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2LT Cecil M Gurganus

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2LT Cecil M Gurganus Veteran

Birth
Jacksonville, Onslow County, North Carolina, USA
Death
27 Mar 1945 (aged 21)
Saint-Avold, Departement de la Moselle, Lorraine, France
Burial
Saint-Avold, Departement de la Moselle, Lorraine, France Add to Map
Plot
Plot B Row 28 Grave 7
Memorial ID
View Source
2nd Lt Cecil Gurganus is buried at the Lorraine American Cemetery and Memorial in St. Avold, France. A cenotaph memorial, Find A Grave number 79589109, for him is located in the Onslow Memorial Park in Jacksonville, NC.

The Lorraine American Cemetery and Memorial in France covers 113.5 acres and contains the largest number of graves of our military dead of World War II in Europe, a total of 10,489. Their headstones are arranged in nine plots in a generally elliptical design extending over the beautiful rolling terrain of eastern Lorraine and culminating in a prominent overlook feature. Most of the dead here were killed while driving the German forces from the fortress city of Metz toward the Siegfried Line and the Rhine River. Initially, there were over 16,000 Americans interred in the St. Avold region, mostly from the U.S. Seventh Army's Infantry and Armored Divisions and its Cavalry Groups. St. Avold served as a vital communications center for the vast network of enemy defenses guarding the western border of the Third Reich.

Lt Gurganus was awarded the purple heart and Air medal
2nd Lt Cecil Gurganus is buried at the Lorraine American Cemetery and Memorial in St. Avold, France. A cenotaph memorial, Find A Grave number 79589109, for him is located in the Onslow Memorial Park in Jacksonville, NC.

The Lorraine American Cemetery and Memorial in France covers 113.5 acres and contains the largest number of graves of our military dead of World War II in Europe, a total of 10,489. Their headstones are arranged in nine plots in a generally elliptical design extending over the beautiful rolling terrain of eastern Lorraine and culminating in a prominent overlook feature. Most of the dead here were killed while driving the German forces from the fortress city of Metz toward the Siegfried Line and the Rhine River. Initially, there were over 16,000 Americans interred in the St. Avold region, mostly from the U.S. Seventh Army's Infantry and Armored Divisions and its Cavalry Groups. St. Avold served as a vital communications center for the vast network of enemy defenses guarding the western border of the Third Reich.

Lt Gurganus was awarded the purple heart and Air medal


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  • Maintained by: SHG
  • 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/56651915/cecil_m-gurganus: accessed ), memorial page for 2LT Cecil M Gurganus (25 Aug 1923–27 Mar 1945), Find a Grave Memorial ID 56651915, citing Lorraine American Cemetery and Memorial, Saint-Avold, Departement de la Moselle, Lorraine, France; Maintained by SHG (contributor 47536040).