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625 North Stokes Street, c. early 1900s

Albert F. Sutor was 30 years old and living at this address when he was inducted in May 1918 in the Army. He served in the Training Battalion 154th Depot Brigade; and Company G of the 313th Infantry. PFC Sutor was overseas from July 1918 to April 1919 where he saw action in Acovourt Sector and Meuse Argonne. He was severely wounded October 2, 1918, when he lost one of his legs, but returned to Havre de Grace.
Albert Sutor didn’t get around well and walked with a cane in the 1950s-1960s. Larry Chatham remembers that his Uncle, Carlton Parsons, would go to Mr. Sutor’s every afternoon where Mr. Sutor would give him an insulin shot. Albert Sutor died in 1972 and was laid to rest at Angel Hill Cemetery.
In the mid-1930s this became home to George W. and Florence Pierce and their children, of which Jimmy Pierce was one. George had a passion for flying and joined the U.A. Air Force, from which he later retired as a Lt. Col. Around 1950, they moved to Franklin Street where Jimmy Pierce developed his love of carving and painting decoys.
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