Clark, Arthur P.
Army Sergeant

Arthur P. Clark, age 22, from Gibson County Princeton, Indiana .

Service era: World War II

Date of death: Sunday, September 19, 1943
Death details: Died at the army’s Fletcher general hospital of a broken neck received when he dived into a swimming pool at Kenyon College, Cambier, where he was enrolled for special training.
Cemetery: White Church, Princeton

Source: National Archives, grave marker, Chronicle Tribune (1943), Vincennes Sun Commercial (1943)

Jarvis, Joseph R
Army 2nd lieutenant

Joseph R Jarvis, age 23, from Gibson County Princeton, Indiana .

Parents: Joseph C. Jarvis
Spouse: Jean Elizabeth (Sullivan)

Service era: World War II
Schools: Purdue University

Date of death: Thursday, September 3, 1942
Death details: Died in Dayton, Ohio from injuries received that day when a plane he was piloting crashed at Patterson Field. The motor failed.
Cemetery: IOOF in Princeton

Source: National Archives, grave marker, Princeton Daily Clarion (1942)

Key, Oscar M.
Army Staff sergeant

Oscar M. Key, age 28, from Gibson County Princeton, Indiana .

Parents: Mattie Key

Service era: World War II
Schools: Princton High

Date of death: Friday, July 18, 1941
Death details: Died, non-battle; died at Letterman Hospital in San Francisco of injuries suffered in an automobile accident near Hamilton Field where he was serving.
Cemetery: White Church in Princeton

Source: National Archives, grave marker, Princeton Daily Clarion (1941)

Ringer, Brice
Private

Brice Ringer, age 22, from Augusta, Indiana, Pike county.

Parents: William F. and Addeline Ringer

Service era: World War I

Parents: William F. and Addeline Ringer

Date of death: Sunday, June 22, 1919
Death details: Committed suicide in Berlin, Germany. Despondency caused by homesickness was given as the probably reason. His letters to relatives expressed a desire to return home. He was a member of the Red Cross mission in Germany and went overseas as a member of a medical detachment in 1918.
Cemetery: Buried in Augusta, Indiana

Source: Indiana Historical Commission, Princeton Daily Clarion (1919)

Shaw, Carl E.
Army Private 1st class

Carl E. Shaw from Custer County Oklahoma.

Spouse: Betty Ahern Shaw

Service era: World War II

Date of death: Unknown
Death details: On December 13, 1944, Japanese forces in the Philippines began the transfer of 1,621 Allied prisoners of war (POWs) to Japan. The POWs were to make the journey aboard transport ships whose harsh conditions and extreme overcrowding led survivors to refer to them as “Hell Ships.” The ships also lacked markings that would distinguish them from any other military target, causing some of them to be attacked by Allied forces who could not identify them as POW transports. On December 14, 1944, Allied aircraft attacked the first ship, the Oryoku Maru, in Subic Bay in the Philippines, killing many Allied POWs who became lost in the water, sank with the ship, or were washed ashore. Survivors of the bombing were put aboard two other ships, the Enoura Maru and the Brazil Maru, to continue on to Japan. During the journey, while anchored in Takao Harbor, Formosa (present-day Taiwan), the Enoura Maru was attacked by Allied aircraft from the USS Hornet (CV-8), killing Allied POWs who were lost in the water, on board the ship, or on the nearby shore. Survivors of the Enoura Maru bombing were loaded onto the Brazil Maru, and reached Japan on January 30, 1945. As a result of these incidents, Allied POWs were lost in the Philippines, at sea between the Philippines and Taiwan, while anchored in Taiwan, at sea between Taiwan and Japan, and in Japan. The attacks on these POW transports ultimately resulted in a series of death notifications from the Japanese government through the International Red Cross (IRC), and some casualties were given up to five different dates of death at various locations during the transfer. Witness accounts from surviving POWs offer detailed information for a handful of casualties, but the specific dates of loss and/or last-known locations for many of these POWs are based on the most recent reported date of death. Private First Class Carl E. Shaw, who entered the U.S. Army from Oklahoma, served in Medical Detachment, 31st Infantry Regiment in the Philippines during World War II. He was taken as a POW following the Japanese invasion and interned in the islands until December 1944, when he was put aboard the Oryoku Maru for transport to Japan. Records indicate PFC Shaw was killed several weeks later in the attack on the Enoura Maru; however, these reports often involve information solely furnished by enemy governments, with some casualties given multiple dates of death. Future research may determine that these reports were inaccurate. Private First Class Shaw’s remains could not be identified following the war, and he is still unaccounted-for. Today, Private First Class Shaw is memorialized on the Walls of the Missing at the Manila American Cemetery in the Philippines.

Source: National Archives, Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, Cumberland Evening Times (1944)

Greentree, William
Army Private

William Greentree from Indiana, Gibson county.

Service era: World War II

Date of death: Unknown
Death details: Died of wounds

Cemetery: White Church, Gibson County

Source: National Archives, grave marker