Monthly Archives: January 2015

January 16, 1945

Today we have two brief, unrelated letters from Dart, both written on the 16th, but as he’ll explain, the date is irrelevant where he is. His ship crossed the international dateline sometime last night, so he went from January 14 to January 16, sleeping right through the six hours of his birthday.

Anyway, now that he is 21, he can sign contracts, own cars and houses, and marry without his parents’ consent. He assures her that no consent would be necessary in his case, because his folks heartily approve of his choice in girls. Now he hopes they don’t have to wait until she’s old enough not to need the consent of her parents!

How he hopes things work out the way they’ve dreamed! He hopes they still feel the same way about each other when he gets home and they’re able to spend more time together.

He says that several days ago he wrote a long letter full of restricted information. In it, he also talked about his memories of their limited time together. “I still think you were surrounded by a halo and heavenly music that first moment I saw you, when you came downstairs with Betty Wolf. I was fascinated by your presence all evening. Ever since I met you I’ve been thanking the Lord that I recognized the one girl for me so soon, and captured her heart as well.”

Anyway, he dare not try to get all that restricted material past the censor, so he cannot send the letter.

His next letter begins with the hope that they’ll soon be able to mail letters home. He says this life of ease he’s been leading recently has become a habit. He’s read every magazine and book he could put his hands on, including a raunchy thing called “Shore Leave.” In a rough way, it’s humorous, but definitely not family reading!

He asks her to remind him the next time they’re together to describe Marines. “On second thought, you’d better wait until you’re accustomed to my cuss words. I can’t describe Marines in anything but profanity.” Well!

As we might suppose, he sends his love.

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January 18, 1945

In her short note, Dot tells of meeting Carter Ford’s father when she went to babysit last night. He was home on a short leave from the Navy before leaving for Texas. When he and Dot talked about Dart, Lt. Ford said that Fire Control training was the toughest school in the service. Dot’s not surprised Dart was selected for it.

She’s overwhelmed by the thought that she’s going to Ohio for her graduation in just three weeks. Between thinking about that and Dart, she is not getting much sleep. She tries to recall all their special moments together while she’s drifting off to sleep, but then she never gets to sleep. “You make a very poor sedative,” she tells Dart.

There’s nothing else to write because she’s received nothing in the mail. She says it’s a wonder she hasn’t completely lost her sanity from the lack of news from him. All that’s left to say is that she loves him “loads and loads.”

More word from Dart tomorrow.

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January 19, 1945

Dart’s idle body has infected his mind. With nothing to do all day but sleep, read, and watch the endless horizon, he finds his brain can think of little to write about. Still, he somehow manages to fill three pages.

He makes the comment that he lives in “mortal fear” that the censors will cut his letters to ribbons. Two things struck me; he seems to get nearly every word of his letters past the prying eyes and sharp instruments of the ship’s board of censors and, he never sees his letters once they are passed on to that body. Because he’s had no word yet from Dot, he has no idea how much of his letters survive for her eyes.

I assume he’s traveling somewhere near the equator, which may account for his days being slightly longer than 24 hours. He also has surmised that he’ll probably not be running into his buddy Fred. It seems the Pacific is quite large and the island where Fred stays is tiny (although Dart does not know what island that is.) He says his group is headed for a different island in a different part of the Pacific. What isn’t clear to me is how he came to the conclusion, without knowing where he’s going or where Fred is staying, that they will not be the same place! Once again, he asks Dot to send him Gordon’s address so that he can keep on the look out for his ship. What fun if they could meet each other for the first time on the other side of the world!

He writes a little about the movies he’s seen recently. Apparently the ship’s crew gets movies almost every night, but as a passenger, Dart has seen only three.

As much as he’d like to be together with Dot, he’s grateful she can’t see him right now. His fair skin has taken quite a beating (or shall I say “broiling”) on the open sea and he has peeled twice already. He mourns the fact that he can’t tan like most of the other guys.

He closes with “I wish you were here, or even more, that I were there.” I’m sure that’s true!

More from Dart tomorrow.

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January 20, 1945

It’s another bonus day, with two letters from Dart. He begins by telling Dot how much he misses being out in a big snow storm. Last winter, he stared out at the snow for weeks on end from inside a hospital. This winter, he’s sailing around endlessly under a tropical sun. That’s quite an adjustment for a boy born and reared in the Snow Belt!

This morning he attended a radio broadcast on deck. It’s a show called “Command Performance,” produced exclusively for the boys serving overseas. Today’s cast of performers reads like a Who’s Who of Hollywood and New York; Jack Benny, Bob Hope, Gary Cooper, Bing Crosby, Lena Horn, Judy Garland, Cab Calloway and Count Basie, to name a few.

Last night, Dart stayed up until midnight writing to Dot and his folks. When he tried to go to sleep, the Marines kept him awake with their raucous card games. “They sleep all day and play poker all night when good folks are trying to sleep,” he groused. I’m beginning to think Dart’s not too fond of Marines.

Now he has to quit writing so he can move around and hope some of the perspiration drenching his shirt evaporates.

Later that day, he’s inspired to write again. Everyone on board is chased down below decks at night fall, for security reasons. He’s heard the night sky at sea is a beautiful sight, but he’s yet to witness it himself.

According to the ship’s scuttlebutt, which is even less reliable than the rumors heard for weeks at Shoemaker, this voyage is nearing an end. Of course, he’ll never be able to tell Dot when they land, or where, but when it happens, he hopes to quickly be assigned to a ship, and “begin at last the business of helping to win the war.” He calls himself an innocent parasite, getting a college education and hospital care from the war bonds people bought thinking they were purchasing guns and jeeps. “More power to the war bond purchasers, and may they live on forever in blissful ignorance of Peterson the Parasite.”

He expects there will be another religious service on deck tomorrow morning. Last Sunday was mostly a hymn and prayer service, with “organ” music provided by an accordion. A brief sermon by a jolly, rotund chaplain followed. Dart, who has never considered himself religious but who’s tried to live a moral life, has had lots of time to think about religion recently. “I believe in it a lot more strongly than ever before. I have reason to, now – probably because never before have I asked for help.”

I’ve heard the expression that there are no atheists in a foxhole. I guess the same can be said of Navy ships.

I’ll be back tomorrow with an update from Dot.

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January 21, 1945

Now it’s Dot’s turn to write two letters in a single day. The first was actually written just after midnight, reporting on the events of the day just ended. The main news was to tell him that she’d had an especially enjoyable evening, considering that he wasn’t with her. She and four other girls went bowling and she scored the highest of all of them on every game. She tells Dart that her mother used to be the champion female bowler in Greenwich with an average far higher than Dot’s highest score. “I guess I didn’t inherit her skill for knockin’ ’em down.”

She’s missing him and his letters something fierce! Today at the bowling alley, there was a sailor with his girlfriend looking very happy together. Dot was quite jealous until she realized that someday people will look at her and Dart the same way.

Yesterday she got her invitation to the prom at Andrews to be held on graduation weekend. Naturally, she won’t be going, but she suggests that when he’s home, she and Dart should learn to dance. Then they could have their own private prom and dance every song together. “Don’t mind me – I couldn’t thrive without my day dreams,” she says.

Today a co-worker brought in a photo of her future daughter-in-law from England. She was beautiful! Dot protests that the Lend-Lease Act was not supposed to lend all the young men from the US to beautiful women overseas. The least the other countries could do was to either send some of their own men over to us, or return our guys. Dot prefers the latter choice.

She’s going off to get some sleep and perhaps to dream of Dart. She’s heard one never dreams of a person one thinks about constantly, so she’ll probably have no luck in the dream department.

Her second letter was written near midnight at the other end of the day. She and El went bowling after work and bowled four games. Dot’s high score was 139, a definite improvement over recent games. As soon as she got home, she was ready to go back and try again, and was able to convince her mother to join her. Since her mother had not bowled a game in over eight years, Dot was confident she could beat her, but Ruth prevailed. Still, Dot has the bowling bug and hopes to get good enough to play for the Franklin Simons team.

El had a phone call from Don today while he was on a 24-hour pass to his parents’ house. They talked for about 20 minutes until Arthur picked up the extension and said, “If you keep this up, you’ll have to postpone the wedding for another year just to pay the phone bill.” They hung up in a hurry.

That’s all for now. Tomorrow is a big day, with letters from both Dot and Dart.

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January 22, 1945

Dart’s letter begins on a high note, but fades into melancholy by the end.

For openers, he tells Dot of the surprise he had last night when the “passengers” were allowed to sit up on deck after dark. The brilliant half moon nearly dowsed the stars, but the sky was beautiful, nonetheless. The ships surrounding Dart’s were barely discernible shapes that appeared only after the boys’ eyes grew accustomed to the blackness.  As Dart leaned on the rail and gazed into the inky water, he could only wish that Dot was there beside him, enjoying the splendor and beauty of the night time sea.

While he enjoys seeing the beauty of this part of the Earth, he says “As far as I’m concerned, I’ll be satisfied after the war if I can stay within the limits of the State of Ohio for most of the rest of my days.” Well, he and Mom ended up traveling to Europe a few times, New Hampshire nearly every summer, and much of the rest of the USA for business or pleasure, but he did manage to live in his beloved Ohio for the rest of his life.

At one point in the letter, he had to scratch out a couple of words in the paragraph. The reason for his break in concentration was the cause of his surly mood for the remainder of the letter. A rowdy group of Marines swiped his prized lifebelt as he turned his back to get a drink of water. Then he found one of them sitting on his seabag which was full of clean clothes, ink bottle and precious photographs. “If those thugs don’t get some of that rudeness taken out of them before they’re discharged, there’ll be a whole new law enforcement problem after the war.” He suspects none of what he writes about the Marines will get past the censor, but every word comes through in tact. Maybe the censor shared Dart’s opinion of the “rowdy thugs.”

He finished up this letter the following day after discovering that some other things had been stolen from him by the dirty poachers. The greatest loss was a large map of the Pacific that his folks had given him.

He reports that he and the other Peterson from his class at Treasure Island spent most of last night up on deck talking about education, machinery and two women named Dorothy. If you recall, Pete is married to a Dorothy and he seems to miss her as much as Dart misses Dot.

“I’m getting anxious to get all my 25 months of liability to the Navy ended, and get some of that training into use. From all the way out here it seems so futile to keep telling you how much I love you, but I’ll keep telling you anyway.”

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Dot begins her letter with a vow that it’ll be a long one, in spite of the fact that there is no news so she’ll have to fill it with useless chatter.

She awoke this morning feeling like “the fag end of a mis-spent life.” She explains “My right arm aches from all the bowling I did over the weekend. My left arm aches from opening the heavy elevator door. And my legs ache to keep my arms company. An extremely sad case!”

She reports that they are not having as much weather as they had last week, but it’s always doing something outside. (Now that must be the epitome of a nonsense sentence!)

Exactly three weeks from yesterday, she’ll receive her masters degree from Andrews School for Girls. “What I should have said was that I get the 3rd degree from the Master of the school – a very different situation but one to which I have become accustomed.”

Another nonsensical paragraph follows about her falling into the swimming pool yesterday and discovering that the water is much wetter when one has her clothes on. She adds a goofy limerick about a maiden named Dot who love a boy named Dart. She pauses to think of other silliness to fill the pages and follows that with a giant underlined “I love you!”

Here, the letter abruptly stops after only two pages. There’s no signature, and certainly not enough material to constitute the long letter she promised, so I guess the rest of this masterpiece must have been lost. Well, she was right about one thing – there is absolutely nothing new to report so she had to fill the letter with useless chatter. (I’ll venture a guess that Dart is as happy to receive her useless chatter as he would be to read the great American novel.)

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January 23, 1945

Well, the mystery of the abruptly ended letter from yesterday has been solved. Dot simply continued it past midnight and dated the new page with today’s date, fooling me into thinking there were two separate letters

She begins with “Don’t tell me you’re still sitting on your bunk waiting for me to finish this thing! Well, I guess I can keep it up just about as long as you can stand reading this stuff. This shall be a case of the ‘survival of the fittest.'”

Does Dart remember that Thursday night when they had a nice long talk and he said something about her nose and Dot made a crack about how stupid it’ll look when she’s sixty? He tried to console her by asking how she thought his bony frame would look when he was sixty. Well, she’s been giving it some thought and she knows there’s hope for his bony frame. There are a number of things that can be done to put some meat on him, but there’s no viable solution for turning her poor square nose into a pretty little triangle. (Note to reader: There is not a living creature on Earth who ever found anything objectionable about Dot’s nose, except Dot. It’s a lovely nose, well-suited to her pretty face.) She goes on to tell Dart the sad story of her cousin who was born with no bridge in his nose. He recently underwent a painful surgical procedure with very little improvement in his appearance. She suggests she should quit stewing about that which can’t be fixed and worry more about the size of her body rather than the nose she seems to be stuck with.

While writing this letter, Dot has been thinking about what she was doing five years ago and what “they” will be doing five years from now. At the tender age of 13, she had just discovered a brochure from Andrews School and was determined to attend there. When she looks forward five years, it seems like an eternity in the future, but when looking back, she can scarcely believe how quickly those years have flown. How glad she is that she and Dart didn’t meet back in 1940, because a 16-year old boy would probably not had much interest in a 13-year old girl. Although she would like to have known him better and longer, she thinks the disadvantages of an earlier acquaintance outweigh the advantages. Still, she says the only reason she was happy at age 17 was that she didn’t know what she was missing until she met Dart.

Commenting on Dart’s portrait (the one where his eyes are turned away from the camera), she says his radiant smile is lighting up the wall in her bedroom. If she holds the picture at a close angle and closes one eye, she can almost imagine that he’s looking at her. She sure hopes he won’t flash those pearly teeth at any Australian girls, should he happen to meet any.

She’s proud that she’s gotten this far into a letter with very little effort. Is he starting to get bored? Has he been reading it on the installment plan? she asks. Having reached page eight, she declares that this has been loads of fun on her part and she hopes they can do it again sometime. She also hopes that by the time he receives this, he will have read all her other letters, too and that she will finally have heard from him.

Tonsillectomy adds a brief postscript and the letter is finally complete. As Dot prepares for her trip to Cleveland for graduation, she will write no other letters this month. We’ll have to rely on Dart to keep us connected.

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January 24, 1945

This one-pager crams lots of news into a small space. There’s a small notch excised from the upper corner of the paper where the censor has removed the final word in the phrase “An island in the __________.”  Dart and his shipmates are engaged in the Navy’s favorite occupation – waiting. They’ve not begun unloading onto land yet, and no one seems to know when that operation will begin. Meanwhile he says, “the tiny bits of land here and there are the first ones we’ve seen in many days and they look cool and inviting to the guys who are still on the ship.”

Dart has joined the ranks of the “fuzzy-wuzzies” and had his hair clipped to a quarter inch. It feels much cooler. His skin has stopped blistering and peeling – even starting to darken a little, although he still dreams of getting a real tan some day. I think we see here the origins of the many bouts of skin cancer he experienced much later in life!

He’s bubbling over with things he wants to say which can’t be said. All he can tell Dot is that the sight of the island is beautiful from his ship in the harbor. Furthermore, he loves her.

We have only one letter left this month from Dart, and that one won’t come until the 31st. As I mentioned yesterday, Dot has no more for this month. I’ll try to check back during the week to add photos or other items of interest to the blog. Stay tuned!

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January 26, 1946

Today I’m posting another of the greeting cards that Dot sent on January 15th. It’s a “thinking of you” message featuring a little brown-skinned girl with pig tails and written in the southern black dialect made popular many years earlier by the poetry of Paul Lawrence Dunbar. Dot has indicated on the front cover that the card comes from “Tonsillectomy.” Dot writes her own brief note on the back.

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