Barnett, Marion Eugene, PFC

Fallen
 
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Last Rank
Private First Class
Last Service Branch
Engineer Corps
Last MOS Group
Engineer
Primary Unit
1943-1944, 252nd Engineer Battalion
Service Years
1943 - 1944
Engineer Corps
Private First Class

 Last Photo   Personal Details 



Home State
Indiana
Indiana
Year of Birth
1923
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Kevin Konczak-Family to remember Barnett, Marion Eugene, PFC.

If you knew or served with this Soldier and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Casualty Info
Home Town
Ninevah, Johnson County

Casualty Date
Oct 14, 1944
 
Cause
KIA-Killed in Action
Reason
Other Explosive Device
Location
France
Conflict
WWII - European Theater of Operations/Northern France Campaign (1944)
Location of Interment
Greenlawn Cemetery - Franklin, Indiana
Wall/Plot Coordinates
Plot: Section M

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World War II Fallen
  1944, World War II Fallen


   1943-1944, 252nd Engineer Battalion

Private First Class
From Month/Year
September / 1943
To Month/Year
October / 1944
Unit
252nd Engineer Battalion Unit Page
Rank
Private First Class
MOS
Not Specified
Base, Fort or City
Not Specified
State/Country
France
 
 
 Patch
 252nd Engineer Battalion Details

252nd Engineer Battalion
The Combat Engineers during World War II had principal responsibility for construction and wide-ranging operational support but also served as infantry when necessary.  Serving in the European Theatre of Operations (ETO) after extensive training, the 252nd Combat Engineer Battalion undertook every form of mission and performed with distinction.  The unit served front-line duty during the Battle of the Bulge and excelled at bridge construction to enable the Allies’ advance across Europe.  After meeting Russian forces at the Elbe River the battalion joined the Army of Occupation in Germany until receiving orders to embark for the Pacific Theatre.   Short-lived, the unit continued occupation duties into 1949 when it was inactivated, and later, reactivated for a brief period during the Korean conflict.
 
The 252nd Battalion arrived in Normandy on 19 September 1944 through Omaha Beach, with elements of the battalion having been transferred to form a provisional unit that landed on D-Day.  Mine-clearing duties in Normandy presented uncommon hazards and resulted in four engineers killed-in-action, twelve wounded and two Letters of Commendation from XVI Corp for heroism.  Subsequent to this, the unit undertook support missions through December but proximity to the front-line meant even routine assignments were conducted while under artillery fire or engaging the enemy.  From time-to-time the battalion assisted in clearing towns of enemy rear-guard and snipers.  Then, for ten days in January 1945 (the Bulge) the battalion was ordered to relieve the 102nd Infantry Division at Lieffarth and Wurm, Germany, resulting in five engineers killed and fifteen wounded.  Later, elements of the battalion were again transferred to support assault and crossing of the Rhine River.
 
Construction duties began almost immediately in the ETO, alongside support for the Red Ball Express to safe-guard Allied supply lines, clearing mines and booby-traps, road repair, saw-mill operation, material transport, light demolition, water purification and other support missions.  Soon, the Allied advance created unprecedented demand for bridges; spanning January to July, 1945 the 252nd Battalion built eight bridges at strategic locations including the Maas, Rhine and Elbe rivers.  In the earliest of these, the battalion seized on innovation and constructed a bridge directly beneath an existing structure, requiring only forty-five minutes to make it fully operational.  For the Venlo and Roosevelt bridges, the 252nd partnered with the 250th Combat Engineer Battalion in record-setting performance for size and speed, both units earning Letters of Commendation from the British 21st Army Group and US Ninth Army.
 
Code Name: CLOUDBURST
 
Motto: Igni Ferroque (translates to FIRE AND IRON)
 
Command Structure (23 July 1943):
Lt. Col. Thomas W. Wommack- Commanding / Later Maj. David H. Woods
                                                                                 Lt. Col. Robert N. Anderson
                                                                                 Lt. Col. Alexander H. Miller
Capt. Seton H. Grim- XO
Company A- 1st Lt. Paul B. Ward- CO / Later Capt. Gilbert Markarian
Company B- 1st Lt. Paul O. McKeown- CO / Later Capt. Frank G. Maguire
Company C- Capt. Withers G. Birdsong- CO / Later Capt. Milton E. Staben
Hdqtr/Service- 1st Lt. Kenneth A. Nehring- CO
 
Unit Formation/Assignments:            
Unit activated (Camp Gruber, Oklahoma)- 23 July 1943
Assigned to Third Army
Assigned to X Corp- 10 August 1943
Assigned to Ninth Army- 15 April 1944
Assigned to XVI Corp- 2 February 1945
Reassigned to Ninth Army- 8 February 1945
Assigned to Seventh Army- 15 June 1945
Redesignated 252nd Engineer Construction Battalion- January 1947
Redesignated 252nd Engineer Service Battalion- 1 September 1948
Unit inactivated (Swetingen, Germany)- 1 May 1949
Unit reactivated (Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri)- 22 March 1951
Unit inactivated (Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri)- 15 August 1952
 
Unit Strength:
At the time of formation on 23 July 1943 the battalion was comprised of four subordinate units (Headquarters/Service Company, Company A, Company B and Company C) consisting of 27 officers, 3 warrant officers and 63 enlisted men. The battalion grew to 29 officers, 2 warrant officers and 740 enlisted men by 31 December 1943 and maintained this strength through February 1944; beginning in March and through the end of World War II the battalion total averaged 630.
 
Campaigns:
Northern France, Ardennes, Rhineland, Central Europe
 
Deployments:
European Theatre of Operations (ETO)- 24 August 1944
France, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany (Occupation thru 1 May 1949)

Principle
Bridge Constructions:
Wood bridges- Valkenburg, Holland/11-44
Trestle Bridge- Geilenkirchen, Germany/1-45
Trestle Bridge- Holland/2-45
Venlo Bridge (Maas)- Venlo, Holland/3-45
Trestle Bridge- Munchen-Gladbach, Germany/3-45
Roosevelt Bridge (Rhine)- Wesel, Germany/4-45
Weser-Elbe Canal Bridge (Elbe)- Magdeburg, Germany/5-45
Railway Bridge- Jossa, Germany/7-45

Type
Engineer
 
Parent Unit
Engineer Units
Strength
Battalion
Created/Owned By
Konczak, Kevin -Family 
   

Last Updated: Jan 15, 2021
   
   
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7 Members Also There at Same Time
252nd Engineer Battalion

Hall, Thomas, T/SGT, (1943-1946) Technical Sergeant
Harrison, Walter, S/SGT, (1943-1946) EN Staff Sergeant
Howat, John Jules, S/SGT, (1943-1944) EN Staff Sergeant
Stahl, William Woodrow, SGT, (1943-1944) Sergeant
Hudson, Benjamin Earl, T/5, (1943-1944) Technician Fifth Grade
Hudson, Benjamin Earl, T/5, (1943-1944) Technician Fifth Grade
B Company

Porter, Willis, S/SGT, (1943-1953) EN 3359 Staff Sergeant
Konczak, Alfred, PFC, (1943-1945) EN 50 Private First Class

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