Wellborn Griffith, A&M College of Texas class of 1923, KIA August 16, 1944, at Lves, France.
Wellborn was a member of D Company and the Panhandle Club as pictured in the 1921 Longhorn.
Welborn Barton Griffith, Jr., was a United States Army officer, recognized for his heroics in Chartres, France, during
World War II in saving Chartres Cathedral. Griffith was born in Quanah, Texas, in a family of five children to Welborn B. Griffith, Sr., and Lula Love (Smith) Griffith on November 10, 1901. Griffith attended Texas A&M College and the United States Military Academy at West Point where he played tackle on the Army football team.
Griffith ordered his driver to head to the village of Lves, a suburb of Chartres, on the main road to Paris. On this road, he encountered a German patrol of around fifteen men. After returning hostile fire from the Germans, Colonel Griffith ordered his driver to return to Chartres where he encountered a tank from the Seventh Armored Division. Griffith ordered the tank crew to proceed to the location where he engaged the Germans. He climbed on the back of the tank behind the turret and held a pistol in his left hand and a rifle in his right. As the tank moved through the streets of Lves, it came under attack from machine gun, rifle, and rocket launcher fire. From the intense fire, Colonel Griffith was struck in the back and was killed instantly.
French citizens erected a memorial plaque marking the spot where Col. Walborn Griffith fell in battle in Lves on August 16, 1944. In the twenty-first century, residents still honored the Texan and annually commemorated his efforts to save Chartres Cathedral.
Colonel Wellborn Griffith is buried in the Brittany American Cemetery.