Korean War error troop train wreck Ohio Sept. 11, 1950


21 OR MORE DIE IN OHIO WRECK. MANY INJURED AS FAST TRAIN HITS TROOP CARS.

Newcomerstown, O. -- A fast Pennsylvania railroad passenger train ploughed into the rear of a standing troop train during a heavy fog early today, killing at least 21 National Guardsmen.
LT. COL. FRANK TOWNSEND, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., commanding officer of the Pennsylvania National Guard troops aboard the train, said 13 bodies were carried from the wreckage, four died at hospitals, and the bodies of four more soldiers were still in the wreckage. The state highway patrol, however, placed the death toll figure at 25.
COL. TOWNSEND said 44 were injured. All of the dead and most of the injured were members of the 109th Field Artillery Battalion, Pennsylvania National Guard, enroute to Camp Atterbury, Ind., to begin training under Federal Service. The Pennsylvania Guard was one of four militia divisions recently called into Federal Service for the Korean War.
3 Cars Demolished.
Three cars of the troop train, carrying 655 troops, were demolished when the Spirit of St. Louis, enroute from New York to St. Louis with 240 passengers, rammed the rear of the stalled troop carrier at Isleta, five miles west of here. The first unit of the twin-unit Diesel pulling the passenger train plunged into a creek and two cars on the Spirit of St. Louis were derailed. They did not overturn, however, and none of the passengers aboard the passenger train was injured seriously.
Witnesses said the troop train stopped west of a signal when a steam valve controlling the train's air brake system apparently snapped. Crewmen had just placed flares at the rear of the disabled troop carrier when the Spirit of St. Louis plunged out of the dawn and smashed into the end of 

 read on


The Chronicle-Telegram Elyria Ohio 1950-09-11
Killed In The Wreck:
Service Battery:
CORP. CARL W. ARMBRUSTER.
CORP. JOHN L. BARNA.
PVT. WILLIAM R. DISBROW.
CORP. JOSEPH E. FLETCHER.
PFC EDWARD W. GALLAGHER.
PVT. WALLACE R. LUDWIG.
WO JAMES F. McGINLEY.
SGT. BERNARD S. OKRASINSKI.
CORP. THOMAS M. OSTRASZEWSKI.
PVT. WILLIAM F. TIERNEY.
CAPT. ARTHUR J. THOMAS.
RCT. THOMAS W. WALLACE.
Battery B.
PFC LEONARD BALONIS.
RCT. EUGENE CARR.
SGT. JOHN W. COX.
RCT. WILLIAM J. DOUGHERTY.
SGT WILLIAM C. EDWARDS.
RCT. HUGH L. FARGUS.
PFC. HAROLD HANDLOS.
PFC CLYDE P. HARDING.
PFC MARTIN F. HORNLEIN.
PFC RONALD J. JACKSON.
SGT. LESTER J. KUEHN.
CORP. LARRY L. LUZENSKI.
RCT. FRANK C. MARTINEZ.
RCT. CHARLES NORTON.
PFC RAYMOND PUDLOWSKI.
RCT RICHARD A. ROYER.
RCT. WILLIAM F. SOBERS.
WO WILLIAM M. WELLINGTON.
SGT. GILBERT B. WHARTON.
PFC EDMUND ZABICKI.
PFC DONALD C. ZIEKER.
List Of Injured:
PFC EDWARD BILSKI.
CORP DAL. D. DAUBERT.
PFC DEAN DAUBERT.
PFC JOHN J. DOUGHTERY.
SECOND LT. MERLE R. EDWARDS.
CORP. FRANCIS D. FISHER.
CORP. LEONARD FLECKNOE.
CORP ARTHUR GIAMPA.
CORP. CYRIL G. GULIUS.
PFC FRED D. HAWKE.
SGT. JOSEPH J. KUDRAK.
CORP NICHOLAS MARSHALL.
CORP CARL O. METZGER.
SGT. KENNETH MISHKELL.
LT. EARL W. PHILLIPS.
PFC FRANCIS X. QUAREQUIO.
CORP. JOHN D. ROOPER.
PFC ROBERT ROWLES.
CORP. JAMES SAMPSON.
PVT. JAMES SAUERWINE.
PVT. ROBERT H. SCHELL.
CAPT. ROBERT SHORTZ.
CORP JOHN SIMONSON
SGT. RAYMOND TALMADGE.
CORP. ROBERT J. THOMPSON.
PFC FRANK TOWH.
CORP. LEONARD J. WALKOVIAK.
PFC ALBERT WILLIAMS.
PFC WILLIAM YESIRVIDA.
CAPT. FRANCIS R. BRANNAN.
M/SGT. ROBERT ROBERTS.
SFC LAWRENCE ROBERTS.
SGT. GEORGE YANCK.
PFC JOSEPH DIMIRCO.
PFC DONALD FORIET.
PFC THOMAS GALLAGHER.
PFC WILLIAM HALL.
CORP. LEWIS A. COMPTON.
RCT. RAMON MARTINEZ.


60 years ago, death took Wyoming Valley’s bravest
Thirty-three members of the 109th Field Artillery died in an Ohio train crash.
RUTH WHISPELL Times Leader Intern
An unbelievably loud noise awoke Virginia Norman in the early morning hours of Sept. 11, 1950.

759th Railway Operating Battalion - Jack Dellinger Obit

759 dellinger by Nancy Cunningham

732nd Oliver Moran

732nd Moran Brothers

3rd TMRS Romeo Aultman

3rd Aultman by cunningb

763rd Cpl. Milton M. Hanna

763rd Hanna by cunningb

746th Railway Operating Batalion Company C Roster / Directory

746th Railway Operating Battalion Co C directory/ roster by Nancy

746 R.O.B - Donald James Banyard obit


Died Oct. 15, 2011
Pocatello Bannock County Idaho, USA

POCATELLO - Donald James Banyard, 96, Pocatello, passed away Saturday evening, Oct. 15, 2011, at a local health care center.
A special thank you to Highland Hills and Idaho Home Health and Hospice.
Funeral services will be held Friday, Oct. 21 at 2 p.m. in the Cornelison Funeral Chapel, 431 N. 15th Ave., Pocatello. Interment will be in the Mountain View Cemetery, Pocatello, with military graveside rites by the Pocatello Veterans Honor Guard.
In lieu of flowers memorials in Donald's memory can be made to the charity of the donor's choice .
Arrangements are under the direction of the Cornelison Funeral Home, 431 N. 15th Ave., Pocatello, 232-0542. Condolences may be sent to the family online at www.cornelisonfh.com.
Published in Idaho State Journal on October 21, 2011

His neighbor wrote me  in 2010 ....I have a neighbor who is having his 96th birthday in a couple of weeks.  He was an engineer with the  746 ROB, 1944-1946.  I told his wife I would gather some information 

746th Railway Operating Battlion - Never to forget : an informal history of Company D 746 R.O.B Donald James Banyard

Special thanks to friend and neighbor WFerguson for sharing with all of us Mr Donald James Banyard copies of his MRS unit's history. Below you will find a scanned pdf of Never to forget : an informal history of Company D 746 R.O.B and a scanned image of the original.

712th Transportation Railway Operation Battalion - Harold Cooper

 For The Telegraph
Veteran Harold Cooper was a brave lineman who climbed power poles to keep the line of communication open for railroad cars carrying supplies U.S. infantrymen fighting on the battlefields of Korea. Cooper, of Godfrey, was a soldier in the 712th Transportation Railway Operation Battalion, which gained fame for transporting supplies and ammunition through dangerous territory to the U.S. soldiers who were in fierce battles against North Korean and Chinese communist forces.
Cooper climbed 35-foot wooden power poles in 30-degree-below-zero temperatures to make emergency repairs along 52 miles of territory in the Korean War.
"The lines froze and broke in the cold temperatures," Cooper recalled. "We climbed high on the poles in the bitter cold air to set up an emergency phone system."
The soldiers of the 712th Transportation Railway Operating Battalion gained a reputation for their courageous action to keep supplies moving to U.S. infantrymen.
The Korean War was raging in 1952 when Cooper was drafted in the Army in his hometown of East Alton.
He graduated from East Alton-Wood River High School in the class of 1950 and worked a year at Laclede Steel Co. until he went into the Army.
Cooper was sent to special training to learn to climb wooden power poles as a lineman to keep lines of communication open to the fighting front.
He learned to dig the steel spikes on the side of his boots into the wood pole and climb 35 feet in the air. Dozens of soldiers underwent intense training to learn the skill of standing near the top of a pole in the dangerous job of keeping lines of communication open for U.S. forces fighting to defeat communist troops in Korea. Cooper was assigned to the elite 712th Transportation Railway Operation Battalion, which first went to battle in the early 1940s in World War II. In the Korean War, the 712th was activated on Sept. 3, 1950 at Ft. Eustis, Va., with officers and enlisted men who had experience in railroad operation. The 712th operated the Korean National Railroad in the early months of the war from Taejon north to the frontlines of the battlefield. Cooper climbed poles to set up emergency phone communication systems on the site of four major wrecks of railroad trains.
In one Collision, rocks slid down a hillside in the night and slammed into a train, killing the engineer.
Armed with a pistol in his shoulder holster, Cooper dug his steel spikes in the wooden pole and climbed to install phones to open the line of communication at the scene of the train wreck cause by the rock slide.
Cooper's 712th Railway Transportation Battalion was awarded the U.S. Meritorious Unit Commendation medal for courageous action in transporting troops to the battlefields.
In one dangerous mission, men of the 712th transported U.S. infantrymen, tanks and artillery guns of an entire army division through the night across Korea to another fighting front.
Cooper and his crew did maintenance work on 52 miles of power lines through deep valleys and up mountains in the hot, steamy summer and 30 degree below zero winters. After 17 months in Korea, Cooper came home in 1953 with Army service medals, including the Korean United Nations ribbon with three bronze battle stars. He returned to work at Laclede Steel Co. where he operated a press in the wire mill, retiring after 42 years. Cooper and his wife, Juanita, married in 2003.
He was married 51 years to Shirley Cooper, who died in 2001. They have two daughters, Debbie and Starla, four grandchildren and two great grandchildren.
Cooper is a life member of Alton VFW Post 1308.

Unit histories - do you own one ?

If you own a MRS ( Military Railway Service) unit history book, please consider sharing it with others.

So many families do not still have a copy of their veteran's ( Dad or Granddad's ) unit history- so I have been working hard obtaining and digitizing copies of the books on the blog and making them freely available to everyone .

If you own a book, please contact me if you'd be willing to let me digitize it -so it can be shared with others who served together and their families. These books contain precious information on service and many, many have not seen before photos of their loved one. They just all shouldn't end up in private collections or in boxes in attics.

You don't have to give it up and scanning won't hurt it in anyway and it will be immediately returned to you !

Please help...

Thanks , Nancy
cunningb2@gmail.com  cunningb2@gmail.com

We could also create a fund of $$ designated to buy these when they become available - let me know if you'd be willing to donate of sponsor a purchase.