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Personal info

Full name
ULFENG, Milton Jeane
Date of birth
28 June 1926
Age
18
Place of birth
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois
Hometown
Williams Bay, Walworth County, Wisconsin

Military service

Service number
36845362
Rank
Private
Function
Rifleman
Unit
F Company,
2nd Battalion,
271st Infantry Regiment,
69th Infantry Division
Awards
Purple Heart

Death

Status
Killed in Action
Date of death
19 February 1945
Place of death
Büschem, Germany

Grave

Cemetery
American War Cemetery Margraten
Plot Row Grave
I 10 8

Immediate family

Members
Martin J. Ulfeng (father)
Hilda C. (Olsen) Ulfeng (mother)
Helen Ulfeng (sister)
Martha Ulfeng (sister)
Earl M. Ulfeng (brother)
Lorraine Ulfeng (sister)
Ruth Ulfeng (sister)
Wilbert Ulfeng (brother)

More information

On 19 February 1945, Col Mc Cormick, commander of the 271st Infantry Regiment, called for volunteers to mount a patrol to proceed to a specific point before Büschem, Germany and then return. A patrol of 13 men was formed under the command of 2nd Lt Bill Ricker. It moved out
across a small stream and up a long gradual hill to the south of Buschem and then disappeared from sight. Shortly thereafter, the sound of gunfire and mortars penetrated the mid-afternoon
quiet. Within minutes, the remains of Ricker's patrol came running back to the 271st lines.
Ricker's patrol had mistakenly gone beyond the point specified by Col McCormick and had actually gone beyond Buschem and nearly into the next town. The patrol had reversed direction and within minutes entered Buschem from the southwest. There remains some controversy about the fact that Ricker's captain may never have passed along Col McCormick's orders not to proceed beyond a specific point.
Several young German soldiers of the 277th Division had watched the progress of Ricker's patrol almost from the moment they first stepped out of American lines. (Buschem sits at the high point of the land and even today is completely
surrounded by large open fields. The Germans watched the approach of Ricker's patrol through open farm fields. Quietly, each enemy soldier prepared for the impending chance to spring an ambush.
Ricker's patrol stopped at the first house on the right, the home of Joseph Metz. The civilians inside told Ricker that German soldiers were in the town. The patrol then entered a second house which was found to be empty. A flag appeared
from a third house but was followed immediately by machine gun, rifle and mortar fire. It was a classic ambush.
Four members of the patrol had been killed outright in the ambush. S/Sgt David H. Hyde, Pvt Milton J. Ulfeng, Pv. Glenn T. Burton and Pvt James O. Durkee.

In 1946, Ulfeng's parents received a letter from a wounded German soldier, who had been assigned to a German hospital to take care of Milton, where he had been taken as a Prisoner of War. According to the letter he had a 10 cm wound in the right side of his chest. He further wrote that as the battle continued to rage they had to move the wounded back for their safety. They boarded them on a boxcar and that was the last he saw of Milton.

Eventually, his grave was found in a railroad yard with his helmet and dog tags.

Note: The official sources state the date of death as 19 February. However, German documents in the IDPF indicate that he died on 26 February.

Source of information: Raf Dyckmans, www.wwiimemorial.com, www.ancestry.com, U.S. Census Records, 1930, Illinois, Family Trees-Milton Jeane Ulfeng, http://www.69th-infantry-division.com/.
Photo source: www.ancestry.com