Posted on Sep 25, 2021
First World War.com - Battles - The Battle of Loos, 1915
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Posted 3 y ago
Responses: 2
My uncle Frank Harrington was a rifleman in the U.S. First Infantry Division and was gassed at some point. I don’t know where or when, but he told me it burned his lungs and affected him for the rest of his life. When I visited him at his farm outside Sweetwater TN in 1967 as I was en route to San Antonio to visit my parents before leaving for Vietnam, he came out of his house and sat with me in rocking chairs on his front porch. He said to me, “I’ve been told you’re in the Infantry, son. Is that right?” I said “Yes sir, I enlisted as a Private Recruit in San Antonio and went through training at Ft Jackson and Ft Benning and was commissioned a 2LT at Ft Benning. I’ve spent a few months at the Army’s Special Warfare Center and School at Ft Bragg and now I’m headed to Vietnam. Uncle Frank said “That’s good that you’re in the Infantry. That’s what I was in. You’ll do just fine.” Uncle Frank passed on only a month later. He was 70 years old.
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