From Dispatch Newsletter <[email protected]>
Subject WWI DISPATCH December 2025
Date December 18, 2025 3:59 PM
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2025 was great year for Doughboy Foundation | WWI Christmas Ships | Hello Girls Musical | much more!



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December 2025
2025 Christmas Card no border final [ [link removed] ]


2025 Christmas Truce and Wreaths Across America Activities Wrap Up Eventful Year for Doughboy Foundation

The activities from this past weekend were an appropriate way to end the year and celebrate 2025's noteworthy events and big milestones for the Doughboy Foundation.

2025 Christmas Truce chorus and band

The French Embassy's Chorale de l' Ambassade de France, and the Doughboy Foundation's American Expeditionary Forces Brass Band.

Always focused on remembering those who served in World War I and their families, the Doughboy Foundation held its first annual *Christmas Truce* event at the National World War I Memorial on Friday, partnering with the Embassy of France. The event featured the Embassy's "Chorale de l' Ambassade de France" singing Christmas Carols, accompanied by the Doughboy Foundation's own "American Expeditionary Forces Brass Band". It was a lovely setting and great way to Keep Faith with the American Doughboy. A reception followed at the Willard Club

2025 Wreaths Across America event at National WWI Memorial and Ft. Lincoln

On Saturday, the Doughboy Foundation participated in the national *Wreaths Across America* program with a ceremony at the National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC. Wreaths were laid in honor of veterans from the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, Merchant Marine Services, Space Force and for all those who remain missing in action. Wreaths sponsored through the Doughboy Foundation were also laid at Arlington National Cemetery. In addition, the Hello Girls Military Honors and Remembrance Project, a Doughboy Foundation Special Project, had its initial Wreaths Across America campaign, with sponsored wreaths laid at Ft. Lincoln National Cemetery in Maryland and elsewhere.



2025 was a very eventful year for the Doughboy Foundation, its first full calendar year of operation after completion of the National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC at the end of 2024. Besides last weekend's events, notable activities during 2025 included:


* Celebration of the approval of a *Congressional Gold Medal for the WWI U.S. Army Signal Corps Female Telephone Operators, known as the "Hello Girls,*" [ [link removed] ] after a 7-year campaign started by the U.S. World War I Centennial Commission, and carried to completion by the Doughboy Foundation after the sunset of the Commission.
* First performance of "*The Story of A Rose: A Musical Reverie on the Great War*" on May 7. [ [link removed] ]
* The 1500th consecutive *Sounding Of Daily Taps At The National World War I Memorial* in Washington, DC July 2. [ [link removed] ]
* The Doughboy Foundation’s "‘*REMEMBER US: The Fight for America’s World War I Memorial*’" [ [link removed] ] movie wins a Silver Medal at the 44th Annual Telly Awards.
* Doughboy Foundation's *Inaugural World War I Symposium* on September 12 [ [link removed] ] was a resounding success, establishing itself as a premier gathering for historians and enthusiasts of the Great War.
* Doughboy Foundation announces the "*Over There: In the Footsteps of the Doughboys*" [ [link removed] ] tour of WWI European battlefields, taking place Sept. 27-Oct. 5, 2026.
* Clair S. Sassin selected as the new Doughboy Foundation Chief Executive Officer [ [link removed] ].
* The annual* Bells of Peace Ceremony [ [link removed] ]* on Tuesday November 11, 2025.
* The new *Doughboy Shop* opens, with lots of great new merchandise [ [link removed] ].

Doughboy Foundation logo

That list just hits the high points of a very active and successful year for the Foundation. We appreciate all the donations and other support that makes it possible for us to continue our work as *"Stewards of the National World War I Memorial"*. We're looking forward to another active and eventful year in 2026, and invite you to participate in all the upcoming events you'll be hearing about in each monthly issue of the WWI DISPATCH.



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Is There Still Enough Hope to Answer the Call…Again?

Hello Girls musical posterRoss Valley Players theatre

Theatrical director Maeve Smith of Sonoma, CA has ""been given the extraordinary opportunity to direct *The Hello Girls* [ [link removed] ] for a second time, while also helping to honor another “Hello Girl” whose service has gone unrecognized for more than a century,""  and she couldn't be happier. Smith says that the Ross Valley Players in Marin County, California [ [link removed] ] production of The Hello Girls musical will be ""the first time in my career I’ve returned to a show I’ve already staged, and it feels like an incredible gift."" But Smith and the cast of the show will be giving back as well: learn how they will be participating in a solemn ceremony to honor a California Hello Girl with the dignity of a named headstone acknowledging her World War I military service. [ [link removed] ]



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Theatrikos presents ‘The Man Who Saved Christmas’: A true story of toys, tenacity and holiday hope in World War I

The Man Who Saved Christmas cast photo [ [link removed] ]

This winter, Theatrikos Theatre Company in Flagstaff, AZ will present a heartwarming holiday musical based on a true World War I story. Running now through Dec. 21, “*The Man Who Saved Christmas*,” written by Ron Lytle and directed by Joe Maniglia, has something for everyone to enjoy. Set in 1917, this WWI story follows real-life A.C. Gilbert, a Connecticut inventor and olympic athlete who is also a toy manufacturer. After Congress votes to cancel toy manufacturing in order to more effectively produce materials for the war effort, Gilbert decides to stand up to Congress himself and becomes “"The Man Who Saved Christmas".” FInd out more about how Gilbert ""doesn’t feel that it’s fair to the children, and he comes from a good place in his heart, so he’s going to talk to Congress...He goes to Washington and changes their minds and comes back and saves Christmas.”" [ [link removed] ]



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The U.S. Navy’s Christmas Colliers at the Outset of the Great War

Christmas Ship song sheet music

In 1914, three of the U.S. Navy's fuel ships, massive colliers, ships that would usually transport coal to fuel other ships, would receive unusual tasking from the Navy and garner public attention. The three colliers became Christmas ships, carrying donated clothing, toys and handmade gifts for the children of war-torn Europe. Learn more about how the Navy ships were the carriers of ""thousands upon thousands of Christmas presents collected by the press of America for the children of the warring countries of Europe"," and how a song about the Christmas Ship helped galvanize ""the beautiful spirit of generosity (that) touched the people on both continents."" [ [link removed] ]



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ALL IS CALM: THE CHRISTMAS TRUCE OF 1914 at Asolo Repertory Theatre in Sarasota, FL through December 19, 2025

Christmas Truce play in Sarasota snip

The Western Front. Christmas. A German soldier sets down his rifle and steps into No Man’s Land, singing “"Silent Night"”. Thus begins an extraordinary night of fellowship, music, and peace, told in the words and the songs of the men who lived it. Peter Rothstein’s salute to unsung heroes of The Great War, *All Is Calm: The Christmas Truce of 1914*, returns to the Historic Asolo Theater after a sell-out run last season. This is the powerful true story of the unofficial ceasefires during World War I among British, French and German soldiers in the trenches along the Western Front around Christmas of 1914. Defying orders, the enemy combatants simply left the trenches for No Man’s Land and exchanged greetings, tobacco and chocolate, photographs… and songs.  [ [link removed] ]



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The USS Arizona was built, launched, and served during World War I

USS Arizona 1916 colorized photo snip [ [link removed] ]

The sinking of the USS Arizona in the attack on Pearl Harbor that plunged America into World War II on December 7, 1941 is remembered by the USS Arizona Memorial in Hawaii. But the great ship was actually built and served in the United States Navy during World War I. The USS Arizona account on "x.com" recalls the ship’s WWI-era origins with period photographs, including one that shows the only known person who was present at the beginning and at the end of the USS Arizona. [ [link removed] ]



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106th NYC Veterans Day Parade marks big anniversary for Army, Marines & Navy

DBF Bugler at 2025 NYC Veterans Day Parade [ [link removed] ]

The 106th New York City Veterans Day Parade that took place Tuesday, Nov. 11, was the nation’s largest tribute to American veterans and it was one of the coldest marches in recent years. The combination of freezing temperatures and bone-chilling winds was something of a challenge. Despite the cold, a Doughboy Foundation bugler sounded Taps at the Eternal Light Flagstaff monument flagpole in Madison Square Park before the beginning of the Parade. Read more about the 2025 parade, which heralded the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps and U.S. Navy, all founded in 1775. [ [link removed] ]



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Dropping the Textbooks:
How 8th Graders from Minnesota Connected with WWI in Washington, D.C.

school group at memorial sculpture snip

Since the 1980’s Prior Lake-Savage Area Schools, which is located in Minnesota, has been bringing groups of 8th graders to Washington D.C. in the fall. For the past two years, the group has visited the National World War I Memorial at Pershing Park [ [link removed] ]. The memorial has ""become a must-stop destination for the Prior Lake-Savage Area Schools’ annual Washington D.C. trip.""  Read more, and learn how, after their time at the Memorial, the 8th grade students leave D.C. ""not just with souvenirs, but with powerful, personal connections to the brave Americans of World War I"." [ [link removed] ]



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"*Daily Taps at the National WWI Memorial [ [link removed] ]*"

Honoring Thomas Croft Neibaur

On December 5, 2025, Daily Taps at the National World War I Memorial [ [link removed] ] in Washington, DC was sounded in honor of Thomas Croft Neibaur [ [link removed] ], a native of Sugar City, Idaho, who was the first soldier from Idaho and the first member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to be awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions during World War I.

On October 16, 1918, while serving as an automatic rifleman with the 167th Infantry Regiment, 42nd Infantry Division, Neibaur single-handedly repelled a German counterattack near Côte de Chatillon, France, despite being wounded in both legs and surrounded by 15 enemy soldiers. He killed four of the attackers at close range with his pistol and captured 11 others. His heroic actions, which halted a full-scale enemy assault, were recognized with the Medal of Honor, presented to him by General John J. Pershing at the American Expeditionary Forces headquarters in Chaumont, France, on February 9, 1919.

Thomas Croft Neibaur [ [link removed] ]

The Daily Taps program of the Doughboy Foundation [ [link removed] ] provides a unique opportunity to dedicate a *"livestreamed" *sounding of Taps in honor of a special person of your choice while supporting the important work of the Doughboy Foundation. Choose a day, or even establish this honor *"in perpetuity"*. Click here for more information on how to honor a loved veteran with the sounding of Taps. [ [link removed] ]

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The “Maryland 400” in the Great War

115th snip [ [link removed] ]

Sometimes in wartime, new units are formed. For example, in World War I, the US Army saw fit to post the four permanent African American regiments (9th, 10th, 24th and 25th) elsewhere, form two entirely new divisions (the 92nd and 93rd Infantry Divisions), and send them to Europe as part of the American Expeditionary Force. But in other cases, units with military heritages dating even before the Revolution, which had been reorganized as National Guard units, were sent overseas under Pershing. Learn how this was the case for the 1st Maryland Regiment, the “Maryland 400,” which had transitioned and played a role in World War I. It is the seventh oldest regiment in the U.S. Army (predating the U.S. Army by seven-and-a-half-months), and it is one of only 30 units in the Army and Army National Guard today that can claim colonial-era lineage. [ [link removed] ]



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How World War I Reshaped Industrial Cities Like San Francisco & Los Angeles

For Every Fighter a Woman Worker poster [ [link removed] ]

When we think about the First World War, we often picture European battlefields and diplomatic tensions far from the United States. But the war years also triggered major changes at home, especially in cities that were already moving toward an industrial future. Places like San Francisco and Los Angeles didn’t see combat, but they felt the pressure of wartime production, labor shifts, and population growth. These changes didn’t fade after 1918. They shaped how both cities developed throughout the 20th century. Let's dive together into all the ways World War I resh [ [link removed] ]aped industrial cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles.  [ [link removed] ]



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The virus that killed World War I young soldiers faster than the Germans at a North Carolina camp

Camp Greene NC hospital snip

Camp Greene in North Carolina rose from nothing in just 90 days during summer 1917. By December, this massive World War I training site held 60,000 young soldiers, nearly doubling Charlotte’s population. Then came the flu. It struck first on September 20, 1918, when two feverish men checked into the base hospital. Within days, the virus ripped through the camp, hitting Black troops hardest. Leaders locked down the facility on October 3, but death soon followed. By mid-October, coffins stacked floor to ceiling at the railroad station. Read more, and find out how, in all, nearly 300 soldiers died before the pandemic ended in early 1919. [ [link removed] ]



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Been There, Seen That: The National World War I Museum and Memorial

National WWI Museum &amp; Memorial [ [link removed] ]

Travel writer Dees Stribling remembers that ""As a kid, that is as a kid in the late ’60s and early ’70s, I took an unusual interest in WWI. My grandfather, my mother’s father, had been with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in France, but it was more than that, since he was gone by the time I could remember, and I only heard bits and pieces about his service from family members who knew him." " Stribling's lifelong interest in World War I history was rewarded recently with a visit to the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City Missouri. Read his review from a recent visit to the museum, which he finds ""first rate"" and notes that "t"here is more than you can absorb in one go"." [ [link removed] ]



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The all-Black World War I unit that America rejected, but France couldn’t stop honoring

Harlem Hellfighters snip [ [link removed] ]

The Harlem Hellfighters fought for a country that didn’t fight for them. In 1917, these Black soldiers from the 369th Infantry were told “black is not a color in the rainbow” and banned from their own farewell parade. Yet once in France, they spent 191 days in non-stop combat, longer than any American unit. Under French command with French weapons, they earned fame when Henry Johnson fought off twelve Germans despite 21 wounds. The entire regiment won France’s Croix de Guerre medal for bravery. Back home in February 1919, they finally got their parade through Harlem’s streets. Learn how the legendary fighting force's story of courage still stands tall in monuments across Harlem today. [ [link removed] ]



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War on the Porch: A Doughboy’s Interview

War on the Porch cover [ [link removed] ]

Army Veteran Travis Davis was inspired to write *War on the Porch* by his own personal experiences, both as a soldier, and as a kid sitting on his grandparents’ porch sharing stories. As he says, *War on the Porch* (his second novel about WWI) ""isn’t just a war story; it’s a reflection on courage, trauma, and the power of storytelling to bridge generations"."  Davis aims ""to convey the true cost of the war, both during the fighting and upon the soldiers’ return home.""  Read more about *War on the Porch, *which is "based loosely on the life of a real Doughboy, Thomas 'Tommy' Miller, a young American soldier and a farm boy from Kansas." [ [link removed] ]



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Mahwah, NJ poet and World War I vet Joyce Kilmer honored in NYC with refurbished plaque, ceremony

Joyce Kilmer [ [link removed] ]

A refurbished memorial plaque honoring Mahwah’s favorite son and poet, Joyce Kilmer, was dedicated in ceremonies at Central Park in New York City on Veterans Day, Nov. 11. Kilmer, a native of New Brunswick, wrote “Trees” in 1913 while a resident of Mahwah. He lived there until his death on July 30, 1918, at the age of 31, during the Second Battle of the Marne while serving with New York’s 69th Infantry Regiment in France during World War I. Read more about Kilmer, and the project to refurbish his memorial, dedicated in 1931 at base of elm tree in Central Park, NYC.  [ [link removed] ]



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The Soldiers in the Photos: A Family’s Quest Through Lost Names & New Lands

J.A.B Collins [ [link removed] ]

Jocke Hallberg, proprieter of the *Swedes in the Great War* website, reports that ""I was contacted by a person named Håkan Bergquist from Malmö, Sweden, and he told me a very interesting story about his two ancestors who were soldiers in the American Expeditionary Force during the Great War. With some background information from Håkan I decided to write a small article about how it can be trying to find information about ancestors when initially not having all the present facts in hand"." Find out more about the discovery process, and learn all the ways that " [ [link removed] ]"researching Swedes who emigrated to North America and became soldiers in the Great War can be quite challenging" [ [link removed] ]."



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Warrior Canine Connection Names New Service Dog After World War I Hello Girl

Levy

Warrior Canine Connection, which enlists recovering Warriors in a therapeutic mission of learning to train service dogs for their fellow Veteran, has welcomed Levy, named in honor of United States Army Signal Corps Operator First Class Hortense Levy Amram. On a trip to Europe in 1914, Levy and a female friend found themselves stranded in a small French seaport when the First World War erupted. After 18 days and much paperwork, Hortense and her travel companion reached Paris where they were able to begin their journey home. Her experiences in these early days of the war, watching the French women take on new roles as the men left to fight, made a mark on her. Learn more about Levy's decision to become a U.S. Army Signal Corps Telephone Operafor in WWI, and why her story makes her a wonderful namesake for a Warrior Canine Connection trainee. [ [link removed] ]



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World War I Army Pilot Proved Airplanes Could Sink Battleships and Predicted Pearl Harbor — He Was Fired For It

Billy Mitchell [ [link removed] ]

In 1921, after WWI ended, Army Brig. Gen. Billy Mitchell proved airplanes could sink battleships. Three years later, he predicted Japan would launch a surprise air attack on Pearl Harbor at dawn. Navy and Army brass dismissed him. They court-martialed him, forced him out, then spent the next two decades building more battleships. On Dec. 7, 1941, Mitchell’s predictions were proven right, but it was too late. Read more about how Mitchell, a veteran of the Spanish-American War and World War I, spent the late 1910s vocalizing how airpower could dominate the seas, and when he finally proved it, he was court-martialed. [ [link removed] ]



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World War I News Digest December 2025

Irvin Berlin in uniform snip
 

World War I was "*The War that Changed the World*", and its impact on the United States continues to be felt over a century later, as people across the nation learn more about and remember those who served in the Great War. Here's a collection of news items from the last month related to World War I and America.




 

Irving Berlin came home from WWI more famous than ever [ [link removed] ]

The Modern US Passport is a Product of World War I [ [link removed] ]

WWI Museum and Memorial honors US-Australia alliance [ [link removed] ]

The World War I Assault on Free Speech in America [ [link removed] ]

WWI toxic compound sprayed on Georgian protesters says BBC [ [link removed] ]

WWI Cannon was on Texas courthouse lawn until WWII [ [link removed] ]

This Arizona airport is a WWI memorial in disguise [ [link removed] ]

Billy Dunne of Coolaghy, Ireland served in the AEF in World War I [ [link removed] ]

WWI created the close relationship between the USDA’s dietary recommendations and the American agricultural industry [ [link removed] ]

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Doughboy MIA for December 2025

Sergeant Harry Convin Pruitt [ [link removed] ]

A man is only missing if he is forgotten.

Our Doughboy MIA this month [ [link removed] ] is Sergeant Harry Convin Pruitt. Born September 17th, 1889 Harry Pruitt was a professional soldier, having enlisted in the regular US Army in March, 1913 at the age of 24. He served his first hitch at Columbus Barracks, Ohio, where he was assigned to Company E, 14th Infantry Regiment. He embarked for ‘Over There’ on April 7th, 1918 and in France was reassigned to Company I, 7th Infantry of the 3rd Division; soon to gain fame as the ‘Rock of the Marne’ division. With them he was killed July 15th, 1918 during the Second Battle of the Marne, helping the 3rd earn their title. Originally buried at Fossoy, Marne, his grave was never located after the war. Nothing else is known at this time.

Would "*you*" like to be involved with solving the case of Sergeant Harry Pruitt, and all the other Americans still in MIA status from World War I? "*You can!*" Click here to make a tax-deductible donation to our non-profit organization today [ [link removed] ], and help us bring them home! Help us do the best job possible and give today [ [link removed] ], with our thanks.  Remember: "A man is only missing if he is forgotten".



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Merchandise from the Official
Doughboy Foundation WWI Store

Commemorative Coins in Doughboy Shop [ [link removed] ]
2018 WWI Centennial Coins [ [link removed] ]
from the U.S. Mint [ [link removed] ]

The Doughboy Foundation Shop is featuring these beautifully boxed coins available for each military branch and offered at a "*special holiday price*". Produced by the U.S. Mint to commemorate the Centennial of “"The War That Changed the World"”, each coin set makes an especially thoughtful gift that can be passed down from generation to generation. We have priced these at competitive rates. Have a look and add to your collection today. *Please note: Supply is limited!*

Proceeds from the sale of these items will help keep watch over the new National World War I Memorial in Washington, DC. [ [link removed] ]

This and many other items are available as Official Merchandise of the Doughboy Foundation [ [link removed] ]. [ [link removed] ]



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*"Over There:"*
"In the Footsteps"
"of the Doughboys
"

Sept 27-Oct 5, 2026
Over There vertical sidebar

*Learn how you can walk
some of the most significant battlefields of WWI,
and experience
historical sites [ [link removed] ] **from
the Somme to the Marne
to Verdun, guided by
noted military historian
Mitch Yockelson. [ [link removed] ]*

*A Doughboy Foundation*
*Special Event*

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CFC 2025 sidebar ad [ [link removed] ]
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App image 3 [ [link removed] ]

Click or scan the QR Code below to download the Virtual Explorer App for the National World War I Memorial [ [link removed] ]. Our WWI Memorial Apps let you experience the WWI Memorial ‘In Person’ or Virtually from anywhere in the world!

QR Code for Virtual Explorer App download [ [link removed] ]
"Over There:"
"In the Footsteps"
"of the Doughboys
"

Sept 27-Oct 5, 2026

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Taps Sponsorship VS1 [ [link removed] ]
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"NEW!" Desktop Explorer
Desktop App screen [ [link removed] ]

Use the new "*WWI Memorial: Desktop Explorer [ [link removed] ]*" to learn about the National WWI Memorial in the classroom or at home. Both Mac [ [link removed] ] and PC [ [link removed] ] apps are available. Check them out here:

APPLE APPSTORE image [ [link removed] ]MICROSOFT APPSTORE image [ [link removed] ]
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Education Thumb Drive image [ [link removed] ]

*Free Self-Contained WWI History Web Site on YOUR computer*

*Sources, lessons, activities, videos, podcasts, images*

We have packaged all the content we created for “How WWI Changed America” into a format that is essentially a web site on a drive. Download the content onto any drive (USB, external, or as a folder on your computer), and all the content is accessible in a web site type format even without an internet connection. Click here to learn more, and download this amazing educational resource for home or classroom use. [ [link removed] ]

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Genealogy Guide VS2 [ [link removed] ]
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Doughboy MIA [ [link removed] ]
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Legacy Society [ [link removed] ]
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Valor Medals Review [ [link removed] ]
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Pershing Sponsors

Pershing Sponsors sidebar w-founding sponsor [ [link removed] ]
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LeRoy Appleton

A Story of Service from the Stories of Service section [ [link removed] ] of "doughboy.org"

Lee Appleton

*Submitted by: Ethel Lee Douglas Lawson (niece)*

My Uncle LeRoy Appleton served in WWI as a private in Co. G of the 144th U.S. Infantry. He was 25 years old when he enlisted May 15, 1917.

Many years ago my mother, Ethel Mae Appleton Douglas, told me an interesting story about my Uncle LeRoy and my father, John Albert Douglas. My mother and her brother had been very close all of their lives, since the death of their mother at an early age. When my mother had not heard from her brother for a very long time, she became extremely worried for fear he had been killed or wounded so badly he could not write letters. After unsuccessfully trying to console my mother, my father decided to get on the train from Texas to New York. That’s where the troops came in from the European war zone and where war records were kept.

My father searched and searched, finally finding Uncle Leroy in a hospital so “doped up” that he had no awareness of what was going on around him. My father was told that Uncle LeRoy’s entire unit, troop (or whatever it was), had all died from disease or gas poisoning. My uncle was expected to die too but hadn’t died yet, so he was just being kept “doped”, expected to die at any time. My father checked Uncle LeRoy out of the hospital and took him home, where my family cared for him and got him off the drugs. Uncle LeRoy married one of my mother’s best friends and lived into his eighties.

Submit your family's Story of Service here. [ [link removed] ]


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Footer Image pigeon messages

*Contact Form:
*[Click Here] [ [link removed] ]

*Mailing Address:
*The Doughboy Foundation 
1455 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Suite 400
Washington, DC 20004

*Website:
* [ [link removed] ]www.doughboy.org [ [link removed] ]

*Telephone:
*(202) 380-0725

*Carrier Pigeon:
*Please call first! 

 

 

 

 

WWI Dispatch is a monthly publication of the Doughboy Foundation
Publisher: CAPT Chris Christopher, USN (Ret.)      Chief Technologist: Theo Mayer






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"Doughboy Foundation is a 501c3 non-profit funded by philanthropic contributions. Our mission is to keep the story of WWI in the minds of all Americans, so that the 4.7 million who served in the Armed Forces, and how WWI changed America, will never be forgotten."

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