Charles Basil Bumgarner was born October 23, 1895, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the eldest of two sons born to Charles Hamilton and Ella Dotson Bumgarner. When "Basil" was four years old, his mother died and he and his younger brother Dotson were reared by their father and his second wife, Sally Redsecker Bumgarner. Five children were born of this marriage, including Roy Bumgarner, who would marry the sister of Ray Pettit.
The family moved to Wirt County, West Virginia, while Basil was a boy. Basil, a quiet and reserved young man, was well known in the county, being in the cattle business with his father. He was inducted into the Army on May 27, 1918, at Elizabeth, West Virginia.
Basil was shipped overseas and served as a member of Company D, 131st Infantry. On October 10, 1918, during the Meuse-Argonne Forest battle in France, he was killed instantly when he was struck by a bullet from a hidden machine gun nest, according to Pvt. McGruider Netterville, an eyewitness to the event.
The body of Basil Bumgarner was returned to the United States in August 1921 and interred in the Knights of Pythias Cemetery in Elizabeth. An article in the August 21, 1921 issue of the Wirt County Journal describes the funeral which was attended by hundreds throughout the county.
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Tombstone for grave of Charles Basil Bumgarner.
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