Missing information?
Do you have any additional information you would like to share about a soldier?
Submit- Full
name
LESTER, Raymond Evert - Date of
birth
15 February 1922 -
Age
22 - Place of
birth
Oxford, Chester County, Pennsylvania -
Hometown
Bassett, Henry County, Virginia
Personal info
Military service
- Service
number
33530458 -
Rank
Corporal -
Function
unknown -
Unit
B Battery,
285th Field Artillery Observation Battalion
-
Awards
Purple Heart
Death
-
Status
Killed in Action - Date of
death
17 December 1944 - Place of
death
The field next to the N62, near the crossroads "Five Points"
Baugnez, Belgium
Grave
-
Cemetery
American War Cemetery Henri-Chapelle
| Plot | Row | Grave |
|---|---|---|
| A | 9 | 52 |
Immediate family
-
Members
Simon B. Lester (father)
Zannie E. Lester (mother)
Mary I. Lester (sister)
Louise E. Lester (sister)
More information
Raymond Lester was a furniture maker.He enlisted in Roanoke, Virginia on 13 January 1943.
He was one of the victims of Malmedy massacre when German SS soldiers of the 1st Panzer Division captured over 100 American soldiers at Baugnez Crossroads outside Malmedy, Belgium, on 17 December 1944 during the Battle of the Bulge and, under orders to take no prisoners, placed them in an open field and then machine gunned them. When the machine guns stopped, the SS went through the field where some victims were still alive and systematically finished them off with pistols at short range leaving 84 soldiers dead when they had finished. Fortunately, when the machine guns first started shooting, a number of soldiers ran and some managed to escape and tell the story of how the Germans had treated the others who had not survived.
His name is mentioned on the monument on the opposite side of the road.
Source of information: Peter Schouteten, Raf Dyckmans, Terry Hirsch, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.archives.gov, http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/malmedy_massacre.htm, www.ancestry.com - 1930 census / Headstone and Interment Records
Photo source: Peter Schouteten, Martinsville Bulletin newspaper clippings, Bassett Historical Center