Manly J. PringleAge: 461899–1945
- Name
- Manly J. Pringle
Birth | 16 January 1899 44 34 Sand Lake, Kent Co. Michigan
Note:
Name: Manly Pringle
Name: Manly Pringle
Birth Date: 16 Jan 1899
Birthplace: Sand Lake, Kent, Michigan
Gender: Male
Father's Name: N.N. Pringle
Father's Birthplace: Michigan
Mother's Name: Elva Pringle
Mother's Birthplace: Michigan
Reference ID: item 2 p 357 rn 16711 , GS Film number: 2322869 , Digital Folder Number: 4207563 , Image Number: 1052 Citing this Record
"Michigan, Births, 1867-1902," Database with images, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NQFQ-XD9 : accessed 29 June 2015), Manly Pringle, 16 Jan 1899; citing item 2 p 357 rn 16711, Sand Lake, Kent, Michigan, Departmen t of Vital Records, Lansing; FHL microfilm 2,322,869. |
Death of a maternal grandmother | 18 February 1907 (Age 8) Solon, Kent County, Michigan
maternal grandmother -
Martha Jubb
|
Death of a paternal grandfather | about 17 January 1909 (Age 10) Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida
paternal grandfather -
Alfred Pringle
|
Military Service | Canadian Over-Seas Expeditionary Forces 28 November 1916 (Age 17) St. Catherine's, Ontario Canada
Note:
Attestation papers of men enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) of the First World War.
Attestation papers of men enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) of the First World War.
CANADIAN OVER-SEAS EXPEDITIONARY FORCE.
No. Folio.
QUESTIONS TO BE PUT BEFORE ATTESTATION.
What is your surname?..Pringle,
What are your Christian names Manley Jay
What is your present address
. In what Town, Township o
Parish, and i
what Country w
3. What is the name of your next-of kin ?............
4. What is the address of yoar nest-of-kin ?........
4a. What is the relationship of your next-of-Mn ?,
5. What is the date of your birth?........................
6. What is your Trade or Calling?........................
8. Are you willing to be vaccinated or re-vaccinated and inoculated?................................
9. Do you now belong to the Active Militia?.......
10. Have you ever served in any Military Force ?..
your engagement?................................................
12. Are yon willing t
Pringle, Manley ""J
Sand Lake, Michigan, USA
can,
LAN 0 VEB
nthe)
"ICtfo- January ;t\*94-School' Teac-he r
Yes
..... No
Yes
Yes
Manley Jay Pringle
Birth Date: 16 Jan 1894
Birth Location: Sand Lake, Michigan, United States of America
Residence: Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Relative: Mrs Elvie Pringle
Relationship: Mother
Regiment Number: 264785
Source Information
Original data: Canada. "Soldiers of the First World War (1914-1918)." Record Group 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 4930 - 35. Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa.
|
Military Service | , Troop E of the 16th Calvary 3 June 1918 (Age 19)
Note:
Pension Number 1963456
Pension Number 1963456
Inscribed on his tombstone "Veteran World War I"
Name: Manly J Pringle
Event Type: Military Service
Event Date: 1934
Event Place: Dayton, Ohio, United States
Age: 36
Birthplace: ,
Birth Year (Estimated): 1898
Page: 76831
Affiliate Publication Title: Historical Registers of National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938
Affiliate Publication Number: M1749
Affiliate Film Number: 80
GS Film number: 1548681
Digital Folder Number: 004832624
Image Number: 00176
Citing this Record:
"United States National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938," Database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VZ3Q-SBN : accessed 29 June 2015), Manly J Pringle, 1934; citing p. 76831, Dayton, Ohio, Unite d States, NARA microfilm publication M1749 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 80; FHL microfilm 1,548,681.
As part of the 1916 plan for increase of the Army, two cavalry regiments were authorized in the first increment. Designated as the 16th and 17th, they were organized in July 1916 at Forts Sam Houston and Bliss, Texas, respectively. To enable th e new organizations to become operational as soon as possible, experienced officers and men from existing cavalry regiments were transferred to the new ones, and by mid-July 1916 the 16th and 17th Cavalry were in fair shape. These were the las t additions to the cavalry arm until after the declaration of war on Germany.
In the matter of arms and equipment during this period, it is important that in 1904 the new U.S. rifle Model 1903 replaced the Krag-Jorgensen as the standard arm of cavalry, as well as infantry, and remained so until the beginning of World Wa r II. Cavalrymen readily accepted the new shoulder arm. It could be handled as well while mounted as on foot, and it had a range greater than that of the carbine.
A new side arm, the Colt automatic pistol caliber .45, was approved 29 March 1911, and by the time of the Punitive Expedition all troops in the United States were armed with it. Units going to the Philippine Islands, where there had been so muc h demand for an arm of this caliber, took it with them, but no special effort was made to supply those already there.
38
In 1914 the semaphore code, until that time used only by field artillery, was authorized for cavalry, infantry, and engineers. The fifty-six kits furnished for each cavalry regiment were distributed four to a troop.
<i>World War I
Cavalry
</i>The cavalry organization of seventeen regiments in effect when the United States entered the war against Germany was based upon the National Defense Act of 1916. In May 1917 emergency laws called for immediate increase to the full strength a uthorized by the National Defense Act, and organization of the remaining eight new cavalry regiments began at once. To speed up the process, certain old units in June 1917 transferred two-thirds of their men to the new regiments.
The new regiments were numbered the 18th through the 25th. But, one month after their organization was completed, all eight began training as field artillery. On 1 October 1917 Congress acted to make their conversion to field artillery legal, an d on 1 November 1917 the 18th through the 25th Cavalry were redesignated as the 76th through the 83d Field Artillery. Although Congress specified that the units would reorganize as cavalry after the emergency, such action was never taken. Hence , the histories of the former 18th through 25th Cavalry are currently perpetuated in a number of artillery units.
An act of Congress on 18 May 1917 provided for twenty National Army (or temporary) cavalry regiments, which were designated 301st through 320th. Fifteen of them, the 301st through the 315th, were organized in early 1918 at various National Arm y camps, but in August of that year they, too, were converted to field artillery. Thirty field artillery regiments, the 44th through the 72d, and nine trench mortar batteries, the 15th through the 23d, were organized from them. None of those uni ts served outside the United States and all were demobilized in January-February of 1919. The 316th through the 320th Cavalry were not activated during the war years.
By the time the United States entered World War I, the machine gun, together with improved artillery, barbed wire, and elaborate field fortifications, had produced a stalemate on the European Western Front. The Allies and the Germans, with thei r opposing armies anchored on the sea in the west and on the mountains in the east, repeatedly used waves of infantrymen and heavy artillery barrages in vain efforts to break the deadlock. Their critical need was for mobility and shock action, b oth traditional roles of horse cavalry, but static trench warfare and the machine gun had made use of the horse impractical.
Four regiments of U.S. cavalry- the 2d, 3d, 6th, and 15th- nevertheless formed a part of the American Expeditionary Forces, and engaged chiefly in remount duty. That they would have been used otherwise during the latter part
39
of the war, had they been available, was implied by General Pershing in 1920. He stated that, once the forces were in the open, cavalry would have been of great value on several occasions, and Allied cavalry trained in American tactics would hav e been most effective in the pursuit of the enemy northward toward the Meuse.
Since U.S. cavalrymen had been trained to fight dismounted as well as mounted, many of them did see action as foot soldiers. Again, as in earlier wars, many individual awards for gallantry were earned by the dismounted troopers who fought in oth er arms and services.
Only a very small portion of the U.S. cavalry saw any mounted service in France. In late August 1918, just before the St. Mihiel offensive, a provisional squadron was formed from Troops, B, D, F, and H of the 2d Cavalry. Fourteen officers and 40 4 enlisted men from those troops with convalescent horses furnished from the veterinary hospital moved to old Camp Jeanne d'Arc, near Neufchateau, for training in mounted action. Lt. Col. Oliver P. M. Hazzard commanded the squadron. Among the tr oop commanders was Capt. Ernest N. Harmon who, during World War II, was to command the 2d Armored Division and then the XXII Corps.
After about ten days of training, one troop of the Provisional Squadron was detached and marched to Menil-la-Tour, where it reported for courier duty with the 1st, 42d, and 89th Divisions. The remainder of the squadron reported to the 1st Divisi on on the night of 11 September 1918, and by a few minutes past noon of the next day U.S. cavalrymen, mounted, were at Nonsard, about five miles behind the original front line of the enemy. Sent out on reconnaissance duty beyond their capabiliti es, the cavalrymen met the enemy in considerable force and were routed. Later, in the Meuse-Argonne action, the squadron with three troops maintained liaison between flank divisions and those on the front lines. Among the trenches, which made mo vement of a whole troop impracticable, small patrols, sometimes riding and sometimes walking, acted as military police and couriers. By mid-October, when withdrawn from the front, the squadron had only 150 mounted effectives, largely because o f the evacuation of sick and wounded horses.
After the armistice, Headquarters, Band, and six troops of the 2d Cavalry acted as advance guard for the Army movement into Germany, and afterward were stationed along the Rhine with the American Army of Occupation.
Although few U.S. cavalry regiments went to Europe during World War I, all were well represented there by individual cavalrymen. For example, between May and September 1917, one regiment alone- the new 16th Cavalry- lost most of its original off icers by promotion in the National Army; and from May 1917 until November 1918 more than a hundred enlisted members of that regiment received commissions in the National Army. Many of these men saw
40
service in France. After the armistice twenty-six of them returned and reenlisted as noncommissioned officers.
Vacancies in cavalry units created by promotion and reassignment were filled by new personnel, and the regiments were moved to the Mexican border, an area well known to the older cavalrymen. Germany's efforts to rekindle trouble between the Unit ed States and Mexico were met by the concentration of a cavalry force in the southwest. In December 1917 the 15th Cavalry Divisionthree brigades of three regiments each- was organized in Texas. There were no other cavalry divisions in the Army t hen, but no explanation for designating this one the 15th has been found. Like the divisions organized during previous emergencies, the life of the 15th was short. Actually, a full division organization was not completed, and it was discontinue d in May 1918. The brigade headquarters lasted until July 1919 when they, too, were disbanded.
http://www.history.army.mil/books/Lineage/arcav/arcav.htm |
Marriage | Ora Marie Parrott - View family 20 March 1920 (Age 21) Lucas Co., Ohio, United States
Note:
Name: Manley J. Pringle
Name: Manley J. Pringle
Birth Date: 1898
Birthplace: Sand Lake, Mich.
Age: 22
Spouse's Name: Ora Marie Parrott
Spouse's Birth Date: 1896
Spouse's Birthplace: Blanchard, Mich.
Spouse's Age: 24
Event Date: 20 Mar 1920
Event Place: Lucas Co., Ohio
Father's Name: Norman M. Pringle
Mother's Name: Alvie M. Bradford
Spouse's Father's Name: Charles Parrott
Spouse's Mother's Name: Mina Howard
Marital Status: Single
Spouse's Marital Status: Single
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M01363-8 , System Origin: Ohio-EASy , GS Film number: 2134491 , Reference ID: P94-35927 Citing this Record
"Ohio, Marriages, 1800-1958," Database, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XDWM-DL9 : accessed 17 June 2015), Norman M. Pringle in entry for Manley J. Pringle and Ora Marie Parrott, 20 Mar 1920; citing Lucas Co., Ohio , reference P94-35927; FHL microfilm 2,134,491. |
Death of a father | 13 January 1921 (Age 21)
father -
Norman Newton Pringle
|
Death of a mother | 22 February 1922 (Age 23) East Grand Rapids, Kent, Michigan, United States
mother -
Elvie M. Braford
|
Birth of a daughter #1 | 23 January 1923 (Age 24) Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan
daughter -
Marion J. Pringle
|
Birth of a son #2 | 5 October 1925 (Age 26) Michigan
son -
Jay Howard Pringle
|
Death of a daughter | 26 November 1932 (Age 33) Detroit City, Wayne Co., Michigan
daughter -
Marion J. Pringle
|
Residence | 1932 (Age 32) Van Dyke, Macomb County, Michigan Address: 7220 Paige Ave
|
Death | 28 March 1945 (Age 46) Allen Park, Wayne Co., Michigan
Note:
Name: Manley J Pringle
Name: Manley J Pringle
Event Type: Death
Event Date: 28 Mar 1945
Event Place: Allen Park, Wayne, Michigan, United States
Gender: Male
Age: 47
Marital Status: Married
Birth Date: 01 Jan 1898
Birthplace: Michigan
Birth Year (Estimated): 1898
Father's Name: Norman Pringle
Mother's Name: Elvie Breakford
GS Film number: 1972951 , Digital Folder Number: 005240263 , Image Number: 01802 Citing this Record
"Michigan, Death Certificates, 1921-1952," Database, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KFQZ-R6K : accessed 17 June 2015), Norman Pringle in entry for Manley J Pringle, 28 Mar 1945; citing Allen Park, Wayne, Michigan, U nited States, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics, Lansing; FHL microfilm 1,972,951. |
Burial | Clinton Twsp, Macomb, Michigan, United States Address: Clinton Grove Cemetery Section L Lot 226
|
Globally unique identifier | 8D2014E934A7524DBB2695E17EA7FCAF4B7C |
Last change | 16 August 2022 - 07:25:02 |
Family with parents - View family |
father |
Norman Newton Pringle
Birth 13 March 1854 29 26 Richmond Township, Canada West
Death 13 January 1921 (Age 66) Loading...
|
11 years mother |
Elvie M. Braford
Birth 6 January 1865 33 33 Michigan
Death 22 February 1922 (Age 57) East Grand Rapids, Kent, Michigan, United States Loading...
|
Marriage: 6 January 1881 — Solon, Kent Co, Michigan |
|
21 months #1 elder brother |
Ray Abner Pringle
Birth 18 October 1882 28 17 Solon, Kent Co, Michigan
Death 25 August 1970 (Age 87) Walla Walla, Walla Walla, Washington Loading...
|
14 months #2 elder brother |
Abner J "Jay" Pringle
Birth January 1884 29 18
Death 23 August 1885 (Age 19 months) Michigan Loading...
|
3 years #3 elder brother |
Alfred Lee Pringle
Birth 22 October 1886 32 21 Solon, Kent Co, Michigan
Death 13 April 1962 (Age 75) Sandpoint, Bonner Co., Idaho Loading...
|
19 months #4 elder sister |
Ethel Pringle
Birth 11 May 1888 34 23 Nelson, Kent, Michigan, United States
Death 15 July 1889 (Age 14 months) Nelson, Kent, Michigan, United States Loading...
|
4 years #5 elder brother |
Homer Lynn Pringle
Birth 26 June 1892 38 27 Kent Co, Michigan, United States
Death July 1979 (Age 87) Upton, Weston County, Wyoming Loading...
|
7 years #6 himself |
Manly J. Pringle
Birth 16 January 1899 44 34 Sand Lake, Kent Co. Michigan
Death 28 March 1945 (Age 46) Allen Park, Wayne Co., Michigan Loading...
|
Family with Ora Marie Parrott - View family |
himself |
Manly J. Pringle
Birth 16 January 1899 44 34 Sand Lake, Kent Co. Michigan
Death 28 March 1945 (Age 46) Allen Park, Wayne Co., Michigan Loading...
|
-3 years wife |
Ora Marie Parrott
Birth 1896 Blanchard, Michigan, United States
Loading...
|
Marriage: 20 March 1920 — Lucas Co., Ohio, United States |
Family with Christene Olsen - View family |
himself |
Manly J. Pringle
Birth 16 January 1899 44 34 Sand Lake, Kent Co. Michigan
Death 28 March 1945 (Age 46) Allen Park, Wayne Co., Michigan Loading...
|
-10 years wife |
Christene Olsen
Birth 23 July 1889 38 36 Allendale, Ottawa Co, Michigan
Death 15 July 1981 (Age 91) Harrison, Macomb County, Michigan Loading...
|
#1 daughter |
Marion J. Pringle
Birth 23 January 1923 24 33 Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan
Death 26 November 1932 (Age 9) Detroit City, Wayne Co., Michigan Loading...
|
3 years #2 son |
Jay Howard Pringle
Birth 5 October 1925 26 36 Michigan
Death 24 August 1992 (Age 66) Loading...
|
#3 daughter |
Loading...
|
#4 daughter |
Loading...
|
Birth | Name: Manly Pringle
Birth Date: 16 Jan 1899
Birthplace: Sand Lake, Kent, Michigan
Gender: Male
Father's Name: N.N. Pringle
Father's Birthplace: Michigan
Mother's Name: Elva Pringle
Mother's Birthplace: Michigan
Reference ID: item 2 p 357 rn 16711 , GS Film number: 2322869 , Digital Folder Number: 4207563 , Image Number: 1052 Citing this Record
"Michigan, Births, 1867-1902," Database with images, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:NQFQ-XD9 : accessed 29 June 2015), Manly Pringle, 16 Jan 1899; citing item 2 p 357 rn 16711, Sand Lake, Kent, Michigan, Departmen t of Vital Records, Lansing; FHL microfilm 2,322,869. |
Military Service | Attestation papers of men enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) of the First World War.
CANADIAN OVER-SEAS EXPEDITIONARY FORCE.
No. Folio.
QUESTIONS TO BE PUT BEFORE ATTESTATION.
What is your surname?..Pringle,
What are your Christian names Manley Jay
What is your present address
. In what Town, Township o
Parish, and i
what Country w
3. What is the name of your next-of kin ?............
4. What is the address of yoar nest-of-kin ?........
4a. What is the relationship of your next-of-Mn ?,
5. What is the date of your birth?........................
6. What is your Trade or Calling?........................
8. Are you willing to be vaccinated or re-vaccinated and inoculated?................................
9. Do you now belong to the Active Militia?.......
10. Have you ever served in any Military Force ?..
your engagement?................................................
12. Are yon willing t
Pringle, Manley ""J
Sand Lake, Michigan, USA
can,
LAN 0 VEB
nthe)
"ICtfo- January ;t\*94-School' Teac-he r
Yes
..... No
Yes
Yes
Manley Jay Pringle
Birth Date: 16 Jan 1894
Birth Location: Sand Lake, Michigan, United States of America
Residence: Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Relative: Mrs Elvie Pringle
Relationship: Mother
Regiment Number: 264785
Source Information
Original data: Canada. "Soldiers of the First World War (1914-1918)." Record Group 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 4930 - 35. Library and Archives Canada, Ottawa.
|
Military Service | Pension Number 1963456
Inscribed on his tombstone "Veteran World War I"
Name: Manly J Pringle
Event Type: Military Service
Event Date: 1934
Event Place: Dayton, Ohio, United States
Age: 36
Birthplace: ,
Birth Year (Estimated): 1898
Page: 76831
Affiliate Publication Title: Historical Registers of National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938
Affiliate Publication Number: M1749
Affiliate Film Number: 80
GS Film number: 1548681
Digital Folder Number: 004832624
Image Number: 00176
Citing this Record:
"United States National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938," Database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VZ3Q-SBN : accessed 29 June 2015), Manly J Pringle, 1934; citing p. 76831, Dayton, Ohio, Unite d States, NARA microfilm publication M1749 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.), roll 80; FHL microfilm 1,548,681.
As part of the 1916 plan for increase of the Army, two cavalry regiments were authorized in the first increment. Designated as the 16th and 17th, they were organized in July 1916 at Forts Sam Houston and Bliss, Texas, respectively. To enable th e new organizations to become operational as soon as possible, experienced officers and men from existing cavalry regiments were transferred to the new ones, and by mid-July 1916 the 16th and 17th Cavalry were in fair shape. These were the las t additions to the cavalry arm until after the declaration of war on Germany.
In the matter of arms and equipment during this period, it is important that in 1904 the new U.S. rifle Model 1903 replaced the Krag-Jorgensen as the standard arm of cavalry, as well as infantry, and remained so until the beginning of World Wa r II. Cavalrymen readily accepted the new shoulder arm. It could be handled as well while mounted as on foot, and it had a range greater than that of the carbine.
A new side arm, the Colt automatic pistol caliber .45, was approved 29 March 1911, and by the time of the Punitive Expedition all troops in the United States were armed with it. Units going to the Philippine Islands, where there had been so muc h demand for an arm of this caliber, took it with them, but no special effort was made to supply those already there.
38
In 1914 the semaphore code, until that time used only by field artillery, was authorized for cavalry, infantry, and engineers. The fifty-six kits furnished for each cavalry regiment were distributed four to a troop.
<i>World War I
Cavalry
</i>The cavalry organization of seventeen regiments in effect when the United States entered the war against Germany was based upon the National Defense Act of 1916. In May 1917 emergency laws called for immediate increase to the full strength a uthorized by the National Defense Act, and organization of the remaining eight new cavalry regiments began at once. To speed up the process, certain old units in June 1917 transferred two-thirds of their men to the new regiments.
The new regiments were numbered the 18th through the 25th. But, one month after their organization was completed, all eight began training as field artillery. On 1 October 1917 Congress acted to make their conversion to field artillery legal, an d on 1 November 1917 the 18th through the 25th Cavalry were redesignated as the 76th through the 83d Field Artillery. Although Congress specified that the units would reorganize as cavalry after the emergency, such action was never taken. Hence , the histories of the former 18th through 25th Cavalry are currently perpetuated in a number of artillery units.
An act of Congress on 18 May 1917 provided for twenty National Army (or temporary) cavalry regiments, which were designated 301st through 320th. Fifteen of them, the 301st through the 315th, were organized in early 1918 at various National Arm y camps, but in August of that year they, too, were converted to field artillery. Thirty field artillery regiments, the 44th through the 72d, and nine trench mortar batteries, the 15th through the 23d, were organized from them. None of those uni ts served outside the United States and all were demobilized in January-February of 1919. The 316th through the 320th Cavalry were not activated during the war years.
By the time the United States entered World War I, the machine gun, together with improved artillery, barbed wire, and elaborate field fortifications, had produced a stalemate on the European Western Front. The Allies and the Germans, with thei r opposing armies anchored on the sea in the west and on the mountains in the east, repeatedly used waves of infantrymen and heavy artillery barrages in vain efforts to break the deadlock. Their critical need was for mobility and shock action, b oth traditional roles of horse cavalry, but static trench warfare and the machine gun had made use of the horse impractical.
Four regiments of U.S. cavalry- the 2d, 3d, 6th, and 15th- nevertheless formed a part of the American Expeditionary Forces, and engaged chiefly in remount duty. That they would have been used otherwise during the latter part
39
of the war, had they been available, was implied by General Pershing in 1920. He stated that, once the forces were in the open, cavalry would have been of great value on several occasions, and Allied cavalry trained in American tactics would hav e been most effective in the pursuit of the enemy northward toward the Meuse.
Since U.S. cavalrymen had been trained to fight dismounted as well as mounted, many of them did see action as foot soldiers. Again, as in earlier wars, many individual awards for gallantry were earned by the dismounted troopers who fought in oth er arms and services.
Only a very small portion of the U.S. cavalry saw any mounted service in France. In late August 1918, just before the St. Mihiel offensive, a provisional squadron was formed from Troops, B, D, F, and H of the 2d Cavalry. Fourteen officers and 40 4 enlisted men from those troops with convalescent horses furnished from the veterinary hospital moved to old Camp Jeanne d'Arc, near Neufchateau, for training in mounted action. Lt. Col. Oliver P. M. Hazzard commanded the squadron. Among the tr oop commanders was Capt. Ernest N. Harmon who, during World War II, was to command the 2d Armored Division and then the XXII Corps.
After about ten days of training, one troop of the Provisional Squadron was detached and marched to Menil-la-Tour, where it reported for courier duty with the 1st, 42d, and 89th Divisions. The remainder of the squadron reported to the 1st Divisi on on the night of 11 September 1918, and by a few minutes past noon of the next day U.S. cavalrymen, mounted, were at Nonsard, about five miles behind the original front line of the enemy. Sent out on reconnaissance duty beyond their capabiliti es, the cavalrymen met the enemy in considerable force and were routed. Later, in the Meuse-Argonne action, the squadron with three troops maintained liaison between flank divisions and those on the front lines. Among the trenches, which made mo vement of a whole troop impracticable, small patrols, sometimes riding and sometimes walking, acted as military police and couriers. By mid-October, when withdrawn from the front, the squadron had only 150 mounted effectives, largely because o f the evacuation of sick and wounded horses.
After the armistice, Headquarters, Band, and six troops of the 2d Cavalry acted as advance guard for the Army movement into Germany, and afterward were stationed along the Rhine with the American Army of Occupation.
Although few U.S. cavalry regiments went to Europe during World War I, all were well represented there by individual cavalrymen. For example, between May and September 1917, one regiment alone- the new 16th Cavalry- lost most of its original off icers by promotion in the National Army; and from May 1917 until November 1918 more than a hundred enlisted members of that regiment received commissions in the National Army. Many of these men saw
40
service in France. After the armistice twenty-six of them returned and reenlisted as noncommissioned officers.
Vacancies in cavalry units created by promotion and reassignment were filled by new personnel, and the regiments were moved to the Mexican border, an area well known to the older cavalrymen. Germany's efforts to rekindle trouble between the Unit ed States and Mexico were met by the concentration of a cavalry force in the southwest. In December 1917 the 15th Cavalry Divisionthree brigades of three regiments each- was organized in Texas. There were no other cavalry divisions in the Army t hen, but no explanation for designating this one the 15th has been found. Like the divisions organized during previous emergencies, the life of the 15th was short. Actually, a full division organization was not completed, and it was discontinue d in May 1918. The brigade headquarters lasted until July 1919 when they, too, were disbanded.
http://www.history.army.mil/books/Lineage/arcav/arcav.htm |
Marriage | Name: Manley J. Pringle
Birth Date: 1898
Birthplace: Sand Lake, Mich.
Age: 22
Spouse's Name: Ora Marie Parrott
Spouse's Birth Date: 1896
Spouse's Birthplace: Blanchard, Mich.
Spouse's Age: 24
Event Date: 20 Mar 1920
Event Place: Lucas Co., Ohio
Father's Name: Norman M. Pringle
Mother's Name: Alvie M. Bradford
Spouse's Father's Name: Charles Parrott
Spouse's Mother's Name: Mina Howard
Marital Status: Single
Spouse's Marital Status: Single
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M01363-8 , System Origin: Ohio-EASy , GS Film number: 2134491 , Reference ID: P94-35927 Citing this Record
"Ohio, Marriages, 1800-1958," Database, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XDWM-DL9 : accessed 17 June 2015), Norman M. Pringle in entry for Manley J. Pringle and Ora Marie Parrott, 20 Mar 1920; citing Lucas Co., Ohio , reference P94-35927; FHL microfilm 2,134,491. |
Marriage | Name: Manley J. Pringle
Birth Date: 1898
Birthplace: Sand Lake, Mich.
Age: 22
Spouse's Name: Ora Marie Parrott
Spouse's Birth Date: 1896
Spouse's Birthplace: Blanchard, Mich.
Spouse's Age: 24
Event Date: 20 Mar 1920
Event Place: Lucas Co., Ohio
Father's Name: Norman M. Pringle
Mother's Name: Alvie M. Bradford
Spouse's Father's Name: Charles Parrott
Spouse's Mother's Name: Mina Howard
Marital Status: Single
Spouse's Marital Status: Single
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M01363-8 , System Origin: Ohio-EASy , GS Film number: 2134491 , Reference ID: P94-35927 Citing this Record
"Ohio, Marriages, 1800-1958," Database, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XDWM-DL9 : accessed 17 June 2015), Norman M. Pringle in entry for Manley J. Pringle and Ora Marie Parrott, 20 Mar 1920; citing Lucas Co., Ohio , reference P94-35927; FHL microfilm 2,134,491. |
Residence | Van Dyke was a community of northern Detroit, it is now Warren.
Paige Ave is where the family lived when daughter Marion passed. |
Death | Name: Manley J Pringle
Event Type: Death
Event Date: 28 Mar 1945
Event Place: Allen Park, Wayne, Michigan, United States
Gender: Male
Age: 47
Marital Status: Married
Birth Date: 01 Jan 1898
Birthplace: Michigan
Birth Year (Estimated): 1898
Father's Name: Norman Pringle
Mother's Name: Elvie Breakford
GS Film number: 1972951 , Digital Folder Number: 005240263 , Image Number: 01802 Citing this Record
"Michigan, Death Certificates, 1921-1952," Database, <i>FamilySearch</i> (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KFQZ-R6K : accessed 17 June 2015), Norman Pringle in entry for Manley J Pringle, 28 Mar 1945; citing Allen Park, Wayne, Michigan, U nited States, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics, Lansing; FHL microfilm 1,972,951. |
Burial | Clinton Grove Cemetery
Clinton Township
Macomb County
Michigan, USA
Plot: Section L Lot 226
Created by: Melanie Mardlin
Record added: Sep 08, 2010
Find A Grave Memorial# 58328547 |