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Pvt David Hickey

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Pvt David Hickey

Birth
Saint Louis, St. Louis City, Missouri, USA
Death
24 Feb 1918 (aged 39–40)
France
Burial
Jennings, St. Louis County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Plot
sec 3, lot 283A
Memorial ID
View Source
7 CO CAC FT MONROE, VA TO 18 MAY/17; 10 CO CAC FT MONROE, VA TO 21 JUN/17; BTRY A 8 FA TO 18 AUG/17; 1 CO PROVISIONAL RCT BN TO; BTRY A 7 FA TO 22 NOV/17;BTRY E 6 FA TO DEATH.

DIED 24 FEB 1918 OF WOUNDS RECEIVED IN ACTION; SISTER, MRS CELIA EBERLY, ST.LOUIS, MO NOTIFIED.

(obit sent from Bobby Remo)
Mr. Hickey was first St. Louis Man Killed in France near Verdun.
ST. LOUIS David Hickey was 38 when he answered the patriotic drumbeat in April 1917 to fight in the Great War. He was assigned to a U.S. Army artillery battery in France at the village of Seicheprey, near the slaughterhouse known as Verdun.
Hickey had grown up just north of downtown and was a newsboy. He later worked in shoe factories and the Post-Dispatch mail room, where newspapers were bundled. He played on local amateur baseball teams and never married.
His distinction was posthumous. "First St. Louis Man Killed in France," was the headline in the Feb. 27, 1918 Post-Dispatch, reporting that Hickey had died three days before of shrapnel wounds suffered on Feb. 12.
It was a big local story. The United States had entered World War I on April 6, 1917, but still was forming its forces along the Western front when Hickey was fatally wounded. America's first significant offensive didn't take place until May 1918. Not until September did the Army begin its major push at Saint-Mihiel, near the village of Seicheprey.
Hickey probably was hit by some of daily shellfire that routinely tossed dirt along the shattered front for four numbing years. Only minor engagements were reported in France on Feb. 12, 1918. The headlines were about the Russian revolutionary government's withdrawal from the war.
When word of Hickey's death reached St. Louis, reporters interviewed state Sen. Michael Kinney, who knew him from the old Bates School north of today's Laclede's Landing. Kinney said Hickey had sent a letter in November asking the senator to notify his sister at 5872 Garfield Avenue about his service in France.
"Dave was a happy-go-lucky chap always ready to do a pal a good turn," said Kinney.
But the senator couldn't locate Hickey's sister, Celia Ebeler, who had moved. Newspapers described Hickey and Ebeler as "estranged."
Hickey was the first of 1,072 men from the St. Louis area who died in uniform during World War I. America's total military deaths were 116,500, a small number compared to other combatants. France and Germany together lost at least 300,000 soldiers killed in grinding battle for Verdun in 1916.
Hickey was buried in France, as were almost all of America's war dead. But in 1921, the government brought back the remains of 7,264 to symbolize the nation's loss. Hickey's casket was among 22 bound for St. Louis on a special train.
His sister, Ebeler, was in the front row at the St. Louis Armory, 3676 Market Street for a memorial service on July 27, 1921. Nearly 1,000 people took part. Hickey was reburied in the American Legion section of Memorial Park Cemetery in Jennings.
In 1939, American Legion Post 235 in St. Louis was chartered in Hickey's name. Two years later, the city established Hickey Park at Goodfellow and Bircher boulevards, but the land soon was taken to build the massive ammunition works on Goodfellow for World War II.
In 1960, St. Louis Mayor Raymond Tucker dedicated a second park in Hickey's honor at 8700 North Broadway in Baden. Legion Post 235 disbanded in 2003.

Copied from 02/24/2013 St. Louis Post Dispatch
7 CO CAC FT MONROE, VA TO 18 MAY/17; 10 CO CAC FT MONROE, VA TO 21 JUN/17; BTRY A 8 FA TO 18 AUG/17; 1 CO PROVISIONAL RCT BN TO; BTRY A 7 FA TO 22 NOV/17;BTRY E 6 FA TO DEATH.

DIED 24 FEB 1918 OF WOUNDS RECEIVED IN ACTION; SISTER, MRS CELIA EBERLY, ST.LOUIS, MO NOTIFIED.

(obit sent from Bobby Remo)
Mr. Hickey was first St. Louis Man Killed in France near Verdun.
ST. LOUIS David Hickey was 38 when he answered the patriotic drumbeat in April 1917 to fight in the Great War. He was assigned to a U.S. Army artillery battery in France at the village of Seicheprey, near the slaughterhouse known as Verdun.
Hickey had grown up just north of downtown and was a newsboy. He later worked in shoe factories and the Post-Dispatch mail room, where newspapers were bundled. He played on local amateur baseball teams and never married.
His distinction was posthumous. "First St. Louis Man Killed in France," was the headline in the Feb. 27, 1918 Post-Dispatch, reporting that Hickey had died three days before of shrapnel wounds suffered on Feb. 12.
It was a big local story. The United States had entered World War I on April 6, 1917, but still was forming its forces along the Western front when Hickey was fatally wounded. America's first significant offensive didn't take place until May 1918. Not until September did the Army begin its major push at Saint-Mihiel, near the village of Seicheprey.
Hickey probably was hit by some of daily shellfire that routinely tossed dirt along the shattered front for four numbing years. Only minor engagements were reported in France on Feb. 12, 1918. The headlines were about the Russian revolutionary government's withdrawal from the war.
When word of Hickey's death reached St. Louis, reporters interviewed state Sen. Michael Kinney, who knew him from the old Bates School north of today's Laclede's Landing. Kinney said Hickey had sent a letter in November asking the senator to notify his sister at 5872 Garfield Avenue about his service in France.
"Dave was a happy-go-lucky chap always ready to do a pal a good turn," said Kinney.
But the senator couldn't locate Hickey's sister, Celia Ebeler, who had moved. Newspapers described Hickey and Ebeler as "estranged."
Hickey was the first of 1,072 men from the St. Louis area who died in uniform during World War I. America's total military deaths were 116,500, a small number compared to other combatants. France and Germany together lost at least 300,000 soldiers killed in grinding battle for Verdun in 1916.
Hickey was buried in France, as were almost all of America's war dead. But in 1921, the government brought back the remains of 7,264 to symbolize the nation's loss. Hickey's casket was among 22 bound for St. Louis on a special train.
His sister, Ebeler, was in the front row at the St. Louis Armory, 3676 Market Street for a memorial service on July 27, 1921. Nearly 1,000 people took part. Hickey was reburied in the American Legion section of Memorial Park Cemetery in Jennings.
In 1939, American Legion Post 235 in St. Louis was chartered in Hickey's name. Two years later, the city established Hickey Park at Goodfellow and Bircher boulevards, but the land soon was taken to build the massive ammunition works on Goodfellow for World War II.
In 1960, St. Louis Mayor Raymond Tucker dedicated a second park in Hickey's honor at 8700 North Broadway in Baden. Legion Post 235 disbanded in 2003.

Copied from 02/24/2013 St. Louis Post Dispatch


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