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Born: March 6, 1925
Died: December 13, 1978
Campaigns Served: Namur, Saipan, Tinian (wounded), Iwo Jima (wounded)
Highest Rank Attained: Private First Class
Decorations: Purple Heart with Gold Star
Ronald Bartels was born in Wisconsin in 1925. His family moved to Mississippi later that decade, and took up residence in Washington County. Ronald enlisted in the Marine Corps shortly before his eighteenth birthday; he attended boot camp in San Diego and trained with Company E of Camp Elliott's infantry battalion before being assigned to Company A, 24th Marines, on August 27, 1943.
Private Bartels originally qualified as a rifleman; he was reassigned to the weapons platoon when the company expanded, and became an ammunition carrier with the mortar section. He fought in the battle of Namur, after which he was promoted to Private First Class. Bartels stayed with the mortar section during the battle of Saipan; he was evacuated for illness on July 5, 1944. He may have been suffering from shell shock as the company lost heavily in a Japanese ambush - among the casualties were the first and second in command of Bartels' mortar section. Bartels returned to the company on July 8, in time to participate in the final days of the campaign.
Bartels was wounded in action during the Japanese banzai attack early in the Tinian campaign; he was evacuated to a naval hospital on Hawaii to recover. He rejoined the company in the fall of 1944, once again taking a position as a mortarman. PFC Bartels was likely one of the senior members of his squad when they landed on Iwo Jima on February 19, 1945; he was one of several mortamen wounded by Japanese shellfire on the night of the landing. Bartels was evacuated to the USS Hinsdale (APA 120) for treatment; he returned to the battle on February 26 and fought through the rest of the battle. Bartels remained with Able Company through the end of the war.
Ronald Bartels decided to make a career of the Marines. Though he left a wife, Elizabeth Snow Bartels, at home in Meridian Mississippi, Bartels went on to serve his country during the Korean and Vietnam Wars. He retired as a Master Gunnery Sergerant.
Bartels died in 1978. He is buried in Section 67, Site 1354 of Arlington National Cemetery.
Photo by Anne Cady, FindAGrave.com volunteer.
