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Personal info

Full name
REAMER, Leonard A
Date of birth
18 August 1917
Age
27
Place of birth
Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan
Hometown
Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan

Military service

Service number
36167820
Rank
Sergeant
Function
Tank Commander
Unit
B Company,
40th Tank Battalion,
7th Armored Division
Awards
Bronze Star,
Purple Heart

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
9 September 1944
Place of death
North of Maizieres-les-Metz, France

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Lorraine
Tablets of the Missing

Immediate family

Members
Charles W. Reamer (father)
Laura H. (Spigoda) Reamer (mother)
Ruth V. Reamer (sister)
Mary E. (Ostach) Reamer (wife)

More information

Sgt Leonard A Reamer was a galvanizer.

He was married to Mary Ostach on 21 December 1941.

He enlisted at Fort Cluster, Michigan on 22 January 1942.

On 9 September 1944, just north of Maizieres-les-Metz, a tank of B Company was hit by a German anti-tank gun and burned. Two crew members escaped, T/5 James W. Logan and Pvt Robert Millerwise. Three did not, Sgt Leonard A. Reamer, Pvt Harry B. Pake and Cpl Charles H. Bowen. When the company commander, Capt. Emerson Wolfe, examined the tank after it stopped burning, he could not detect any remains of the three men. So, all three were believed to have been cremated in the fire.
However, on 25 Mar 1946 - a year and a half later - a U.S. Graves Registration team found the tank which they saw had serial number USA 3883676-S and was marked 7-40-B-18 and examined it for remains. Their trained eyes identified some charred bone fragments that were later confirmed to be from the same person, designated Unknown X-6010 (St Avold).

There was no way at that time to associate the tank with the tank destroyed on 9 September 1944, although the tank was clearly marked as a B/40 tank. But now there is a significant collection of documents available. Combining the contemporary records of the 40th Tank Battalion, 48th Armored Infantry Battalion (to which B/40 was attached on that date) and Combat Command A (to which both battalions were attached) with the Individual Deceased Personnel File of one of the three men (Charles Bowen) killed in the tank and the file of St Avold X-6010, it is now clear that the only B/40 tank lost at that location was the one in which the three men were killed. Thus the bone fragments must be from one of the three men and originally believed to have been entirely consumed in the fire. This web page presents the information from all records. It applies what is known about St Avold Unknown X-6010 and narrows his identity to two of the three men killed.

Source of information: André Koch, IDPF, www.abmc.gov, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.archives.gov – WWII Enlistment Record, www.ancestry.com - 1920/1930/1940 Census / U.S. WWII Draft Cards Young Men, 1940-1947 / Indiana, Marriages, 1810-2001, https://www.7tharmddiv.org/40deaths.htm / https://www.7tharmddiv.org/40b-1944-09-09.htm

Photo source:
www.findagrave.com - Dave Hansen / B Spigoda