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2Lt Richard Paul Padgett

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2Lt Richard Paul Padgett Veteran

Birth
Walterboro, Colleton County, South Carolina, USA
Death
30 Apr 1945 (aged 22)
Germany
Burial
Saint-Avold, Departement de la Moselle, Lorraine, France GPS-Latitude: 49.1210695, Longitude: 6.7189334
Plot
Section E, Row 37, Plot 37
Memorial ID
View Source
South Carolina native, member of The Citadel Class of 1944, "The Class that never graduated." Drafted with his entire class in the spring of 1944, attended OCS at Fort Benning, Georgia and commissioned on July 11, 1944. The following day he married Ann Ficken, son Richard Paul born on May 16, 1945. Platoon Leader with G Company of 2d Battalion, 303d Infantry Regiment, 97th Division.
South Carolina native, member of The Citadel Class of 1944, "The Class that never graduated." Drafted with his entire class in the spring of 1944, attended OCS at Fort Benning, Georgia and commissioned on July 11, 1944. The following day he married Ann Ficken, son Richard Paul born on May 16, 1945. Platoon Leader with G Company of 2d Battalion, 303d Infantry Regiment, 97th Division.

Inscription

Richard “Paul” Padgett was born in 1923, in Walterboro, South Carolina. His family was well-known in Colleton County as his grandfather was the president and founder of the first bank of Walterboro. Padgett had two older brothers, Christopher and Brantley. His sister, Vivienne, was two years his junior.

Padgett was very well-liked in high school. A part of his reputation was due to his family name. However, some of this popularity can be attributed to his good looks as well as his athletic and artistic talents. On a page in the Walterboro High School yearbook dedicated to seniors titled “What if. . .”, Padgett’s classmates completed it with “Paul Padgett was not the leader of something?”

Padgett enrolled at The Citadel, Military College of South Carolina, where his stardom did not diminish. When Governor Richard Manning Jefferies visited, the corps selected Padgett to act as his personal aide. Padgett was involved in a variety of activities—yearbook staff and the all-important Hops ceremonies (senior ring presentation, homecoming dance, and celebration of the corps).
Padgett was in his senior year at The Citadel when his class was called up for service in the U.S. Army. He was sent to Fort Benning, Georgia, to the Officer Candidate School. A day after his commissioning ceremony, he married Lavinia “Anne” Ficken on July 12, 1944.
After his brief honeymoon, Padgett was sent to Fort Ord in California for several months. For the second half of World War II, Fort Ord was the west coast replacement and training depot for established units. After Padgett’s time here, he was sent to England where he would wait for an assignment to a combat unit.

As a member of the 97th Infantry Division, Padgett was charged with securing the Czechoslovakian border as the Third U.S. Army advanced. Once there, his division assisted the 90th Infantry Division with caring for the recently freed inmates of Flossenburg concentration camp. After the Third Army’s successful attack in Czechoslovakia, Padgett was sent to Germany for occupation duties. According to his son, Paul, Padgett was killed when he was shot by a German sniper in Tirschenreuth, Germany.

In an interview with the son, Paul Padgett, Jr. stated his grandparents, rather than Padgett’s wife, Anne, received a telegram on May 15 about the news of Padgett’s death on April 3

Gravesite Details

Entered the service from South Carolina.



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