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Price Lewis Roosevelt

Name:
Lewis Roosevelt Price
Rank:
Private
Serial Number:
33134289
Unit:
33rd Armored Regiment, 3rd Armored Division
Date of Death:
1944-08-29
State:
Maryland
Cemetery:
Epinal American Cemetery, Epinal, France
Plot:
B
Row:
34
Grave:
31
Decoration:
Purple Heart
Comments:

A farmer in Somerset, Maryland. Enlisted on January 15, 1942 at Fort George Meade, Maryland. Member of the crew of a Sherman tank of the 3rd Armored Division.
From Find a Grave:
Lewis served as a Private, 33rd Armored Regiment, 3rd Armored Division, U.S. Army during World War II. He resided in Somerset County, Maryland prior to the war. He enlisted in the Army on January 15, 1942 in Baltimore, Maryland. He was noted as being employed as a Farm Hand and also as Single, without dependents. Lewis was "Killed In Action" after the 3rd Armored Division "spearheaded" the US First Army through Normandy, taking part in a number of engagements, notably including the Battle of Saint Lô, where it suffered significant casualties. After facing heavy fighting in the hedgerows, and developing methods to overcome the vast thickets of brush and earth that constrained its mobility, the unit broke out at Marigny, alongside the 1st Infantry Division, and swung south to Mayenne. The engineers and maintenance crews took the large I-Beam Invasion barriers from the beaches at Normandy and used the beams to weld large crossing rams on the front of the Sherman tanks. They would then hit the hedgerows at high speed, bursting through them without exposing the vulnerable underbellies of the tanks. Until this happened, they could not get across the hedgerows. Ordered to help close the Falaise Gap and Argentan pocket which contained the German Seventh Army, the division finished the job near Putanges by 18 August. Six days later the outfit had sped through Courville and Chartres and was located at the banks of the Seine River. On the night of 25 August 1944 the crossing of the Seine by the division started; once over, the 3rd slugged its way across France, reaching Belgium on 2 September 1944. Liberated in the path of the division were Meaux, Soissons, Laon, Marle, Mons, Charleroi, Namur and Liege. It was at Mons that the division cut off 40,000 Wehrmacht troops and captured 8,000 prisoners. His body was taken to a temporary cemetery at Solers which is SE of Paris and remained there until the family requested it be buried in a permanent cemetery - Epinal. He was awarded the Purple Heart. Service # 33134289