Name : | Charles Heck | |
Rank : | Private | |
Regiment : | 345th Infantry Regiment | |
Division : | 87th Infantry Division | |
Entered Service from : | Pennsylvania | |
Year of Birth : | 1925 | |
Date of Death : | 6 March 1945 | |
Place of Death : | near Lissendorf (G) | |
In Henri-Chapelle : | Plot H, Row 3, Grave 12 | |
Awards : | Purple Heart | |
Charles Heck's Story ... |
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Charles Heck was born in 1925 and raised in Schaefferstown Pennsylvania. He grew up in a family with two brothers, one half-brother and two sisters. |
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St Luke's (a Lutheran church) in Schaefferstown | ||
After grammar school Charles became an automobile serviceman before he was drafted and joined the Army in 1944. |
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a 1940's Gas station ... | ||
Charles was enlisted in the Army in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. After basic training he was assigned to the 345th Infantry Regiment of the 87th Infantry Division, where he ended up in A-Company. |
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PVT Charles Heck in the US Army | ||
On 5 March 1945 a task force was formed under the command of (then) Captain John E Muir. This task force was formed to spearhead a fast-moving attack. Consisting of Company A 345th; the 87th Division's Reconnaissance Troop; Company C, 735th Tank Battalion; two tank destroyers and a pioneer platoon from the 607th Tank Destroyer Battalion; and an amublance, they formed during the night and set out at 6.30 AM from Neureuth on the morning of March 6th 1945. The small force was named after it's commanding officer, John E Muir ... |
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Major (then still Captain) John E Muir | ||
Together with the rest of Company A's men, Charles rode one of the tanks, tankdestroyers or a reconnaissance car. Following the excellent road net, they rolled over the hills and valleys between twenty-five and thirty miles an hour. After breaking a roadblock in Steffeln, Task Force Muir continued it's way. By 10.15 AM the leading echelon was moving through Lissendorf, headed for Kyll River bridge at the easternmost end of town. As the leading vehicle moved up to the ramp the bridge was blown to pieces. The retreating germans had succesfully thrown a water barrier in the path of the 345th Infantry Regiment. |
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Lissendorf (Germany) | ||
Platoon Sergeant Earle Hart and his men slogged across the river by foot ... One of the soldiers next to him was PVT Charles Heck. They started looking for Germans in the woods. By that time enemy fire from a small village North East of Lissendorf, Birgel was guided upon the task force. |
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the little town of Birgel (Germany) | ||
An American scout was wounded by enemy fire as he ran across a clearing. Soon afterwards, the life of the 19 year old Charles came to an abrupt end ... thousands of miles from home and family ... he was killed by a sniper. Platoon Sergeant Earle Hart remembers that the soldier sqeezed of a few rounds before dropping to the ground. Later that day another private was killed. |
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Earle Hart in 2004, the Platoon Sergeant who was with Charles ... |
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Earle Hart stated "The whole operation was a great succes to almost everyone else, but here in the final stretch, two guys were killed and another wounded." Unfortunatly Charles was one of them ... |
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Charles Heck ... only 19 years old and far away from home ... |
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These days Charles Heck rests in the beautiful American Military Cemetery at Henri-Chapelle ... He is remembered and honored by his cousin Mary Garisson and everyone who visits this website. His final resting place is visited regularly by the In-Honored-Glory webmaster. |
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PVT Charles Heck's final resting place | ||
Special thanks to Mary Garisson (neice Charles),
Preston Durrer, Earle Hart. Credits to Peter van de Wal - photographer of the Earle Hart picture. |
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© www.In-Honored-Glory.info published, December 4, 2005 |