"These Sons of Eufaula Also Died": Amending An Alabama Doughboy Memorial
May 16, 2018
Eufaula’s Doughboy Memorial has stood at the downtown intersection of Orange Avenue and East Broad Street for more than ninety years. Erected in 1925 by the Porter R. Doughtie Chapter of the Service Star Legion, the imposing monument honors Eufaula men who “made the supreme sacrifice” during the Great War. Five names occupy the monument’s façade: James Ashbury Boswell, Robert W. Brannon, Hinton W. Holleman, Porter R. Doughtie, and Daniel T. Tully. Beneath these names is carved the common, prayerful command, “Lest We Forget.”
Doughboy Memorial, courtesy of Doug Purcell
Doughboy Memorial, courtesy of Doug Purcell
Still, there were others who were forgotten. Many World War I memorials erected in the 1920s often did not include the names of African Americans who served. Monuments paid for by subscription, such as the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial in Mobile, often excluded the names of servicemen, black and white, whose families were unable to pay to have them included.
Later this month, in a special ceremony, the names of six soldiers from Eufaula, one white and five African American, will take their place as part of the city’s World War I memorial.
The City of Eufaula will dedicate a granite addition to the Doughboy Memorial on May 28, 2018, Memorial Day, at 10AM Central Time. The event is being held in cooperation with the Barbour County Chapter of the NAACP, Eufaula Heritage Association, Eufaula-Barbour County Chamber of Commerce, Lewis Chapter DAR, Historic Chattahoochee Commission, American Legion, VFW, Ozark Chapter of the DAV, Buffalo Soldiers, and the Alabama National Guard.
Extending along the bottom of the original monument, the addition reads: “These Sons of Eufaula also died in the service of their country during World War I,” followed by the names of Pat Lenard Brown, William Loach, Zachariah Lewis, John H. Thompson, Howard Hill, and Ulysses Persons.
Rendering by artist Kathy Hamrick of the Doughboy Memorial with its addition, courtesy of Doug Purcell
The addition was funded by an anonymous donor in honor of Private James F. Lamar, who survived the war. It was manufactured by Jaxon Monument Company.
The Honorable Jack Tibbs, Mayor of Eufaula, will serve as master of ceremonies. Doug Purcell, Executive Director Emeritus, Historic Chattahoochee Commission, will give the keynote address featuring biographical sketches of the soldiers listed on the memorial. Records on World War I servicemen kept by the Alabama Department of Archives and History aided in the identification of the six additional soldiers. “The centennial of World War I is a fitting time for communities to revisit the contributions made by individuals who served in uniform and their families,” said Archives director Steve Murray. “Future residents and visitors to Eufaula will know that in 2018, the city felt it important to recognize the sacrifices of all who gave their lives one hundred years ago.”
Records of the men added to the memorial (courtesy of the Alabama Department of Archives and History):
Pat Lenard Brown's Gold Star Card
Howard Hill’s service card
William Loach’s service card
Zachariah Lewis, a private in the 159th Depot Brigade, died of pneumonia at Camp Taylor, Kentucky, on September 12, 1918. He was twenty-six years old. His body was returned to his mother, Mary Lewis, in Eufaula.
Ulysses Persons’ Gold Star card
John Henry Thompson’s service card
Clayton Recordclipping of August 1918 shows two of these men, Zacariah Lewis and William Loach bound for Camp Zachary Taylor, Louisville, KY, with forty other men. Both Lewis and Loach would die of pneumonia in mid-September
The ceremony is open to the public. Limited seating will be available. For more information, contact Doug Purcell at 334.687.9787 or dcpurcell@gmail.com.