Category Archives: 20. May 1945

May 25, 1945

The gorgeous moon shining through Dot’s bedroom window has put her in a “mushy” mood. Especially after a brief ride in an open convertible on a perfect spring night after spending time with old family friends, Dr. and Mrs. Hallorhan. How she dreams of a long car ride when the war and rationing end – driving aimlessly, talking endlessly and admiring the stars and the driver beside her.

Her memories tonight are of her favorite drive of her life – the one that took place on November 8, 1944 on a very rainy night. She and Dart were in a dark green “convertible.” In this case, the car converted from one that ran to one that wouldn’t. This particular night, it chose not to for a while. “Oh, Dart! That night and the one that followed, I was really in Heaven. What did we talk about while we were riding? Guess it was a bit of everything. But, I’m afraid I neglected to tell you how much I loved you. As a matter of fact, I still love you.”

The evening she refers to was one of their early dates after meeting in late September. These two days when Dot stayed with a friend in Cleveland count as two out of the eight days they have shared since meeting each other. I marvel constantly at how fast they fell for each other and how deep the bonds were, after but a few hours in each other’s company. The hundreds of pages of letters that have passed between them are like the mortar that holds together the foundation they established instantly. I’ve always sensed the hand of God in the creation of that unshakable foundation. I’m certain Mom would agree.

She’s sorry to hear that his job in the mess is turning out to be such a mess. “When you get so disgusted you think you can’t stand it anymore, try doing what I do. Merely shrug your shoulders and say ‘Ah, well, in five years how insignificant this will all seem, so why bother fretting about it now?’ I’m sure that’s not the best way to handle a problem, but it’s a certainty you won’t be grey before you’re 80 if you follow my method.”

She hopes he’s begun to get his Readers’ Digest by now. She feels another cold coming on, so she needs to get some sleep, but not before she tells him that she’ll love him forever.

She adds a P.S. in large capital letters with multiple underlines and exclamation points: I WILL NOT BE JOINING THE WAVES!!!!!!

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May 26, 1945

This is a long letter from Dart which he wrote over the course of three days. It is his response to Dot’s letter of May 12, in which she pleas for an explanation of what he sees in her. It is a response that requires deep thought and tender handling. I’ll let him speak for himself.

As I look at it now, the job at hand is three-fold. First; I must in some way convince you that I don’t believe you recognize your own capabilities, that you’re a bit unsure of yourself. Second; I feel it is my duty to warn you that you have a few misapprehensions as to my own virtues, to which you should not adhere too closely until we have known each other more personally than letters and a few dates permit. Third; to answer definitely your question.

In the first place, one thing which people in love are very apt to do is to make the slip of under-rating themselves and over-rating the other partner of the match. That, coupled with a lack of self-confidence, produces a most disheartening effect.

For example: You ask for a set of reasons why I love you. You give some reasons for loving me and ask for the same. Can’t you see, Dot, that my reasons for liking you so very, very much are, to me, almost the same as the ones you gave me. I won’t deny many of the flattering accusations you wrote. But I’ll try to modify them. You list a bunch of things in my favor in one paragraph. You set yourself up as the direct antithesis. I’ll try to blow up both theories together in a series of short (?) paragraphs.

You say I’m ambitious. No, not to any extreme more than you are. Don’t we both aspire to own that little house we’re planning, to get married, to have children, to give them a good chance in life, to make that house into a home? And don’t we aspire to do those things together? There’s one of the reasons you asked for.

You say I have a keen sense of humor. I say you have the same, that it seems that our senses of humor are almost alike, that neither is always keen, nor will they be congruent at all times, but they are near enough together most of the time as to make us happy. That’s another of your reasons. May I hasten to add that you haven’t seen much of the bewildered, sore-at-the-world feeling I have most of the time?

And now, an example of my not thinking straight was when I disapproved so all-fired violently to your plans to join the Cadet Nurse Corps or the WAVEs. I see now that either would have been good for you, and that in both cases, I was acting without thinking deep enough; acting selfishly. For that I am sorry and regretful. I’m prone to act impulsively. Maybe you are too, but I doubt it, as far as most things go. So another reason comes out.

You made some cracks about my appearance. You’re the first ever to do so, except maybe my Mom. I’ve told you often how attractive I think you are, so we are still even, and you have provided me with another of the reasons.

I don’t always know right from wrong. No one does. Nor do I have will-power to follow my own convictions. (For an example of that: I’m convinced that I must stop an incessant use of obscene language; I try to stop, but it’s always blurting out.) You say that you know right from wrong but do not do much about it. I ask you this: Do you steal, lie, deliberately and maliciously make a habit of cheating, or of disobeying your parents? Do you drink or smoke to excess? Are you unfaithful to me? (I think you know how I mean that.) There’s my theory of wrong, in a nutshell. …Do you feel able to answer those questions to me?  I believe so, I hope so, I know so. For my faith in you, for my belief that you, alone, of all the girls I’ve ever known, can answer those, I love you very, very much.

You say that at the age of 19, you have accomplished nothing. I answer by asking you how many people have accomplished more than you at the age of 19? Don’t you have the most enviable trait of being able to make friends easily, and to be entertaining company? As for me, at the age of 21, I could say the same, in fact it has been the same since I was nineteen.

I’ve been in poor or delicate health half my life. I’ve quit, discouraged, almost everything I’ve ever tried. There are few accomplishments of which I’m really proud. I flunked miserably out of engineering college, and I try to rationalize it by some excuse about ‘back trouble. True, I was in the choir at Shaw. But I was always the last chosen for concerts. I was on the staff of the Shaw Observer, but I resigned. I was on the Shaw debate squad, but all I ever did was bang a gavel on a beat-up desk. I may have been president of my Hi-Y club, but no one will dispute my words that I was the poorest president they had. So it goes. I tried for a commission, ended up in boot camp, and am now seaman first class after two and a half years of active duty. No, there’s nothing wrong in your having not accomplished anything at 19. Our real job, our most important chance for the accomplishment of an ideal, comes when we can prove ourselves good and faithful homemakers and parents. Our greatest responsibility is to each other in this respect. We can meet that responsibility together. I’m sure of it. Neither can do it without the other. And we can’t rush into it thinking that “we’ll see if things work out all right.” We must believe and be determined that it will work, it must work, cannot fail. We must have open minds and open hearts. It is truly our biggest job. I’m willing to undertake it with you. Not only willing, but highly eager to do it. I’m sure we can. How about it? How do you feel on the same ideas?

Skip what old Hibschman said. There can be no hard and fast rule set for a thing like that, and he’s silly to try and make out like there is. Besides, what he said applies to us in the right way. We wouldn’t have been attracted to each other so strongly if it didn’t. Out of this paragraph you can divine another of the reasons you seek.

There’s another reason which you’ve discussed, undoubtedly, with your sisters and friends, just as much as I’ve discussed it with my buddies. But even though we may sometime talk about it with each other, I believe that here is not the time or place for it. We should have an understanding of some sort on that, too.

Now comes my part of the letter: the part you didn’t ask for; the part I’ve been thinking about for two weeks or more.

You surely recall how I’ve felt about being engaged to you during the war. It’s been a feeling of apprehension that I might not come back; that something might happen which would be tragic. After the events which have occurred out here, something has happened which has removed all doubt. I feel more sure now than ever before that I’ll be coming back, that there would be no harm, no heartbreak.

But now comes the question. Do you think that we could become officially, really, publicly engaged on my next leave? Surely that leave will not be more than many months from now. Eventually the ship must get tired and return. It will give us something to look forward to. Oh Dot, I do want that so very much. Shall we do that? Please give me your answer so we can make some plans for the big event.

I love you very, very much, Dot.

It’s an important letter and he handles it seriously. He told me in later years that after the kamikazi attack on the Haggard, he absolutely knew that he would get home in one piece. I’m nearly certain that by the date of this letter, he already knew that his beloved ship had fought her last battle.  I’m not sure when it happened, but I’ve noticed that he is no longer writing “in port,” or “at sea” at the top of his letters. I’m guessing that by now, the Haggard was probably already making her way, ever so slowly, back to the USA to be turned into scrap. He wouldn’t have been permitted to say anything in a letter because she was a sitting duck, unable because of her wounds to defend herself. Had the wrong letter fallen into enemy hands, it could have been disastrous for all hands. Still, I’m sure that the general belief on the ship was that by the time the Haggard had limped all the way back home, the war in the Pacific would be over. He knew he was safe, and therefore free to ask Dot what had been in his heart for months.

I cannot wait to read her response, even though the outcome is well known.

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Dot is writing from her overnight stay at the Miller’s where she’s babysitting for Chris and Eric. She swiped one of their 1,000s of snapshots of the boys to send to Dart. She’s also included one of her taken at her graduation in February.

Her only mail today was a nice letter from Dart’s mother. She explained that they could not make a trip to New England this summer because Burke is on 24-hour notice for the Navy and they are not allowed to leave town. Helen was so kind to invite Dot to spend her vacation with them in Ohio, but Dot has to count her pennies. She’s afraid to think how long it may be before she gets to see Dart or his family again.

Last night,she dreamed she was at the Brooklyn Navy Yard to meet a ship when she suddenly spotted Dart on board! She ran to him and hugged him so tightly that she thought she’d break his ribs. Over his shoulder, she saw a big, burly sailor, and off she ran to give him the same treatment. Dart was more than a little stunned until she explained that the big guy was her brother, Gordon. She awoke clutching her pillow tightly to her stomach. “After a night like that, I’m a nervous wreck!”

She’s also very tired and needs to shut her eyes. More tomorrow.

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May 27, 1945

Dot’s letter tonight is uncharacteristically sentimental. Blame it on “The Enchanted Cottage,” a romantic movie she saw with Betty and Nancy tonight. Dorothy McGuire and Robert Young did a masterful job of making the love story seem real. Dot loved it, and wished every moment she was watching it with Dart by her side.

“Oh my darling, I love you so much! I spend half my life wishing we had said more when we were together and the other half thinking of what I will say when we’re together again.”

She dreamed of Dart for the second time this week. In this dream episode, they had that long talk each of them has wanted so badly. The topic was…Dot joining the WAVEs! This poor girl can’t get a break even in her dreams! Anyway, Dart’s arguments were very clear and strong, and in the end, Dot was “eating out of his hand.” They kissed and made up, just as they had agreed to do in their letters. “And that kiss!! It was like the one we had on the stairway that night before you left, only much more so! Oh, after that I never wanted to wake up. But I did, and as usual my pillow was taking a beating.”

Then she quips, “Well – will you read what Dottie’s been writing! Mush, mush, and more mush. And I, such a supposedly shy girl! The way I feel tonight, though, it would be perfectly natural for me to tell you all the things I’ve kept cooped up inside me since September 25, 1943. Brother! I better quit before I say something I shouldn’t!”

She sure hopes he has a chance to see “The Enchanted Cottage.”

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May 28, 1945

It’s another chatty, somewhat sassy letter from Dot today. She’s not sure what these “booster shots” that he mentioned are, but if it’s a morale boost the Navy seeks, they’d get better results by delivering some mail to these poor homesick sailors!

“And before I go on any further, let me remind you for the last time, I’m not going to join the WAVEs!!!! Maybe you’ll get just as sick of reading that as I do at reading why I shouldn’t.”

She’s happy to have his enthusiastic support for her cause of getting his parents to make a trip out east this summer. She already knows they can’t come during her vacation, but anytime this summer would be great. How happy she’d be if they could meet her family and her family could meet them.

At the moment, she and Nancy are lounging across their beds listening to Tchaikovsky’s 5th symphony. She says Nancy would welcome it if the music put Dot to sleep, because that’s the only time she stops talking about Dart.

She goes on for another paragraph, gently teasing Nancy about how her blushes match her red hair. She tells Dart the two of them have been laughing so hard all day that she’s sure to get a good night’s sleep tonight. “I don’t really deserve it, as I haven’t done anything to speak of all day. I’ve done lots of dreaming about us, though. Gosh, but dreams are wonderful things!” I’ll bet Dart loved the mental image of his lady love in full laughter. I’m sure it will brighten his gray surroundings when he pictures it.

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May 29, 1945

Perhaps this letter from Dart will finally lay the WAVEs topic to rest. His entire one-page note was an apology for his handling of the situation, but in typical Dart style. I quote below some of the choicest morsels:

Oh, lay your pistol down! Call off the dogs!

Stand by, Peterson! Action Starbord!

I surely put my size twelves into a bucket of steam.

The worst of it (for me) is that there’s another letter on it’s way.

I wrote to Fred about my plight. He wrote to you. I shudder to think what you’ll say to me when you get that letter from him.

There was a guy here who told me I was making too much ado about nothing. I’ve already shaken his hand and told him he was right.

Hell hath no fire like a woman’s ire!

Please take it easy on me. I left my asbestos suit at home.

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May 30, 1945

Dart lets Dot know that his first Readers’ Digest arrived today – the March issue. He’s happy to have it. He’ll also try answering the letters he received from her yesterday and today.

The first order of business is to apologize once again for his over- reaction to the WAVEs idea. “Maybe someday I’ll learn, but this stuff of learning by experience isn’t always too enjoyable. …I’m ashamed of myself. As for writing about life because we can’t talk about it, all I have to say is that I must have lived a very sheltered one, for the world continually astounds me.” He agrees with her comment that thousands of men must have been grateful for the care of service nurses, and says he, too, has had occasion to be grateful for them.

A letter from his beloved high school English teacher, Miss Palmer, brought the news that excerpts of his recent letter to her were published in the Shaw Observer recently. He’s very proud of that letter and hopes Dot will have a chance to read it sometime. He’d also like to introduce her to Miss Palmer.

He sends his congratulations on her success in the war bond sale and urges her to keep earninig her stripes. He believes that every war bond shortens the war by the time it takes to sell it.  That should provide excellent motivation for the young Miss Chamberlain.

He assures Dot that he’s trying to remember ease of cleaning as he thinks about the house. He’s eager to thrash out all the details with her when they start planning instead of dreaming. He told his parents about the house plans and his mother reminded him how quickly his savings account is growing; $300 a year in the bank and an equal sum in war bonds. “It shouldn’t be long before we can start the house or complete my education.”

Speaking of education, houses and marriage, Dart intends to take full advantage of the GI Bill of Rights to assist with all three. “Maybe more, if I can find some more to take advantage of. Awful parasite, this boy!”

In a recent letter Dot wrote about how much she hates to wear glasses. Dart agrees that it’s disagreeable, but he’d rather see well and avoid headaches than worry about vanity. He understands it’s different for a girl, however. The mention of glasses brought back sweet memories of her trying to hide them the night they went to see “Phantom of the Opera.” “Remember, always, that I love you, glasses or not, or anything else that you can use against yourself.”

By the way, he had his back examined and the doctor declared it perfectly fine. He’s happy to report it bothers him less and less these days. Maybe all those months in the hospital were worth it, after all.

As he wishes his sweetheart goodnight, he yearns for her response to the long letter he wrote earlier this week. He hopes she’ll let him know if the very important letter does not arrive because there’s so much riding on it. “Talk it over, think it over, and let me know – soon.”

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May 31, 1945

As another month comes to a close, Dart writes a playful, funny letter to his favorite girl. A huge bull session has formed in his corner, threatening to draw his attention away from the letter he’s writing. He blames the three boxes that arrived today from the USA; cookies from Aunt Elizabeth, a baseball cap from his mother, and “that swell assortment of cookies, candies, fruitcake and games” from Dot.

The cookies are in remarkably fresh and unbroken condition. Much of what arrives from home is a “hopeless and unrecognizable mass of salty, soggy, moldy crumbs and bugs.”

He warns her that if his future letters are too short, she only has herself and her wonderful family to blame because he’s spending too much time with his Readers’ Digest, but it makes the time fly mighty fast.

He asks Dot for an update on Harriet, George and Gale’s cat Fifi and her expected litter. He tells about a stray cat his family once took in who blessed them with five kittens. After the feline family stunk up the basement and drove his relatives from their door, his parents took the cats to the ASPCA. He recalls the most robust kitten was called “Blitzkrieg.”

In her letter, she mentioned the long-ago ice-cube incident. “Ordinarily I am not given to holding grudges. But this is one time I feel morally obligated to get even. You know that you owe your miraculous escape from that same spine-chilling torture you inflicted on me solely to the rebuke I received from Mother, who said, ‘Dartie, don’t put that ice cube down Dot’s neck.’ When I heard that, I relaxed my grip, allowing your escape. Remember the Alamo. Remember the Maine. Remember Pearl Harbor. And remember that ice cube, Darling. Another one’s on it’s way.”

“Well, Tempus keeps on fugitin’ faster than I can write, so I’ll have to stop.—————–. There, that space was used by me dreaming that I was kissing you goodnight. Wish it were real.”

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Dot has lots of news, but no time to write. Nancy has been keeping her so busy this week that she’s wrung out.

She got a sweet note from Dart’s father the other day, thanking her for the cigarettes. She thinks he’s a swell guy, and she’s sure Dart agrees.

Her head is hung in shame because she hasn’t written for several days. Of course, she blames Nancy. There’s no time to write anything else, except that she loves him and all reports indicate the condition is permanent.

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