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Frank Severin Erickson
Ernest Julius Erickson
Andrew Anders Sebran Erickson
American Expeditionary Force 1918 - 1919
Out West & North Dakota

My grandfather Frank Gustaf Severin Erickson's US Army discharge paper. Numbered with his serial # 3143116 it is dated May 4th, 1925.

Frank was a member of the American Expeditionary Force and served with the 308th Regiment - 77th Division - Company H. He shipped out out of Brooklyn to England and then eventually to France and was fortunate to become a surviving member of what later would be referred to as "The Lost Battalion."

Frank’s number was 121, typed on the list of a piece of paper from the "Headquarters Port of Embarkation, Hoboken, New Jersey.” His embarkation on-board the Steamer Nestor on August 8th, 1918 began out of the Brooklyn (NYC) Port. The "Notify in Case of Emergency" is fittingly listed as his mother, my great grandmother Christine Britta (Olson-Anderson) Erickson of Wilton, North Dakota.

For some comic relief before things get serious and a coincidence or two, here goes. Frank was born on December 12th, 1892 in Sudsvalle, Sweden. He came to the states with his family in 1903 at the age of eleven years old and settled onto a farm in Painted Woods, North Dakota. My grandfather shares the birthday with Frank Sinatra who was born on December 12th, 1915 in Hoboken, New Jersey. The paperwork header states Hoboken, New Jersey.

So maybe a three year old Frank Sinatra was watching the ships pull out of the harbor on August 8th, 1918 and viewed in the mass of men the face of a twenty six year old Private Frank Erickson on-board heading into the Atlantic toward Europe to face combat. Maybe or maybe not, but still the both of them always did it their way and lived for the Summer wind.

Frank started his military training at Camp Upton in Yaphank (Long Island) in Suffolk County, New York. The Division eventually shipped out to France on August 8th, 1918 where Frank would serve on the Western Front.

Frank was a surviving member of what later would be referred to as “The Lost Battalion." What entailed in the Argonne Forest was a serious and brutal battle that began on October 2nd when the Division was surrounded by the Germans and ended October 8th when a handful of survivors were able to escape.

The Lost Battalion, the name given to the nine companies of the United States 77th Division of the American Expeditionary Force, consisted of 554 men that were surrounded by German forces in the Argonne Forest in France between October 2nd through the 8th of 1918. Roughly 197 were killed in battle and approximately 150 went missing in action and or were taken prisoner. Only 194 remaining men walked out alive.



Lost Battalion

77th Brigade - 308th Infantry Regiment

Meuse-Argonne Offensive

Click to view a High Resolution image

© Mark Erickson 2017 All rights reserved.

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