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- 47th Infantry Regiment, US Army during the Second World War -


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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

47th 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

47th 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 47th Infantry Regiment, US Army from other sources.



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Want to know more about 47th Infantry Regiment, US Army?


There are:-1 items tagged 47th 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.


Capt. Ralph E. Manuel 3rd Btn. I Coy. 47th Infantry Regiment

My Great Uncle Ralph Manuel was captured on the 12th of November 1944 leading his men in action at Bovenburg Farm, North of Hamich, Germany. He was first held in Stalag 12A prisoner of war camp, then transferred to 9B. According to family stories he escaped and eventually made his way back to his unit, however a Fort Benning Infantry School report says he was recaptured after escaping by the Russians and returned to the US Army. Records dated 30th of March 1945 confirm he did return to the 47th.




SSgt. Edward "Ski" Wisneski Company E 47th Infantry Regiment

Capt Humphrey

Lt. Conroy

Company E

Edward Wisneski trained at Ft. Bragg, NC as part of the initial cadre of the 9th Division. He made the invasion of North Africa 8th of November 1942 landing at Safi Yellow Beach. He replaced units decimated at Kasserine Pass. On 26th of March 1943, marching at night, he attempted to take Hill 369 at El Guettar, Tunsia. Due to faulty French maps they were led into a wadi or canyon. One soldier described it as a football stadium, flat with little cover and steep walls all around. Just as sun was rising, all hell broke loose. Flares went up and Italian troops with German officers opened up with MGs and artillery. Any movement was met with MG fire. After a few hours, 2nd battalion commander Lt. Col. Louis Gershenow surrendered. All of Company E and part of Company F were either killed or captured. Company E XO, 1st Lt. David Conroy, was one of the first killed. Company E CO, Capt. Benjamin Humphrey was shot through both hips. One soldier said it looked like he was cut in half by MG fire. S/SGT Wisneski broke down an M1 rifle, put the stock on the outside of one leg and the barrel on the outside of the other and strapped his belt and Humphrey's belt around Humphrey's legs.

Besides 175 of Company E and part of Company F, Battalion Commander Lt. Col. Gershenow, Lt. Craig Campbell (Aide to Eisenhower), Lt. Sidney Thal, Lt. Willard Duckworth (S2), Lt. Carlos Burrows, Lt. Harold Red Tallman and Capt. Horace Spaulding CO of Company H were all captured.

Edward spent 26 months mostly in Stalag 3B and was moved to Stalag 3A in February 1945. They rarely received Red Cross packages and when they did, it was because the Red Cross was due for an inspection. They received a half-barrel of coffee that was so bad, they took turns bathing in it until it was cold. He attempted to escape twice and after the 2nd time the Germans smashed the top of his right foot with a rifle butt and broke it. Edward died December 1988.

As a side note, Benjamin Humphrey survived the war and became a doctor. He married a doctor. He, his wife and 2 sons were killed in a small plane that he was piloting which crashed in the mountains of his home state of Idaho in 1973.

Edward Wisneski, Jr.



Willie S. Sweatmon 47th Infantry Regt.

Willie Sweatmon was my great uncle. He with the 9th Infantry Division, 47th Infantry Regt and was involved in the Tunisian Campaign and at some point was captured. He was a POW at Stalag IIIB and later moved to Stalag IIIA where he died. His body was not returned to the States until 08 Aug 1949. The cause of death is not known. He is buried in Georgia not far from his birth place.

If by some chance anyone has any additional information on him I would greatly appreciate a notification.

George E. Anthony









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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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