Goodbye to the Last Doughboy (Spring 2011 | Volume: 61, Issue: 1)

Goodbye to the Last Doughboy

AH article image

Authors: The Editors

Historic Era: Era 7: The Emergence of Modern America (1890-1930)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

Spring 2011 | Volume 61, Issue 1

On March 15, 2011, Army Corporal Frank Woodruff Buckles was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery. He was the last surviving American World War I veteran. His internment was joined by that of Albert Woolson (d. 1956), the last Union Civil War veteran, and Lemuel Cook (d. 1866), the last official veteran of the Revolutionary War, whose deaths signaled a major turning point in our history. A 16-year-old Buckles lied his way into the Army in August 1917, claiming that Missouri didn’t publish birth records. He served during most of the war in France, driving ambulances and later escorting German prisoners of war. In 1941, he happened to be in Manila on business when the Japanese invaded. He spent more than three years in a prisoner-of-war camp. Buried with full honors, Corporal Buckles now lies 50 yards from General John Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces during the war. The Great War is now—officially—history.