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Personal info

Full name
ELTMAN, Harold Peter
Date of birth
23 January 1925
Age
19
Place of birth
Brooklyn, Kings County, New York
Hometown
Queens, Queens County, New York

Military service

Service number
32797402
Rank
Private First Class
Function
unknown
Unit
B Company,
60th Engineer Combat Battalion,
35th Infantry Division
Awards
Purple Heart

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
10 October 1944
Place of death
Ajoncourt, France

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Lorraine
Plot Row Grave
A 33 38

Immediate family

Members
Joseph F. Eltman (father)
Elsie A. Eltman (mother)
Joseph F. Eltman (brother)

More information

Pfc Harold P. Eltman attended high school for three years and was employed at the Republic Tool & Die Company before he enlisted in New York City, New York on 9 February 1943.
On the night of 10 October 1944, B Company suffered the loss of 47 men in an explosion of anti-tank mines at Ajoncourt, France. The third and elements of the first platoon were engaged in a night mine laying operation just north of the town. The squad trucks loaded with mines were parked at a point just south of the town and the mines were being fused and unloaded from the trucks and carried to the mine field. At approximately 2300, a terrific explosion from the leading truck which was loaded with mines caused a sympathetic detonation of a nearby truck load of mines and mines stacked on the ground nearby. Approximately 1,500 mines in all exploded. The entire area immediately became an inferno of exploding mines, small arms ammunition and burning vehicles.
He was first buried at the Temporary American Military Cemetery in Andilly, France.

Source of information: Peter Schouteten, www.abmc.gov, www.wwiimemorial.com – Joseph F. Eltman, www.archives.gov – WWII Enlistment Record, www.ancestry.com - Headstone and Interment Record / U.S. WWII Draft Cards Young Men, After Action Report 35th Infantry Division, www.findagrave.com – SueMac
Photo source: www.wwiimemorial.com – Joseph F. Eltman