While I was at this free site, I went ahead and found all the other Edmonds they had. Here they are:
John Wes and James Otis were not veterans and I don't know why.
The interesting one in the bunch is a grave we have been taking care of for years but know so little about.
Thom Edmonds had approximate birth dates for the Edmonds 9, as I have come to know the 9 Male Edmonds men who were born to Charlie and Anna Moss in Baskerville, VA around the end of the 1800's. Charles Adolphus Edmonds did not have a correct birth date, so he is out of order in the batting lineup. Today I found out his exact date and a few other things. First his "Old Man's Draft Card":
As you can see he was 52 at the time of signing in 1942.
What it neglects to note was that he was a veteran of the first World War. I know this from tending his grave.
His print is getting hard to see, but we were able to make out the inscription "Co. F 811th Pion. Inf."
So off I spun to find out about his duty. Thanks to this book:
I learned a great deal. Here is but a small part from the book:
The Negro in the
Service of Supply
War is not all "death and glory." For every soldier who
gets even a glimpse of the enemy or risks his life within range of shellfire,
there must, in all modern warfare, be from twenty to thirty men working at such
commonplace and routine tasks as loading and unloading ships, building piers,
laying railroad tracks, making roads, in a thousand other ways making it
possible for the fighting men to get to the front, and for the necessary food,
ammunition, and other supplies to reach them. But what man would want to render
such service? It was somewhat exciting news for the Negro population of the
United States to learn that only about twenty per cent of the colored draftees
were to be trained to fight while the remaining Negroes in the military service
would constitute noncombatant divisions in the Service of Supply, or other
non-fighting organizations. On June 23, 1918, when 237,000 Negroes had been
called to the colors, it was estimated that the battalions of the noncombatant
to the combatant troops were in the proportion of about four to one.
This vast army of Stevedores in France was composed mostly of men
who volunteered when the call was first sounded. The first men who went over
early in June, 1917, were with a civilian contract company, experienced as stevedores
in America. They served one year and finishing their contract in June, 1918,
returned to America. During the early days of July, 1917, other companies of
volunteer men arrived, so the army grew until the Stevedore Camps at base ports
in France became one great industrial army, numbering about fifty thousand.
The army of Stevedores had all the equipment, regulations,. and
military rank and uniform that the infantry had. Though industrial in its
nature, all the life and workings, and details of procedure, were according to
military law and order. This vast army of workers was divided into companies
and regiments and had their individual camps regularly officered and numbered.
Anything by the way of uniform and ration that other men received, the Stevedore
shared equally. They were soldiers and took great pride in the fact that they
belonged to Uncle Sam's Army. Including all the display that goes with drills,
reviews, and inspections, saluting an officer, flag-raising, and perchance, the
grand parades, with companies swinging into line, and the martial music of
bands, the Stevedores always stepped proudly and lively enough to suit the
keenest military eye for discipline and fine training.
The Stevedores also took great pride in their companies, their
camps, and all that belonged to the Army, and because their work and
contribution were always emphasized by officers as being essential to the boys
in the trenches, the name "Stevedore" finally became a dignified and
distinguished term, representing an important part of the great American Army.
To the Negro soldiers of the American Army fell a large part of
the work of this "Service of Supply," or, as it was known in Army
slang, the "S. O. S." The work of the Negro Stevedore Regiments and
Labor Battalions, and their unremitting toil at the French ports---Brest, St.
Nazaire, Bordeaux, Havre, Marseilles---won the highest praise from all who have
had an opportunity to judge of the efficiency of their work. Every man who
served his country in one of these organizations was as truly fighting to save
his country as though he had carried a rifle and killed Germans.
Finally, here are our pictures from the visit to Woodlawn today:
Hubby Peter Scherff cleaning off Charles A. Edmonds gravestone
Charles Adolphus Edmonds World War I Veteran
Company F 811th Pioneer Infantry
Beloved dad, Kenneth Samuel Edmonds- World War II Veteran
Dad's sister Lillian Edmonds and her husband, Charles Kenneth Jackson- World War II Veteran
Lillian and Charles' son Daryl, and his great grandmother. This small family plot was the most neglected when we started as Lillian died of cancer in 1966, Charles died a year later in 1965 (at the age of 41, don't know what from) and then Daryl died in 1969 from Sickle Cell at age 22. Tragedy haunts me each time I visit this little nuclear unit.
A living visitor!
Other Edmonds up in the front: Nathaniel + Kate and James O + Ethel
John Wes and Susie Edmonds
Fallen Angels...
Need a bit of loving care
A glimpse of the old Suffield, Ct.
...and a pleasant surprise right over the Ct/MA line= a Veterans place in Agawam, MA
May they all "Soldier On."
We thank you for your service. You, our own families, and the millions of others who have given lives and service.