Person:Walter Schauweker (1)

Watchers
Walter Alton Schauweker, II
m. 14 Jun 1924
  1. Walter Alton Schauweker, II1925 - 1997
  • HWalter Alton Schauweker, II1925 - 1997
Facts and Events
Name Walter Alton Schauweker, II
Gender Male
Birth? 21 Jan 1925 Albion, Noble, Indiana
Census? 3 Apr 1930 Avilla, Noble, Indiana
Graduation? 1942 Avilla High School in Avilla, Noble, Indiana
Marriage to Unknown
Occupation? furniture liquidator, salesman, and soldier (WW2)
Death[6] 30 Jul 1997 Kendallville, Noble, IndianaCause: throat cancer
Burial[7] Avilla, Noble, Indiana
Religion? Methodist

Avilla Panthers Basketball Season 1940-41. Avilla (20-5). Coach: Wayne Strycker. Walter Schauweker 1 pt. Season 1941-42. Avilla (13-7). Coach: Phil Domer. Walter Schauweker 15 pts.

Veteran: WWII. Theater: South Pacific (New Guinea and the Solomon Islands). Service: 1st Marine Parachute Regiment (Paramarines; US Marine Corps Paratroopers). Rank: Corporal; machine gunners' assistant. Enlisted: October 19, 1942. Wounded: Bougainville Campaign; shot in the knee. Post-war deployment: guard; NCR Corporation, Dayton, Ohio. Discharged: February 6, 1946.

Walter enlisted in the Marine Corps immediately after graduating high school and went straight to family life after the war. He enrolled at Purdue University on the GI Bill but left after approximately one year.

Silk Chutes and Hard Fighting: U.S. Marine Corps Parachute Units in World War II. Jon T. Hoffman.

The 1st Marine Parachute Regiment was activated on April 1, 1943 under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Robert H. Williams at Vella Lavella upon arrival from its training base at Camp Kiser in New Caledonia. The 1st Marine Parachute Regiment, with around 3,000 men in three battalions was assigned to I Marine Amphibious Corps.

The first Paramarines (also known as Marine paratroopers) were trained at NAS Lakehurst in New Jersey in October 1940. A second group was quickly trained in December 1940, forming the 2nd Marine Parachute Battalion. A third class trained at Camp Kearney in Santee near San Diego in early 1941, eventually forming the 3rd Marine Parachute Battalion. After the US joined the Second World War, the training program was stepped up, and a special training camp was opened temporarily at Camp Elliot in May 1942, next to Camp Kearney in San Diego, CA.

The Beginning. In October 1940, the Commandant of the Marine Corps sent a circular letter to all units and posts to solicit volunteers for the paratroopers. To qualify a volunteer had to be unmarried, an indication of the expected hazards of the duty. The letter further stated that personnel qualified as parachutists would receive an unspecified amount of extra pay. " Parachute duty promised "plenty of action" and the chance to get in on the ground floor of a revolutionary type of warfare.

Marine Captain Marion L. Dawson oversaw the new school at Lakehurst, New Jersey. Two other officers, Second Lieutenants Walter S. Osipoff and Robert C. McDonough, were slated to head the Corps' first group of parachute trainees.

On 26 October 1940, Osipoff, McDonough, and 38 enlisted men reported to Lakehurst. The initial training program included 16-week course of instruction at the Parachute Material School land that conclude on 27 February 1941. A Douglas R3D-2 transport plane arrived from Quantico on 6 December and remained there through the 21st, so the pioneer Marine paratroopers made their first jumps during this period. For the remainder of the course, they leapt from Navy blimps stationed at Lakehurst. Lieutenant Osipoff, the senior officer, had the honor of making the first jump by a Marine paratrooper. By graduation, each man had completed the requisite 10 jumps to qualify as a parachutist and parachute rigger. Not all made it through - several dropped from the program due to ineptitude or injury. The majority of these first graduates were destined to remain at Lakehurst as instructors or to serve the units in the Fleet Marine Force as riggers.

1st Marine Parachute Battalion. The first mission for the new paramarines was an amphipious assault on the islets of Gavutu and Tanambogo north of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands. With 8 small infantry platoons, a total of 361 marines, the paramarines had a tough mission. The coral reef surrounding the islets only compounded the problem.

After a pre-dawn bombardment on 7 August 1942 Company A of the 1st Marine Parachute Battalion landed on Gavutu in Higgins boat against little opposition. B & C Companies were not as fortunate and had to land under heavy fire. Bitter fighting ensued for the next two days until they secured their objective, Hill 148. The units 20 percent casualty rate was the highest of any unit fighting to secure a foothold on Guadalcanal. Because of the battalions depleted manpower, the unit was attached to Edson's Raider Battalion by General Vandegrift at the end of August on Tulagi.On September 8th the 1st Marine Parachute Battalion and the 1st Raider Battalion landed on Guadalcanal under cover of darkness and conducted a raid against Japanese positions near the village of Tasimboko. After this highly successful raid the Marine parachute battalion remained on Guadalcanal occupying defensive positions atop Lunga Ridge. It later became known as Edson's Ridge because of the success of Edson's 1st Raider Battalion and the 1st Marine Parachute Battalion against repeated ferocious banzai attacks by the Japanese in their attempt to recapture Henderson Field.

The two-day battle on the ridge had cost the 1st Marine Raiders 135 men and the 1st Parachute Battalion 128. Of those totals, 59 were dead or missing, including 15 parachutists killed in action. Many of the wounded parachutists would eventually return to duty, but for the moment the battalion was down to about the size of a small rifle company. With their ranks further depleted from the ferocious combat on Edson's Ridge, the 1st Marine Parachute Battalion was relieved by the 7th Marines and withdrawn to New Caledonia outside the town of Noumea at Camp Kiser.

Bougainville. Scheduled to jump on the heavily defended Japanese airfields of Kahili and Kara on Bougainville, the American planners cancelled the jump for fear of heavy casualties. Instead, they chose diversionary attacks on the island of Choiseul, 30 miles east of Bougainville. The 2nd Parachute Battalion was selected for this operation under the command of Lt. Colonel Victor H. Krulak. For the next month the 2nd Parachute Battalion raided Japanese positions on the island.

Meanwhile, on November 23rd the 1st Parachute Battalion now commanded by Major Richard Fagan was attached to the 2nd Raider Regiment and conducted raids on Japanese supply bases along Bougainville's coast. On December 3rd, the 3rd Parachute Battalion along with the rest of the 1st Parachute Regiment landed on Bougainville and attached to the 3rd Marine Division. The regiment fought as regular infantry until January 11, 1944 when it was relieved by the Army's 132nd Infantry Regiment.

While participating in several bloody actions during the course of the war, they were utilized as infantry and there were no Marine parachute combat jumps during W.W.II. Eventually, the need for a parachute corps in the Marines was questioned. The fact that Marines were generally assigned to attack small heavily defended islands which were not suitable for para type operation, the lack of transport aircraft required for a massed parachute drop and the cost led the Commandant to order the 1st Marine Parachute Regiment to be disbanded on December 30, 1943. It officially ceased to exist on February 29, 1944.

Though Walter spent most of his life in Avilla, Indiana, his job as a furniture liquidator took him all over the US. He lived in Beaumont, TX; Columbia, TN; Columbus, OH; and Tuscon, AZ - among other places.

Walter A. Schauweker, 72, of Avilla died Wednesday at McCray Hospital, Kendallville. The Albion native was a salesman. Surviving are sons, Stephen of Browns City, Mich., and Fransisco of Dallas; sisters, Sally Sibert of Avilla and Patricia Bailey of Avon; and a brother, Jack of Houston. Graveside services are 3 p.m. Saturday at Avilla Cemetery. Arrangements are by Brazzell Funeral Home. ~ Ft. Wayne News Sentinel. August 1, 1997. P. 10A.

Walter A. Schauweker Jr., 72, died Wednesday at McCray Hospital in Kendallville. He was a salesman. Surviving are two sons, Stephen of Browns City, Mich., and Fransisco of Dallas; two sisters, Sally Sibert of Avilla and Patricia Bailey of Avon; and a brother, Jack of Houston. Graveside services at 3 p.m. today at Avilla Cemetery. No calling. Memorials to donor's choice. Arrangements by Brazzell Funeral Home, Avilla. ~ Ft. Wayne Journal Gazette. August 2, 1997. P. 11A.

Walter's grave was visited and documented in May, 2011.

References
  1.   Noble County, Indiana Birth Records from the Whan Collection.

    Schauweker Walter A, 1-21-1925, Walter A, Simon Daisy P, A12a-21.

  2.   US Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS File.

    Name: Walter A Schauweker. Gender: Male. Death Date: 30 Jul 1997. SSN: 367267546. Branch: M. Enlistment Date: 19 Oct 1942. Release Date: 6 Feb 1946.

  3.   Social Security Death Index.

    First name: Walter. Middle name: A. Last name: Schauweker. Birth date: Jan 21, 1925. Death date: Jul 30, 1997. Age: 72. Social Security Number issued in: IN. Social Security Number: 310-03-7225. First known location: IN. Last known residence: Avilla, IN. Last residence zipcode: 46710. Record type: death record. Collection: Social Security Death Index. Source: Social Security Administration. Years: 1937 to 2009. Verification code: V. Reference number: 310-03-7225.

  4.   Noble County, Indiana Obituaries from the Whan Collection.

    Schauweker, Walter Alton, Jr., 72, of Avilla died July 30 in McCray Hospital. He was born Jan. 21, 1925 in Albion to Walter Alton and Pearl Daisy (Simon) Schauweker. He had been a salesman. Surviving are 3 sons and one daughter, Stephen of Browns City, Mich., Francisco of Dallas, Texas, Chad, of Port Angeles, Washington, and Nikki of Berkeley, California; 2 sisters, Sally Sibert of Avilla and Patricia Bailey of Avon; and a brother, Jack of Houston. He was preceded in death by a sister, Sandra Bender. Graveside services in Avilla Cemetery. ~ 8-7-1997. Amended. Added middle name, father's middle name, mother's middle name; son, Chad; daughter, Nikki.

  5.   Headstone.

    Schauweker
    Walter A. Jr.
    1925-1997

    Walter A Schauweker Jr
    Cpl US Marine Corps
    World War II
    Jan 21 1925
    July 30 1997

  6. McCray Memorial Hospital
  7. Avilla City Cemetery