SOLVING PRIVATE MATEVSKI – the Macedonian soldier who fell at Normandy in the US Army.
by Sasha Uzunov
June/July 1944 D-Day and Normandy Landings – Steven Spielberg had Saving Private Ryan, we have SOLVING PRIVATE MATEVSKI .
With the 70th anniversary of D-Day approaching… I began seeking any information on a Private First Class Panta Matevich (Pande Matevski) 28th Infantry regiment, 8th Infantry Division, US Army, who fell in July 1944 in Normandy, after reading an article see attached below.
My own research has uncovered some details:
His final resting place is in Bitola, Macedonia, the country of his birth. There has been some confusion over his identity. When he left his homeland of Macedonia in 1938 it was then under Serbo-Yugoslav occupation and his name was changed to Matevich, under which he enlisted in the US Army.
He was born in Bitola, Macedonia then under Serboian occupation in 1914 and in 1938 moved to Chiacgo, Illinois, US. I believe he had a younger brother called Pete Matevich who also served in WWII. Their sister was Kalopia Tasseff, who married a Bozin Tasseff, born in 1892 in Macedonia.
According to US military records a Private First Class Panta Matevich, born 1914, enlisted in the US Army from Cook County, Chicago Ilinois, US. Army ID number is 36032731
The attached article below contains some errors – namely his rank of Petty Officer instead of PFC and makes the wrong assumption he was in Airborne.
Matevski did not take part in the initial landings on 6 June 1944 known as D-Day but arrived a month later and took part in what was known as the Normandy breakout… the hard and brutal battle to push the Germans from the beaches of Normandy into German territory. His unit 28th Infantry Regiment, 8th Infantry Division, US Army, was known as the Pathfinders and Blacklions. They were not Airborne or Parachute but took part in some of the heavy fighting against the Germans leading upto the Battle of the Bulge.
PFC Matevski was killed in action on the 4th of July 1944 – American independence day – on the beaches of Normandy during the break out. His unit landed on 4 July 1944 at Utah Beach, one of the original landing sites of the allies on D-Day 6 June 1944. We salute his bravery and ultimate sacrifice.
American Petty Officer from Macedonia: The Mystery of the Soldier from Bitola that Died in the Invasion of Normandy
April 8, 2014, reporter Zaneta Zdravkovska
Original story in the Macedonian media link –
The only testimony that this soldier participated in the invasion is the memorial plaque at his derelict crypt at the Bukovo’s cemetery in Bitola. Photo: dnevnik.mk