Online Books. New York : Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co., c1919 Proctor M. Fiske. I have by the Division. which date there were eighty deaths. This chart can be zoomed in and is available for purchase at HistoryShots.com. [Visit website for rosters] SOURCE: Official History of The 88th Division in the World War of 1914-1918.
Seventh Army, part of the 6th Army Group, which had raced south through Bavaria into Innsbruck, Austria, in Vipiteno in the Italian Alps.[1]. Reconstituted 24 June 1921 in the Organized Reserves as the 350th Infantry and assigned to the 88th Division (later redesignated as the 88th Infantry Division) Organized in November 1921 with Headquarters at Corning, Iowa. An element of the 88th is credited with being first to enter the Eternal City. conflict which cost the American Expeditionary Force battle casualties totaling 240,197 ( Minnesota, Iowa. [2], When World War II in Europe ended, the United Nations created the Free Territory of Trieste, which elements of the 88th Infantry Division were ordered to garrison. By the end of World War II the 88th Infantry fought its way to the northernmost extreme of Italy. at Wienville, preparatory to taking active part in the Meuse-Argonne offensive.
Activated 15 Jul 1942 Entered Combat 27 Feb 1944 Days of Combat 307 Casualties 13,111, Maj. Gen. John E. Sloan (Jul 42 - Sep 44)Maj. Gen. Paul W. Kendall (Sep 44 - Jul 45)Brig. Save Page Now. Until October 6, 1918, there were only two ambulances in the
This site will contain the entire roster of every officer and man who served with the 88th Division in the A.E.F. It is not my intention to even try to tell the entire story of World War 1, The 88th Infantry Division was one of the first all-draftee divisions of the United States Army to enter the war. History of the 350th Regiment of U.S. Infantry, Eighty-Eighth Division, American Expeditionary Forces. A detachment then served in western Virginia and Maryland, but returned to Ohio to operate against John Hunt Morgan. Date landed in France: August 8,- September 9, 1918. 19 million men, women, and children from all the nations were wounded, and some countries The 88th Ohio Infantry Regiment, sometimes 88th Ohio Volunteer Infantry (or 88th OVI) was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War. // -->