- William Seegers
William Alfred Seegers (
October 24 ,1900 -July 10 ,2007 ) was, at age 106, one of the last two known remaining veterans of the First World War to have served in the German forces (the other one is Erich Kästner) andCalifornia 's last known WWI veteran.Born "Wilhelm" near
Brinkum , he was originally passed over for service in October 1917 as being too short, only five foot three inches. But by the middle of 1918, the Germans were desperate for recruits, and he was drafted onJune 10 ,1918 . Seegers served in the 71stErfurt Battalion. Since he didn't want to shoot anyone, and in part due to his short stature, he volunteered for office work and was accepted as such, though soon he was made to perform guard duty as well. In the closing months, with food in short supply and desertions rampant, Seegers deserted (in part because he didn't like his commander) and joined a second division in the confusion and collapse of theGerman Empire in November 1918. William did not serve in combat but guarded prisoners of war. While serving in this capacity, he, many of his comrades and many of the prisoners contracted theSpanish Flu , killing many, but Seegers managed to survive. In part because his tasks included administrative duties, he stayed on after the Armistice. He was discharged from service in April 1919.In 1922, Seegers emigrated to the U.S. by way of
New York harbor. He settled inPennsylvania , and became anUnited States citizen .In October 2006, when he turned 106, William moved to California to live with his daughter, having lived independently until that point.
Perhaps because he served for Germany, no one noticed his status as a World War I veteran until his family contacted the
Gerontology Research Group in May 2007. He told of problems such as food shortages and low morale among the German soldiers. Seegers was one of the last four World War I veterans to be discovered so far, the others beingYakup Satar ofTurkey ,Raymond Cambefort ofFrance andEnrico Garbuglia ofItaly (who died not long after having been discovered). Interviewed in May 2007 by GRG correspondent Robert Young, William was photographed in June 2007 by former presidential photographer David DeJonge as part of a 'surviving WWI veterans' project.ee also
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Veterans of the First World War who died in 2007 References
* http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/07/12/BAG61QV5G31.DTL
* http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_6356814
* http://www.dejongestudio.com/
* http://www.genarians.com/WWI%20Veterans.html
* http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_6366047
* http://www.philly.com/philly/obituaries/20070729_WWI_vet_whose_freethinking_took_him_far.html
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