Today is November 11th, 2007. Veterans Day. A day set aside for Americans to honor the men and women who have served and are serving their country in the armed forces. An appropriate day to begin this humble attempt to honor one soldier's ultimate sacrifice.
Private First Class Levester Goodman died on September 16th, 1944, somewhere in Normandy, France. We know that from his headstone, which my wife and I came across during our August visit to the
Normandy American Cemetery & Memorial. Private Goodman's headstone is one of the first that visitors see. Captivated by the "North Carolina" inscription on his cross, I snapped the picture you see
here, hoping to learn more about him once I got back home to the Tarheel state.
When I finally began searching for information on Private Goodman, very few tidbits came easily. The only real information I found was an abstract of his enlistment record at
ancestry.com. His enlistment states that he was born in Robeson County, North Carolina, in 1920. He signed up on April 30th, 1942 at Fort Bragg, not far from where he was born. He had a grammar school education and worked as a geographer in civil life. He was listed as being single, with dependents. He was a big man for his day: 6'1" and 174 pounds. Most surprising to me, he was black.
Why is the fact that he was black so surprising? Simply because he was a man who did not enjoy many of the rights he was signing up to defend. He could not even drink from the same water fountain as a white man, yet there he was, enlisting for his country in a time of grave need. He wasn't drafted. It seems he was signing up of his own free will. A remarkable act of selflessness.
So I hope you join me in honoring Private Goodman here. As I uncover more about him, I will post it on this blog and share it. If you have information that can help, I invite you to leave a comment.