York Sherman Drexler

Private York S. Drexler served with Charlie Company, First Battalion, 2nd Marines.
He was killed in action at Guadalcanal on 10 November 1942.
Branch
Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 352384
Current Status
Remains Not Recovered
Pursuit Category
The DPAA has not publicized this information.
Capsule History
Pre-War Life
Birth
February 22, 1913
at Columbiana, OH
Parents
Mathias “Matt” Drexler
Anna Theresa (Shier) Drexler
Education
Columbiana High School (1934)
Occupation & Employer
Upholsterer
Franklin Furniture Company
Service Life
Entered Service
January 16, 1942
at Cleveland, OH
Home Of Record
32 Railroad Street
Columbiana, OH
Next Of Kin
Mother, Mrs. Anna Drexler
Military Specialty
—
Primary Unit
C/1/2nd Marines
Campaigns Served
Solomon Islands / Guadalcanal
Individual Decorations
Purple Heart
Additional Service Details
—
Loss And Burial
Circumstances Of Loss
After spending several days in reserve positions supporting units of the 164th Infantry Regiment, two battalions of the 2nd Marines were ordered to recommence offensive operations against Japanese troops west of Guadalcanal’s Point Cruz. The terrain was rough and hilly – familiar to combat veterans, but physically taxing. “The day was the hottest I can remember on the ‘Canal,” wrote William Rogal of A/1/2.
Able and Charlie Companies advanced together, with Charlie Company on the left flank. After struggling through a jungle-choked ravine and up a steep slope, the Marines were relieved to find a grassy hilltop. Two squads from Able Company crept forward to secure the summit forty feet away. Jim Sorensen (Able Company) recalled how “one squad of ‘C’ company moved up on my left and just as our own company began breaking out of the jungle, the Jap ambush… opened up on us with machine guns and sprayed right down through us.” The exposed squads endured a terrible storm of bullets and mortar shells before finally managed a “strategic withdrawal” to the trees. “We had our asses whipped” admitted William Rogal (A/1/2).
While Able Company took the lion’s share of the casualties, Charlie suffered several men wounded and one killed in action. Private York Drexler was the lone fatality; he may have been a member of the squad seen by Sorensen. Unfortunately, no eyewitness accounts of his fate are known.
Burial Information or Disposition
None; remains not recovered. In his memoir, Rogal notes “Even retreating wasn’t easy for we didn’t have enough stretchers for the wounded nor enough able-bodied men to get them and our weapons back to the safety of our lines. There was no help for it – we had to leave our dead.”
Drexler was “presumably buried in the field at place of death” but there is no documented evidence to back up this assumption.
Memorials
Manila American Cemetery and Memorial
Namesake of VFW York Drexler Post 5532, Columbiana, Ohio.
Next Of Kin Address
Address of mother, Mrs. Anna Drexler
Location Of Loss
Approximate location of the ambush site of 10 November 1942.