of the eleventh day of the eleventh month.
|  | 
| Harry Singley and his wife Helen Schwar
 | 
A little late this year, but here is a letter written by Sgt. Harry Singley, 304th Engineers, Rainbow Division, AEF, my mother's father.  
|  | 
| First day of the Meuse-Argonne Offensive 26 Sept. 1918
 | 
"It was on Sept. 26 when the big drive started in the
 Argonne Forest and I saw all kinds of things that I never witnessed 
before.  We started out on the night of the 25th.  At 9 o'clock we 
commenced a tank road and worked our way almost to the German's front 
line trenches.  At 2:30 one of the greatest of all barrages was opened. 
 It was said that between 3500 and 4000 guns, some of them of very large
 calibre, went off at that hour just like clock work.  We worked on this
 road under shell fire until about 3:45 and then went back until the 
infantry went over the top at 5 oclock.  We followed with the tanks.  
That is the way the Americans started and kept pounding and pushing 
ahead until the great day on Nov. 11.  ...
|  | 
| Harry Singley, 304th Engineers, Rainbow Division
 | 
 
It was some life.  I am proud that I went through 
it, for nobody on the Hill will have anything on me...  I was a little 
with sneezing or tear gas.  It made me sick but I remained with the 
company for I did not like to leave my detachment at any time for if 
something would happen, I thought, there would be plenty of help.  I 
felt much better in a few days.  A small piece of shrapnel splinter hit 
me below the knee.  Otherwise I was lucky. ..."
"Somebody will wake up soon when the boys get back to the States..."
 
No comments:
Post a Comment