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TEC5 Charles Frey Haines

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TEC5 Charles Frey Haines

Birth
Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
17 Dec 1944 (aged 22)
Baugnez, Arrondissement de Verviers, Liège, Belgium
Burial
Columbia, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA GPS-Latitude: 40.0761705, Longitude: -76.4938908
Memorial ID
View Source
Killed at the Massacre at Malmédy by the Germans on his 21st birthday.
Charles F. Haines was born on December 17, 1923 in Pennsylvania. He served in Battery B, 285th Field Artillery Observation Battalion as a Technician 5th Grade during World War II. T/5 Haines was Killed in Action on December 17, 1944 (his 21st birthday) and is now buried in the Newtown United Methodist Cemetery, Columbia, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA. He was one of the victims of Malmedy massacre when German SS soldiers of the 1st Panzer Division captured over 100 American soldiers at Baugnez Crossroads outside Malmedy, Belgium, on 17 December 1944 during the Battle of the Bulge and, under orders to take no prisoners, placed them in an open field and then machine gunned them. When the machine guns stopped, the SS went through the field where some victims were still alive and systematically finished them off with pistols at short range leaving 84 soldiers dead when they had finished. Fortunately, when the machine guns first started shooting, a number of soldiers ran and some managed to escape and tell the story of how the Germans had treated the others who had not survived.
Killed at the Massacre at Malmédy by the Germans on his 21st birthday.
Charles F. Haines was born on December 17, 1923 in Pennsylvania. He served in Battery B, 285th Field Artillery Observation Battalion as a Technician 5th Grade during World War II. T/5 Haines was Killed in Action on December 17, 1944 (his 21st birthday) and is now buried in the Newtown United Methodist Cemetery, Columbia, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, USA. He was one of the victims of Malmedy massacre when German SS soldiers of the 1st Panzer Division captured over 100 American soldiers at Baugnez Crossroads outside Malmedy, Belgium, on 17 December 1944 during the Battle of the Bulge and, under orders to take no prisoners, placed them in an open field and then machine gunned them. When the machine guns stopped, the SS went through the field where some victims were still alive and systematically finished them off with pistols at short range leaving 84 soldiers dead when they had finished. Fortunately, when the machine guns first started shooting, a number of soldiers ran and some managed to escape and tell the story of how the Germans had treated the others who had not survived.



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