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- 141st Infantry Regiment, US Army during the Second World War -


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

141st Infantry Regiment, US Army




If you can provide any additional information, especially on actions and locations at specific dates, please add it here.



Those known to have served with

141st Infantry Regiment, US Army

during the Second World War 1939-1945.

The names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List

Records of 141st Infantry Regiment, US Army from other sources.



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Want to know more about 141st Infantry Regiment, US Army?


There are:-1 items tagged 141st Infantry Regiment, US Army available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Second World War.


Fred O. Stanley 141st Infantry

My grandfather Fred O. Stanley was a prisoner of war. He just recently passed away, and while looking through some of his stuff I found his Prisoner of War tags which say STALAG IV B. He was part of the 141st Inf. US Army. Unlike many of the others he told me many stories of his days as a prisoner of war. They were not too pretty. It would be nice if I could find someone else who knew him.

Johnathan Stanley



PFC. Walter Charles Meyer BSM. 141th Inf Regt. Co K. 104th Inf. Div.

My father, Walt Meyer was a 'BAR' rifleman. His most vivid memories, those which he would talk about, revolved around the flooded Ruhr crossing, the cold, cold winter and riding the hulls of the Canadian Tanks, across the Rhein River. He also recounted a story where they were clearing houses, house-to-house, and found his mother's wedding picture on a sideboard in the dinning room. He was also very angry with having to pick-up refugees and prisoners fleeing from Berlin, instead of being able to go in and take the city themselves. He really hated the Russians.

Raymond P. Meyer



Cloyd "Doc" Brown 142nd Infantry Regiment

This is the full story that went with this photo from my grandfather:

"I went through bits and pieces of this 50+ year old story. I went through the Italian campaigns - Sicily, Naples, Santa Maria, Anzio Beach, Rapido River, Salerno, Rome, Florence. Then invasion so to France, Frajtes Beach, I was captured on the 30th of August1944 at 3:30 am, in the Rhone Valley outside Valeure, France.

I was a machine gunner (30 caliber water cooled) CO. M. 142 INF 36th Division. Held in France six weeks; put in box car to Stalag 12A Limburg, Germany. Wound up in the prison hospital five days later with pneumonia. After I was released I was again loaded onto boxcar “40 ton car.” Locked in for 14 days. Wound up in Neubrandenburg Germany, Stalag IIA on the Baltic Sea. There I stayed till liberated by Russians in April ’45. I escaped once, Ray Vanarsdale, Frenchie Thibadeaux and myself. Were caught 20 days later. Put in city jail til German guards came and got us. We evaded the guards when this young German soldier took us up through the compound. (Lucky).

The picture of Ray, Frenchie, Henry Morris, Rohland Stager and myself and the horse and buggy we stole five days after the Russians left. We stole a camera, too to take pictures and map. We travelled 11 days hiding out in barns, etc. We ran into the 82nd Airborne Headquarters on the 11th day. They deloused us, burnt our clothes and gave us uniforms and we were on an Army plane within 50 minutes. Taken to Le Havre, France Army Hospital."

Shari Lewis



Pvt. Harold L. Thompson 2nd Btn. G Coy. 141st Infantry Regiment

Harold Thompson enlisted in the U.S. Army on 24th of November 1942 at the age of 20. He served in G Company, 2nd Battalion, 141st Infantry Regiment in the 36th Infantry Division. He had spent some time in North Africa for additional training before he would fight in Italy.

His baptism of fire occurred around 0330 on 9th of September 1943 on the beach at Salerno, Italy during Operation Avalanche. In the weeks that followed, Harold and the 141st Infantry Regiment fought up Highway 6 to Monte Cassino. By January 1944, the 36th Infantry Division was at the vicinity of San Angelo. Harold was fighting in a battle known as the Battle of Rapido River at the time of his capture. This battle took place from 20th of January through 22nd of January 1944, when he was reported as missing in action. Harold was one of approximately 770 men captured at the Rapido River. Harold would spend 503 days in captivity at Stalag IV-B.

Austin Ballew









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    The free section of the Wartime Memories Project website is run by volunteers. We have been helping people find out more about their relatives wartime experiences since 1999 by recording and preserving recollections, documents, photographs and small items.

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