Ollie Schmith, World War II CasualtyPorter County Data on World War II Casualties . . . .
Ollie Schmith
Private, US Army
Date of Birth: August 28, 1921
Date of Death: April 9, 1945
Burial: Barrancas National Cemetery (Section 2, Row 0, Site 328), Pensacola,
Escambia County, Florida
Cause of Death: Killed in Action
Date of Enlistment: August 29, 1944
Hometown: Valparaiso
Newspaper Notices:
Two Killed, Two Missing In War Action
Soldiers Employed by McGill Mfg. Co. Reported Dead
Casualty lists from war fronts today recorded the deaths of two men, both former
employes of McGill Manufacturing company. Two others, a Valparaiso university
student and husband of a Valparaiso girl, was reported missing in action.
Pvt. Ollie Schmith, Jr., 24, formerly residing at 702 Beech street, Valparaiso,
employed at the McGill plant before entering army service last August, was
reported killed in action in Germany on April 9, according to word received by
his aunt, Mrs. Robert Chester, 603 Oak street.
Schmith formerly served in the Seabees, but was called to service by his
selected service board at Jacksonville, Fla., last August. He went overseas in
January.
His wife, the former Irene Pfserick, of Valparaiso, is now living in
Jacksonville. The couple have three small sons.
Besides his wife and children, Schmith is survived by his father, Ollie Schmith,
Sr., and his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Ellis Hicks, of Valparaiso, and two half
brothers, Lt. Richard Doud, in India, and Raymond Doud, U. S. Army, in
Australia.
Word was received Tuesday by Otto Storz, of the McGill company, announcing the
death of Lt. John (Jack) Meilahn, 26, during an air mission in the south Pacific
recently. He was well known in Valparaiso, having been a student at Valparaiso
university and an employe of the McGill plant. His home was Chicago where he
resided with his father, Henry J. Meilahn, at 1144 N. Rockwood street. He
enlisted in the Army Air Corps in October, 1942.
Joseph H. Durand, bailiff of the Porter superior court, received word Tuesday
that his son-in-law, Ensign Don Finerman, 25, of the U. S. Navy, is missing in
action in the south Pacific. Ensign Finerman was a member of a crew of a
destroyer reported to have been lost during an engagement around Iwo Jima. He
was the husband of the former Mary Durand, of Valparaiso. He attended Valparaiso
university and was a star football player on the university team under Coach
Jake Christiansen. Mrs. Finerman is at present at San Francisco, Calif., where
she went recently to await her husband's return. Finerman's home is at Calumet
City, Ill.
Mrs. Richard Wheeler, 552 S. Locust street, received word Monday night that her
son, Pvt. Theodore Weichert, is missing in action somewhere in Germany.
Weichert entered service in May, 1944, and went overseas last December.
He was a student at Valparaiso high school and before entering the service was
employed in Detroit, Mich.
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Source: The Vidette-Messenger, Valparaiso, Porter County, Indiana; May
2, 1945; Volume 18, Page 1, Column 3
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List of
Porter County World War II Casualties
Information abstracted and transcribed by Steven R. Shook