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Dr Stephen Wilmer Tunnell

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Dr Stephen Wilmer Tunnell Veteran

Birth
Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
25 Dec 1961 (aged 76)
Burial
Beverly, Burlington County, New Jersey, USA Add to Map
Plot
W, 2127
Memorial ID
View Source
Captain sailed to France aboard the ship Agamemnon in Hoboken, NJ on Jul 9, 1918 with Casuals as a member of the 317th Amb. Co. of the 305th Sanitary Train. He returned a Major on the ship Rotterdam with the Headquarters Detachment Ambulance Section, of the 305th Sanitary Train. Typically soldiers of the 305th Sanitary Train of the 80th Division sailed to France for WWI on several ships, USS Mercury, USS Siboney, or USS Huron from Newport News & Norfolk, Virginia, in May, 1918. The Sanitary Train consisted of the 317, 318, 319, and 320th Ambulance Companies, the 317, 318, 319, and 320th Field Hospitals, and the 305th Sanitary Train Headquarters. The sanitary train returned to Hoboken, New Jersey, on the USS Rotterdam from Brest, France. The soldiers boarded the ship on May 20, 1919 in Brest France and arrived in Hoboken on May 31, 1919. Once ashore they were given refreshments by welfare organizations. They proceeded to Jersey City by ferry and then by passenger coaches to Camp Dix, New Jersey, for out-processing. All their possessions were sterilized in a steam sterilizer which was very effective. Any thing leather shrunk to a much smaller size. Sanitary Train was decommissioned on Jun 9, 1919. (Reference: “History of 318 Field Hospital” (2019) by Thomas Nelson; U.S. Army Transport Service, Passenger Lists, 1910-1939)
Captain sailed to France aboard the ship Agamemnon in Hoboken, NJ on Jul 9, 1918 with Casuals as a member of the 317th Amb. Co. of the 305th Sanitary Train. He returned a Major on the ship Rotterdam with the Headquarters Detachment Ambulance Section, of the 305th Sanitary Train. Typically soldiers of the 305th Sanitary Train of the 80th Division sailed to France for WWI on several ships, USS Mercury, USS Siboney, or USS Huron from Newport News & Norfolk, Virginia, in May, 1918. The Sanitary Train consisted of the 317, 318, 319, and 320th Ambulance Companies, the 317, 318, 319, and 320th Field Hospitals, and the 305th Sanitary Train Headquarters. The sanitary train returned to Hoboken, New Jersey, on the USS Rotterdam from Brest, France. The soldiers boarded the ship on May 20, 1919 in Brest France and arrived in Hoboken on May 31, 1919. Once ashore they were given refreshments by welfare organizations. They proceeded to Jersey City by ferry and then by passenger coaches to Camp Dix, New Jersey, for out-processing. All their possessions were sterilized in a steam sterilizer which was very effective. Any thing leather shrunk to a much smaller size. Sanitary Train was decommissioned on Jun 9, 1919. (Reference: “History of 318 Field Hospital” (2019) by Thomas Nelson; U.S. Army Transport Service, Passenger Lists, 1910-1939)


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