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Edward Chevalier

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Edward Chevalier

Birth
Bathgate, Pembina County, North Dakota, USA
Death
30 Nov 1943 (aged 51)
Fargo, Cass County, North Dakota, USA
Burial
Clontarf, Swift County, Minnesota, USA GPS-Latitude: 45.3779666, Longitude: -95.6868222
Memorial ID
View Source
Edward Chevalier, a veteran of World War I passed away on Tuesday at the Veterans hospital at Fargo. He was a member of Walter Tripp Post of the American Legion.
He was inducted into the United States army on May 24, 1917 at Glenwood. He was sent to France where he was in action for nine months. He was given his honorable discharge on February 3rd, 1919 at Ft. Lewis, Wash.
Mr. Chevalier was born on a farm near Bathgate, No. Dak. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Chevalier. When he was five years old he came with his parents to Clontarf where he lived until the army in 1917. After the war he lived on farms in the vicinity of Hancock.
He was married to Pauline Nieneber on February 11, 1920 at Clontarf. She and two daughters, Mrs. Arlette Hogy and Donna Chevalier all of Hancock, survive him. He is also survived by the following brothers and sisters; Oliver Chevalier of Hancock, Eugene of Benson, Leah of Clontarf, Leon of Willmar, Joseph of St. Paul, Marie of St. Cloud, Adlar of Havre, Mont., Arthur of Portland, Ore., Amos of Minneapolis, Raymond of Los Angeles, Odell of Boston, Mass., and Irene who lives in North Dakota.
Source: The Morris Sun Dec. 3, 1943 page 8.
On the application for headstone is a note that he was awarded the Purple Heart.
Edward Chevalier, a veteran of World War I passed away on Tuesday at the Veterans hospital at Fargo. He was a member of Walter Tripp Post of the American Legion.
He was inducted into the United States army on May 24, 1917 at Glenwood. He was sent to France where he was in action for nine months. He was given his honorable discharge on February 3rd, 1919 at Ft. Lewis, Wash.
Mr. Chevalier was born on a farm near Bathgate, No. Dak. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Chevalier. When he was five years old he came with his parents to Clontarf where he lived until the army in 1917. After the war he lived on farms in the vicinity of Hancock.
He was married to Pauline Nieneber on February 11, 1920 at Clontarf. She and two daughters, Mrs. Arlette Hogy and Donna Chevalier all of Hancock, survive him. He is also survived by the following brothers and sisters; Oliver Chevalier of Hancock, Eugene of Benson, Leah of Clontarf, Leon of Willmar, Joseph of St. Paul, Marie of St. Cloud, Adlar of Havre, Mont., Arthur of Portland, Ore., Amos of Minneapolis, Raymond of Los Angeles, Odell of Boston, Mass., and Irene who lives in North Dakota.
Source: The Morris Sun Dec. 3, 1943 page 8.
On the application for headstone is a note that he was awarded the Purple Heart.

Inscription

MINNESOTA
PVT 363 INF 91 DIV



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