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Offical List compiled from the New York Honor Roll
published by the Adjutant General Kineaid, 1919

NOTE: Make sure you check thru the entire listing
for each letter.They are not always alphabetized..

I

Ianuzzi, Thomas, 
268 Union St. Bklyn.  
Pvt.Co.B, 315th Inf..  
Died of wounds, October 10. 1923.

Ingersoll, Henry I.
245 Plymouth street 
Corporal Henry I. Ingersoll, 25 years old of 245 Plymouth street, reported
dead from disease Sept. 15, is believed to have succumbed to spinal
meningitis after being in the front line trenches several days.  He was
attached to Company K, 107th Regiment, Twenty-seventh Division.  He was
taken to a British casualty station, where he died.
Brooklyn Standard Union-21 October 1918

Ingram, John F., 
1759 73d St., Bklyn.  
Pvt, 1st Cl Co. C,  165th Inf.  
Killed in action, July 27, 1918.
SERGT JOHN INGRAM MET BRAVE SOLDIER'S DEATH
Comrades of Brooklyn Boys' Regiment Tell How He was Killed
The type and character of the boys who fought and died "over there", and 
the impressions their supreme sacrifice made upon their surviving comrades,
are graphically told in two letters concerning Private John F. INGRAM,
formerly of 1818 Seventeenth street, to Mrs. Fannie B. REIMANN, of 1536
Seventy-first street.  INGRAM was a member of Company E, Fourteenth
Regiment and was transferred to the "old Sixty-ninth," now the 165th
United States Infantry.  He was killed in action in France July 27.
Louis KLOPACH, Chief Liason Sergeant, Company C, 165th United 
States Infantry wrote:
'John INGRAM was one of God's noblemen, and he met an end that is
typical of the American soldier.  He suffered no paid and his last words
were of encouragement in the face of what then seemed unsurmountable
obstacles.  A German high explosive shell landed within a few feet of him
and the man never knew what struck him.  He was buried close by the
spot on which he fell.  His grave is plainly marked, and I shall forward
to you a map showing its exact location just as soon as we get out of
the front lines where we are still battling the enemy of civilization and
happiness."
Sergt. Lester MORIARITY of the same company, wrote:
"John had every quality of a good soldier and you can be forever proud
of his noble deeds."
Brooklyn Standard Union-4 December 1918

Ingrisano, Antonio, 
56 Franklin Ave.,Bklyn.  
Pvt.Co.G, 108th lnf.
Killed in action, September 27, 1918.

lrwin, James C., 
69 Lurting St., Corona,L.I.
Corp.Co.A, 102d F.Sig. Bn.  
Died of broncho pneumonia and influenza, October 27, 1918.

Isaacs, Joseph, 
210 Hewes St., Bklyn.  
Pvt.Co.H, 308th Inf.  
Died of wounds in action, September 28,1918.

Isaken, Michael, 
365 Hoyt St., Bklyn.  
Pvt Co. C, 308th Inf.  
Died of wounds in action, October 1, 1918.

Israel, Louis, 
285 Keap St., Bklyn.
Pvt Co. F, 305th Inf. 
Died of wounds, October 5, 1918.

lvers, Christopher, 
626 Sterling PI.Bklyn. Corp.Co.G, 106th Inf.
Killed in action, September 27, 1918.

lvers, James A.,  
626 Sterling PI.Bklyn.
Pvt.1st Cl.Co.E,328th Inf. 
Killed in action, October 9, 1918.
Private James A. IVERS, who is reported killed in action Oct. 9, was twenty-
nine years old, and lived with his widowed mother at 626 Sterling place, the
same house in which he was born.  He went to France last April, a member of
Company E, 328th Infantry.  In his later letter, dated Oct. 5, he wrote he was
in a forest ready to go into action.  He was a graduate of St. Teresa's 
Parochial School and a member of the Holy Name Society.
His brother, Corporate Christopher S. IVERS, of Company G, 106th Infantry,
formerly the Twenty-third, has not been heard from since Sept. 22, a few
days before the fighting at Cambrai, where his regiment suffered heavy
casualties.
Brooklyn Standard Union-1 December 1918

Iverson, Thomas T.,
Mechanic Thomas T. IVERSON, 23 years old, the son of Mr. and Mrs. John
IVERSON, of 123 Fifty-seventh street, is reported to have died of disease
Oct. 27.  About four years ago he enlisted in the regular army and was sent
to Columbus, Ohio, where he became a member of the Fifteenth Calvary.
Later he was transferred to a Machine Gun Battalion.
Brooklyn Standard Union-12 December 1918

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