![]() | February 10, 1916 26 24 |
![]() | School or college: Rio Hondo Tx school District |
![]() | US Army in WWII Note: Floyd served with the 605th Quartermaster Grave Registration Co in Europe from 1943 through 1945. Floyd served with the 605th Quartermaster Grave Registration Co in Europe from 1943 through 1945. "605th QM Graves Registration Company (activated 25 May 1943 > Northern France, Rhineland, Central Europe)" From: https://www.med-dept.com/articles/quartermaster-graves-registration-service/ Floyd was assigned to the 605th by 1943. He did his training in Vancouver WA and the unit shipped out to England in 1943. "Unit Training of QM Graves Registration companies under provisions of MTD 10–3, 1943 was initiated on 26 April when the 604th QM Graves Registration Company was activated at Vancouver Barracks Unit Training Center ... Three more companies, the 605th , 606th and 607th , were activated at Vancouver between 26 April and 15 July 1943. On 15 September the 606th and 607th were transferred to Fort Warren Unit Training Center, the 604th and 605th remaining at Vancouver." page 19, From Google Books, HISTORICAL STUDIES: The Grave Registration Service in World War II, April 1951, by Edward Steere. Evidently the 605th was assigned to the 3rd Army in Europe but it seems that the Grave Registration units were sometimes temporaily attached to other army units as needed. Floyd came home from the war with personal photos taken either by himself or one of his buddies in the unit. One photo shows a cemetery that (I assume) his unit had created in France. The cemetery at Chanpigneul-sur-Marne was closed sometime after the war but a memorial still exists. Records indicate the cemetery was created by the Third US Army (TUSA). "The cemeteries used/created by TUSA for the burial of its troops were: ... Champigneul, France: this cemetery opened on September 1st, 1944, and closed on September 20th, 1944. ...." Above quote taken from https://www.pattonsbestmedics.com/graves-registration-in-the-4th-armored-division/ Graves registration in the 4th Armored Division By Reinier Groeneveld / February 22, 2023 |
![]() | Eliza Jane FRIEND November 29, 1917 (Age 21 months) |
![]() | Edna GANN February 9, 1918 (Age 23 months) |
![]() | Howard James “Pete” GANN 1923 (Age 6 years) |
![]() | Robert Wilton GANN January 1, 1926 (Age 9 years) |
![]() | Alta Ruth GANN April 2, 1929 (Age 13 years) |
![]() | William Allen GANN December 21, 1937 (Age 21 years) |
![]() | Opal Mae GANN July 23, 1939 (Age 23 years) |
![]() | William Joseph MAGEE May 14, 1941 (Age 25 years) |
![]() | between 1942 and 1945 (Age 25 years) Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010 Name Floyd William Gann Gender Male Birth Date 10 Feb 1916 Death Date 9 Apr 1977 SSN 454167337 Enlistment Branch ARMY Enlistment Date 18 May 1942 Discharge Date 27 Nov 1945 Page number 1 V Mail From Floyd to his Mother Note: Floyd's unit had been sent to England by the end of 1943 as is verified by this letter home to the f… Floyd's unit had been sent to England by the end of 1943 as is verified by this letter home to the family. He requested some sweaters, a scarf and some candy be sent to him. |
![]() | First Allied Airborne Army 1944 (Age 27 years) Note: A letter from Floyd written in 1945 states that he had been a member of First Allied Airborne Army -… A letter from Floyd written in 1945 states that he had been a member of First Allied Airborne Army - an amalgamation of US and British airborne and troop units. He also states he had been in Holland during the airborne operations there in 1944 and in the fighting in the cold during December 1944. [Newspaper article from Valley Morning Star, 31 Aug 1945, Page 4] A history of the unit can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Allied_Airborne_Army |
![]() | Herman Taft GANN December 26, 1965 (Age 49 years) |
![]() | Mary Melisse Caroline BENNETT May 25, 1967 (Age 51 years) |
![]() | Thomas Floyd GANN August 26, 1970 (Age 54 years) |
![]() | Alta MAGEE August 15, 1973 (Age 57 years) |
![]() | Alta MAGEE August 18, 1973 (Age 57 years) |
![]() | Carpenter |
![]() | April 9, 1976 (Age 60 years) |
Family with parents - View this family |
father |
Birth: July 29, 1889 29 33 — Thorpe, Dallas, MO Death: August 26, 1970 — San Benito, Cameron Co., TX, USA |
mother |
Birth: June 22, 1891 24 23 — Groveton, Trinity Co., TX, USA Death: August 15, 1973 — San Benito, Cameron Co., TX, USA |
elder brother |
Birth: January 6, 1911 21 19 — Eagle Lake, Colorado Co., TX Death: December 26, 1965 — San Benito, Cameron Co., TX, USA |
20 months elder sister |
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22 months elder sister |
Birth: June 29, 1914 24 23 — Eagle Lake, Colorado Co, Tx Death: April 6, 2009 — Brownsville Tx |
19 months himself |
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2 years younger sister |
Birth: February 9, 1918 28 26 — Muskogee (Porter), Oklahoma Death: September 6, 2019 — San Marcos, Hays Co., TX, USA |
6 years younger brother |
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3 years younger brother |
Birth: January 1, 1926 36 34 — San Benito, Cameron Co., TX, USA Death: October 18, 2009 — Brownsville, Tx |
3 years younger sister |
Birth: April 2, 1929 39 37 — Rio Hondo, Cameron Co., TX, USA Death: June 16, 1993 — San Benito Tx |
brother |
Private |
Family with Virginia Francis FABIAN - View this family |
himself |
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wife |
Virginia Francis FABIAN Birth: July 18, 1915 — Kansas Death: May 20, 1990 — Fort Bend Co, Texas |
son |
Private |
Family with Private - View this family |
himself |
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wife |
Private |
Military | Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010 Name Floyd William Gann Gender Male Birth Date 10 Feb 1916 Death Date 9 Apr 1977 SSN 454167337 Enlistment Branch ARMY Enlistment Date 18 May 1942 Discharge Date 27 Nov 1945 Page number 1 |
Military | A letter from Floyd written in 1945 states that he had been a member of First Allied Airborne Army - an amalgamation of US and British airborne and troop units. He also states he had been in Holland during the airborne operations there in 1944 and in the fighting in the cold during December 1944. [Newspaper article from Valley Morning Star, 31 Aug 1945, Page 4] A history of the unit can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Allied_Airborne_Army |
Military | Floyd served with the 605th Quartermaster Grave Registration Co in Europe from 1943 through 1945. "605th QM Graves Registration Company (activated 25 May 1943 > Northern France, Rhineland, Central Europe)" From: https://www.med-dept.com/articles/quartermaster-graves-registration-service/ Floyd was assigned to the 605th by 1943. He did his training in Vancouver WA and the unit shipped out to England in 1943. "Unit Training of QM Graves Registration companies under provisions of MTD 10–3, 1943 was initiated on 26 April when the 604th QM Graves Registration Company was activated at Vancouver Barracks Unit Training Center ... Three more companies, the 605th , 606th and 607th , were activated at Vancouver between 26 April and 15 July 1943. On 15 September the 606th and 607th were transferred to Fort Warren Unit Training Center, the 604th and 605th remaining at Vancouver." page 19, From Google Books, HISTORICAL STUDIES: The Grave Registration Service in World War II, April 1951, by Edward Steere. Evidently the 605th was assigned to the 3rd Army in Europe but it seems that the Grave Registration units were sometimes temporaily attached to other army units as needed. Floyd came home from the war with personal photos taken either by himself or one of his buddies in the unit. One photo shows a cemetery that (I assume) his unit had created in France. The cemetery at Chanpigneul-sur-Marne was closed sometime after the war but a memorial still exists. Records indicate the cemetery was created by the Third US Army (TUSA). "The cemeteries used/created by TUSA for the burial of its troops were: ... Champigneul, France: this cemetery opened on September 1st, 1944, and closed on September 20th, 1944. ...." Above quote taken from https://www.pattonsbestmedics.com/graves-registration-in-the-4th-armored-division/ Graves registration in the 4th Armored Division By Reinier Groeneveld / February 22, 2023 |
Note | Maybe Floyd served in the Ninth Army in the European Theater of WW2 for part of the war. Not certain. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Ninth United States Army Active 1944-1945 Country United States Branch Regular Army Type Field Army Engagements World War II Notable commanders William Hood Simpson The Ninth United States Army was one of the main U.S. Army combat commands used during the campaign in northwest Europe in 1944 and 1945. It was commanded from its inception by Lieutenant General William Simpson. It had been designated Eighth Army, but on arrival in the United Kingdom it was renamed to avoid confusion with the famous British formation of the same designation. Ninth Army was the fourth US Army to come into action in France, after First Army which had taken part in the initial Operation Overlord landings, Third Army which had first been used just after the breakout from Normandy, and Seventh Army which had landed in southern France on 15 August. The first responsibility for Ninth Army, upon its arrival on 5 September was to take part in the final reduction of the German forces holding out in the French port of Brest. After the surrender of the town fifteen days later, Ninth Army was sent east to take its place in the line. It came into the line in between Third Army and First Army. In November, Ninth Army was shifted to the very left flank of 12th Army Group. It undertook operations to close the front up to the Roer River. December 16 saw the opening of the last great German offensive of the war, the Battle of the Bulge. Ninth Army was isolated from the headquarters of 12th Army Group, and it was thus placed (on December 20[1]) under the command of General Bernard Montgomery's 21st Army Group along with First Army, despite opposition from General Omar Bradley. Simpsonreoriented his command quickly to help in the reduction of the salient that the Germans had created. Many of Ninth Army's units passed to the command of First Army, which was doing the main work of reducing the German salient from the north. In the meantime, the remainder of Ninth Army continued to hold the line along the Roer. When First Army and Third Army had finished reducing the salient, First Army returned to the command of 12th Army Group, but Ninth Army remained under the command of21st Army Group for the remainder of the Rhineland Campaign. Late February and Ninth Army launched Operation Grenade, which was the southern prong of a pincer attack coordinated with Canadian First Army's Operation Veritable, with the purpose of closing the front up to the Rhine. By 10 March, the Rhine had been reached in all sectors of Ninth Army's front. It was not until after 20 March that Ninth Army units first crossed the Rhine itself. However, after doing so, the Army quickly struck east around the north of the Ruhr. An enormous pocket soon formed containing the German Army Group B under Model. By 4 April, Ninth Army had reached the Weser and was switched back to 12th Army Group. The end was now clearly in sight, and as part of Ninth Army, along with the newly arrived Fifteenth Army, reduced the enormous Ruhr Pocket, other elements reached the Elbe on 18 April. 2 May saw the whole of Ninth Army's front reached the agreed demarcation point with the Russians, and the advance ceased. |
Note | A newspaper article appeared in the Valley Morning Star, Aug 31, 1946. In it Floyd gives some details of his experiences in WW2. |
Education | Format: image/jpeg Image dimensions: 433 × 683 pixels File size: 57 KB Type: Photo |
Military | Format: image/jpeg Image dimensions: 1,475 × 2,001 pixels File size: 799 KB Type: Other Note: Floyd's unit had been sent to England by the end of 1943 as is verified by this letter home to the f… Floyd's unit had been sent to England by the end of 1943 as is verified by this letter home to the family. He requested some sweaters, a scarf and some candy be sent to him. |
Military | Format: image/jpeg Image dimensions: 826 × 1,024 pixels File size: 186 KB Type: Other |
Military | US_First_Allied_Airborne.png Format: image/png Image dimensions: 250 × 350 pixels File size: 57 KB Type: Photo Highlighted image: no |
Military | Floyd Gann Letter to Ruth in Valley Morning Star Format: application/pdf File size: 1,273 KB Type: Newspaper Highlighted image: no |
Military | Format: image/jpeg Image dimensions: 1,334 × 887 pixels File size: 231 KB Type: Photo |
Media object | Format: image/jpeg Image dimensions: 726 × 1,084 pixels File size: 499 KB Highlighted image: yes |
Note | Floyd Gann Letter to Ruth in Valley Morning Star Format: application/pdf File size: 1,273 KB Type: Newspaper Highlighted image: no |
Extra information
Family navigator
Family with parents | |
Thomas Floyd GANN
1889–1970
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Alta MAGEE
1891–1973
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Herman Taft GANN
1911–1965
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Opal Mae GANN
1912–1939
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Mary Jane GANN
1914–2009
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Floyd William GANN
1916–1976
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Edna GANN
1918–2019
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Howard James “Pete” GANN
1923–1997
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Robert Wilton GANN
1926–2009
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Alta Ruth GANN
1929–1993
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Family with Virginia Francis FABIAN | |
Floyd William GANN
1916–1976
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Virginia Francis FABIAN
1915–1990
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Family with Private | |
Floyd William GANN
1916–1976
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Private |