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  • Nashua goes to war

    Nashua Telegraph, NH
    Oct 16 2005

    Nashua goes to war


    By ALAN S. MANOIAN

    Published: Sunday, Oct. 16, 2005

    April 1917, the United States was forced to declare war on Imperial
    Germany, entering the European bloodbath that was World War I.

    By this time, Nashua was a city of 25,000 with a rich mix of proud
    immigrant groups. The city had many well-established ethnic enclaves,
    neighborhoods and parishes. Irish, French-Canadians, Greeks, Poles,
    Lithuanians, Jews, Armenians and others called Nashua home. The
    long-settled families of the old colonial Yankees, Scotch-Irish and
    African-Americans had become increasingly accustomed to the new,
    modern multicultural manufacturing city. Nashua had become one great
    multi-ethnic mosaic.

    The Great War would vividly demonstrate the depth of Nashuans' new
    social, cultural and economic cohesion as Americans, as well as their
    neighborly commitment to each other. That's because in 1917 and 1918
    the Great War was fought not only by the boys in the armed forces in
    Europe, but also by the entire community.

    In July 1917, the Federal Selective Service Conscription Act was
    enacted. The initial New Hampshire quota of young men was 1,204. The
    first roster of Nashua Guardsmen was brought together as Companies D
    and I of the 103rd Infantry Regiment, American Expeditionary Forces.
    Company D totaled 147 and Company I had 154 men, including legendary
    Nashua heroes James E. Coffey and Amedee Deschenes, and the not so
    famous, but equally brave Sarkis Sermonian, Charley Kiratsos, James
    Zepuka, David Oshansky, Fredrick Osgood, John McNulty and the many
    others.

    These were the boys of the city, the boys of the neighborhoods and
    parishes, that everybody knew and loved. We must realize today that
    back in 1917, 90 percent of the total population of Nashua lived in
    close proximity to each other, in compact inner-city neighborhoods,
    including poor, middle-class and affluent; they were not sprawled out
    as is the case today across the entire 36 square miles of the city
    limits. Unlike today, everyone knew their neighbors intimately.

    One young man should be mentioned at this point: Pvt. Edward
    Clifford, or, as known in Nashua, Eddie. Clifford was the first
    Nashuan to enlist in World War I at the outbreak of the war in 1914.
    Both his mother and father had died some time before, and the
    25-year-old Clifford enlisted in the Royal Irish Regiment and went to
    Europe to fight. It was reported of him in 1917, `he has been in the
    trenches in France for the past two years . . . he was in the thick
    of the terrible battle in which Maj. Redmond, the Irish leader, the
    commander was killed . . . he writes that they are giving the Germans
    their fill, and now when the Irish charge the Germans do not meet
    them, for all the fight has been taken out of them . . . the Germans
    do not care to meet the Irishmen when the latter are out for
    trouble.'

    Sadly, in September 1918, just two months before the end of the war,
    Clifford was killed. It was said of him, `He was wounded several
    times but went back each time . . . it was the spirit of boys (such)
    as Eddie Clifford that has put the fear of God in the Germans, and
    the victory has been with the Allies.'

    In July 1917, the Nashua boys of Co. D and Co. I marched up Main
    Street, turned onto East Pearl Street en route to the Union Railroad
    Station, and went off to war.

    `Escorted by several hundred of Nashua's representative citizens, and
    passing through the streets filled with a cheering throng, although
    upon the face of many a person were visible signs of tears, 308
    stalwart Nashua soldiers left . . . forward to the battle lines in
    France . . . it was a never to be forgotten sight as the train pulled
    from the station with the boys in olive drab leaning from the
    windows, some singing, grasping the hands of their friends and
    families,' according to reports.

    The Nashua boys first went to Concord to meet up with other New
    Hampshire companies under Col. Healey, then down to Camp Green in
    Charlotte, N.C. Afterwards many other Nashuans trained at Fort Devens
    in Ayer, Mass., before going off to France.

    Homefront efforts

    Back in the city, the community war effort kicked into full gear. The
    local American Red Cross Chapter began to make Comfort Kits for each
    local soldier; the kits being comprised of towels, shoe brushes,
    cakes of toilet soap, tubes of toothpaste, sticks of shaving soap,
    cans of talcum powder, shoelaces, bottles of three-in-one oil, shoe
    polish, boxes of cigarettes and chewing gum.

    The gymnasium at the YMCA on Temple Street was opened and special
    programs were offered for new Nashua soldiers to get into improved
    physical and moral shape for the battles and extreme personal
    military challenges ahead in Europe. The Nashua Public Library
    launched a civic program to collect masses of reading materials for
    the soldiers so they could occupy and soothe themselves with great
    literary works while in the trenches at the front.

    At this time, in August 1917, the national food conservation movement
    came into being. All kids of foodstuffs were needed to send to the
    front and food at home became short or even rationed, so the `war
    garden' effort began.

    Most noted locally was the Nashua Manufacturing Company, the Jackson
    Manufacturing Company and the Nashua Gummed and Coated Paper Company
    (today's Nashua Corp), all of which planted expansive potato and bean
    fields upon their Nashua riverfront land around the inner city, and
    on estate land backing onto the Merrimack River behind Concord
    Street. A great potato storehouse was prepared in the cellar of the
    Nashua Gummed and Coated Paper Co. on Franklin Street.

    Also notable was the Pennichuck Water Works, which built a massive
    farm produce cellar of fieldstone and timbers on its land that stored
    500 bushels of potatoes and 50 bushels of beans and corn for the war
    effort in September 1917.

    The Nashua Telegraph also took the lead in the effort to aid the
    Nashua boys soon going off to France by printing a daily piece
    titled: `Fast Lessons in French for the Soldier Boys.' The daily
    piece presented a number of important phrases such as, `Are the
    German Troops near here? Ya-t-il des troupes allemandes pres d'ici?'

    In December 1917, The Telegraph pitched in again. Nashua Infantry
    Companies D and I were camped in dirt-floor shelter tents in North
    Carolina when they got some nine inches of snow. The Nashua boys sent
    an urgent telegram to the

    city stating, `We had a fierce snowstorm here . . . and we are in
    tents . . . us poor devils are undergoing the most severe conditions.
    The boys from Nashua hereby apply and appeal to the Nashua Red Cross
    for 50 pairs of woolen socks at once if they can be obtained, if not
    as soon as possible . . . if the socks can be sent, please have them
    forwarded . . . I am writing now and my feet are soaked, and very
    cold.' When the telegram was received it was the Nashua Telegraph
    that immediately responded and quickly purchased, gathered and
    shipped the requested woolen socks.

    The women of Nashua were also hard at work in the war effort. In
    September 1917 there was a call for sweaters for the Nashua soldiers;
    it was soon reported that 270 Nashua women were energetically engaged
    in knitting 200-plus sweaters for the city's soldiers.

    In 1917, many, if not most, of these young French-Canadian, Greek,
    Yankee, Polish and other Nashua boys were employees of the great
    manufacturing enterprises of the city, including the textile
    factories, iron foundries, shoe shops, lumber mills, railroads, etc.
    So, even the factories did their part to bolster and express their
    pride and confidence in their boys. This was well demonstrated by the
    Jackson Manufacturing Co. on Canal Street as it proudly raised a
    handmade Service Flag of 19 stars, which showed the number of
    employees then in the military service, over the mill buildings.

    Nashua's Jewish community did its part, as well. It was reported in
    September 1917, `Hebrew War Effort: Temple Beth Abraham and Linus
    Hatzedak had raised over $500 and would make a trip with 10
    automobiles down to Fort Devens in Ayer, Massachusetts to provide
    necessities to 50 young Hebrew soldiers.'

    One of the necessities that young soldiers of all faiths constantly
    requested was cigarettes. It was reported, `Soldiers at Front Badly
    Need Tobacco: Send us tobacco, that is what we need more than any
    other one thing which the folks at home can do for us . . . the
    American soldiers are forced to pay 28 cents per 5 cent package of
    smoking tobacco . . . it is hard to procure even at this price . . .
    they long for a good smoke of the kind of tobacco that they are used
    to . . . it is hoped that various organizations, either clubs or
    societies of men or women will open up subscriptions in order that
    Nashua may do her full part.'

    Civic leaders

    During these trying war years, James B. Crowley was mayor of Nashua.
    It was he who gave the powerful and heartfelt speeches and made his
    presence known at every gathering, demonstration, parade and send-off
    for the boys and their families.

    Nashua could probably not have had a better man to lead the city
    during these years, because Mayor Crowley was the son of a true and
    genuine Nashua-born American Civil War military hero and patriotic
    martyr, Maj. Timothy B. Crowley, of the famed Irish Company B of the
    New Hampshire 10th Volunteer Regiment.

    It was said of Maj. Crowley in 1897, `In every hour of battle and
    danger he was at the front sharing the hardships and never flinching.
    In the gallant charge at the second battle of Fair Oaks in 1864, he
    was severely wounded in the hip. For this distinguished bravery in
    this action he was promoted to the rank of Major . . . since that day
    at Fair Oaks he was a constant sufferer; a sufferer for his country,
    but no man ever heard him express regret for the service he had
    rendered the old flag, for which in the prime of his manhood he laid
    down his life.'

    In September 1917, Mayor Crowley addressed the next wave of Nashua
    boys recently drafted and going to the front in France, he said at
    their farewell, `The demonstration this afternoon shows the esteem of
    the people of this community to your going, and the expression of
    their confidence in you. All I can say, all that I can do, is simply
    to extend to you the confidence that the people have in you. . . . I
    would ask you to be clean of body, pure of spirit, and there is no
    question of the result of your endeavor; I bid you Godspeed.'

    In October 1917, the thousands of workers in the numerous Nashua
    factories and manufacturing companies organized and conducted a huge
    patriotic parade on Main Street in order to launch the great Liberty
    Bond Drive for the war effort. The headline read: `Seven Thousand
    Five Hundred Men and Women Parade Through Main Street and Throng Mass
    Meetings in the Most Remarkable Out Turning Ever Seen in This City.'

    The other great campaign of the fall of 1917 was the YMCA `Big Red
    Triangle' Campaign. This campaign was led by the most affluent men
    and families of Nashua; the owners and directors of the mills, banks
    and other businesses. They sought to raise $35,000, which was a huge
    amount of money in 1917 for a city the size of Nashua. In fact, they
    exceeded their aims and ultimately raised almost $50,000 for the war
    effort. Each time they met and exceeded a monetary goal, a red light
    was placed on an electric sign in front of City Hall, which then
    stood on the east side of Main Street between Park and Temple
    streets. Everyone in the city, whether poor, rich or in-between, was
    together in this great civic war effort.

    In November 1917, the Nashua Chapter of the Knights of Columbus
    launched a program to raise some $5,000 for the boys at the front;
    they met and exceeded their goals as well. Again, whether Protestant,
    Catholic, Jewish or other, all were together pushing hard every day.

    Also in November 1917, it was reported, `A large shipment was made by
    the Nashua chapter of the Red Cross last week: The shipment was made
    up of the following: 180 sweaters, 72 pair of socks, 48 pair of
    wristlets, 6 pair of bed socks, 6 helmets, 24 mufflers, 5 three yard
    bandages, 12 eye bandages, 2060 gauze compresses, 96 nurses mitts, 48
    wash cloths, 72 surgical sheets, 18 pajamas, 220 handkerchiefs, 18
    ambulance pillows, 445 soultetus bandages, 455 triangular bandages,
    15 T bandages, 110 four tail bandages, 7 shoulder wraps, 12 fracture
    pillows.'

    A city mourns

    In November 1917, Pvt. James E. Coffey of 51 Broad St. wrote home to
    his mother from England before going over to the battlefront in
    France: `I received your letter and was glad to hear from you all. We
    are all well and happy and never felt better in our lives . . . This
    will be a trip that will never be forgotten by any of the boys. Well,
    I don't know when I'll be back home again . . . If you should happen
    to see Bald Arnold or Eddy O'Neil tell them this is a trip well worth
    taking for their country and I shall never regret the day I signed up
    . . . I am thinking that this war is going to last some time to come.
    So here I am until this little game is over with . . . Well, dear
    mother and sisters as I can't give you any more information of where
    we are for this letter might get lost or some German might get at it,
    and then we might get what the French and English are getting, some
    hot lead . . . Give my regards to the boys. Good bye and good luck
    and God bless you all.'

    On May 10, 1918, 22-year-old Pvt. Coffey, along with his fellow
    Nashuans, Sgt. Clement W. Gravelle and Pvt. Edmond Leblanc, all of
    Co. D, 103rd Infantry Regiment were killed in action.

    These three young men were Nashua's first lives lost in the Great
    War, with Coffey the first to fall.

    At the very same battle, James Coffey's brother, William B. Coffey,
    19 years old and also a member of Co. D, was seriously wounded. It
    was reported that he was, `laying at the point of death in a hospital
    in France.' William, however, survived the gas attack and wrote home
    to his mother soon after saying, `Just a word to let you know that I
    am well and happy once more. I leave for the front again, and glad
    that I am going back to join the boys. Don't worry about me, it's all
    in the chance. I have won a wounded strip on the right arm, and a
    couple more won't look bad . . . But, believe me, when I get back to
    the front, I'll have a bone to pick with the Germans. God help the
    prisoners, they won't live long. I never did a job yet, but what I
    could finish it, and I am hoping to finish those Huns with the rest
    of the boys. There are only a few of the boys left after the attack,
    but they are still in the game. Well, I received your mail and
    picture. Ma, you took a good one. Well, cheer up, when you get my
    letter, you can picture me back in the trenches. Best wishes and love
    to all.'

    That summer of 1918, the Nashua boys of Co. D and I were in the thick
    of the action in France. In September, Lt. Joseph P. Lee of 102 Ash
    St. came home for a seven-day leave before reassignment. He told the
    Nashua folks of the battles their boys had bravely served in that
    summer. He said of the July battles, `The men of the two Nashua
    companies had had their mettle proved in the sharpest fighting on the
    Chateau-Thierry, and all had acquitted themselves like heroes. The
    Xivray battle, in which Co. I had the big part to play, was one of
    the great actions of the whole war. The Nashua men's companies again
    were at the forefront of the fighting when the Germans were turned
    back at Chateau-Thierry . . . It was here that Company D suffered the
    heaviest toll in its fighting to date. Company I was in the first
    battalion forming the shock troops for our attack . . . it went under
    terrific machine gun fire. Everyone will tell you what its work was.
    Every man fought for all that was in him . . . the men now are
    veterans. I am proud of the Nashua boys.'

    During the intense battle of Xivray on July 16, three more Nashua
    boys were killed; Cpl. Fred Kearns, Pvt. Sarkis Sermonian and Pvt.
    Charles Dubuque. It was reported of Sermonian, `He was born 26 years
    ago in Armenia . . . he had been a resident of Nashua for seven
    years, and an employee of the Nashua Manufacturing Co., prior to his
    enlistment in Co. 1, First NH Infantry, when it went to service on
    the Mexican border. He continued in the military upon discharge . . .
    and went to Concord and Westfield camps, with his company. He was a
    young man who had a wide circle of friends, and old militia men say
    he was a good soldier.'

    Kearns wrote his wife, Bessie, in Nashua on June 9 as follows: `Dear
    Little Wife, Just a few lines to let you know that I am still
    thinking of you and the folks . . . hope mother's cold is better. I
    sure will be some happy boy to get a picture of you and the baby.
    Bess, you are right when you said you knew who your friends were. But
    cheer up, Bess, me and you for a little home of our own and better
    days are coming sometime if an old German or `Square Head' don't get
    me . . . well, Bess, we couldn't all have weak hearts because some of
    us had to pass and help out Uncle Sam . . . Love and kisses to you,
    and good luck, and God bless you. From Your Little Hubby.

    Pvt. Gilbert Mitchell of 140 Canal St. also wrote to his parents,
    letting them know that he was wounded, but would be all right, he
    went on to say, `They tell me that I will be sent home and all that,
    but I am going back into the fight if there is a possible chance. I
    didn't come over here to quit with the game just starting. It would
    seem like heaven to home, but then, I have seen so much death and
    suffering in the past ten months, I have become immune to any
    emotions connected with losing my friends and comrades. It is nearly
    a year since I bid you goodbye and made me feel a bit sad, but I try
    to remain cheerful, for sadness is not good for anyone here. Love to
    all my friends.'

    War's end

    The Great War finally came to an end with the surrender of Germany on
    Nov. 11, 1918. Nashua had lost many of her boys from all the distinct
    ethnic groups, and many others came home terribly wounded and
    psychologically affected from the carnage and gas attacks that they
    had somehow lived through. But they all came home as Americans, to a
    city of deeply and profoundly appreciative and proud families,
    friends and fellow citizens of the United States of America.

    They were all real Americans now, no matter where they, their parents
    or grandparents had originally emigrated from.

    On Nov. 11, 1918, it was reported in the Nashua Telegraph, `Nashua
    uncorked enthusiasm pent-up from last week . . . The word reached
    Nashua at 4 o'clock. At 4:10 a.m. the fire bell tolled out the news,
    in accordance with the arrangements made by Mayor James B. Crowley.
    Nashua has seen some glorious Fourth of July celebrations in years
    gone by . . . Nashua this morning went back to the old time way, with
    variations. Bells were rung, whistles blown, cowbell and tin pan
    parades filled the street from one end of the city to the other. Guns
    were fired, horns tooted, rockets shot into the air and red fire
    blazed everywhere . . . An old wash boiler or tin ash can, securely
    fastened to the rear axles of automobiles being hauled over the
    pavements at a raid rate was an innovation over the old-time din
    making contrivances. Old Mount Pleasant bells pealed out shortly
    after 4:30, being the first bell on the north side . . . shortly
    after 5 o'clock the chimes on the First Congregational Church began
    playing and added music to the racket which at this hour reached a
    point never before equaled in this city . . .

    `Some patriotic young men who owned fifes and drums, got downtown at
    an early hour, soon a parade formed after the manner as the famous
    Harvard `snake dance' and up and down Main Street it passed again and
    again. In its ranks were many well known citizens . . . Nothing like
    it was ever seen in the city.'

    This was how Nashua, in grand civic ritual, went to war and
    celebrated the return of her brave soldiers as a true community some
    87 years ago.

    How shall we, the city, continue to support Nashua's military
    personnel fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan today? How shall we
    celebrate their proud return home to good old Nashua after their
    noble part in the hard-fought battle is honorably finished?

    Alan Manoian of Nashua is the city's former assistant economic
    director and downtown development specialist. He can be reached at
    [email protected].
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