Jesse E. DEVORE

devore jesse 1

Source : Jaap Vermeer
NUMBER OF SERVICE18002478
AGE23 yo
DATE OF BIRTH1921 Osage OKLAHOMA 
ENLISTMENT STATEOKLAHOMA
FAMILY

Parents : Lew E & Airiel Archer Farr DeVore
Siblings : Claude E, Paul L, Ruby Irene, George R & Arthur Donald

RANKPrivate First Class 
FONCTIONInfantry Man 
JOB BEFORE ENLISTEMENT NE
DATE of ENLISTEMENT8 March 1940 OKLAHOMA 
COMPANYCompany
REGIMENT  38th Infantry Regiment 
DIVISION   

2nd Infantry Division

"Indian Head"        "Second to none" 
DATE OF DEATH27 June 1944

devore jesse 1

Source : Frogman
STATUSKIA
PLACE OF DEATHSector of St Lô 
CEMETERY TEMPORARY

 

CEMTERY TEMPORARY of  St Laurent  N°3582 

st laurent

Story of Cemetery Temporary  

CEMETERYNORMANDY AMERICAN CEMETERY of Colleville

Map of Normandy American Cemetery

GRAVE
PlotRowGrave
H264
DECORATION

Purple Heart

World War II Victory Medal 

Combat Infantryman Badge

 

Photo FDLM

victory medal

combat infantryman badge

 

 

us army div 2 38ir 38ri 1
 
STORY

 The 2nd Infantry Division was set up in Bourmont in France in August 1917.


Returning to the United States in the summer of 1919, she garrisoned at Fort Travis in Galveston, Texas. Like the 1st Infantry Division, it continued its existence between the wars.


In October 1940, it adopted the triangular organization (3 infantry regiments, 9th, 23rd and 38th Infantry Regiments.)
On March 9, 1942, the 2nd Infantry Division was attached to the VIII Corps of the 3rd Army.


She will continue her training until her departure for Great Britain in October 1943.


She landed on June 7, 1944 on Omaha Beach. The first to land on French soil is the 9th Infantry Regiment then the other two regiments in the afternoon of June 8.


From June 9, the division is engaged in Trévière
The Pfc. Jesse E. Devore of the 38th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Division.


He became famous following a photo taken on the day of the liberation of Tréviéres on June 10, 1944 with a child in his arms
Devore will be killed in action two weeks after this photograph was taken, he was 23 years old.


Trévières is a small village in Lower Normandy, in the Calvados department.


The battle for this village took place from June 9 to 10, 1944.

devore jesse 1

Source : Jap

The attack by the 9th and 38th Infantry Regiment of the 2nd Infantry Division began at 12:00 p.m. on June 9.

The German defensive positions are carefully established, the 38th Infantry Regiment will not return to the city until the end of the day, and the liberation of Trévières will only take place after house-to-house fighting and the elimination of several snipers. elite Germans.

On June 10, they fight for Cerisy la Forêt, the forest is secured at 10 p.m.

The division suffered heavy casualties fighting with the V Corps during the Battle of St Lo on June 12.

It continued its advance on St George d'Elle and suffered a heavy counter-attack by the Germans who blocked them in their positions.

Combat de St Lo

 

From June 7 to 13, the division will lose 855 men killed, wounded or missing.

PFC Jesse E Devore will be killed in the St Lô region on June 27, 1944.

 

devore jesse 1

 

Colored by Gisele Nash from America

If you have any information about the identity of the little boy, please contact me, Thank you. Fred

div 2

2nd INFANTRY DIVISION - INDIAN HEAD

 

Activated/Activé

 Normandy/Normandie

26 Octobre 1917  Days of Combat/Jour de Combat  303
   Casualties/Victimes 16 795

Entered Combat/Entré au combat

 
8 Jun 44 Normandy  

Commanding Generals/Commandants généraux

Maj. Gen. John C. H. Lee (Nov 41 - May 42)
Maj. Gen. Walter M. Robertson (May 42 - Jun 45)
Brig. Gen. W. K. Harrison (Jun 45 - Sep 45)
Maj. Gen. Edward M. Almond (Sep 45 - Jun 46)

Campaigns/Campagnes

Normandy (6 Jun 44 - 24 Jul 44)
Northern France (25 Jul 44 - 14 Sep 44)
Rhineland (15 Sep 44 - 21 Mar 45)
Ardennes-Alsace (16 Dec 44 - 25 Jan 45)
Central Europe (22 Mar 45 - 11 May 45)

   

PLAN DE ROUTE DE LA CAMPAGNE - CAMPAIGN ROUTE MAP

carte campagne europe

DIVISION CHRONICLE


After training in Ireland and Wales from October 1943 to June 1944, the 2d Infantry Division crossed the channel to land on Omaha Beach on D plus 1, 7 June 1944, near St. Laurent-sur-Mer. Attacking across the Aure River, the Division liberated Trevieres, 10 June, and proceeded to assault and secure Hill 192, the key enemy strongpoint on the road to St. Lo. With the hill taken 11 July 1944, the Division went on the defensive until 26 July. Exploiting the St. Lo break-through, the 2d Division advanced across the Vire to take Tinchebray 15 August 1944. The Division then moved west to join the battle for Brest, the heavily defended fortress surrendering 18 September 1944 after a 39-day contest. The Division took a brief rest 19-26 September before moving to defensive positions at St. Vith. The German Ardennes offensive in mid-December forced the Division to withdraw to defensive positions near Elsenborn, where the German drive was halted. In February 1945 the Division attacked, recapturing lost ground, and seized Gemund, 4 March. Reaching the Rhine 9 March, the 2d advanced south to take Breisig, 10-11 March, and to guard the Remagen bridge, 12-20 March. The Division crossed the Rhine 21 March and advanced to Hadamar and Limburg, relieving elements of the 9th Armored Division, 28 March. Advancing rapidly in the wake of the 9th Armored, the 2d Division crossed the Weser at Veckerhagen, 6-7 April, captured. Gottingen 8 April, established a bridgehead across the Saale, 14 April, seizing Merseburg on the 15th. On the 18th the Division took Leipzig, mopped up in the area, and outposted the Mulde River; elements which had crossed the river were withdrawn 24 April. Relieved on the Mulde, the 2d moved 200 miles, 1-3 May, to positions along the GermanCzech border near Schonsee and Waldmunchen, and attacked in the general direction of Pilsen, reaching that city as the war in Europe ended.

CHRONIQUE DE DIVISION


Après s'être entraînée en Irlande et au Pays de Galles d'octobre 1943 à juin 1944, la 2e Division d'infanterie traverse le chenal pour débarquer à Omaha Beach le jour du 1er au 7 juin 1944, près de Saint-Laurent-sur-Mer. Attaquant de l'autre côté de la rivière Aure, la division libéra Trévires, le 10 juin, et attaqua et sécurisa la colline 192, le principal point d'appui de l'ennemi sur la route de Saint-Lô. Avec la montée de la colline le 11 juillet 1944, la division est passée sur la défensive jusqu'au 26 juillet. Exploitant la percée de Saint-Lô, la 2 e division avança à travers la Vire pour prendre Tinchebray le 15 août 1944. La division se dirigea ensuite vers l'ouest pour rejoindre la bataille de Brest, la forteresse fortement défendue capitulant le 18 septembre 1944 après un combat de 39 jours. La division a pris un peu de repos du 19 au 26 septembre avant de passer à des positions défensives à St. Vith. L'offensive des Ardennes allemandes à la mi-décembre a contraint la division à se replier vers des positions défensives près d'Elsenborn, où la campagne allemande a été stoppée. En février 1945, la division attaqua, reprenant le terrain perdu et s'empara de Gemund le 4 mars. Atteignant le Rhin le 9 mars, le 2d s'avance vers le sud pour prendre Breisig, 10-11 mars, et pour garder le pont de Remagen, du 12 au 20 mars. La Division a traversé le Rhin le 21 mars et a avancé à Hadamar et Limburg, en soulageant des éléments de la 9ème Division Blindée, le 28 mars. Avançant rapidement dans le sillage de la 9ème Armored, la 2d Division a traversé la Weser à Veckerhagen, 6-7 avril, capturé. Göttingen, le 8 avril, établit une tête de pont à travers la Saale, le 14 avril, s'emparant de Merseburg le 15. Le 18, la division s'empare de Leipzig, épongée dans la région, et a quitté la rivière Mulde; les éléments qui avaient traversé la rivière ont été retirés le 24 avril. Relâché sur la Mulde, le 2d se déplace de 200 miles, 1-3 mai, à des positions le long de la frontière Tchécoslovaque près de Schonsee et Waldmunchen, et attaque dans la direction générale de Pilsen, atteignant cette ville comme la guerre en Europe a pris fin.

 

SOURCE INFORMATION & PHOTOArmydivs.squarespace.com

SOURCE INFORMATION & SOURCE PHOTOLivre: 21st Army Group (HEIMDAL) - Ww2enlistment.org - Findagrave.com
PROGRAMMERHenri, Garrett, Clive, Frédéric & Renaud
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