"Frenchy" as he
was known in Easy Company was from North Smithfield,
Rhode Island. Frenchy was the youngest of thirteen
children and grew up at a difficult time during the "Great
Depression". At age seventeen Frenchy gave up
his youth as did many of his childhood friends and
joined the Army in 1943. After his basic training and
paratrooper infintry training Frenchy was sent to England
in early 1944.
After he arrived in England he was assigned to Easy
Company 506th PIR of the 101st Airborne Division sometime
during February of 1944. On May 19th 1944 just two
weeks before D-Day Frenchy turned nineteen and on June
6th, 1944 jumped into Normandy with the rest of Easy
Company, he jumped from the same C-47 as did Lt. Richard
Winters who was his platoon leader at the time. When
Frenchy jumped into Normandy on D-Day he landed in
an apple tree in a field on the outskirts of Ste. Mere
Eglise, he could speak french and went to a local farm
house where a farmer and his family were able to tell
him where he was and gave him directions as to where
he should be heading from the maps that he was carrying
with him.
Frenchy was separted from the rest of Easy Company
for about thirtysix hours and after he rejoined them
he went on to fight in the Battle of Carentan, several
weeks had passed and Easy Company was returned back
to England. In September of 1944 Frenchy and Easy Company
were again called to duty and he took part in "Operation
Market Garden" in Holland and again he took part
in the "Battle of The Bulge" at Bastogne
during the winter of 1944 and 1945. At Bastogne he
suffered from severe trench foot and frozen legs and
was hospitalized for several months.
Once he recuperated he went back to Easy Company and
finished out his remaining day's with the Army in Austria.
Frenchy was discharged from the Army in December of
1945 and returned back to Rhode Island where he met
his wife Rita and had a family. He was proud of his
military service and would tell people that he was
not a hero but merely did his duty for his country.
When I was younger my father did not speak of WWII
often and only started to talk about the war after
the miniseries "Band of Brothers" came to
light in 2001.
Frenchy had great respect for and spoke highly of
Richard Winters and Carwood Lipton. In June of 2001
Frenchy was reunited with the remaining veterans of
Easy Company at the reunion in Paris and Utah Beach,
Normandy. Frenchy died on January 15th, 2005 and is
sadly missed by his wife of 57 years Rita, children
Jerry and Susan, four grand children and three great
grand sons.
Jerry Lamoureux
son of "Frenchy" Paul Lamoureux |