A Guide to World War I Papers and Memorabilia
Chiefly Regarding Thomas R. Pleucker
1914-1930 Pleucker, Thomas, Papers and
Memorabilia, 1914-1930
10875-r
Funding:
Web version of the finding aid funded in part by a
grant from the National Endowment for the
Humanities.
Processed by:
Special Collections Department
Repository
Special Collections, University of Virginia
Library
Accession number
10875-r
Title
World War I Papers and Memorabilia Chiefly
Regarding Thomas R. Pleucker
1914-1930
Physical Characteristics
188
items
Language
English
Abstract
The collection consists of ca. 188
papers and memorabilia chiefly pertaining to Thomas Pleucker,
including a bust portrait, glass lantern slides, children's
alphabet blocks, drawings, newspapers, certificates, posters,
and letters.
World War I Papers and Memorabilia Chiefly Regarding
Thomas R. Pleucker, 1914-1930, in the Joseph M. Bruccoli
Great War Collection, Accession #10875-r, Special
Collections Dep., University of Virginia Library,
Charlottesville, Va.
Acquisition Information
These items were given to the University of Virginia
Library Joseph M. Bruccoli Great War Collection by Mrs.
Michael Lazare, New Milford, Connecticut, through Matthew
J. Bruccoli, Columbia, South Carolina, on September 27,
1993.
This addition to the Joseph M. Bruccoli Great War
Collection consists of ca. 188 items, ca. 1914-1930, including
a bust portrait of Francis Ledwidge, "Lance Corporal Royal
Inniskilling Fusiliers," with a quote from a Ledwidge letter
to Lord Dunsany; about 109 glass lantern slides of the Great
War and other scenes; "ABC Picture Blocks," a set of
children's alphabet blocks, each bearing on one side a paper
slip with the letter of the alphabet, and on the other side, a
slip bearing a halftone reproduction of a colored drawing of a
World War I personality or item still in its original sales
box and protected in a new storage box; a single copy of
The Mehun News , May 16, 1919, a
weekly newspaper published by Ordnance Troops at Atelier de
Mehun-sur-Yevre, France, with poetry, travel articles,
photographs, cartoons, and histories of ordnance units
(transferred to Rare Books); and a photograph "showing how
French 270 mm. guns are brought up to new positions as Allied
drive advances" by Underwood and Underwood, New York.
Also present are ten military promotion and memorial
certificates and posters, 1916-1919, pertaining to two
American soldiers, of Oneida County, New York, George A.
Laurin and Lloyd J. Laurin, who was killed in action on July
21, 1918, at Soissons, France, as a private, Supply Company,
2nd Ammunition Train. These include rosters for Troop "D" 6th
Cavalry, Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas, listing George
A. Laurin as a sergeant, and a roster for Troop "I" Fifth
Cavalry, Camp Stewart, Fort Bliss, Texas, listing Lloyd J.
Laurin as a private.
There are about seventy letters and other items regarding
an American soldier, Thomas R. Pluecker (1892-1918) of
Nacogdoches, Texas, who died of pneumonia at the American
Expeditionary Force Base Hospital No. 17 shortly after
arriving in France, on September 13, 1918, as a member of the
Machine Gun Company, 64th U.S. Infantry. All of the letters
are on patriotic or Knights of Columbus stationery, and are
from Pluecker to his family, including his brother, Angus R.
Pluecker, sister, Madie Pluecker, and his mother, Mrs. J.T.
Pluecker, expressing concern for the family and the farm,
mentioning his attendance at Roman Catholic religious
services, and praising the activities of the Knights of
Columbus and the Red Cross on behalf of the soldiers. He began
his training at Camp Travis, San Antonio, as part of the [45th
?] Company, 12th Brigade, but was transferred to Camp
MacArthur, Waco, Texas, 7th Division, Machine Gun Company,
64th Infantry, by July 20, 1918. By July 26, 1918, Pluecker
was at Camp Merritt, New Jersey, after a five day train ride,
and in a letter dated August 20, 1918, he mentions that he had
previously left for France but was returned to Camp Mills,
Long Island, New York, after a sub attack on the fourth day of
the voyage. On August 28, 1918, his company left for France
for the second time.