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Personal info

Full name
OCHSZNER, Clarence Clifford
Date of birth
22 May 1922
Age
22
Place of birth
Walworth County, South Dakota
Hometown
Potter County, South Dakota

Military service

Service number
37317243
Rank
Private First Class
Function
unknown
Unit
HQ Company,
20th Armored Infantry Battalion,
10th Armored Division
Awards
Bronze Star,
Purple Heart with Oak Leaf Cluster

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
24 December 1944
Place of death
Rue de Neufchâteau 19
Bastogne, Belgium

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Ardennes
Tablets of the Missing

Immediate family

Members
Carl K. Ochszner (father)
Agnes E. (Lenz) Ochszner (mother)
Calvin J. Ochszner (brother)
Marcus Ochszner (brother)
Inez Ochszner (brother)
Blanche Ochszner (sister)

More information

Private First Class Clarence C. Ochszner enlisted on 18 October 1942, at Fort Snelling, Minnesota. He was sent overseas in August 1944.

Per Dr. Jack T. Prior: "At 8:30 p.m. Christmas Eve, as I was about to step out the door for the hospital I heard the screeching sound of the first bomb. I ran outside to discover that the three-story apartment serving as my hospital was a flaming pile of debris about six feet high. The night was brighter than day from the magnesium flares the German bomber pilot had dropped. Our team headquarters about a block away also received a direct hit and was soon in flames.
I estimated that about twenty injured soldiers were killed in this bombing along with Renee Lemaire."
The incident was mentioned on page 156 of S.L.A. Marshall's book Bastogne: The First Eight Days: "That night the town was bombed twice. During the first raid, in the late evening, a bomb landed on the hospital of the 20th Armored Infantry Battalion near the intersection of the main roads from ArIon and Neufchâteau. It caved in the roof, burying 20 patients and killing a Belgian woman, Renée Lemaire, who was serving as a nurse."

A plaque on the wall of the building at the spot where this aid station was situated, remembers this tragic event.

Source of information: Terry Hirsch, www.abmc.gov, www.wwiimemorial.com, National Archives, www.findagrave.com, CWGC/ABMC, www.ancestry.com - 1930/1940 Census / Family Trees, http://vetaffairs.sd.gov

Photo source: www.findagrave.com, http://vetaffairs.sd.gov