Category Archives: 18. March 1945

March 1, 1945

Dart begins “It’s really hard to believe that I’ve been aboard the Haggard for almost a month now. Slowly but surely, I seem to be getting adjusted to the conditions, and my curses are getting softer.”

His watches come in rapid succession, helping to make time go by faster. He stands watch with the same three guys. Their schedule is such that they get to observe both sunrise and sunset over the gray and silver sea. Every time, they think how much more beautiful that beautiful sunrise or sunset would be if only it were over Yuma, Arizona, the rolling farmlands of Nebraska, or the skyline of Boston or Cleveland. He swears that the coal smoke from Cleveland’s industries helps create the most impressive sunsets anywhere. Now there’s a homesick boy! He says that watching a lovely moon cross above the ship only serves to make one miss his loved ones more.

Last night, he had an interesting experience; he was standing watch, but thinking so intently about Dot and their future together, that he felt her physically standing beside him. “What a letdown when I reached out my hand and got it tangled in the cords of the battle telephone I was wearing.”

The guys have been hearing quite a lot about the curfew on entertainment places lately. (But he’s not yet received Dot’s letter on that topic.) He thinks the folks back home have had a rough time of things since December. He’s especially worried that the fuel shortage might have prevented Dot and her mother from traveling to Cleveland for Dot’s graduation. He truly hopes they were able to get there, and, if they did, that they had a chance to meet his parents. It seems strange that so much has happened in Dot’s life that he’s unaware of. Not only did she make it to Cleveland, but she stayed at his parents’ home for a whole week! How frustrating that mail takes so long to reach him, but I guess, in a way, it’s pretty incredible that it ever gets to him at all.

He writes that “the knotty finger of work beckons, and he must heed its call.” He misses her terribly, but way out where he is, it doesn’t do any good to mope about it. (I love that word “mope”. I think one could almost guess at it’s meaning just by the way it sounds.)

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Dot writes that a mild snow fall quickly vanished under sunny skies, so one can hardly claim that March came in like a lion.

The folks at work predicted she’d get a letter from Dart today, but they were all disappointed. It certainly does her heart good to hear from him, although she can’t exactly say why. “What have you got that any other sailor doesn’t? You’ve got ‘IT!'”

She babysat for Chris and Eric Miller last night – the first time in quite a while. Eric has grown so much since she last saw him that she hardly recognized him. With long eyelashes and beautiful dark curls, he’s going to be a heart-breaker. He’s already a flirt at just eight months! His big brother Chris is also a cutie. She tells Dart that as cute as they are, they are both little devils. If you blink away for a moment, Chris has Eric’s hair in his firm grip and Eric has Chris’ kiddie-car wheel in his mouth. I think Dot secretly loves the challenge.

Tonight she’s babysitting for Carter Ford, but he doesn’t appeal to her at the moment. He’s been a little stinker all night,  but when he looks at her with his big, beautiful eyes, she’s powerless to discipline him. She confesses that her kids will be spoiled rotten, especially if they have beautiful eyes. (Well, either Dot found her backbone or none of us kids had beautiful eyes, because she never seemed to have trouble disciplining us!) She adds. “Beautiful eyes just about hypnotize me, but I guess you found that out already, didn’t you?”

She and El have gone into business. They even ran a  little ad in the newspaper: Is there a curfew in your night life? Let us help you out. We’ll take care of your children (35 cents/hr.) or assist at dinner parties (50 cents/hr.) Phone Gr 2630 after 6:30 pm.

She says they both babysit a lot, but they’d like to  be busy every night. El is saving for her wedding next year and Dot needs money for college. About the business she adds, “It ought to be loads of fun, if it works out. More variety, and I hope more cash.” This girl jokes about how lazy she is, but I’ve never known an 18-year-old willing to work as hard as she does.

Work at FS has been so slow that she’s begun taking books to read there. Now she’s enjoying “The Razor’s Edge” by W. Somerset Maugham.

There’s no more news, so she’ll close, with all her love.

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March 2, 1945

Dart’s overjoyed by the mail call he got yesterday – four letters from Dot and three from his parents. They all tell the wonderful stories of Dot’s graduation and the lengthy visit they all had in Cleveland. The most recent letter from Dot was written on February 17 – not such a terribly long delay, under the circumstances.

At this point in the letter, he’s interrupted by another mail call. He’s had a total of 35 letters since arriving on this ship and he thinks the mail will now be coming in as regularly as one can expect while on sea duty.

Today, he visited a destroyer tender and met a “ghost,” a guy named Lester Stern who was a year ahead of him at Shaw, a year ahead at Case in the V-12 unit and roomed next door in the dorm. Lester just graduated from Annapolis and is now an Ensign. They had a long talk about old times and Lester told Dart that lots of their old V-12 buddies are out here in this area of the globe. Dart interjects that where they are is not where Dot and his folks guessed he was from his early letters. He hopes no V-12 guys get assigned to his ship because it’s “awkward business” to know an officer personally.

Because of censorship, Dart can only write on one side of the page (to allow for excising forbidden words or phrases, I suppose.) He’s really burning through stationery and it’s hard to get more way out where he is. The paper he’s using today is not worth much, but it’s priced high at a penny per sheet.

He asks Dot to let her mother know that he’ll write to her soon. He’s afraid he never thanked her for the Christmas gift, but magazines are prized commodities while at sea. The Readers’ Digest she gave him for Christmas are very popular with his shipmates and with him.

If Dot’s looking for an enjoyable book without message or purpose, he recommends Chicken Every Sunday by Rosemary Taylor. It’s light and amusing, along the lines of My Sister Eileen or Life With Father.

He asks Dot if, when she was a little girl, she took time out from playing football with the Alley Rats to play any of the little girls’ games like skipping rope. He tells her that the guys have great fun performing for each other jumping rope on deck. The ship’s always rolling and pitching beneath their feet and occasionally a wave washes over the deck, but some of the men are really good, nonetheless. He describes the fancy footwork demonstrated by the best jumpers, and then confesses he’s only managed to do “regular” skipping, and then only about 10 skips in succession without a miss.

“Here I’ve come all this way without telling you how doggone much I love you, and my paper’s used up. Don’t worry. I’ll write a love letter someday soon.” In Dot’s eyes, aren’t they all love letters?

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March 3, 1945

It’s a hurried note from Dart today, but he crams a lot in. He’s very tired from an all-day working party he was part of yesterday. He’s not complaining because he says the other men had it much worse. No further details are forthcoming, so maybe he’s being mindful of the censors. Speaking of which, I’m pretty impressed by how long it’s been since we’ve seen any part of his letter cut out with a razor. He seems to be taking the censorship rules to heart.

He raises the issue of the “Dear John” letters he’s written about before. He explains that when he wrote that letter about them, he was “under the influence of current events.” He watched as some of the fellows received such letters and seemed very hurt by them. He’s since learned that in some of the cases, the fellow himself had been chiseling,” (cheating?) and in other cases, the girl was just a passing fancy anyway. Sometimes the girl was to blame, sometimes not.

His point in bringing it up now is to say that he loves her beyond anything he thought possible before he met her, and he trusts her thoroughly, without the slightest doubt in his mind. “So, Dearest, please forgive a sailor his blue moments. These are the things I should write on scratch paper and throw over the side.”

He gushes a final thought, “Goshamighty, you’re nice, Dot.” I love the simplicity of that line. Yes, he loves her looks, and he tells her so often. He thinks she’s funny. He appreciates her positive outlook and her way with children. I trust he feels his share of lust for her as well. But the sweet “you’re nice, Dot,” also reveals that he just genuinely likes her.

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March 4, 1945

Does Dart finally have an assigned sleeping spot? Maybe so. He reports that after a month on board, he is happily ensconced in a nice little hangout with three other fire control men. All of them except for one bitter guy have their girl’s picture in front of them as they write. He’s so thrilled to have those pictures! He says if she’s received 400 letters from him, he must have received about that many from her, and each one still thrills him as much as that first one that came to him in the V-12 barracks at Case.

Another mail call today brought four letters from Dot and two from his parents. He lived every word of her letters over and over again. He tells her that a letter or a visit from her does his parents a world of good, and that clearly comes through in their letters to him. His mother says that Dot gets prettier every time they see her, although he doesn’t know how that’s possible because she was already so pretty the first time he laid eyes on her. How nice that his parents like Dot almost as much as he does. Nice for Dot, too.

He confesses that his mom told him “off the record” that Dot looks cute in curlers. He’d like to see that. In fact, he’s decided to grant her wish of surprising her when the Navy tells him he’s done, and he’ll show up unannounced. It would serve her right, he says, if he caught her with curlers, cold cream and dressed in overalls! “That’ll cure you of wanting me to surprise you!”

After mail call, Dart had another treat in store. He put his feet on solid land for the first time in a month. His liberty section got their turn at experiencing a little relaxation on the beach of a tiny island. “The recreation island is a tiny, very tropical place, covered with coconut palms, dense undergrowth and an occasional breadfruit tree. Also present are flies, sailors and innumerable beer cans.” The island is surrounded by white coral-sand beaches and clear blue-green water.

In explaining the beer cans, Dart tells her that the Navy carries large quantities of the stuff for use by recreation parties on shore. Because of the tropical heat, the beer has a more powerful affect on the sailors than it ever would in the States. Consequently, every sailor gets a beer ration. Teetotalers like Dart can become very popular fellows during shore liberty as guys buddy up to them in an attempt to get more beer. Dart prefers to hand his out to his real buddies, rather than the pseudo-buddies who are only interested in his beer and try to play him for a sucker.

Risking the censor’s blade, he talks a bit more about the island. He describes the small marine life he saw, including colorful fish and harmless little sand sharks, red coral and salamanders, crabs and other shell fish. The swimming beach is wide and white, with shallow water and a flat bottom. The guys go “natural” because there isn’t a woman to be found within a million miles.

He wraps up with “Gee, I wish you could come adventuring with me! Better still, I’d like to come there to see you, and skip this whole world-traveling mess.”

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March 5, 1945

No mail for Dart today and he’s feeling a little let down. Sure, he has the big stack of letters that have been arriving this week, but he’s hoping to save answering them for the coming days when he won’t have any news he can tell from the ship and when no new mail is arriving from the States for days or weeks on end.

The film they’re showing on board tonight is “Meet Me in St. Louis,” with Judy Garland and according to Dart, “a whole slew of nice tunes.” If he can’t think of much to write, he may take in the show – his first aboard the Haggard.

He asks Dot if he ever told her how this ship feels in a moderately rough sea. He doesn’t have to explain it if she’s ever ridden a Euclid Ave. street car during a rainy rush-hour. The only differences are that here, the water washes over everything, the lurching and swaying lasts much longer, and there’s not as much of a crowd.

He wishes she could see him in his foul weather gear. (I think it should be called “fowl” weather, because he’s always talking about the duckings they get.) He wears a big jacket and nice, padded ski-pants, just like the girls back home wear; also galoshes. “A day’s not complete without a ducking while we’re under way, and if we get ducked more times than we have dry suits of clothes, we wear wet ones. Salt water ruins shoes, too. I bought another pair today.”

A lot of guys out where he is wear white sailor hats that have been dyed blue. He dyed two of his today, so he must be getting “real salty.” Some destroyers have tight rules about uniforms, but his ship is quite liberal. In port – such as it is – the uniform is blue hats, dungarees and black shoes. On the ship, just about anything goes for the head and feet. He says baseball caps are quite popular among the boys, as are heavy rawhide Marine shoes. When some destroyers are in port, crew members are required to wear regulation white hats, and some are even forced to wear their white uniforms. Still, the Haggard is one of the cleanest, best looking “cans” around and the crew is mighty proud of that.

He had is picture taken today by the ship’s doctor. At the time, Dart’s hair was a mess, his face was dirty and sunburned and he had paint on his hands, arms, face, shirt and pants. Although cameras are forbidden out here, a few officers have them. He hopes he’ll get to see the photo when it’s done, but it’s hard to get film developed way out where they are. New film has to come all the way from the States.

Well, he’s surprised by how much he squeezed out of a no-news day. He’s solved the problem of the second floor of their house. How he wishes he had his drafting tools with him to make better drawings. Now, they’re just sketches. “But there’s nothing sketchy about my love for you.” I’d say after a line like that, it’s time to close this letter. And he does.

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Another weekend’s passed and Dot fears she’s neglected Dart. Friday night was spent at Nancy’s house, talking about…Dart! She says Nancy may have mentioned some guy she’d known once in California, but, says Dot, “I’m afraid I was a much better listener to what I had to say.”

All day Saturday, this girl WORKED! She scrubbed her bedroom floor, windows and woodwork, vacuumed the entire third floor and stairs, cleaned up the front lawn, washed all her clothes and did three sets of dishes. At bedtime, she crashed.

This morning, the light coming through her clean bedroom windows nearly blinded her, but it allowed her to make a remarkable discovery. She actually has a cozy, comfortable bedroom, when it’s clean. She enclosed a sketch of the layout of the room, complete with a photo of Dart on every horizontal surface. That way, nearly anyplace her eyes land, there he is! She says she plans to tape another one to the ceiling so when she wakes up in the morning, that’s the first thing she’ll see.

She and El recently saw “30 Seconds Over Tokyo” and she hopes Dart gets to see it. (I’m not sure why a guy who is actually living in the war would want to see a movie about that same war, but maybe…) Anyway, she was so taken with the actress who played Mrs. Ted Lawson that she came home and cut her hair very short, like the woman in the movie. Then she tells Dart, If you do see it, notice her eyes. They sparkle like diamonds.”

She has no more paper with her at work, so she’ll have to end the letter. She added a P.S. that she got a letter from the Marine she mentioned a year ago. She got his last letter in May and never answered it, but he thought it was his turn to write. He’s in the Philippines, ‘bombing the hell out of the Japs.’ Dot says that since Dart is writing to a Marine, she thought it would be okay if she did, too.

Then, as has become her habit, she enclosed a few cute cartoons, which I’ll save for a day when no one writes a letter.

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March 6, 1945

Old Faithful writes again! This letter from Dart begins with the announcement that another day has flown by quickly because he had a job to do. There’s no mention of what that job was, but he believes that keeping busy makes time pass faster, and that’s fine with him.

As he writes, some of the guys are lounging around looking at each other’s photo albums and talking about the future. They all have similar plans – marriage, a house, education and a job. Marriage seems to be of the most immediate interest to the men, but then they worry about how they’ll support a family. The worst part is they can’t discuss the priorities with their fiancees or would-be fiancees, nor with experienced older folks who might help them sort it all out. “We’ll have to wait and see what conditions are if and when we all return to our complacent life ashore, far from the Navy blue and white.”

Speaking of Navy, he remarks that in a long-ago letter, Dot said she didn’t care what he wore in his civilian life, as long as it wasn’t Navy blue. I think she meant that she didn’t want to see him in uniform after the war, but he took a different meaning. He thinks she has some aversion to the color and warns her that the only suit he owns is actually a navy blue shade. He assures her that by the time he gets released and can wear civvies, that suit won’t be good for much except the Salvation Army for a homeless veteran hero, or for shining shoes or waxing a car. I think it’s interesting that they had homeless veterans in 1945 and that Dart actually crossed out “veteran” and re-wrote “hero.” Sounds like modern times.

He comments that she seems a trifle obsessed about him meeting an Australian girl. He goes to some lengths to assure her that even if such an unlikely thing should happen, he’d be a darned fool to mess up the best thing in his life with the best girl in the world. He’s totally in love with the girl from Greenwich.

The plans for the house are nearly ready for her perusal, but he has a few questions about a bath upstairs. Do they need one? Could it be built out at a later date, if needed?

He bemoans another Easter coming when they won’t be together, but he expresses great hope that someday, they’ll celebrate all the holidays of their lives together.  He ends with “I love you only, always.”

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Dot’s full of news about her new business. She and El have received about 15 calls as a result of their newspaper ad. Tonight she’s sitting for a new customer and Sunday, she and El will be serving a dinner party at the home of Stanford White, a famous architect. When they said in the ad “assist at dinner parties,” they intended it to mean serve and clean up. Instead they’re getting lots of calls to actually cater the events. With typical “can-do” verve, they’ve dived head-first into catering.

She confesses to missing him “like sixty.” It’s been 16 days since she’s heard from him. Of course, she doesn’t blame him. She only wants him to know how much she misses him. Next to him being there, his letters are the best boost to her disposition.

Although she hasn’t written to him very often due to a lack of things to write about, she did write to his family right after her trip to Ohio. She still hasn’t heard from them. She asks that when he writes to them he remind his parents that they owe her a letter. She jokes that she’ll not stand for this kind of abuse much longer.

Having finished reading “The Razor’s Edge,” she’s moved on to “Jane Eyre,” which she says she should have read ages ago when she thought she had it rough at Andrews School.

She recalls that 17 weeks ago tonight, they were enjoying a delicious spaghetti dinner together in Cleveland during Dart’s whirlwind leave. Now, as she wraps up the letter in preparation for her client to come home, she wishes that he were with her now and that they could hold hands as he walked her up the stairs.

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March 7, 1945

Here’s a quick note from Dart on another day that passed quickly and brought no new mail. The whole crew is busy painting the entire ship “while they have the chance.” He explains that it’s a huge job. First, they must scrape off all the rust – and there’s rust wherever there has been salt water. He says the salt water even finds its way into “water-tight” spaces and can’t get out, so it does major destruction. After the rust has been removed, the undercoat goes on. When that’s dry, the final coat is applied. This process is repeated on every metal surface of the ship!

He remembers that Dot wrote in one of her recent letters that she had bought him a Parker pen for his birthday and decided not to send it. He thanks her for the pen and for being so thoughtful. “It was a good idea not to send it, for things like that have remarkable ‘ambulatory’ habits here. They walk out on the owner without the slightest provocation.”

After he tells her how much he misses her and how thoughtful, cheerful and sweet she is, he warns her that the day is coming soon when his letters will become quite irregular again. But even though they may not be leaving the ship, he’ll still try to write them almost every day. “I won’t promise to write, but I’ll promise to try to write.” Sounds like some big offensive is afoot in his neck of the ocean.

He’s run out of time and must end their little talk for the night. He’s done more dreaming than writing, but the dreams make her seem closer.

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March 8, 1945

Dart’s letter is a single page, four short paragraphs with almost no news. He asked her if she’d ever seen those cartoons when a guy was painting a floor and painted himself into a corner. She would have laughed if she’d seen him and his buddies almost do that exact same thing today. For awhile they thought they really were trapped, but then someone pointed out there was a hatch above them through which they could exit. See the advantages of living on a ship instead of in a traditional house?

The other ships around them have been getting mail every day, but the Haggard hasn’t had a delivery in four days. The injustice seems to bother Dart almost as much as not getting the mail.

He can think of nothing else to say, except that he loves her very much, and he can’t even think of a new way to say that.

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With Mr. Goldstein in New York City learning what the other Franklin Simon’s has going on that they need in Greenwich, Dot is running the Young Men’s department by herself. It’s not too challenging because there have been almost no customers.

She announces that Spring is on its way and it’s much too nice a day to spend it all indoors. From her third floor window at work, she has a nice view of the countryside. In a paragraph that rivals Dart’s for its descriptive power, she tells of the trees that seem to be stretching toward the sky, ready to burst into bloom. The sky is an intense, brilliant blue strewn with light clouds that resemble careless brush strokes.

Now and then a plane flies overhead and Dot says she can’t help but pity the poor wretched souls who are terrorized by the sight and sound of airplanes. In equal measure, she’s grateful that those who live in America don’t have to be fearful of such things.

A sudden influx of customers arrives and she hastily promises to finish the letter later.

When she continues, it’s already March 10. She received her first letter from Dart today in over three weeks. It was that heart-wrenching masterpiece he wrote on Valentine’s Day. She’s happy he thought of her on this special day and tells him she re-read the poem he wrote her a year ago. She liked it even more this year. She says that being loved by him is all the Valentine she needs. “Your letter did get here and so will all the others you write, so forget to worry about that. I hope there won’t have to be too many more letters before I see you again.” She says that each letter seems to bring a little bit of him with it, so she prays he’ll continue to write whenever he has the chance.

She’s sorry to hear about his seasickness and worries there’ll be nothing left of him if that’s still happening. She says that although she’s never been seasick, she has some idea of what he’s going through and she has huge sympathy for him. Although she’s too modest or discreet to say so, I suspect she’s alluding to her monthy cramps which just about knock her off her feet.  In those days, I doubt there were many young women who would mention anything to do with menstrual issues to a male who was not her husband. How different from today when so many young people share every detail of their bodily functions through very public modes of communication!

She begs him not to apologize when he doesn’t write. She knows he has a very good reason not to. But she feels guilty. With no brass to polish, salt water spray to dodge, or battles to fight, she still doesn’t write as much as she should or would like to. She tells him that last night was the first in many that she was actually able to sit down for dinner. Usually, she races home from FS, grabs a bowl of cereal, and rushes off to her evening gig. Last night, she had a feast when she babysat at the Miller’s and tonight, she’s serving and cleaning at a huge estate 10 miles outside Greenwich. She’s ” just a lowly maid,” but ever since the money machine in their basement broke down, she’s had to resort to all sorts of indignities like work to obtain “the filthy green stuff.”

Last night Mrs. Miller gave Dot her bicycle as a graduation gift. Dot says it’s a real honey, with balloon tires and everything. Dot plans to fix it up and paint it so she can get plenty of use out of it this Spring. Mr. Miller has offered Dart the use of his bike if he gets to Greenwich during bike-riding season.

She was thrilled to get another letter from Dart today, written on March 1. It reminded her of the times when she’d hear from him nearly every day. She was so happy to see that his spirits seemed much improved since the Valentine’s letter. I know he wrote several times between February 14 and March 1. I wonder when those other letters will find their way to her.

She tells him that she, too, has often had the sensation that he is standing right beside her. It’s a hard realization that he’s not there, but it somehow makes them seem closer than the thousands of miles that separate them.

She’s eager to see his new plans for their house. Everyone she tells about them – which is everyone she knows – thinks they sound perfect. The other night, Nancy Lou asked if she’d received any new sketches.

Although it’s often nearly 1:00 before she gets ready for bed, she vows that she is not going to sleep this next week until she has written Dart at least a short note. It’s a challenge, but it also makes her feel better when she “chats” with him regularly.

“You’re in my thoughts every minute I’m awake and in my dreams when I sleep. Please finish this war in a hurry and come home. I’ll let you put a whole tray of ice cubes down my back. Oh, what am I saying?!”

She ends with a simple “Thank you for ‘being.'”

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March 9, 1945

No letters were written on this day, but as promised, I’ve posted some of the clippings that Dot enclosed with a recent letter to Dart.

My favorite one shows a sailor dangling from a harness over the side of a ship while an officer glares at him from the rail. The sailor, like Dart himself, is engaged in painting the ship. In large black letters, he has scrawled the words “Is this trip necessary?” Just as a major media campaign in the States was asking civilians to preserve gas by posing the same question to themselves, this young sailor has every right to ask it!

There’s another that shows a man in his trousers and undershirt eagerly peering into the bathroom mirror as he’s about to take a razor to his curly, burly lumberjack beard. Nearby, his Army uniform hang on a hook while  his weeping mother is being consoled by her husband. Says the husband,”Now, now, mamma…Junior has to start shaving sometime.” Dot says this one reminds her of the sketches Dart used to draw of himself when he was growing a “goat” at Great Lakes Naval Hospital.

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March 10, 1945

Wow! This letter begins with two stories about justice (and injustice) in the Navy, and ends with a fine discussion on what Dart believes he’s fighting for.

First, the tale of injustice – a wrong which was righted through the efforts of our young hero, the valiant Dart. Since coming aboard the Haggard, Dart and his fellow new arrivals had been told there were no lockers available in which they could stow their belongings. As a consequence, they had all been forced to lug the things from place to place and store them in public areas. Recently, rumors began to circulate that this ship had been built with ample storage for all hands to access. Further investigation revealed that several guys had actually appropriated multiple lockers while the newbies remained “lockerless.” Dart and a buddy took it upon themselves to approach the Master-at-arms, a “redheaded New Jerseyite” and tell him that they knew several of his boys were occupying lockers that rightfully belonged to the newest sailors on the ship. They even threatened to go to the executive officer and spill all their grievances. By the end of the day, they all had lockers to call their own!

The tale of justice also features our man Dart. He was sentenced to 10 hours of extra duty for neglecting to wear a life jacket for a general quarters drill. As he explains it, when he heard the alarm, he dashed to the large storage area where he and all the other lockerless men sometimes threw their gear. When he saw the mountain of stuff piled on top of his belongings, he knew that taking the time to dig through it all to get to his life jacket would delay his whole battle station from being manned and ready. He opted instead to report to duty without the required life jacket. Unfortunately, he got caught by the executive officer and sentenced to the extra hours of duty. “I was in the wrong, my reason is not strong, and I must take the consequences.”

Still, with some residual bitterness, he talks about the disillusion he feels after two and a half years in the Navy. He feels that although he has always tried to follow the rules and play fair, his toes have been stepped on quite a lot. He hopes he doesn’t become sour, or lose his sense of right and wrong by spending so much time under the Navy’s influence.  Even though some of his thoughts and actions are changing by being in the Navy’s environment, there are some things which he knows will remain steadfast.

“You and I know what they are. We want a home. We want to be happily married and successful in life. We want to live our lives in freedom – freedom from debt; freedom from the bonds of a conqueror; freedom from the seamy side of existence, or at least as much of it as possible; and, above all, freedom from the thought that our successful existence has been due to the fact that somebody else was wronged in our struggle; that is, freedom derived from our own minds and senses of decency and honesty. Speaking of honesty, I love you — honest!”

And I love that a value he holds most dear is to not achieve his hoped-for success by abusing or mistreating someone else. That kind and conscientious perspective was a driving force for Dart throughout his life.

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