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1Lt Lester Weiss

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1Lt Lester Weiss Veteran

Birth
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York, USA
Death
11 May 1944 (aged 24)
Gaubert, Departement d'Eure-et-Loir, Centre, France
Burial
Colleville-sur-Mer, Departement du Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France Add to Map
Plot
Plot A, Row 11, Grave 5
Memorial ID
View Source
First Lieutenant Lester Weiss, Army serial number O-789843, was born at Brooklyn, Kings County, New York on April 5, 1920. His friends in the service called him Wiggie. His parents were Dr. Meyer Weiss (15 Oct 1883 – 16 Jul 1940), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America about 1893; and Rose (Rosen) Weiss (9 Feb 1889 – 1 Jun 1951), who was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents married at Philadelphia on January 1, 1911. He had an older sister, Sylvia (Weiss) Lazar (8 Jun 1912 – 7 Mar 1990). The family lived initially in Manhattan, New York, where his father was a dentist. By September 1918 they lived at 782 Bushwick Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. In 1923 the family moved to Yonkers, Westchester County, New York, and by 1930 lived at 84 Elliott Avenue. His father set up his dental practice at 16 Palisade Avenue in Yonkers.

He graduated from Nathaniel Hawthorne Junior High School (now PEARLS Hawthorne School) in Yonkers in June 1934. In June 1937 he graduated from Yonkers High School (now Yonkers Middle High School), where he excelled at running track. He completed three years of college at Cornell University. After his father died in July 1940, he and his mother moved to 26 Post Street in Yonkers, the residence of his sister Sylvia and her husband Albert Earle Lazar (21 Jan 1909 – 1 Jan 1990).

He registered for the draft at Port Jervis, Orange County, New York on July 1, 1941. He was six feet tall, weighed 160 pounds, and had brown eyes and brown hair. At that time he was employed at Camp Talcott, a New York City YMCA Camp at nearby Huguenot, New York. He was single, without dependents, when he enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps as an Aviation Cadet at New York City, New York on December 8, 1941.

He completed Army Air Forces navigator training at Turner Field in Albany, Georgia, and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant on May 23, 1942. He was then assigned as a navigator in the 8th Antisubmarine Squadron, part of the the 26th Antisubmarine Wing of the Army Air Forces Antisubmarine Command. The 26th Antisubmarine Wing was headquartered at Miami, Florida. In 1942–1943 it dispatched B-24 antisubmarine patrols from bases in Florida, the Caribbean, South America, and Ascension Island. These included bases at Miami, Florida; Havana, Cuba; Borinquen Field, Puerto Rico; Waller Field, Trinidad; Atkinson Field, British Guyana; Zandery Field, Suriname; Belem, Fortaleza, and Natal in Brazil; and Wideawake Field on Ascension Island. In May–June 1943 Lt Weiss was stationed at Naval Auxiliary Air Station (NAAS) Boca Chica, 6 miles east of Key West, Florida.

On October 1, 1943 the 8th Antisubmarine Squadron was designated the 839th Bomb Squadron, and was assigned to the newly-formed 487th Bomb Group. The Squadron moved temporarily to Pueblo, Colorado; and on November 17, 1943 moved to the 487th Bomb Group's base at Bruning Army Air Base, Nebraska.

In December 1943 the 839th Bomb Squadron moved with the 487th Bomb Group to Alamogordo Army Air Base, New Mexico to conduct B-24 crew training. Some of the veterans of antisubmarine patrol were assigned to the other three Squadrons in the Group. Lt Weiss was assigned to the crew of 2/Lt Olen F. Huff in the 838th Bomb Squadron. Lt Huff's crew completed B-24 crew training at Alamogordo and deployed with the Group to England in March 1944. There is a photo of Lt Weiss and the Huff crew that was taken in March 1944 at Herington, Kansas, the first stop of the Group's flight echelon during the deployment. They flew B-24H 42-29525 from Alamogordo, New Mexico to Lavenham, England via the southern Atlantic ferry route—a journey of about 10,000 miles—and arrived in England by mid-April 1944. The 487th Bomb Group was based at Army Air Forces Station 137 near Lavenham, Suffolk, England, and was part of the 8th U.S. Army Air Force in Europe. The base control tower was located about two miles north of Lavenham at 52.1330°N, 0.7693°E.

Because of his previous experience, Lt Weiss was transferred off the Huff crew after arrival in England and was made a lead navigator. On May 11, 1944 he flew with the lead crew of Captain Edward J. Brodsky in B-24H 42-52763, in the deputy lead position of the 838th Bomb Squadron. Here is Captain Brodsky's crew roster on that day:

B-24H 42-52763 – 838th Bomb Squadron
Brodsky, Edward J – Capt – Pilot – POW
Roberts, John W – Capt – Copilot – POW
• Weiss, Lester – 1/Lt – Navigator – KIA
Johnson, Lee G – 2/Lt – Navigator – POW
Pearce, Thomas W – 1/Lt – Bombardier – KIA
Simoni, Walter – T/Sgt – Engineer – KIA
Nance, Clifford P – T/Sgt – Radio Operator – KIA
Tollett, Elton – S/Sgt – Ball Turret Gunner – MIA
Lipskas, Bronis D – S/Sgt – Tail Gunner – MIA
Murphy, William J – S/Sgt – Top Turret Gunner – KIA

The primary target for this mission was the railroad marshalling yards at Chaumont, France, southeast of Paris. The secondary target was Troyes. The 487th Bomb Group formation never reached the target. Navigational error resulted in the formation flying over accurate German flak guns guarding the airfield at Chateaudun, France. Brodsky's plane was hit by flak in the number 3 engine, which caught fire. The aircraft peeled off to the right. After losing number 4 engine it dove down, and Capt Brodsky made a crash landing on farmland belonging to a Mr. Hubert Bourjois near the village of Gaubert, commune of Guillonville, France, about fifteen miles east of Chateaudun. One crew member, Lt Lee Grover Johnson, bailed out safely before the crash landing. Capt Brodsky and his copilot, Capt John Willard Roberts, were able to escape from the aircraft on the ground, but were unable to suppress a wing fire. Six crew members—Lt Weiss, Lt Pearce, T/Sgt Simoni, T/Sgt Nance, S/Sgt Lipskas, and S/Sgt Murphy—were trapped in the aircraft and died when the fire spread and the fuel tanks exploded, engulfing the aircraft in flames. S/Sgt Elton Tollett was thrown from the plane during the crash landing, and suffered a severe head injury. He died at a German Air Force hospital in Orleans, France on May 12, 1944.

Five of the dead—Lt Weiss, Lt Pearce, T/Sgt Simoni, T/Sgt Nance, and S/Sgt Murphy—were interred as unknowns at the Saint Cheron civilian cemetery in Chartres, France on May 16, 1944, and were not identified until after the war. The remains of S/Sgt Lipskas were never found. S/Sgt Tollett was buried at the Memorial Cemetery in Orleans, France, but after the war a search failed to identify his remains. Lipskas and Tollett are still missing.

In October 1949 the remains of Lt Weiss were permanently interred at the US Military Cemetery Saint-Laurent-Sur-Mer, France (now named Normandy American Cemetery). He is buried in Plot A, Row 11, Grave 5.

He is memorialized on the Washington Park Veterans Memorial near City Hall in Yonkers, New York.

Some relatives:
     His father's parents were Herman H. Weiss (abt Mar 1852 – 4 Jan 1911), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America at New York City, New York in December 1892; and Fanny Weiss (abt Jan 1860 – unk) (first name could be Jedda or similar), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America about 1893. They married about 1875. Herman Weiss was a tailor and dressmaker.
     His mother's parents were Max Rosen (Oct 1861 – 26 Jul 1922), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America about 1885; and Marie (Yudelezsky) Rosen (30 Jan 1865 – unk), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America in July 1884. They married about 1885 and lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Max Rosen was a tailor and clothing manufacturer. Their daughter Rose (Rosen) Weiss was one of at least eleven children.

Sources:
1. 487th Bomb Group Association

2. 1900 US Census; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia County; Philadelphia City; 978 Fifth Street. Rosen, Max. 13 Jun 1900 (his mother's father)

3. 1910 US Census; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia County; Philadelphia City; Ward 20. Rosen, Max. Apr 1910 (his mother's father)

4. 1915 New York State Census; New York County (Manhattan); New York City. Weiss, Meyer. 1 Jun 1915 (his father)

5. 1920 US Census; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia County; Philadelphia City; Ward 20. Rosen, Max. 7 Jan 1920 (his mother's father)

6. 1920 US Census; New York; Kings County; Brooklyn. Weiss, Meyer. 8 Jan 1920 (his father)

7. 1925 New York State Census; Westchester County; Yonkers; Ward 4. Weiss, Meyer (his father)

8. 1930 US Census; New York; Westchester County; Yonkers; Ward 4. Weiss, Meyer. 4 Apr 1930 (his father)

9. 1940 US Census; New York; Westchester County; Yonkers; Ward 4; 84 Elliott Avenue. Weiss, Meyer. 13 Apr 1940 (his father)

10. American Battle Monuments Commission

11. Cleary, Victor J. Clarksburg Ohio's Courageous: WWII: Thomas W. Pearce: Part One and Part Two

12. de Jong, Ivo. The History of the 487th Bomb Group (H). Paducah KY: Turner Publishing, Oct 2004

13. Doup, Liz. A Ghost of Normandy. South Florida Sun-Sentinel, 12 Sep 2001

14. Enlistment Record of Lester Weiss

15. HQ, 359th Combat Crew Training School, Alamogordo Army Air Base, New Mexico. Special Orders Number 71. 11 March 1944 (487th Bomb Group flight echelon orders to proceed from Alamogordo, New Mexico to Herington, Kansas during the deployment to England)

16. Lacy, J. Wray. Combat Diary. May – Sep 1944 (Navigator, Olen F. Huff crew, 838th Bomb Squadron, 487th Bomb Group)

17. Lerner, Isadore. Personal Conversation. Apr 2009 (Flight Surgeon, 838th Bomb Squadron, 487th Bomb Group)

18. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia City Births, 1860-1906: Rose Rosen was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on 9 Feb 1889.

19. Rogers, Robert E. Mission Diary. 1944. (Bombardier, Olen F. Huff crew, 838th Bomb Squadron, 487th Bomb Group)

20. Selzer, Sid. A Little Story behind the Official Missing Air Crew Report. 19 Aug 2001 (now offline)

21. Social Security Death Index

22. U.S. Army Air Forces Missing Air Crew Report 4783

23. U.S. Department of the Army, Adjutant General Office, Technical Records Section. Individual Deceased Personnel File of Bronis D. Lipskas, 11030969 (aka '293 File')

24. U.S. Department of the Army, Adjutant General Office, Technical Records Section. Individual Deceased Personnel File of Elton Tollett, 18137302 (aka '293 File')

25. U.S. Department of the Army, Adjutant General Office, Technical Records Section. Individual Deceased Personnel File of Lester Weiss, O-789843 (aka '293 File')

26. U.S. Headstone and Interment Records for U.S. Military Cemeteries on Foreign Soil, 1942–1949 (ancestry.com)

27. U.S. School Yearbooks, 1900–1999: 1937 Blackboard [yearbook]. Yonkers, NY: Yonkers High School, 1937 (ancestry.com)

28. U.S. War Department. World War II Honor List of Dead and Missing Army and Army Air Forces Personnel. Washington, D.C., June 1946

29. U.S. World War II Draft Cards, Young Men, 1940–1947. Lester Weiss, age 21 years, born at New York City, New York on 5 Apr 1920; residence: 26 Post Street, Yonkers, Westchester County, New York; registered at Port Jervis, New York on 1 Jul 1941

30. Yonkers (NY) Herald Statesman Newspaper. Articles about the Meyer and Rose Weiss family published between 1934 and 1954; includes the obituary of Rose Rosen Weiss, his mother, published on 1 Jun 1951

31. World War I Draft Registration of Meyer Weiss. 12 Sep 1918 (his father)

Research by:
Paul M. Webber
Find A Grave member ID 47577572
First Lieutenant Lester Weiss, Army serial number O-789843, was born at Brooklyn, Kings County, New York on April 5, 1920. His friends in the service called him Wiggie. His parents were Dr. Meyer Weiss (15 Oct 1883 – 16 Jul 1940), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America about 1893; and Rose (Rosen) Weiss (9 Feb 1889 – 1 Jun 1951), who was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents married at Philadelphia on January 1, 1911. He had an older sister, Sylvia (Weiss) Lazar (8 Jun 1912 – 7 Mar 1990). The family lived initially in Manhattan, New York, where his father was a dentist. By September 1918 they lived at 782 Bushwick Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. In 1923 the family moved to Yonkers, Westchester County, New York, and by 1930 lived at 84 Elliott Avenue. His father set up his dental practice at 16 Palisade Avenue in Yonkers.

He graduated from Nathaniel Hawthorne Junior High School (now PEARLS Hawthorne School) in Yonkers in June 1934. In June 1937 he graduated from Yonkers High School (now Yonkers Middle High School), where he excelled at running track. He completed three years of college at Cornell University. After his father died in July 1940, he and his mother moved to 26 Post Street in Yonkers, the residence of his sister Sylvia and her husband Albert Earle Lazar (21 Jan 1909 – 1 Jan 1990).

He registered for the draft at Port Jervis, Orange County, New York on July 1, 1941. He was six feet tall, weighed 160 pounds, and had brown eyes and brown hair. At that time he was employed at Camp Talcott, a New York City YMCA Camp at nearby Huguenot, New York. He was single, without dependents, when he enlisted in the U.S. Army Air Corps as an Aviation Cadet at New York City, New York on December 8, 1941.

He completed Army Air Forces navigator training at Turner Field in Albany, Georgia, and was commissioned a Second Lieutenant on May 23, 1942. He was then assigned as a navigator in the 8th Antisubmarine Squadron, part of the the 26th Antisubmarine Wing of the Army Air Forces Antisubmarine Command. The 26th Antisubmarine Wing was headquartered at Miami, Florida. In 1942–1943 it dispatched B-24 antisubmarine patrols from bases in Florida, the Caribbean, South America, and Ascension Island. These included bases at Miami, Florida; Havana, Cuba; Borinquen Field, Puerto Rico; Waller Field, Trinidad; Atkinson Field, British Guyana; Zandery Field, Suriname; Belem, Fortaleza, and Natal in Brazil; and Wideawake Field on Ascension Island. In May–June 1943 Lt Weiss was stationed at Naval Auxiliary Air Station (NAAS) Boca Chica, 6 miles east of Key West, Florida.

On October 1, 1943 the 8th Antisubmarine Squadron was designated the 839th Bomb Squadron, and was assigned to the newly-formed 487th Bomb Group. The Squadron moved temporarily to Pueblo, Colorado; and on November 17, 1943 moved to the 487th Bomb Group's base at Bruning Army Air Base, Nebraska.

In December 1943 the 839th Bomb Squadron moved with the 487th Bomb Group to Alamogordo Army Air Base, New Mexico to conduct B-24 crew training. Some of the veterans of antisubmarine patrol were assigned to the other three Squadrons in the Group. Lt Weiss was assigned to the crew of 2/Lt Olen F. Huff in the 838th Bomb Squadron. Lt Huff's crew completed B-24 crew training at Alamogordo and deployed with the Group to England in March 1944. There is a photo of Lt Weiss and the Huff crew that was taken in March 1944 at Herington, Kansas, the first stop of the Group's flight echelon during the deployment. They flew B-24H 42-29525 from Alamogordo, New Mexico to Lavenham, England via the southern Atlantic ferry route—a journey of about 10,000 miles—and arrived in England by mid-April 1944. The 487th Bomb Group was based at Army Air Forces Station 137 near Lavenham, Suffolk, England, and was part of the 8th U.S. Army Air Force in Europe. The base control tower was located about two miles north of Lavenham at 52.1330°N, 0.7693°E.

Because of his previous experience, Lt Weiss was transferred off the Huff crew after arrival in England and was made a lead navigator. On May 11, 1944 he flew with the lead crew of Captain Edward J. Brodsky in B-24H 42-52763, in the deputy lead position of the 838th Bomb Squadron. Here is Captain Brodsky's crew roster on that day:

B-24H 42-52763 – 838th Bomb Squadron
Brodsky, Edward J – Capt – Pilot – POW
Roberts, John W – Capt – Copilot – POW
• Weiss, Lester – 1/Lt – Navigator – KIA
Johnson, Lee G – 2/Lt – Navigator – POW
Pearce, Thomas W – 1/Lt – Bombardier – KIA
Simoni, Walter – T/Sgt – Engineer – KIA
Nance, Clifford P – T/Sgt – Radio Operator – KIA
Tollett, Elton – S/Sgt – Ball Turret Gunner – MIA
Lipskas, Bronis D – S/Sgt – Tail Gunner – MIA
Murphy, William J – S/Sgt – Top Turret Gunner – KIA

The primary target for this mission was the railroad marshalling yards at Chaumont, France, southeast of Paris. The secondary target was Troyes. The 487th Bomb Group formation never reached the target. Navigational error resulted in the formation flying over accurate German flak guns guarding the airfield at Chateaudun, France. Brodsky's plane was hit by flak in the number 3 engine, which caught fire. The aircraft peeled off to the right. After losing number 4 engine it dove down, and Capt Brodsky made a crash landing on farmland belonging to a Mr. Hubert Bourjois near the village of Gaubert, commune of Guillonville, France, about fifteen miles east of Chateaudun. One crew member, Lt Lee Grover Johnson, bailed out safely before the crash landing. Capt Brodsky and his copilot, Capt John Willard Roberts, were able to escape from the aircraft on the ground, but were unable to suppress a wing fire. Six crew members—Lt Weiss, Lt Pearce, T/Sgt Simoni, T/Sgt Nance, S/Sgt Lipskas, and S/Sgt Murphy—were trapped in the aircraft and died when the fire spread and the fuel tanks exploded, engulfing the aircraft in flames. S/Sgt Elton Tollett was thrown from the plane during the crash landing, and suffered a severe head injury. He died at a German Air Force hospital in Orleans, France on May 12, 1944.

Five of the dead—Lt Weiss, Lt Pearce, T/Sgt Simoni, T/Sgt Nance, and S/Sgt Murphy—were interred as unknowns at the Saint Cheron civilian cemetery in Chartres, France on May 16, 1944, and were not identified until after the war. The remains of S/Sgt Lipskas were never found. S/Sgt Tollett was buried at the Memorial Cemetery in Orleans, France, but after the war a search failed to identify his remains. Lipskas and Tollett are still missing.

In October 1949 the remains of Lt Weiss were permanently interred at the US Military Cemetery Saint-Laurent-Sur-Mer, France (now named Normandy American Cemetery). He is buried in Plot A, Row 11, Grave 5.

He is memorialized on the Washington Park Veterans Memorial near City Hall in Yonkers, New York.

Some relatives:
     His father's parents were Herman H. Weiss (abt Mar 1852 – 4 Jan 1911), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America at New York City, New York in December 1892; and Fanny Weiss (abt Jan 1860 – unk) (first name could be Jedda or similar), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America about 1893. They married about 1875. Herman Weiss was a tailor and dressmaker.
     His mother's parents were Max Rosen (Oct 1861 – 26 Jul 1922), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America about 1885; and Marie (Yudelezsky) Rosen (30 Jan 1865 – unk), who was born in Russia and immigrated to America in July 1884. They married about 1885 and lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Max Rosen was a tailor and clothing manufacturer. Their daughter Rose (Rosen) Weiss was one of at least eleven children.

Sources:
1. 487th Bomb Group Association

2. 1900 US Census; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia County; Philadelphia City; 978 Fifth Street. Rosen, Max. 13 Jun 1900 (his mother's father)

3. 1910 US Census; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia County; Philadelphia City; Ward 20. Rosen, Max. Apr 1910 (his mother's father)

4. 1915 New York State Census; New York County (Manhattan); New York City. Weiss, Meyer. 1 Jun 1915 (his father)

5. 1920 US Census; Pennsylvania; Philadelphia County; Philadelphia City; Ward 20. Rosen, Max. 7 Jan 1920 (his mother's father)

6. 1920 US Census; New York; Kings County; Brooklyn. Weiss, Meyer. 8 Jan 1920 (his father)

7. 1925 New York State Census; Westchester County; Yonkers; Ward 4. Weiss, Meyer (his father)

8. 1930 US Census; New York; Westchester County; Yonkers; Ward 4. Weiss, Meyer. 4 Apr 1930 (his father)

9. 1940 US Census; New York; Westchester County; Yonkers; Ward 4; 84 Elliott Avenue. Weiss, Meyer. 13 Apr 1940 (his father)

10. American Battle Monuments Commission

11. Cleary, Victor J. Clarksburg Ohio's Courageous: WWII: Thomas W. Pearce: Part One and Part Two

12. de Jong, Ivo. The History of the 487th Bomb Group (H). Paducah KY: Turner Publishing, Oct 2004

13. Doup, Liz. A Ghost of Normandy. South Florida Sun-Sentinel, 12 Sep 2001

14. Enlistment Record of Lester Weiss

15. HQ, 359th Combat Crew Training School, Alamogordo Army Air Base, New Mexico. Special Orders Number 71. 11 March 1944 (487th Bomb Group flight echelon orders to proceed from Alamogordo, New Mexico to Herington, Kansas during the deployment to England)

16. Lacy, J. Wray. Combat Diary. May – Sep 1944 (Navigator, Olen F. Huff crew, 838th Bomb Squadron, 487th Bomb Group)

17. Lerner, Isadore. Personal Conversation. Apr 2009 (Flight Surgeon, 838th Bomb Squadron, 487th Bomb Group)

18. Pennsylvania, Philadelphia City Births, 1860-1906: Rose Rosen was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on 9 Feb 1889.

19. Rogers, Robert E. Mission Diary. 1944. (Bombardier, Olen F. Huff crew, 838th Bomb Squadron, 487th Bomb Group)

20. Selzer, Sid. A Little Story behind the Official Missing Air Crew Report. 19 Aug 2001 (now offline)

21. Social Security Death Index

22. U.S. Army Air Forces Missing Air Crew Report 4783

23. U.S. Department of the Army, Adjutant General Office, Technical Records Section. Individual Deceased Personnel File of Bronis D. Lipskas, 11030969 (aka '293 File')

24. U.S. Department of the Army, Adjutant General Office, Technical Records Section. Individual Deceased Personnel File of Elton Tollett, 18137302 (aka '293 File')

25. U.S. Department of the Army, Adjutant General Office, Technical Records Section. Individual Deceased Personnel File of Lester Weiss, O-789843 (aka '293 File')

26. U.S. Headstone and Interment Records for U.S. Military Cemeteries on Foreign Soil, 1942–1949 (ancestry.com)

27. U.S. School Yearbooks, 1900–1999: 1937 Blackboard [yearbook]. Yonkers, NY: Yonkers High School, 1937 (ancestry.com)

28. U.S. War Department. World War II Honor List of Dead and Missing Army and Army Air Forces Personnel. Washington, D.C., June 1946

29. U.S. World War II Draft Cards, Young Men, 1940–1947. Lester Weiss, age 21 years, born at New York City, New York on 5 Apr 1920; residence: 26 Post Street, Yonkers, Westchester County, New York; registered at Port Jervis, New York on 1 Jul 1941

30. Yonkers (NY) Herald Statesman Newspaper. Articles about the Meyer and Rose Weiss family published between 1934 and 1954; includes the obituary of Rose Rosen Weiss, his mother, published on 1 Jun 1951

31. World War I Draft Registration of Meyer Weiss. 12 Sep 1918 (his father)

Research by:
Paul M. Webber
Find A Grave member ID 47577572

Inscription

LESTER WEISS
1LT   487 BOMB GP
N.Y.   MAY 11 1944

Gravesite Details

Entered the service from New York.




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  • Maintained by: Paul Webber
  • Originally Created by: War Graves
  • Added: Aug 8, 2010
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56651305/lester-weiss: accessed ), memorial page for 1Lt Lester Weiss (5 Apr 1920–11 May 1944), Find a Grave Memorial ID 56651305, citing Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, Colleville-sur-Mer, Departement du Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; Maintained by Paul Webber (contributor 47577572).