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SM3c Casper Ehlert
Casper Ehlert’s favorite hobbies were swimming and drawing pictures.
When he was 19 he joined the Navy on March 9, 1938. In his spare time aboard the U.S.S. Arizona, he painted watercolors of ships and sent them home to his parents in Wisconsin.
Mr. Ehlert was killed in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941. He was a signalman and petty officer third class.
He was born on Feb. 8, 1919, in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, to Russian immigrants Casper and Anna Ehlert. The father, a foundry worker, died when the boy was three. His mother, a homemaker, remarried the next year to another Russian immigrant, John Richter.
The young Mr. Ehlert attended Trinity Lutheran School and graduated from Central High in 1937. He worked for the Civilian Conservation Corps, a Depression-era federal jobs program. The CCC, as it was known, employed single men 18 to 25 to plant trees, build roads and trails and make other improvements to public land, forests and parks. The men lived at camps across the country and were provided a bed and three meals a day. Of their $30 monthly pay, $25 was sent to their families. He served in Co. 604 at Lowell, Idaho.
On the 60th anniversary of his uncle’s death, Alex Ehlert Jr. told a reporter for the Sheboygan Press that Casper might have become a great painter. “He had talent, there’s no doubt. But we’ll just never know.
“For all of those boys who didn’t come back, we’ll just never know.”