Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Frank Booma, UNH student and World War I casualty



My wife Stephanie Toland-Tufts’ great- great uncle Frank Booma is memorialized in Portsmouth, NH and at the University of New Hampshire. He was a University of New Hampshire student (then New Hampshire College) and was the first casualty from Portsmouth where the American Legion post is named for him. He is remembered at the Memorial Union Building at UNH. (Please see my previous blog on his nephews who were star athletes at Dartmouth College.)
 Frank Everett Booma (Junior) was born Jan 24, 1893 in Portsmouth, New Hampshire to Frank E. (senior) and Martha (Field) Booma. Frank senior was the son of Francis Booma of Deep River Connecticut. I have not found much information on Francis. Census records indicate he was from Canada but this is not confirmed. The book French-Canadian Emigrants to New England, An account of the Booma family may have the answers. It is in several libraries including the Baker Berry library at Dartmouth but I have not seen it (yet). Frank senior may have been a hotel worker around the time of his marriage in Lancaster, NH. He is listed in the census (along with many other hotel employees); and the occupation is illegible [looks like “Barber.”].

1880 Lancaster NH census
1900 Portsmouth NH census

By 1900 the Boomas had removed to Portsmouth where Frank Sr. was a pressman or printer. Frank enjoyed childhood in Portsmouth. He even made the paper when he was injured at the railroad station according to this report in the Portsmouth Herald. Later he recovered enough to compete in numerous sports.  Many sports articles can be found in that newspaper relating his accomplishments.

1898 Portsmouth Herald


Frank Jr. attended local schools and was a star athlete. He played football and basketball at the YMCA and graduated from Portsmouth High school in 1910.He took post graduate classes and captained the 1911 football and basketball teams. Before college he worked for Silas Pierce Company as a clerk.
In 1915 he attended New Hampshire College (which became the University of New Hampshire).  While there, he was a member of the football team, basketball team, and the rope-pull team.
 "class of 1917 football team-unidentified"
 The rope pull was a competition between classes

Cadet Corps 1917
I have not found information about whether he was a 2- or 4- year student , but when America joined the war in 1917 he was at Plattsburgh, NY for training with the Reserve Officers Corps. This could have been part of his participation in the cadets at NHC.  The training center was where he was when he filled out his draft card.
 After graduating with honors, he was commissioned with the rank of second lieutenant and assigned to the 151st Field Artillery. The 151st was a Minnesota National Guard unit and was part of the newly formed 42nd Division. This division was made up of numerous National Guard troops from many states. They trained and assembled in Long Island before shipping overseas in October 1917. The journey was a difficult one due to ship conditions, rough seas, and the danger of attack by German submarines.

Frank’s unit trained hard once they arrived in Europe. He wrote home in November 1917 and reported training with the French artillery and studying their language. This was related in the Portsmouth Herald November 15, 1917. His unit and others were moved to the front in February 1918 in the Lorraine section of the line. They were well involved in the battle there and even though not much ground changed hands, they traded artillery barrages daily. In June they were relieved and moved to the Champagne area where the Americans were directly in the face of a German offensive. Lt Booma was killed by a shell in the town of Vadenay on July 15. (Other reports may state July 11.) The newspaper printed the death notice on page one on July 30.The notice was followed by notices of his memorial and commentary. These can be seen at ancestry.com or possibly the Portsmouth library.
Frank Booma’s body was initially interred in France but in 1921, it was removed to Portsmouth where he was memorialized and buried in the south cemetery. A memorial is also on the green by the baseball park on Islington Street in Portsmouth. Lt. Booma never married and left no descendants. His niece, Emily Catherine Booma Dame (my wife’s great- grandmother) has living descendants in the seacoast area. The rest of Frank’s relatives may also have living descendants, but they have not been researched. 
151st Field Artillery

Link to Portsmouth memorial story: The scrappy genealogist blog:

Another history of the 151st:

Photo credits:
UNH library digital collections

4 comments:

  1. Hi Thomas,

    Great to see a fellow New Hampshire genablogger! Excellent articles. I look forward to reading more.

    Thank you for the mention of my WWI Portsmouth memorial article.

    Jennifer

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    1. Jennifer,
      Always a pleasure to share blogger links. Great work on that article. I have been going by that memorial for years not knowing it was there. Please follow my blog for more NH and seacoast stuff coming soon.
      Tom

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  2. Frank Booma was a brother at Kappa Sigma. There was a memorial to him in our chapter room and I believe the fraternity still has it and will hopefully reinstall it when a new house is built.

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  3. I have some pictures of Kappa Sigma when my grandfather went to NHC. I think he was a few years behind Frank. I would love to see pictures of that memorial. send an e-mail for more ttuftsy@comcast.net

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