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Edward enlisted in the Marine Corps on August 25, 1950, and
trained at Parris Island, South Carolina. From there he went to Camp LeJune,
North Carolina, and later to Camp Pendleton, California, before leaving for
Korea. His group was assigned front line duty to C Company, 1st
Battalion, 1st Regiment, of the 1st marine Division, which
had been crippled in the intense fighting. The unit was defending Hill 122, a
strategic hill, just east of the city of Panmunjom. (Panmunjom is a major city
in the northern portion of South Korea where the Armistice was eventually
signed).
With the intense battle repulsing repeated attacks, the Marines name the hill "Bunker Hill." It was here on August 19, 1952, that Private First Class Edward Baumgard killed in action. He was only 20 years old, and had spent less than four months in Korea. He was well-liked by his marine buddies, and his services were delayed to permit two of his closest marines in Korea to arrive. Ten other marine buddies were present for the services, held at Maugers Funeral Home in Malvern, Pa. Edward received Purple Heart, the Korean Service Medal, the United Nations Service Medal and the National Defense Service Medal. Pfc. Edward W. Baumgard Jr. had many marine friends who had kept in close contact with the parents. In December, 1958, the wife of one of these buddies, Richard Leone of New Hampshire, wrote the Baumgards a letter, telling them of a patient in Santa Maria Hospital in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His name was Jackie Jensen and he was an orphan who spent three and a half years in the hospital as a result of an accident while at work. Mrs. Leone enclosed an article concerning Jackie's loneliness and suggested that perhaps the Baumgards needed him as much as he needed them. It started with a Christmas card to this bedfast stranger miles away. It finalized with the Baumgards having a foster son, Jackie, whose picture hangs besides Eddie's in their living room. They now spoke of their "sons", and believes Eddie's memorial lives on in Jackie.
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