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Obituary

Edward Clyde Benfold was born on Staten Island, New York, on January 15, 1931 and at the age of 6,
came with his family to the Borough of Haddon Heights. He was the only child of Edward S. Benfold,
a British citizen who was born in Calcutta, India, and Glenys MacKensie Adams Benfold from Bucksport, Maine.
His father was a Merchant Marine Officer during World War II and, while serving on the Merchant Ship
USS CASTILLA (a troop transport ship in the Atlantic), drowned when the ship was torpedoed and sunk
by an enemy submarine while carrying troops to the European front. Following his death, Edward's father was
the recipient of the U. S. Merchant Mariners' Medal.

Known by his friends as Teddy, Edward was a member of St. Mary's Episcopal Church in Haddon Heights
and a student at Audubon High School. A member of the AHS Class of 1949, he was a color guardsman
in the school band, a member of the senior choir and a member of both the Junior play
(Our Town, in the role of Howie Newsome) and the senior play (My Sister Eileen, in the role of a drunk).
In addition to his participation in school activities, Edward served in the Camden Wing of the Civil Air Patrol for two years.

Edward enlisted in the service in May of 1949. After training at the Great Lakes Naval Station, he served at
the Philadelphia Naval Hospital, at Camp Le Jeune in North Carolina and at Camp Pendleton in California.

Edward met his wife Dorothy (nee Groff) on a blind date in January, 1951. A courtship began that led to their
marriage in St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church in Camden, New Jersey on June 9, 1951.

In the fall of 1951, Edward was transferred to Camp Pendleton and participated in the A-Bomb Test on the
Yucca Flat testing grounds in the Nevada desert on May 1, 1952.

The couple had a son, Edward Joseph, born on May 15, 1952, while Edward was at Camp Pendleton.
Edward saw his wife and then two week old son while on a short leave and, upon his return to Camp Pendleton,
was notified that he had been ordered to Korea. In mid-July, 1952, Edward left the West Coast for Korea.
Following his arrival, he wrote to his wife, explaining that he had been assigned as a medic to the 1st Marine Division at Bunker Hill.

On September 5, 1952, just three weeks after his arrival in Korea, Edward was killed in action while treating
two Marines. Enemy grenades were tossed into the foxhole where Benfold was tending to the wounds of the two men.
He picked up the grenades, leaped from the foxhole and charged the oncoming soldiers, sacrificing his life to
save those of the two wounded Marines. He was 21 years old at the time of his death.
EDWARD  BENFOLD
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