April 18, 1893 - September 30, 1918
Sergeant Eugene T. Lassiter was killed in action on September 30, 1918 in Bellicourt, France during World War I. He was 25 years old.
Eugene T. Lassiter was born on April 18, 1893 in Franklin County, North Carolina, the son of Thomas W. Lassiter and Sarah Wilkerson Edwards Lassiter.
Sgt Lassiter served in Company C, 120th Infantry, 30th Infantry Division which was based in Henderson, North Carolina as a National Guard unit prior to activation into the U.S. Army during World War II.
In May 1918 the division traveled to New York and soon left for Europe. After a two-week voyage, the division landed in England and then departed for France. The 30th Division was assigned to the American 2nd Corps and attached to the British Army. In June 1918 the division underwent extensive combat training under British supervision and exchanged American for British equipment and firearms.
On July 2, 1918, the 30th Division was sent to the British 2nd Army in Belgium. On August 16, "Old Hickory" replaced British troops on the front in the trenches near Ypres. While there, the division attacked and captured German positions with a loss of 37 dead and 128 wounded.
On September 3, the division withdrew from the front and transferred to the British 4th Army. By September 25, the 30th Division held its position opposite the German Hindenberg Line near Bellicourt, France. The Hindenburg Line was an important segment of the German defensive network on the Western Front in Europe during World War I. On the night of September 27, the 119th and 120th infantry regiments moved into the front lines.
At 5:50 AM on the morning of September 29, 1918, the North Carolinians of the 30th Division emerged from the safety of their trenches and began the attack that would break the Hindenburg Line.
As they moved across the field under a cacophony of machine gun and artillery fire, the men did their best to stay abreast and maintain unit cohesion. Due to the poor visibility, the difficult nature of the terrain, and battlefield obstacles, however, the lines began to waver almost immediately. Enemy artillery fire punched at the Allied lines as a thick cloud of fog and smoke enveloped the field. “[Y]ou could hardly see your hand before you,” remembered Luther Hall, a Surry County native attached to the 119th Infantry Regiment.
The coordinated attack quickly descended into an assault of fragmented groups. Battlefield orders became more difficult, if not impossible, to issue. Despite the chaos, the men continued their advance towards the enemy, dealing with the stress in whatever way they could. “[S]ome of the men were singing, some of them cussing,” recalled Surry County native John Collins, a member of Company A, 120th Infantry.
Members of the 119th Infantry reached the Hindenburg Line ahead of schedule, leaving them stranded just in front of the enemy with their left flank exposed. Reinforcements from the 117th and 118th Infantry Regiments moved up in the afternoon to bolster their position but they remained more or less stalled. The men of the 120th experienced far better success, pushing the Germans from their trenches around 7:30 and becoming the first Allied troops to break the Hindenburg Line. Just two hours later, the 120th marched triumphantly into the French town of Bellicourt. The breaking of the Hindenburg Line was part of a series of Allied assaults known as the Hundred Days Offensive, which led to the Armistice on November 11, 1918. Sgt. Lassiter was killed in action on September 30, 1918.
Sergeant Eugene T. Lassiter is buried in Liberty Christian Church Cemetery, Epsom, Vance County, North Carolina.
Last edited: 31 May 2026