The Bulletin feels
honored in honoring the memory of the first Badin boy who has made the supreme
sacrifice in the service of his country. The record of the life of Eddie Sledge
is not a long one, for he was just entering the period where a man takes up a
man’s work when he joined the ranks of the soldiers of liberty. But in his
brief life he has attained what thousands of others are not privileged to do—he
has placed himself on the honor roll of our Nation’s heroes.
Eddie Sledge was born on May 21, 1893, in Randolph County,
North Carolina. He received his education in the public schools of Asheboro,
and afterwards came to Badin with his parents, entering the employ of the
Company in the electrical department. Here he remained until April, 1917, when
he took up his military training at Camp Sevier in Georgia. He went to France
as a member of Company “F”, United States Infantry, and was killed in action
May 28, 1918.
In the words of the Secretary of the North Carolina
Historical Commission, “He died that his country and the high ideals for which
it stands might live; and his country will forever cherish his memory.”
It is the purpose of the Historical Commission to construct
a Roll of Honor, and preserve it along with the similar Roll of Honor of her
Confederate soldiers, which the State kept from 1861 to 1865.
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