This plaque honoring fallen hero’s from Charlotte County mentions two men killed during World War I who were from the Punta gorda area: Augustine Willis and Raleigh Whidden. Lindsey Williams wrote about them in an article which we summarize below.
The first person from the Punta Gorda area to be killed during World War I was Augustine Willis of Charlotte Harbor Town, as reported by the Punta Gorda Herald in October 1918. Mr. and Mrs. Garrison L. Willis received Monday the heart-breaking news that their son, Augustine, had been killed in one of the battles being fought in France. Augustine and his father, Garrison, were gill-net fishermen at Charlotte Harbor. There were three Willis families there at the time - Garrison, Mott and Emmett.
It was said of him in the Herald at the time that"he was one of the noblest young men of DeSoto County (Charlotte was not split from DeSoto until 1921) and was warmly esteemed by all who knew him."
A letter regarding his death dated September 8, 1918 abounded
in fervent expressions of sympathy for the bereaved parents and of praise for
the dead youth. The following are extracts from it:
"'I am writing you for the remembrance of
your son, Augustine, who was at my side when he met his death. His manly form
is always before me as I sit and ponder through the long evenings.
"'He was, and is yet in a way, my dearest
friend and chum. He at all times
commanded the respect of all with whom he came in contact.
"'He met his death a few minutes after we
had promised each other that should one of us be killed, the other would write
to the bereaved parents and relate to them the sad news. It is in fulfillment
of this promise that I am writing to you.
"'His name will always be spoken with reverence
by those who knew him, and it will go down as that of one whose military and
personal record was without a stain.
"'His last words to me were -- 'Write
mother and father if I get killed.'"
* * *
The second military death from Punta Gorda was that of Raleigh Whidden of Punta Gorda who was severely wounded a month after Augustine Willis -- as related in the December 18 issue of the Herald 1918.
Notice of his death appeared in the January
15, 1920, edition of the Herald. The paper noted that 18-year-old Whidden
died at Carlstrom Air Field,
Arcadia, where he was taken for treatment after his Army discharge.
His obituary pointed out that Raleigh was a charter member of Punta Gorda post of the American Legion. His death was the first of the organization. Braxton Blount, representing the post, drove in his car to Gardner, Fla., to assist in burial arrangements. Raleigh was
buried in the family plot there between his mother and father.
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