. Crawford 'Christie E. Cuddeback Ernest D. Dawson Edward J. Dempsey, Jr. •Harold A. Dodge Charles B. Eddy Lloyd C. Ely Harold A. Faulkner 'Wayne M. Faunce Harry A. Forman 'Henry E. Gallup George G. Gifford, Jr. Paul A. Gipfel, Jr. Raymond F. Goodman Frank O. Green *Abram E. Gwynne David E. Hischer Frank J. Honan Everett V. Hood Frederick A. Huggins William R. Irving Reginald S. Kimball 'Ralph C. Knight Edward M. Kolman Henry N. Lonergan Fred A. Lougee Charles N. Lovenberg George K. Macdonald Benjamin W. McKendall Ernest S. Macmillan George P. Macready, Jr. Joseph A. Makanna Herbert H. Marks 'Max Meyer Coe S. Mills Harold C. Mills Elbridge A. Minard 'Byron E. Mitchell Roger E. Moore John J. Muccio Roger W. Nelson Mark A. Nickerson Henry W. E. Noll *01of G. Oden Calvin G. Parks Henry S. Peterson Maurice M. Pike 'Daniel R. Pinkham George W. Potter Harold L. Pulver William B. Robinson 'Milton H. Rusby Louis Salk Seneca G. Samson Samuel Schefelman Lloyd A. R. Sheeran Laurence W. Simonds Harold S. Smith Norman B. Sowell Ralph D. Standish John R. Stevens Henry N. Sunderland Harold E. Switzgablc 'Reginald G. Sykes Edwin L. Thornton Harold L. Tinker 'William A. Towle, Jr. Henry Turoff 72 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR Antonio P. Vadeboncouer John N. Walsh Herbert A. West John J. White *Knowlton B. Woodin Elmer P. Wright 1922 Richard W. Allen Robert A. Appleton Warren E. Baker *Leslie B. Ballou *Theodore O. Barber (Died April 18, 1919) Fred Baurenfeind *Earl W. Belknap IJiram M. Benedict Francis C. Bidwell Arthur E. Bjorkland William B. I. Blake James R. Bland Israel Bloom Martin Borod Donald C. Bowersock Leslie E. Brace William H Bromage Roland D. Brown Ralph S. Brown Edward A. Bullock Robert J. Burgh Charles H. Cahill James H. Campbell Herbert A. Chaffee Harold E. Chapman Lawrence E. Chapman John A. Chesebro Louis S. Chick William B. Crampton Morrill J. Crane George Dawson, Jr. Edward W. Day Harold E. Deady *Joseph C. Derochie Joseph E. Desrosier Louis L. Destremps Bertram E. Deware Harold L. Ellsworth Franklin C. Eteson Raymond J. Farrell Abraham Feldman Alvin A. Gaffney Hugh Geddes, Jr. Bruce S. Gilchrist Milton H. Glover John B. Goetz Benjamin Goldberg Arthur N. Grant Avon D. Green Earl P. Greene Eleodore J. Grenier Herbert R. Grimshaw Joseph Grossman John T. Hackett Robin Halpert Victor A. Hedberg Donald L Higley Walter S. Holt *Edward A. Hummel Harrison B. Huntoon William H. Irving William B. Jewell Walter H. Jillson Robert V. Jones Francis J. Jordan Irving -R. Knapp Hyman M. Kravetsky George Lapchiangian Lawrence S. Larry Albert C. Lewis Bertrand M. Lewis Norman D. Linley Frank B. Littlefield Clifford E. Loomis Earl S. McCoUey Ernest McCormick Bruce H. McCurdy Charles E. Mangan Joseph Marto Francis P. Massaniso Gilbert G. Merrill Arthur E. Miller Harold N. Molter Robert W. Moxham Oliver Newman Clair M. Nussbaum Albert H. Nuttall Winfield E. Ohlson Harry E. Papin, Jr. William Paxton *JoSeph E. Peckham George D. Phillips John H. Pierce Aurelius D. Pinckney *Charles H. Pinkham Davis Pollock Ralph O. Porter . Alfred H. Pratt Frank A. Quintard David E. Racine Samuel W. Remington, Jr. Frederick C. Reynolds Joseph W. Riker William E. Rogers Dewey H. Ross William E. Ryon, Jr. Victor H. Sam William K. Schanck *George A. Schneider *John H. Schneider George D. Seguin Frank A. Simmons Clayton B. Smith Raymond E. Smith John F. Spellman Richard W. Stevens Herman L. Stone Franklin C. Sutherland Theodore L. Sweet Albion F. Tripp Max Trubek *Bartlett B. Tyler Rodney J. Underwood Angelo G. Valentino Willard M. Walcott Sherman Wells, Jr. Alfred L. Whittemore Clarence E. Winsor James K. Yager Angelo L. Zucco SPECIALS Irving S. Aiken George T. Allenson William C. AUinson Robert Almond *Frederick K. Armstrong William Aronson Edward C. Arzt Lewis A. Averill Lawrence E. Backus Evelyn J. Baldwin George A. Ballou Harold F. Ballou *Roy J. Beauregard Walter F. Becket Samuel H. Berger Lyle E. Bourne Louis M. Brass James H. Brown *Robert L. Butler James G. Campbell Frank E. Carr Bernard N. Carter Nathaniel B. Chase Walter V. Connly Edward A. Cooney James E. Davis Arthur W. Eddy Russell H. Emmott Edward L. Fielding *Edward C. Fisher Carl L. Flick Frederick S. Gallup William F. Gay Joseph L. Gibeault Joseph Globus Henry E. Goss Arthur M. Grimes Irvin Hamilton John B. Harvie Edward J. Haskell Frederick Heffernan Albert B. Jeffers Malcolm Johnson Ronald B. Kair Henry G. T. Langdon Oscar S. Lapham Bernard T. Lennon, Jr. Charles B. Lennon Edgar J. Lownes Timothy J. Lyons John T. Lythgoe Everett B. McAlevy Robert G. McCoy *Robert F. McElroy Fergus E. C. McOsker Thomas A. Maloney Henry F. Manchester, Jr. Winfred C. Mason Gilbert D. Miller Philip J. Mills BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR 73 John D. Mitchell *Leigh Morse George H. Ohlson John A. O'Neill William H. O'Neill William P. Orr Charles C. Pearson William B. Piper Harold L. Pittenger William B. Prentiss Joseph A. Quigley John F. Quinn Baldwin P. Roraback Joseph W. Scharf *Wernert J. Schuler George T. Slavin Ambrose F. Smith Walter K. Smith Calvin B. Swain Ira M. Van Vliet Jerome A. Walsh William E. Walsh Raymond G. Welch Jerome West *Berlyn E. White ♦Donald E. Wilbur * Arthur H. Wilde *John C. Williams Louis Wilmerth Elwood Wilson BROWN NAVAL TRAINING UNIT 1919 Alton C. Chick Donald H. Clauss Oliver W. R. Erickson Sidney A. Fox William M. Eraser Harold F. Gibling Alexander T. Hind marsh Ernest E. Nelson James L. Palmer Earle A. Phillips David F. Pierce Marvin W. Ray Waldo W. Robbing Ralph K. Rogers George G. Wilcox 1920 Charles F. Abbott Herbert B. Barlow LeRoy W. Black Harry T. Broadbent Wilfred W. Brouillette Raymond E. Claflin Ernest T. Clough Joseph M. Degnan Wallace B. K. Dove William G. Ely, Jr. Ralph C. Emery Maurice Feingold George H. Gildersleeve Seaverns W. Hilton Walter Hoving Raymond M. Hunter Leo P. Lanigan Charles H. Lawton, Jr. Robert B. Lindsay Harold W. Lord Samuel A. Mehlman Walter V. Moriarty Martin Moskovitz Leonard K. Murphy Louis A. R. Pieri George O. Podrasnik Richard H. Sarle William H. Searles William D. Shay Edward W. Smith Laurence R. Smith Frederic A. Thompson Richmond L. Watson Cecil A. Watt Walter F. Wolfe 1921 Forbes S. Adam Philip P. Borden Harry N. Boureau Howard G. Brewer Lyle Caldwell Arthur S. Caputi Louis E. Card Horace C. Crandall Samuel L. Davis John R. Dorer Charles J. Fish Michael A. Fitzpatrick Russell H. Greene Stephen W. Hopkins Meyer D. Jacofsky Roger P. Jenks Telford R. Jones Ralph H. Koelb Walter B. Leonard Royal B. Lord Harold E. Magnusou Vincent M. Meserve Herman L. Noyes Gordon W. Roaf Jonas Sallet Isadore G. Siegler Howard B. Stearns Preston T. Stephenson Everett L. Sweet William Zimmerman Peter P. Zubrisky 1922 Francis B. Ahern Ronald S. Belcher Douglas P. Boyd Kendrick P. Brown Joseph P. Buckingham Lawrence J. Burby Martin Campbell Marshall H. Cannell Robert H. Casner Warren T. Chandler Herbert J. CoUonan Alfred J. Curry Theodore A. Distler Charles G. Doll Laurence Elmendorf John E. Fawcett Lloyd H. Fisher Leslie B. Goff William P. Graves Clarence S. Gray William B. Greenough, Jr. Byron M. Hatfield Raymond O. Hennigar Charles R. Johnson George C. Johnstone Harold C. Kolbert Harold K. Larson Richard E. Lyman Harold R. MacCabe John H. McCraw Paul Manchester Albert E. MuUiken Chapin S. Newhard Kenneth H. N. Newton Edmund M. Novack David W. L Patterson Harry H. Potter Julius C. Prinz Thomas G. Reid Harold M. Rule Sedgwick R. Ryno James E. Serven Maurice R. Smith Arthur D. Somes Louis T. Stack Chester Stackpole George L. Stratton (Died Dec. 6, 1918, influenza) Charles L. Swan, Jr. Elmer A. Wagner George H. Webb, Jr. RoUand A. Williams Robert 1. Woodbury SPECIALS Arlo G. Adams 74 BROWN UNIVERSITY IN THE WAR George F. Allen Chester H. Briggs Clifford E. Broga Philip C. Brown Albert Canterwitch Israel C. Caplan John E. Cassidy Warren A. Clay Charles H. Cole William M. Cushman Harry O. Dahlstrom Charles F. Donovan Jesse E. DuBois Carroll J. Enemark Donald F. Farnsworth Stanley S. Ferger Arthur H. Fischer Joseph A. Fogarty Arthur D. Fowler Henry L. Gage Harold D. Gagnon George E. Gale, Jr. Joseph I. Gates Lester E. Gavitt Hugh Gourley Herbert A. Gourse Edwin W. Gove Edward C. Hall Thurlow C. Haunton Arthur L. Hurst Charles Jacobson Powel Kazanjian Harry O. Kent Charles D. Koechling Charles W. Lake, Jr. Harry Leades Moses A. Lesser George A. Lindgren Arthur K. Litchfield Edward W. McCarthy Julian D. MacDonald Ernest S. MacKenzie Arthur E. Marley Kenilworth H. Mathus John B. Melvin John F. Morrissey Martin Mulcahey John F. Murphy - Philip G. Nase Francis N. O'Brien, Jr. John J. O'Brien, Jr. Harold W. Pearce Arthur, E. Peterson Leo Renaud Marshall M. Rice Charles A. Ruddy Keith S. Shaw Bertrand Shurtleff ■ George E. Smith Raymond S. Sutcliffe Fred E. Sweet Fred L. Tompkins Albert L. Vandall John F. Vaughan, Jr. Richard S. Vaughan John G. Walker Charles Ej Weinstein Oliver P. Woodward. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 020 914 353 7 #