Alfred John Vandas, Jr.
(1897-1918)
(1897-1918)
Location of Plaque 2015
WWI Soldiers at Camp Sherman
FURNACE NO. 4, LOOKING NORTH. - Corrigan-McKinney Steel Company, 3100 East Forty-fifth Street, Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OH
Parrish and Bingham Company, Cleveland, OH, where Alfred J. Vandas, Sr. (father) worked
*Surname misspelled on the plaque
Birth: 4/8/1897, Cleveland, Ohio
Address: 3165 E. 45th St., Cleveland, OH
Demographics: age 21 at draft registration; native-born Clevelander; single; Caucasian; employed at McKinney Steel Co. at 4002 Dille Ave., Cleveland, OH [previously Corrigan-McKinney Steel Co., once one of the outstanding steel companies in America, established in 1890, strategically located along the Cuyahoga River, and acquired by Republic Steel in 1935]; his place of employment was a 10 minute walk from his home
Appearance: Height medium; Build medium; Eyes light brown; Hair black
Draft Date/Enlistment Date/Rank: 6/5/1918; enlisted 9/5/1918; Private
Service Number: 3861671
Deployment: Died prior to deployment
Action: 15 Co 4 Tng Bn 158 Dep Brig to death. Pvt. Died of broncho-pneumonia Oct 12/18
Death: Died at Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, OH, on October 12, 1918 [one month before the Armistice on November 11, 1918] at age 21 of Bronchopneumonia
Additional Information: Grandparents were from Czech Republic on father's side and Germany on mother's side; Alfred J. Vandas, Jr. appears to have been an only child; Father: Alfred John Vandas, Sr. (1874-1921), born Cleveland, OH, occupation Tinsmith at Parrish and Bingham Company at Madison Ave. and W. 106th St., Cleveland, OH; father was drafted for World War I on 9/12/1918, exactly 2 months after his son died at Camp Sherman, but does not appear to have served; father died 1921 at age 47; Mother: Fannie Haessler Vandas (1876-1942) remarried in 1924 to Peter Celich; mother Fannie Celich was buried in Harvard Grove Cemetery alongside her first husband, her only child and her first husband's parents; more than 123,000 World War I officers and enlisted men trained at Camp Sherman in Chillicothe, OH in 1917-1918; Camp Sherman had the highest influenza death rate of any military installation with 7,618 soldiers admitted to the hospital and 842 deaths; 125 soldiers died at Camp Sherman on 10/8/1918 on the camp's deadliest day
3165 E. 45th St., Cleveland, OH, address given on WW I draft registration
Harvard Grove Cemetery entrance, Cleveland, OH
Section 11 at Harvard Grove Cemetery, where the cemetery record indicates Alfred John Vandas, Jr. and family are buried [graves not found]