Robert was born 23 May 1898 to Thorn and Mertie Belle Smith. He was the oldest child in the family. (Our Pompo, Rossman, was not born until 1907. Pompo was the fifth child, preceded by Robert, Millard b. 1900, Thorn Jr. b. 1903, and Katherine b. 1905.)
Robert was the namesake of my Uncle Bob, and through him, my brother and cousin.
Robert's first and middle names came from Robert Kedzie, who was GGrandpa Thorn's professor and mentor at the school now known as Michigan State University. Prof. Kedzie was unusually lettered (both an MD and an LLD) and accomplished.
Robert Kedzie Smith |
Our Robert was killed in action on 4 Aug 1917, during the Argonne offensive. On the day he was killed,
[t]he authorized strength of the 3rd battalion was 20 officers and 1,000 men, but by 4 August it had only 12 officers and 350 men on the line. As they advanced over 2,100 yards (1,900 m) of mostly open ground, the Germans targeted them with intense artillery and machine gun fire.The division later penetrated the Hindenburg Line, and became the first Allied unit to reach German soil during the war.
Robert was nineteen when he was killed. His remains are interred at Fere-en-Tardenois, Departement de l'Aisne, Picardie, France. It is a beautiful, green place, born of great tragedy and sadness.
The American Cemetery, Picardie, France |
RIP, Uncle Robert.
This is beautiful, Paul! Keep up the great work.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Auntie!
DeleteInteresting factoid--the coronet (short trumpet) that I played (very loud and poorly) in elementary school went to my brother Bob's family ( Robert Frazier Smith). It eventually ended up with his son Philip Rossman, I believe. Quite battered the last time I saw it, and I am not sure where it now resides. This instrument was purportedly the property of Robert Kedzie.
ReplyDeleteAnd as many of you saw at the Smithfest 2016, Grandmother Mertie Belle Underwood Smith was a Gold Star Mother, consequent upon the death of Robert Kedzie. Several of her mementos (flag, fan, pictures, etc) were shown at the reunion. Where all this memorabilia will end up is still an open question.
ReplyDeleteI just now saw your comments, G&M Uncle Rossie. Thanks for the contributions!
ReplyDelete