Local Connections to the Sultana

Last weekend we attended a play, Long Journey Home, The Charles T. Kruse Civil War Story, held in the recently renovated St. Marys Theater. The play is based on a true story with an Auglaize County connection.

Cast of Long Journey Home, Charles T. Kruse Civil War Story, St Marys Theater, 20 Aug 2023

I learned of this interesting story several years ago at a Mercer County Chapter OGS meeting when Dr. Todd Spieles relayed the story of St. Marys native Charles Kruse, who wrote letters while serving in the war and sent them home to his parents. Kruse’s family saved those letters all these years and they were eventually made public.

Michael R. Hurwitz wrote, directed, and produced the one-act play we saw last weekend, which is based on Kruse’s letters and Dr. Spieles’ research. The play was very well done and the acting was exceptional. It was narrated by professional actor and Ohio native Gary Sandy, who is probably best known for his role as Andy Travis in the old TV comedy series WKRP in Cincinnati. Also, kudos to the stage set and the costumes. We enjoyed the play very much.

Cast of Long Journey Home, Charles T. Kruse Civil War Story, St Marys Theater, 20 Aug 2023

I knew most of Charles Kruse’s story from the genealogy talk I heard years ago, but during the play specific parts of Kruse’s story sounded eerily familiar and reminded me of a research report I did a few years ago. I even wrote a blog post about it.   

I’ll cut to the chase and spoil the Kruse story here. In a nutshell, Kruse served in the 50th Ohio Infantry for about a year and a half before he was captured at the Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, on 30 November 1864. He was sent from Cahaba, Alabama, prison camp to Andersonville, Georgia, prison camp, [1] two of the worst Confederate prisoner of war camps. In April 1865 General Lee surrendered his troops to General Grant and the war was nearly over. Kruse, who had survived two terrible prison camps, was allowed to go home. Kruse, with over 1951 paroled soldiers mainly from Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, and East Tennessee, 22 guards from the 58th OVI, 85 crew members, and 70 fare-paying cabin passengers, boarded the steamboat Sultana, at Vicksburg. The ship was extremely overcrowded. There were 2137 passengers onboard a boat that was designed to carry 376 passengers. Kruse and over 1200 other men perished near Memphis, Tennessee, at about 1:00 a.m. on 27 April 1865, when three of the four boat’s boilers exploded. It is the worst maritime disaster in U.S. history.

The final details of Kruse’s story were the same details of a research project I did several years ago. It was the story of Johann “John” Bahn, an Ohio soldier who served in the 183rd Ohio Infantry, captured at the Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, on 30 November 1864, was sent to Cahaba, Alabama, prison camp, survived the camp, boarded the Sultana to go home, and perished when the boat exploded on 27 April 1865. You can read the blog post I wrote about John Bahn’s story several years ago: Who Was Henry Trisel’s Adopted Son?  

I learned of John Bahn’s tragic story while researching a tombstone in our church cemetery. John Bahn, a civil war soldier who perished on the Sultana, left behind a widow and infant son in Cincinnati. The infant son never knew his biological father. John Bahn’s widow remarried and the family moved to near Chattanooga, Ohio, around 1870. John Bahn’s son, also named John Bahn (1865-1876), is buried in Zion Lutheran Cemetery at Chatt. John Bahn’s widow, who married Henry Trisel, is buried in East Bethel Cemetery, a couple miles northeast of Chatt.

The son of a soldier who perished on the Sultana is buried in Zion Chatt’s cemetery. That is why some of the details of the story sounded so familiar. The similarities between the two soldiers, Charles T. Kruse and Johann Bahn:

  • Both enlisted in the Ohio Infantry, Kruse in the 50th, Bahn in the 183rd
  • Both fought in and survived the fierce Battle of Franklin, Tennessee
  • Both were taken to Cahaba Prison Camp [Note: CivilWarPrisoners.com indicates that Kruse was at Cahaba before being transferred to Andersonville] [1]
  • Both survived the terrible conditions at the Confederate camp(s)
  • Both were on their way back to Ohio on the Sultana
  • Both perished when the Sultana exploded

Sad stories indeed. Most war-time stores are.

Sultana

From the website CivilWarPrisoners.com : “The explosion of the steamboat Sultana on April 27, 1865 in the middle of the night on the Mississippi River near Memphis resulted in what is probably the greatest loss of life in a naval disaster in American history. The ship was rated to carry only about 375 passengers, but nearly 2,200 Union prisoners from Andersonville and Cahaba prisons were crowded onto the boat that fateful night. The Sultana’s boilers exploded at 1 a.m. in the morning of April 27 seven miles north of Memphis, flinging men already weakened from their imprisonment into the flooded, icy river. Many prisoners were seriously burned and injured. There are 1,221 verified deaths from existing sources, including Adjutant General (AG) reports. Many Sultana experts put the death toll at 1,500 to 1,800, making the Sultana death toll higher than the Titanic. About 800 survivors were found and taken to hospital in Memphis, but nearly 300 died there from burns and exposure. Many bodies were never found. Men simply floated down the river, past Memphis on to their death.”

Miami Helmet, Piqua Ohio, 1 Oct 1885, Sultana

The following news article was published in 1885, 20 years after the Sultana exploded and sank, the recollections of Sultana survivor George M. Safford. Safford had also been a prisoner at Cahaba. After the war Safford was a railroad conductor and later a brakeman. The article is rather long but is informative and interesting:

THE SULTANA DISASTER
A Terrible Explosion on the Mississippi Twenty Years Ago
The Horrors of the Calamity, as told by a Survivor-The Boat Loaded With Discharged Prisoners of War-An Inhuman Coward-The Story of a Scar.
Correspondence of the Enquirer, Richmond Ind., Sept. 18, ‘85
Twenty years ago the civilized world was startled by the awfulest river horror that had ever occurred…and there are many people in Ohio and Indiana who still mourn for dear ones who had started home to them and never arrived. There are but few survivors living now who were on board the ill-fated steamer Sultana when she exploded her boilers…

…Noticing a large scar on [his] neck that extended up into his hair, the reporter asked him if it was the result of a railroad accident. Worse than that, was the answer I received that when the steamer Sultana blew up…

…The Sultana disaster occurred April 28, 1865, at two o’clock in the morning. It was the most appalling of water horrors…The steamer was a Cincinnati built boat intended to run in the Ohio River trade above the Queen City, but during the war she was placed in the trade between St. Louis and New Orleans. She was lengthened and broadened to a very large carrying capacity, her cabin stopped at the chimneys, leaving a large open space on the cabin and boiler deck, suitable for light freight or convenient for the transportation of troops. I belonged to the Tenth Indiana Cavalry, and was one of the unfortunate devils who took the first degree in rebel prison life at Libby, and the last at Andersonville. Under an arrangement between our Government and the officials of the C.S.A. all, or nearly all, the Union prisoners contained at Andersonville, Ga, Meridian, Miss, United States lines and encamped near Vicksburg, at Four-Mile Bridge, on the Jackson and Vicksburg Railroad. These prisoners were under the charge of three Commissioners of the Confederate States.

You can well imagine how we fellows who had lived a living death for months felt at the prospect of seeing home and friends again, and we were actually lighthearted and had almost forgotten our sufferings. When…the Sultana arrived she was greeted with cheers, and as General Banks walked down her gangplank men cried for joy and hugged each other like school-girls.

But our joy was short duration, for the Sultana brought us the news of the assassination of President Lincoln. The effect of this news is simply indescribable. To be immured for months in hell was bad enough, but to have our beloved President shot like a dog by a coward who used his pistol from behind was more than we could stand. The camp was soon in an uproar, and loud threats of vengeance were made…

It was determined to send home at once all ex-prisoners of war, as the war was virtually over…The prisoners were divided or parceled off by States and the next to the last lot…was composed of soldiers from Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and East Tennessee. This lot was loaded on the Sultana. On board the boat [were] over twenty-one hundred soldiers and ex-prisoners, with the crew and about forty passengers, eight of them women, and six small children, making a grand total of over twenty-two hundred souls on board.

As the boat swung out into the river and we realized that at last we were bound for God’s country, home and friends, we lustily cheered the grand old flag…That old flag never seemed to dear before, and many an old veteran who had borne the horrors of Andersonville without a sign of weakening broke down and cried like a child.

The boat left Vicksburg on the night of April 24th, about half-past eight, and arrived at Memphis on the afternoon of the 27th…The machinery was out of repair and we laid at Memphis until after one o’clock on the morning of the 28th. A number of the passengers were awake and were singing some of our old camp songs, little suspecting what was before. When we were about six miles above Memphis there was a sudden roar, the boat trembled like a leaf, and in an instant the white steam had enveloped her from stem to stern. Our songs were changed to cries, and above the crashing timbers and oaths could be heard the shrieking of women and screams of the children. Men groped through the dense smoke and hot steam, women rushed from their state-rooms, and a scene of wildest confusions prevailed. All this in less time than it takes to tell it.

Suddenly the awful cry went up, The Boat Is On Fire!…flames…darted up the woodwork…dry timbers…and cabins burned like paper. In ten minutes’ time the craft was one sheet of flame, driving the survivors into the water.

The Mississippi at that time was more than bank full, the western bank overflowed for many miles…not an officer of the boat left living to tell the poor wretches what to do…No small boats or life-preservers were in sight…All there was left for that mass of humanity to do was to jump into the water and try for their lives, perhaps ten miles from one shore and one mile from the other, with a strong, swift current to wash them out when almost within arm’s length of the east bank. About five hundred wretches gathered on the bow of the boat, and were seemingly safe, for the hulk was rapidly drifting toward land, and before the flames would reach them they would be so near shore that it would not be much trouble to reach it. Suddenly the hulk turned out stream, the wind gave fresh impetus to the fire, and the flames dashed into that crowd of shrieking, crying and praying humanity driving them into the water, from which not fifty escaped alive.

The river in the evening was lighted up by the flames, and on its broad bosom could be seen hundreds and hundreds of struggling men, catching at everything coming near them. The water was cold and chilly, and many a strong swimmer was taken with cramps and went down forever. Some were uninjured and some had already received their death-wounds, but with that tenacity that had brought them through many months of danger, sickness and suffering, they clung to life until forced to surrender to the mighty flood, and, throwing up their arms in one last effort, would sink to a water grave.

Although twenty years have passed, the recollections of that scene are as fresh in my memory as though occurring yesterday. I was fortunate enough to have some knowledge of river steamers, and, knowing where the life-preservers were kept, I found one for myself and another for my companion, and assisted five of the ladies over the side of the boat from the cabin deck, after buckling on life-preservers, into the water before the flames compelled me to take the same leap.

AN INHUMAN COWARD
I had fastened a preserver under the arms of a very handsome little lady from Columbus, Ohio, who displayed more grit than half the men, and as I turned to help another, a man, or the semblance of a man, jerked the life-preserver from the Columbus lady and she sank before his eyes. Thank God, the cowardly dog was not a soldier, but was one of the crew. I have never seen him since, but I have his picture so stamped on my memory that I would know him if I met him anywhere under any circumstances. Even now I would hate to trust myself if I should meet him.

Besides this lady four of the others were lost also. After I was compelled to take to the water I had to fight my way through a mass of humanity anxious only to grasp at the last thing within reach, and several times I came near being pulled under by drowning men. Being an expert swimmer, as quickly as possible I swam away from the crowd that hovered near the burning boat, like moths near the flame, hoping against that something would turn up to help them ashore, or that they might secure a strong a strong board or plank, or anything they knew not nor cared not, only fearing to trust themselves in the inky darkness of the muddy river away from the circle of light made by the burning steamer. Before the explosion myself and partner were sitting together over the, or on the hatch that led down on the after guard by the ladies’ cabin. We had resolved to stay together, but in case we were separated to swim to the east, hoping to land on the bluff bank on that side instead of trusting to the bottoms of the west bank, although the boat at the time of the explosion was nearer to the willow of what would have been the west shore in an ordinary state of water. We were separated the instant we touched the water, and did not meet again until the afternoon of the next day. I was picked up by a row-boat from the gun-boat Essex and he by another, both of us partially unconscious, both saved by life-preservers.

After swimming away from the crowd around the burning steamer my left arm and both knew were cramped by the cold water, and my left leg was almost useless until the next day. The debilitated condition of the soldiers, and the water extremely cold from the melted snows of the Missouri River, was mainly the cause of such great mortality. I was informed by Major Williams, at that time Provost Marshal for General Washburn at Memphis, that the loss of life exceeded eighteen hundred. It was openly charged at the time that the Quartermaster at Vicksburg and the Captain of the Sultana, Cass Mason, had made money by placing six or eight hundred more men on the boat than her capacity would stand I did at the time, and General Dann at Vicksburg came in for a large share of censure from many friends for allowing so many men on our steamer. Captain Mason was lost, but the pilot on watch at the time of the explosion-I think his name was Cayton-is still living. He was injured somewhat, I believe but got out as I did, with a life-preserver to assist him.

The boilers of the Sultana were of the class called tubular and the explosions from them became so numerous that shortly after the wreck of this boat the scare was on the country so great that steamboats carrying tubular boilers were compelled by public opinion to change them for the old pattern.

THE PECULIAR SCAR
…When the explosion occurred hundreds of human beings were hurled like balls in the air. A handsome little fellow, a Captain in an Ohio regiment, and whose home was in Cincinnati was thrown into the air, and as he came down struck me, knocking me against a stanchion, the blow against the post cutting a fearful gash, the scar of which you see. The little Captain was dead when he struck the deck and I suppose his body was burned and then sunk to the bottom of the Mississippi River…. [2]

About George M. Safford (1844-1902), who told the above story in 1885: Private George Mayhew Safford, 10th Indiana Cavalry, was captured 25 September 1864 at Sulphur Branch Trestle, Alabama, and taken to Cahaba prison camp. He survived the Sultana explosion and was treated for exhaustion at Gayoso. He mustered out 30 June 1865. Some accounts say his father (1815-1887) was on the Sultana with him and that George went insane some years later, from the horrors he experienced on the Sultana. George died in Marion, Grant County, Indiana, 29 June 1902, and is buried in Marion National cemetery there. [3]

Entertainment at Long Journey Home, Charles T. Kruse Civil War Story, St Marys Theater, 20 Aug 2023

[1] Civil War Prisoners.com , Charles T. Kruse. 

[2] “The Sultana Disaster,” The Miami Helmet, Piqua, Ohio, 1 October 1885, Newspaperarchive.com, viewed 23 Aug 2023.

[3] Civil War Prisoners.com, George M. Safford; and U.S., National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938, George M Safford; database on-line, Ancestry.com; and George Mayhew Safford, FindaGrave.com, memorial no. 2864303.  [note by kmb: It appears Safford’s death date is incorrect on Find a Grave.com. Military/veterans documents indicate that he died in June, not January.]

Tombstone Tuesday-Good Shepherd Engraving

This tombstone engraving is one that is immediately recognizable by Christians.

The Good Shepherd engraving, St. Paul Lutheran Cemetery, Preble, Indiana.

Jesus is often referred to as the Good Shepherd and is called a shepherd several times in the Bible.

“The Lord is my Shepherd…” is the first verse of the well-known and comforting 23rd Psalm.

Catholic Cemetery, Celina, Ohio.

Jesus said, “I am the good shepherd. I know my sheep and my sheep know me…” (John 10)

These Good Shepherd verses remind us that Jesus cares for us, watches over us, and guides us, just as a shepherd does for his flock. 

Evans City Cemetery, Pennsylvania

There is even a Good Shepherd Sunday during the church year, when the Gospel and other liturgical readings pertain to the Good Shepherd.

 

Postmarked Willshire, 1911, from D.W.H.

Regular readers know that I enjoy trying to figure out and learn a little about the writers and recipients of old post cards from this area.

Today, an interesting old postcard with an April 1911 Willshire postmark, an Easter postcard with a cross and Easter lilies.

1911 postcard, postmarked 1911 Willshire, Ohio, from D.W.H.

The front of the postcard is a typical holiday postcard for that time period. However, the back is rather unusual because the message and address are typed out. Nearly every postcard I have seen from that time is handwritten.

Postmarked April 1911, Willshire, from D.W.H.

The message:

April 11, 1911
Dear Friend:
They are there.
That makes fence staks
[sic]
Ho. Ho. Ho.
How this for you
It looks good to me.
Good. By.
D,W,H,
pleasant-Mills
Ind,

Mr. Leo Karl.
796 kercheval ave.
Detroit.
Mich,   

The message is rather curious and does not make much sense. Plus, how many rural Indiana households had a typewriter in 1911? Or perhaps this was typed from a business, although the message does not sound very business-like.

The typewriter, as we basically know it, was invented in about 1870 and the first practical typewriter was the Remington. I wonder if this message was typed on a Remington like this.

Old Remington Typewriter

After a little research, I believe the writer, D.W.H., may have been 32 year-old Daniel Wesley Hamrick, who in 1910 lived near Pleasant Mills, in St. Marys Township, Adams County, Indiana. In 1910 Daniel was single, living by himself, and doing odd jobs. [1] He was born in 1875/6, the son of Moses and Margaret (Knock) Hamrick and died in Fort Wayne in 1960.

The recipient of the postcard, Leo Karl, was living at the above address in 1910. He was age 23, single, and worked as a baker. [2] A few years later he was a soldier in WWI.

[1] 1910 U.S. Census, St. Marys, Adams, Indiana, ED 10, p. 1A, Dwelling & Family 7, Daniel W. Hamrick; Ancestry.com, viewed 17 Aug 2023.

[2] 1910 U.S. Census, Detroit Ward 17, Wayne, Michigan, ED 248, p. 12A, Dwelling 197, Family 263, Leo Karl [Anton Karl household]; Ancestry.com, viewed 17 Aug 2023.

Tombstone Tuesday-John George Albright

John George Albright/Albrecht, Kessler/Liberty Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio. (2023 photo by Karen)

This is the tombstone of John George Albright, located in row 15 of Kessler/Liberty Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio.

This tombstone is weathered and is nearly illegible. I believe, at this time, the best reading of this tombstone is from 33 years ago, when the Mercer County Chapter OGS read the cemetery in 1990.

Their 1990 reading: J.G. Alhricht [died] 3 October 1850, [aged] 11 J, 9 M, 11 T. [1]

Although it would appear that 11-year J.G. Alhricht is buried here, I believe this is the tombstone of 44-year-old John Georg Albright/Albrecht, and that what has been read as age 11 years of age is actually age 44 years of age. Certain numbers are difficult to read on old, weathered marble tombstones and the number 4 is one of them. The number 4 often had a bold vertical line and thin horizontal and angled lines. Those thin strokes nearly disappear over time and years later the number 4 may end up looking like the number 1. I believe that is the case with this tombstone.

The surname is also difficult to read and I believe Alhricht is actually Albright/Albrecht.

Several items support the fact that this is the tombstone of 44-year-old John George Albright, who died 3 October 1850:

  • An 1897 affidavit states that John George Albright died 3 October 1850, as stated by two of his Liberty Township neighbors. [2]
  • John George Albright owned a farm and lived about a mile from Kessler/Liberty Cemetery and was the only J.G. Albright living in the area at that time.
  • The 44-year age agrees with John George Albright’s age on the ship’s passenger list and his age in the 1850 census.
  • John George Albright died after 14 September 1850, the day the 1850 census was taken in Liberty Township, and before 16 July 1852, when his daughter Christine Albright died. Her church death record states that her father was deceased.
  • His widow Eva Barbara Albright gave consent for their underage daughter to marry in 1853. The father John George would have given consent if he were alive.
  • John George Albright’s wife Eva Barbara was called Widow Albright in Zion Schumm’s records when she married Adam Ehrman in 1853.

John George Albright, Kessler/Liberty Cemetery, Mercer County, Ohio. (2023 photo by Karen)

Assuming this is the tombstone of 44 year-old John George Albright, his date of birth was 22 December 1805, as calculated from his tombstone.    

John George Albright, 37, emigrated from Bavaria in 1842, arriving in America with his wife Eva Barbara, 38, two daughters, Anna, 6, and Christina, 3, and Andrew Hiller, 42. They sailed from Bremen on the ship Emma and arrived in New York on 26 July 1842. [3]

The John George Albright family and Andrew Hiller immediately settled in Liberty Township, Mercer County, Ohio. Both men were enumerated in Mercer County’s 1843 Quadrennial Enumeration. [4]

About that same time, John George Albright purchased 40 acres of land in Liberty Township. His 40-acre farm was located in the NE Quarter of the NW Quarter of Section 17, as listed in the 1853 Mercer County Plat Book. [5] The Albright farm was located on the south side of what is now Oregon Road, about a quarter mile east of State Route 49.

The Albrights and Andrew Hiller were enumerated in the 1850 census in Liberty Township:
John C [G] Albrite [Albright], 45
Barbara Albrite, [Albright], 40
Barbara Albrite, [Albright], 14
Christina Albrite, [Albright], 11
Andrew Hellen [Hiller], 51.
All members of the household were born in Germany and John and Andrew were farmers. [6]

Andrew Hiller immigrated with the Albrights and lived with the Albrights in Liberty Township. Was he related to John or Barbara? I have a feeling he was.

That 1850 census enumeration was taken in Liberty Township on 14 September 1850. John Georg Albright died a couple weeks later, on 3 October 1850, and is buried in row 15 of Kessler/Liberty Cemetery.

John George Albright’s widow Eva Barbara married widower Adam Ehrman in Van Wert County on 2 August 1853 .

Eva Barbara Albright Ehrman (1810-1853) died on 17 September 1853, about six weeks after her marriage to Adam Ehrman. Three months later, on 18 November 1853, her second husband Adam Ehrman (1799-1853) died.

John George and Eva Barbara Albright had two daughters that immigrated with them:
Anna Barbara Albright (1836-1913), married George Bollenbacher (1830-1912)
Christine Albright (1839-1852)

[1] Mercer County Chapter OGS, compiler, Mercer County, Ohio, Cemetery Inscriptions, Vol. VI, Blackcreek, Hopewell, and Liberty Townships, (Celina, Ohio : Privately printed, 1990), p.66.

[2] Mercer County, Ohio, Recorder’s Office, affidavit, Vol. 15:525.

[3] New York, U.S., Arriving Passenger and Crew Lists, 1820-1957, 1842, Arrival, New York, New York, Line 8, list number 659, Andre Hiller; Ancestry.com, viewed 10 May 2023.

[4] 1827 and 1843 Quadrennial Enumeration of Adult White Males of Mercer County, Ohio, The Mercer County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society, 2004, data from the Paul Lawrence Dunbar Library Special Collections and Archives, Wright State University, p. 28.

[5] 1853 Mercer County, Ohio, Plat Book, p. 199.

[6] 1850 U.S. Census, Liberty, Mercer, Ohio, p.287A, dwelling, family, John C Albrite [sic]; Ancestry.com, viewed 10 May 2023.

1918-Reichard Rescued from Torpedoed Boat

Several months ago I wrote about Emanuel and Emil Schumm, two brothers from the Schumm area who served in the U.S. armed forces during WWI.

They weren’t the only ones. There were many others from the area who also served in The War to End All Wars. Thank you to the Reichards for sending me several photos of their relatives who also served in WWI.

Today, a little about one of them, Willshire native William Denzil Reichard, who served in the Navy during WWI.  

William Denzil Reichard (1891-1982), WWI

William Denzil Reichard was born in Willshire, Ohio, 7 March 1891, the son of James Henry E. (1867-1945) and Malinda Mae (Sonday) (1872-1958) Reichard. William grew up in Willshire and enlisted in the U.S. Navy 4 December 1917.

William D. Reichard, 27, survived a harrowing Naval attack during the war.

William D. Reichard was sailing near Scotland, stationed on the cargo vessel USS Lakemoor. On 11 April 1918 the USS Lakemoor, aka Lake Moore, freighter/cargo vessel (ID-2180), was torpedoed and sunk in the Irish Sea, 3 miles off Corsewall Point Light, sunk by the German UB-64 [possibly UB-73]. 46 sailors perished but William D. Reichard was among the 18 survivors. [1] William was very lucky to have survived.  

An official announcement issued at Washington confirms the report that William D. Reichard, of Willshire, was among the rescued American soldiers on board the Lake Moor, when the vessel was torpedoed in a French port. [2]

VAN WERT BOY RESCUED FROM TORPEDOED BOAT
Van Wert, O, April 25- William Densel [sic] Reichard, of Willshire, this county, was among those rescued from the cargo ship Lake Moor when it was sunk by a German submarine off the Irish coast. The navy officials gave the news to the parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Reichard. The message further stated that Reichard was landed at an Irish port and would soon return to the United States. Reichard enlisted in the navy three months ago. He had previously served one enlistment period. [3]

The Fort Wayne Sentinel, 25 Apr 1918.

A longer article, more detailed article from a Defiance, Ohio, newspaper:

BOY WHO WAS ON BOARD TORPEDOED SHIP WILL SPEAK AT COMMUNITY SING TONIGHT
William Demsel
[sic] Reichard, who was on the ill fated United States freight Lakemoor, which was torpedoed at eleven o’clock the night of April 11th by the Hun submarine rats and which sunk in two minutes after the torpedo was fired with the result that Reichard was in the water for five hours before he was picked up, will appear at the Community Sing at court house square this evening.

Mr. Reichard, who is an engineer in the naval service, was serving as a fireman on the Lakemoor when she was sunk.

His home is at Wilshire [sic], Ohio, and he is visiting his two brothers Charles and Fred, who board at the home of Charles Zeschke. He is home on a fifteen day furlough.

While he is very modest, he has been prevailed upon to appear at the Community Sing in full uniform this evening and will be introduced to the large audience.

“There were nineteen vessels in our fleet,” said Richard [sic]. “Two of them were sunk. They got us at 11 o’clock at night. I was sleeping in the coal bunkers when the crash came. It seemed that everything had come down on me. I had decided to give up when one of my pards said, ‘Hurry up, and get out of this.’ We found our way out and leaped into the water. We were in the water five hours when we were picked up by a Norwegian steamer. I had no life belt but we had a raft and just floated around. My legs became cramped and bent but we were picked up in time so that everything came out alright. I never saw any more of my pards in the fire room. There were 46 lost and 18 saved. The Hun threw his lights around for awhile after he had sunk us. It’s a good thing he didn’t find us or he probably would have shelled us.”

Mr. Reichard says that the Lakemoor was not armed and therefore could not put up a fight. He still feels the effects of the cold water on his limbs.

He returned to the United States on an American ship that formerly was a big German liner. An attempt was made to torpedo it and the torpedo missed it only a few feet, striking a British cruiser that was conveying it but not sinking the cruiser.

He says that the men in the Navy are especially in need of lens (glasses). The Germans camouflage their subs different every time they go out and it is almost impossible to distinguish one. With good lens it makes it easier to locate them. People back home who have opera glasses should give them to the Navy.

He will return in a few days to New York City to take a few more trips across and back.

Mr. Reichards [sic] was asked to appear at the Community Sing this evening. “Nothing doing,” said he. “I’m not a public speaker and I don’t want to face no crowd.” He was told that it would have a good effect on the people back home and finally consented to do so…

Dr. E.O. Crist will deliver a short patriotic address… [at] the Sing…College and High school voices will lead the singing… These Community Sings are being held all over the United States for the purpose of stimulating patriotism and enthusiasm. “America is singing herself to Victory” and Defiance is doing her share. Especially are the Community Sings proving popular in the eastern cities. [4] 

William D. Reichard was honorably discharged 18 September 1919. He married Gertrude Irene Resch (1898-1936) in New York, New York, on 22 Jun 1918. They resided with her parents in New York for a couple years but moved to Fort Wayne, Indiana, between 1920-1921, where their infant son William died in 1921. William and Gertrude Reichard had three additional children. Gertrude died in 1936 and widower William D. Reichard married Bessie Cleo (Ribkee) Berry (1904-2000) on 11 March 1944 in Indiana. William D. Reichard died in Fort Wayne 13 Aug 1982 and is buried Greenlawn Memorial Park, Fort Wayne.

[1] Casualties of the United States Navy and Coast Guard, Naval History Homepage, viewed 9 Aug 2023.

[2] Van Wert Daily Bulletin, Van Wert, Ohio, 26 Apr 1918; NewspaperArchive.com, viewed 9 Aug 2023.

[3] The Fort Wayne Sentinel, Fort Wayne, Indiana, 25 Apr 1918; Newspapers.com, viewed 9 Aug 2023.

[4] Defiance Crescent-News, Defiance, Ohio, Saturday, 11 May 1918, Newspaperarchive.com, viewed 9 Aug 2023.