Memorials › PFC Cyril A. Micek

PFC Cyril A. Micek

1 Oct 1906 – 14 Jun 1944

Birth1 Oct 1906
Death14 Jun 1944
CemeterySaint Stanislaus Catholic Cemetery
Duncan , Platte County , Nebraska , USA
Added byGreg Nickolite on 18 May 2018
FaGhttps://www.findagrave.com/memorial/9094992

Bio

Son of Joseph & Josephine (Czapla) Micek. Was not married. WW II - US Army - Enlisted in the US Army in April 1942 Private First Class, Ser#37256213 - Company "F" 359th Infantry Regiment, 90th Division Killed in action during the Normany Invasion. ---------------------------------- From the web site; http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ne/topic/resources /OLLibrary/Platte/pages/heros/hpcn0183.htm#arkluck Private First Class Cyril A. Micek was born on October 1, 1907, on a farm in Polk County southeast of Duncan, Nebraska, and was killed in action in France on June 14, 1944. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Micek of Polk County, Nebraska. His parents have been deceased for the past several years. Cyril A. Micek was one of a family of seventeen children. He had nine brothers and seven sisters. A brother, Thomas Micek, died several years ago. The others living are: Reverend Raymond Micek of Bastrop, Louisiana; Joseph F. Micek of Omaha, Nebraska; John Micek of Pensacola, Florida; Henry, Sylvester, and Bernard Micek of Duncan, Nebraska; Alois Micek, Route No. 4, Columbus, Nebraska; Alvin Micek, Route No. 2, Columbus, Nebraska; Venerable Sister M. Corneliana of St. Joseph's Hospital of Omaha, Nebraska; Mrs. Barney Stachura, Mrs. Frank Sus, Mrs. Joseph Badstieber, Jr., Mrs. Stanley Rosno, and Mrs. Alfred Warholoski of Columbus, Nebraska; and Mrs. Stanley Kuta of Tarnov, Nebraska. Cyril A. Micek attended St. Stanislaus Parochial School in Duncan, and then farmed in the Duncan community. He made his home for several years at the farm home of his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Rosno, in Butler Township. He entered the service in April, 1942, and spent two years in training, part of which time he spent at Camp Barkley, Texas. He went overseas to the European Theatre of Operations, and landed in England in April of 1944. He was a machine gunner with Company F, Three Hundred Fifty-ninth Infantry. Private First Class Cyril A. Micek was killed in action in the Normandy invasion in France on June 14, 1944. Memorial services were held for him at 7:30 a.m., on July 4, 1944, in the St. Stanislaus Catholic Church in Duncan, Nebraska, with his brother, Reverend Raymond Micek, as celebrant of the Requiem High Mass, and Commander James L. Rich of Hartman Post No. 84 of the American Legion, in charge of the military rite.

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