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World War 2 Two II WW2 WWII 1939 1945

168th Infantry Regiment, US Army




If you can provide any additional information, especially on actions and locations at specific dates, please add it here.



Those known to have served with

168th Infantry Regiment, US Army

during the Second World War 1939-1945.

The names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List

Records of 168th Infantry Regiment, US Army from other sources.



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Want to know more about 168th Infantry Regiment, US Army?


There are:0 items tagged 168th Infantry Regiment, US Army available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Second World War.


Pfc. Melvin Eugene "Popeye" Gregory 168th Infantry Regiment 34th Infantry Division

My uncle Mel Gregory was captured at Anzio Beach, Italy in April, 1944. He was part of a seven man machine gun nest. They were hit by grenade and knocked unconscious. Mel suffered injuries to his left arm, left leg and face. He lost sight in his left eye. The other six members of his squad were unconscious when the Germans overran their positioin. Since they were unconscious the Germans slit their throats. Since Mel was conscious during the overrun, he was taken prisoner. Mel escaped twice during the next 13 months. He was housed at Moosburg, 7A and in Poland he was held at Hammerstein/Schlochau 2B, Stellin 3B, and Alt Drewitz bei Kurstrim 3C, all in Poland. While at 7A Mel became reaquainted with Fred Schumann from Garfield, Washington just 10 miles from Mel's hometown of Oakesdale, Washington. The two men were members of the class of '43 and competed against each other in the Whitman County League in junior high and high school basketball and high school football. They had known each other for many years and had many friends and aquaintences in common.

Chris Gregory



Pvt. Miles Richard Nix 3 Battalion, Co I 168th Infantry Regiment.

My father joined the Army in 1941. After the bombing of Pearl Harbor the US declared war on Japan and immediately after Germany declared war on the US. America entered the war with the invasion of North Africa and Daddy was one of the soldiers in the first invasion. He group landed at Algiers, Algeria. He was later captured at Faid Pass in February 1943 by the Germans under the command of the "Dessert Fox", Erwin Rommel.

They were marched to Tunis where they were held in a fenced in compound, burning under the African sun during the day and digging holes in the sand at night to keep warm during the cold nights. They were sent to Stalag VIIA, which was a staging area for the POW's and then sent out to his permanent camp at Stalag IIIB.

He was required to go out on work details and worked building an electric plant. The men in the camp had some very rough conditions. They had little food. They got a cup of Ersatz coffee for breakfast, waterey soup for lunch, and one loaf of Black Sawdust Bread for supper which had to be divided between 6 men. It was a while before the Red Cross parcels began arriving to the camp. The parcels were kept outside the compound and overseen by the Germans. When they received them, they had often been gone through and some food and other things had been taken.

Occasionally Hitler's SS would visit the camp and they were very fearsome. Even the German guards were afraid of them. He was a POW for 26 months. When the Germans heard the guns of the Allied Army moving closer and closer, they quickly marched the POW's away from front lines with little preparation for the march. They had little food or water and snow was on the ground. They would stay in barns and whatever shelter they could. Daddy once stayed in a chicken coup. At some point while on this march, Daddy and some others escaped and held up in a barn hoping to get to the American troops. When they awoke it was to the sound of tanks. They feared they had been recaptured, but it was the Russians who found them and helped them to return to American control. Freed POW's were given priority on air transport coming back home. He was sent to a hospital in Georgia for a while and then sent to Miami, Florida to recoup. It was a very trying time in his life.

Sandra N. Dean



Sparacio 168th Infantry Regiment

My grandfather was in the 168th Infantry (34th Infantry Div) of the US Army and was captured in Tunisia in 1943. He was a POW for approximately two years in Stalag 3B, Germany.

Michael J Sparacio



Pte. Charles William "Hap" Cady "F" Coy. 168th Rgt.

Charles W. Cady joined the Army in 1942. He was captured in Tunisia in Northern Africa around Kasserine Pass on 17th February 1943. He eventually was taken to Stalag 2B. He worked in a labour kommando. He was part of the forced march and was liberated on or about 15th April 1945. He spent time in Camp Lucky Strike recuperating before being sent home. When he arrived home he was told that his brother had been killed in Northern France on 22nd November 1944.

Richard Cady



PFC Paul John Jordan C Coy.,109th Med.Bn. 34th Inf. Div.,168 Regt.

My uncle, Paul John Jordan, was born in Maibe, WV on April 27th 1919. As a young man in the 1930s, Paul worked in the Water Department in the C.C.C.

Paul was the first of six Jordan brothers to join the armed forces. He enlisted on July 14th 1941, several months before the attack on Pearl Harbor, at Baltimore, MD. He was trained as a medic and then assigned to the 34th Infantry Division. He was placed in C Company, 109th Medical Battalion of the 168th Infantry Regiment. He was listed as 5'11" and 147 lbs.

Paul's 34th Infantry Division was sent straight from Newport News,VA to Oran, North Africa to begin "Operation Torch". In early February of 1943, the 34th Infantry Division's 3rd Battalion, 168th Infantry Regiment was positioned 10 miles east of Sidi Bou Zid on three hills: D.J. Lessouda (northernmost), D.J.Hadid (southernmost) and D.J.Ksaira, which was the easternmost position of the American Forces. C Company, 109th Medical Battalion was atop this hill. At 0430 on February 14th 1943, the German 10th and 21st Panzer Division tanks moved out to attack Sidi Bou Zid.

A raging sandstorm had been blowing for 12 hours and the American Forces couldn't see or hear anything. The storm was blowing from east to west - right into the faces of the Americans atop these three hills. The German tanks first surrounded, then later bypassed these positions. The German infantry, riding the tanks and scout cars, then unleashed a relentless fire upon these three hills for two days. Relief columns sent from Sidi Bou Zid were repeatedly attacked by the German Luftwaffe, and the Americans lost 44 tanks at this time. On the nights of February 15th and 16th, several Americans escaped this ring, but 600 from Lessouda, and 800 from Ksaira surrendered to the Germans.

"Paul Jordan was listed as missing in action on February 17th 1943. He was transported to Sicily on February 3rd 1943, to mainland Italy on March 10th 1943, to Austria on March 14th 1943 and, finally, to Germany, on March 16th 1943. He spent time in Stalags 3A, 7A, 2B, 3B and 5B."

Daniel Patrick Lehan



Sgt. Chalmer Edwin "Pork" Bonnicksen Co L. 168th Infantry Regiment

My uncle, Chalmer Bonnicksen, was a POW at Stalag 3B. He was captured in Tunisia on 17th of Feb 1943. The date of capture happened to be his 30th birthday. I believe he spent his entire time as a POW at Stalag 3B and was liberated on 26th of May 1945.

Uncle Pork was a sergeant with the 34th Infantry Division, 168th Infantry Regiment, Co L. I know very little about his time as a POW. What I do remember is my father telling me that letters back and forth were semi-regular and the Red Cross was getting at least some care packages through. The conditions did seem to have damaged his vision which proved a hardship for a man who liked to read as much as he did. Upon his return, my father told me he looked like a scarecrow, he stood 6'4" and certainly wasn't carrying any extra weight after two years in a camp.

He came back to Iowa and spent the rest of his life drilling and repairing wells around NW Iowa. He died of a heart attack at the young age of 54 in 1967.

Don Sweaney



Cpl. Joseph "Poppa" Pacetti 168th Infantry Regiment

When my father served in Vietnam, his 1SG was Poppa Joe Pacetti. Hoe had been captured in Tunisia on 17th of February 1943 and spent the balance of WWII as a Prisoner of War at Stalag 2B. He went on to serve in both Korea and Vietnam, where he watched over my father and made sure that they both made it through the war in one piece. Uniquely, Poppa Joe was a three time recipient of the Combat Infantryman Badge, which puts him in a small group of individuals to have earned this award.




Pte. John Barclay Harrah 168th Infantry Regiment

John B. Harrah. Taken at Fort Dix N.J. in 1942

John Harrah newspaper article

John B. Harrah and other Cadiz, Ohio soldiers returned from the war.

John B. Harrah Medal Display.

John Harrah was captured during the battle of the Kasserine Pass in Tunisia, North Africa on 17th of February 1943. He was first sent to a POW camp in Italy and after a short time there he was moved to Stalag 2b in Hammerstein. When the war ended he was sent for rehabilitation to Camp Lucky Strike in France. He smoked only Lucky Strike cigarettes until the day he died in 2003.




PFC. William Benjamin O'Neal Coy.I, 168th Infantry Regt. 34th Infantry Division

William B. O'Neal Jr. in 1942

William O'Neal, Jr. was my great-uncle. He was taken prisoner in Italy while on a recon patrol with 6 other soldiers. He stated that the Germans immediately took away their American uniforms and gave them British clothing. He said he worked on a potato farm nearby and would often trade cigarettes for food with German civilians. He was there approximately 15 months, and as the American forces began closing in they started moving them on foot for many miles until they were finally put on a train. He said he had to eat dandelions for energy during the march. After getting on the train, it was shot up by Allied aircraft. He said that after arriving at the last camp, the guards became "nice". Finally after a short while, they woke up to find the guards had left during the night.

Thomas O'Neal









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