Paris Goes To War

War came Paris, Texas on December 7, 1941. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the subsequent declarations of war of the Axis countries of Japan, Germany and Italy against The United States brought World War II literally to the doorsteps of Paris.

The U.S. response to war hit Paris like a tidal wave and the results were everlasting.

This small East Texas town responded as hundreds of small towns across America did. Its sons, daughters and citizens joined the war effort.

But Paris began to develop its own uniqueness with the opening of Camp Maxey just a few miles north of the city limits in 1942. Two major divisions, the 102d Infantry Division and the 99th Infantry Division, trained there. It is estimated that over 200,000 troops and civilians trained and worked at Camp Maxey during its short 4 years of existance.

Camp Maxey was also selected as a site, as were many other training camp sites in Texas, to house German prisoners-of-war. More than 6,000 Germans were hosted there until well after the last shots of anger were fired in Europe in 1945.

Paris, as was the whole country, was like a stirred pot. The young men and women who came to Camp Maxey to train spent their leaves in town. Many of them met, courted, and married local men and women. Likewise, Paris sons and daughters who left were meeting their future spouses. The long historic ties that had held Paris together as a tight community were stretched around the world.

To and from Paris the letters streamed in and out from friends and families: from the battle fronts, from far-away hometowns, from Washington D.C., to Europe, to The Pacific and literally all points of the globe.

Sad news of soldiers being killed, exciting news of the birth of a new baby, common news about town gossip all swirlled around this small town of Paris. Paris was making its contribution to march the country toward victory.

In 1941 Paris Goes To War.


How To Add A Story & Pictures To Paris Goes To War

If you have stories, pictures or items of interest to contribute to these web pages, please email them to steelyfamilias@yahoo.com. You can send written articles in doc or pdf formats and pictures are preferred in jpg format. Contributions will be posted according the their relevance to Paris, Lamar County, Camp Maxey and World War II. All contributions may be used on these blog web pages as well as any future publications that may appear on the subject.

Friday, May 11, 2018

In Memory of Private First Class Richard Travis Townsend, KIA, 99th Infantry Division


  • July 13, 1916-December 17, 1944
  • Hometown: 
  • Crisfield, Maryland
  • Entered Service: 
  • June 19, 1941
  • Unit: 
  • B Company, 371st Field Artillery Battalion, 99th Infantry Division
  • Rank: 
  • Private First Class, U.S. Army
  • Award(s): 
  • Purple Heart
  • Cemetery: 
  • Plot E, Row 16, Grave 12
  • Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery


Before the War 

Richard Travis Townsend was born to Lester and Mabel Townsend on July 13, 1916 in Crisfield, Maryland, which is located in Somerset County along the eastern shore of the Chesapeake Bay. His father owned and operated a local pool parlor while his mother stayed home and cared for his younger brother, Jack. Townsend’s maternal grandmother, Virginia Sommers, came to live with the family when he was a teenager. Upon graduating from Crisfield High School, Townsend worked as a semi-skilled lineman and serviceman in the telephone and telegraph industry.

Military Experience 

Early Military Career
Townsend enlisted in the U.S. Army on June 19, 1941, a month shy of his 25th birthday. Little is known about Townsend’s early career in the Army, but there was an interruption to his military service. On February 10, 1942, Townsend was relieved from active duty and transferred to the Enlisted Reserve Corps (ERC) until November 21, 1942. Townsend’s ERC status coincides with the year of his father’s death at the age of 48. Records do not show what month or day the elder Townsend passed away. After this point, Townsend was assigned to the 99th Infantry Division.

371st Field Artillery TrainingAbout a year after being reactivated, Townsend went for Artillery Training at Camp Maxey near Dallas, Texas, in November 1943. While there, he learned how to handle the 105mm howitzer. Townsend’s work with the howitzer was very important. This particular howitzer was the workhorse of field artillery during World War II. During this training, Townsend married Lillia Katherine Elrod of Dallas, Texas on May 21, 1944. They would not get to spend much time together as Townsend and the rest of the 99th Infantry Division headed to Europe in September.

The Checkerboard Division
The 99th, or Checkerboarders as they are sometimes called because their division insignia resembled a blue and black checkerboard, sailed toward Europe and arrived in England on October 10, 1944. They moved to Le Havre, France, on November 3, where they first saw the ravages of the Normandy Campaign. They made it to their final destination, the Ardennes Forest in Belgium, in December. The Checkerboarders had yet to engage in battle. According to Major General Walter E. Lauer, the most difficult task for them at the beginning was getting used to the snow and bitterly cold temperatures.

“All hell broke loose”
On December 16, 1944, the Germans caught the 99th Infantry Division completely off guard with a surprise counteroffensive which came to be known as the Battle of the Bulge. Fighting was fierce, but the 99th Infantry Division was successful in keeping the Germans at bay. The Germans knew this would be their last major offensive and were using every devious action, including dressing German soldiers as Americans to relay false orders. It was in these first hellish days that Townsend was killed in action on December 17, 1944. He died as a result of multiple wounds. The 99th Infantry Division would soon get reinforcements, and the battle would rage on until January when the Germans went into retreat with the Checkerboarders in pursuit. The division would eventually move into Germany and help liberate over 1,000 Jews from concentration camps.

“Battle Babies” no more
Townsend and the rest of the 99th Infantry Division had been dubbed the “Battle Babies” by Major General Laurer because of their lack of experience in war. After their brave fighting in the Battle of the Bulge and into Germany, they became seasoned war veterans. The 9th Infantry Division would become one of the most highly decorated units in Army history. While Townsend did not live to see the end of the war, his contributions surely helped to defeat the German Army.

Commemoration 
The U.S. Army awarded Townsend the Purple Heart. He was temporarily interred near the site of death in Losheimergraben, Belgium alongside another fallen comrade. He was disinterred and reburied temporarily in a cemetery in Foy, Belgium. At his wife, Lillia’s, request, Henri-Chapelle American Cemetery in Belgium became his permanent resting place. Lillia Townsend decided it was best to have her husband rest eternally with the rest of his fallen comrades. He is also memorialized in his hometown of Crisfield, Maryland. In September 2011, Townsend's grave was adopted by a Belgian citizen.


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