WWII Letters of Three Brothers and Their Sister From 1942-1947

From 1942-1947

by William D. Hedges


Formats

E-Book
$3.99
Softcover
$19.99
E-Book
$3.99

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 2/29/2012

Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 392
ISBN : 9781469170749
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 392
ISBN : 9781469170732

About the Book

FIRST, there is an error. Chapter I title should be FAMILY not BOOT CAMP IN SAN DIEGO. My mother, unknown to me, kept my several hundred letters home during WWII as well as those of my two brothers and sister and when I found them thought them worth publishing. We were what was known as a Blue Star Family of Four. The Gold Stars were for those killed in action. While I don´t have the figures I doubt there was a large number of families with four on active duty during WW II. We were a very patriotic family. First, my elder brother, Sam, joined in January, 1942, shortly after Pearl Harbor. I followed in June of that year, my sister entered the Waves in 1943 and my younger brother the Army Air Force in 1944. We all wrote many letters, however, most here in are mine as I have access only to those my siblings wrote to me. The Navy is viewed primarily through my letters as I was transferred first to San Diego, California for Boot Camp. Subsequently orders sent me to Lakehurst, New Jersey for training in Aerology, i.e. weather forecasting. Upon graduation I was assigned to duty in Houma, Louisiana which was a LTA base whose airships scouted the gulf for German submarines. Later I was ordered to officers training, became an Ensign and served on the U.S.S. Tanner, a hydrographic survey ship. Brother Sam served in the pacific between New Calidonia and Australia. Sister Jane became a Link Trainer, i.e. she trained pilots and was stationed in Atlanta, Georgia. Brother John became a pilot, but the war being over he saw no active duty. However, he decided to make a career in the military and saw more than enough action in Viet Nam to satisfy even him. Following is the first letter I wrote home from Boot Camp in San Diego.


About the Author

After serving five years in the Navy during WWII, William D. Hedges taught high school physics, biology, and mathematics for some years, later becoming a principal and college professor. He taught 44 years. Concerned about the attacks on the teaching of evolution by biology teachers he decided to fight back with a concise, 100 page analysis describing the contradictions, fallacies and weak underpinnings of Christianity, Creationism and Intelligent Design. He believes as Jefferson: “We are not afraid to follow the truth wherever it may lead, nor to tolerate any error as long as reason is left free to combat it.”