Published In People in AFS

Shethar, Norman

* 1925/07/30† 2008/03/05

Who
WWII driver
When
WWII
Where
Germany, Italy
Education
Providence Country Day; Princeton '46
Courtesy of The Archives of the American Field Service and AFS Intercultural Programs
Further details

Norman Shethar was born on July 30, 1925, in Little Compton, Rhode Island to Prentice Shethar and Susan Burchard. In June 1943 he applied to serve as an ambulance driver with the American Field Service (AFS), and departed from Baltimore, Maryland, for Alexandria, Egypt, in late October. He arrived overseas and was reassigned to CM 53 with the British Central Mediterranean Forces (CMF) in Italy. In December 1943, he was attached to the C Platoon of the 485 Ambulance Car Company (Coy) in Italy where he maintained active duty in the Cassino sector. On March 13, 1944, Shethar received wounds in the leg while on duty after an aerial bombing during the Battle of Monte Cassino. He spent the remainder of the year in the hospital until late January 1945. Shortly after transferring to D Platoon of 567 Coy in April, he and other ambulance drivers from C and D Platoons helped evacuate the survivors of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp to temporary hospitals after the liberation of the camp by the British Liberation Army on April 15, 1945. Shethar was repatriated to the United States in June 1945 and was decorated with the 1939-1945 Star, Italian Star, and German Star for his services with AFS.

After the war, Shethar attended Princeton University and graduated magna cum laude in 1948, and received a law degree from Yale Law School in 1951. In 1982 he started his own investment-advisory business in Manhattan, and spent his leisure time teaching and rehabilitating ex-prisoners as well as lobbying for the improvement of criminal justice procedures.

Shethar was a volunteer with AFS through his life.  In October 1993 Beate Schopp-Schilling, the director of the German student exchange program chapter of AFS, invited Shethar to the chapter’s annual convention to talk about his experience as an AFS driver at Bergen-Belsen.  He also attended and spoke at the Bergen-Belsen Memorial Ceremony, which celebrated the 50th anniversary of the camp’s liberation on May 27, 1995. In 1997 he participated as a volunteer with AFS International in the Dominican Republic and spoke for the “AFS at Bergen-Belsen” presentation to AFS Costa Rica at the World Congress on September 21, 1999.

Norman Shethar passed away on March 5, 2008 in Littleton, Massachusetts.

[Bio courtesy of AFS Archives, New York]

* * *

Norman Shethar was wounded in his left leg by a bomb fragment. He is expected to be hospitalized for four months with a compound fracture of the tibia.

AFS Letters No. 23, March 1944 - WOUNDED IN ACTION

WWII File

Unit(s)
CM 53
Home at time of enlistment
Little Compton, Rh.I., USA
Wounded in Action

Related Content

Groupings

Unit CM 53