As Memorial Day nears, we profile three University alumni who made the ultimate sacrifice.
The legacies of 人妻少妇专区 alumni who died while serving in the US Armed Forces are etched across the River 人妻少妇专区.
- affixed to a wall in Hirst Lounge, Wilson Commons, list the names of fallen alumni soldiers since the Civil War鈥攚hich began just 11 years after the University was founded in 1850.
- The Veteran Memorial Grove, located near the stairs leading up to Wilson Quadrangle, honors University alumni killed in wartime since World War I.
- And the University鈥檚 NROTC offices in Morey Hall include the Victor Ohanesian Midshipmen Training Room and the Thomas King 鈥66 Wardroom. Ohanesian was an assistant professor of naval science, and King was a student-athlete and NROTC battalion commander. Both were killed in Vietnam.
In recognition of Memorial Day, here are profiles of three University students鈥攆rom three wars鈥攚ho sacrificed their lives during those conflicts.

Guy Barstow Fraley, Class of 1920
World War I
Fraley was born and raised in Geneseo, a town 30 miles south of Rochester.
He entered the University in the fall of 1916 and immersed himself in college life. He joined the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity, became a member of the University鈥檚 glee club and its 30-piece orchestra, playing violin, and was working toward a bachelor of science degree in general studies. He also was named to Rochester鈥檚 honor roll.
All that came to a halt early in April 1917. The US declared war on Germany and President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress for 鈥渁 war to end all wars.鈥 Three days later, Fraley left school to enlist in the Navy and was sent to Bumpkin Island, Massachusetts, for basic training. That December, he sought and received permission to transfer to the Naval Reserve Flying Corps and was sent to an aviation training base in Pensacola, Florida. Eight months later, on August 12, 1918, Barstow was killed along with two student aviators when their plane crashed during a training session. He was 19 years old.
His remains were returned to Geneseo, and he received a full military funeral five days later at his family鈥檚 Presbyterian church. All local businesses closed that day.
In an eerie coincidence, one of Barstow鈥檚 best friends from high school would meet a similar fate five months later. Allen Honeywell was a student at Cornell University who enlisted in the Navy within hours of Fraley. Like Fraley, he received permission to transfer to the Navy鈥檚 aviation force and he, too, was sent to Pensacola, where he became a student instructor. On January 23, 1919, Honeywell鈥檚 plane also crashed during a training session with two students.

Darwin K. Dunning 鈥39
World War II
听Dunning grew up in Rochester and attended Monroe High School.
During his time at the University, he pursued a pre-med course, was on the football, swimming, and track teams, and served as a camp counselor for first-year students. He was also a member of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity and the Community Speakers Committee.
After graduation, Dunning married Helen Anderson and was teaching school in St. Johnsville, New York, when he entered the Army. He was attached to a chemical warfare unit and sent to the Philippines in February 1943.
A first lieutenant, Dunning was killed in action on the Philippine island of Leyte on October 26, 1944. Six weeks earlier, Helen had given birth to a son. Dunning鈥檚 parents told the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle that a cablegram had been sent to Darwin, informing him of the birth of his son, but they doubted he ever received it.
Dunning was 30 when he died.

Robert N. Funk 鈥67
Vietnam War
Funk was raised in Buffalo but moved with his family to Penfield, a suburb of Rochester, when he was 11. His younger sister, Nancy Sweet, remembers Funk as someone who loved being outdoors. 鈥淗e enjoyed riding his motorcycle, sailing, and working summers for New York State on the Erie Canal,鈥 she says.
He enrolled at Grove City College in Pennsylvania in the fall of 1963 but moved home to help his father, who was losing his vision due to glaucoma. He entered the University in 1964 and graduated in 1967 with an economics degree.
Funk stayed at the University to pursue his MBA but enlisted in the Army in April 1968. He was not inducted until June, after he had completed his graduate work. He was sent to Fort Dix, New Jersey, for basic training, then Fort Benning, Georgia, after being accepted into Officers Candidates School. 鈥淗e was able to come home for Christmas 1968 and held his nine-month-old niece,鈥 Sweet says. 鈥淗e shipped out overseas on Mother鈥檚 Day 1969.鈥
Funk was a staff sergeant in charge of 11 men with the 25th infantry division. On October 24, 1969鈥攍ess than six months after arriving in Vietnam鈥攈e was involved in heavy fighting north of Saigon during a recognizance patrol. Shot in the chest, Funk nonetheless continued evacuating a wounded soldier during the battle.
He died of his wounds two days later and was posthumously awarded the Silver Star鈥攖he Armed Forces鈥 third highest military decoration for valor in combat.
鈥淓ven after 54 years, it still brings tears to my eyes,鈥 Nancy Sweet says. 鈥滻 received a call from a cousin after Rob had been gone 50 years, and he talked of the effect Rob鈥檚 death had on him. My hope is that it wasn鈥檛 just his death that affected so many, but also his life.鈥
Funk was 24 when he died. He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Penfield.
We remember
Read more profiles of University community members who lost their lives serving in the armed forces.
Sylvanus Wilcox, Class of 1860
Charles Savage, Class of 1861
Lawrence Atkins, Class of 1915
Leon Buckler, Class of 1917
Robert Dennison, Class of 1919
Gordon K. Lambert 鈥32, 鈥35 (MD)
Philip Carey 鈥39
Robert Zwierschke 鈥39
Victor Ohanesian
Walter Menegazzi 鈥43
Charles Langtry 鈥45
Robert E. Claudius 鈥46
Bruce Beghold 鈥47Lester Shade 鈥47
Spiro J. Peters 鈥50
George Dykema Jr. 鈥51
James R. Dennison 鈥56
Gary Hopps 鈥61
Donald Thompson 鈥62
Edward Romig 鈥63
Thomas King 鈥66
Armour David Wilcox III 鈥68