Pvt. Baril was serving with the 422 Infantry, 106th Division.
He was taken prisoner the first day of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, while serving in the Golden Lion 106th Division. He had been interred in Stalag 9b Bad Orb Hessen Nassau Prussia.
His parents were notified first that he was missing, and then that he was a prisoner of war, and later that he was liberated April 26, 1945, only to die of tuberculosis in a hospital in France.
He was survived by his parents; three sisters, Mrs. Prusha G. Helie, Doris Baril, and Mrs. Charles (Alice) Johnson; and four brothers, John, Earl, Eugene, and Pfc. Ralph Baril who was serving in the Pacific at the time of Raymond's death.
Pvt. Baril was serving with the 422 Infantry, 106th Division.
He was taken prisoner the first day of the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, while serving in the Golden Lion 106th Division. He had been interred in Stalag 9b Bad Orb Hessen Nassau Prussia.
His parents were notified first that he was missing, and then that he was a prisoner of war, and later that he was liberated April 26, 1945, only to die of tuberculosis in a hospital in France.
He was survived by his parents; three sisters, Mrs. Prusha G. Helie, Doris Baril, and Mrs. Charles (Alice) Johnson; and four brothers, John, Earl, Eugene, and Pfc. Ralph Baril who was serving in the Pacific at the time of Raymond's death.
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