Fred Van Schaick Chamberlain Of New Jersey
Appointed From Illinois, Cadet, United States Military Academy, 15 June 1895 to 24 January 1896
Second Lieutenant, 2nd Illinois Infantry, 16 July 1898
Honorably Mustered Out 26 April 1899
Second Lieutenant, 2nd U. S. Infantry, 1 August 1899
First Lieutenant, 28 February 1901
NEW YORK, New York, September 14, 1943 – Colonel Fred V. S. Chamberlain, who has served for forty-six years in the Army, will retire today from active duty. For the last eight years he has been a professor of military science and tactics at New York University and commanded its Reserve Officers Training Corps.
NEW YORK, New York,
MRS. FRED CHAMBERLAIN
Mrs. Dorothy Hunt Bruce Chamberlain, wife of Colonel Fred V. S. Chamberlain, U.S.A., retired, died yesterday in the New York Infirmary after a long illness. She was 79 years old.
Mrs. Chamberlain lives at 34 Grammercy Park. In 1898, as a nurse, she had cared for Colonel Chamberlain, then a young Spanish-American War Lieutenant who was ill in a Savannah, Georgia, hospital. A year later they were married.
She leaves also a son, Fred. S. Chamberlain of New York; a grandson, and three great-grandchildren.
NEW YORK, New York, March 9, 1958 – Colonel Fred Van Schaick Chamberlain, U.S.A., retired, a veteran of the Spanish-American War, died yesterday at the Veterans Administration Hospital, First Avenue and Twenty-third Street. He was 80 years old.
Colonel Chamberlain, who resided at 34 Gramercy Park, is survived by a son, Fred S. Chamberlain; a grandson and three great-grandchildren.
NOTE: Father-in-law of Louis Brainard Ely, Colonel, United States Army.
CHAMBERLAIN, FRED VAN SCHAICK
COLONEL USA
- DATE OF BIRTH: 07/18/1877
- DATE OF DEATH: 03/08/1958
- BURIED AT: SECTION 6 SITE 5008-A
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY
Michael Robert Patterson was born in Arlington and is the son of a former officer of the US Army. So it was no wonder that sooner or later his interests drew him to American history and especially to American military history. Many of his articles can be found on renowned portals like the New York Times, Washingtonpost or Wikipedia.
Reviewed by: Michael Howard