Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Frilly Fashion is Gone With the Wind
In 1939, Gone with the Wind premiered, and women were beginning to wear fuller skirted and more romantic feeling clothing. Nylon stockings were new to the fashion scene and selling fast. Then came the war, and fashion took a nose dive. Dresses became sparser, shorter, and in darker colors, and nylon stockings disappeared as the DuPont company began making parachutes and airplane cords out of the material instead. Working women also began wearing pants. Now that women were running the factories, they needed clothing that would help them move about more freely and increase productivity. Clothes became simpler as everyone worked to conserve materials. Even bride and grooms were changing their wedding attires to uniform suits. Old clothes were mended, and undergarments were made out of household linens to preserve. Both the American and English governments issued regulations limiting fabric use. In spite of it all, French women used their fashion as a defense mechanism. Even when Paris fell to the German Army, Parisian women proudly wore their elaborate hats as an act of defiance. They would not be seen as downtrodden!
Friday, August 29, 2014
The Monuments Men: The Great Importance of a Mediocre Movie
This blog is typically focused on retelling and preserving
the stories of the World War II era. As such, a movie review of a current film
is not our usual content. The subject matter of this film, however, brings it
into particular relevance to us. So for reasons that will become clear, here is
our review of “The Monuments Men.”
The Film
First off, let’s look at the film itself. Overall it was
generally unremarkable. It was not a bad film, but it wasn’t an overwhelming
success either. While the star-studded cast featuring George Clooney, Matt
Damon, Bill Murray, John Goodman, and Cate Blanchett did an adequate job of
bringing their individual characters to screen, the story as a whole felt a bit
rushed and forced throughout the film. It’s a large story that would have lent
itself well to a mini-series format similar to “Band of Brothers” or “The
Pacific”. However, the two-hour feature format felt like it didn’t allow the
appropriate time to build the story and the characters and the bond between
them to the level that the script required. Each member of the all-star
ensemble had his or her “Oscar” moment in the film, delivering a heartfelt
speech or emotional performance. Most of these moments, however, felt forced
and unnaturally placed within the story. The viewer is left feeling that the
film is trying way too hard to evoke an emotional response from the audience.
That’s not to say that there weren’t a few glimmering moments in which a true
chord was struck, but there could have been a lot more of those moments had the
characters been developed to a point that the audience actually felt invested
and cared about what happened to them. Ultimately, the film did its job. It
told the story. It was enjoyable enough. It just felt a little disconnected
overall. So, the big question now is… If
this film is so overwhelmingly mediocre, why are we even taking the time to review
it, and more importantly why are we still going to recommend you watch it? That
brings us to the second aspect of the film - the history it tells.
The Story
The Result
The sheer numbers of artifacts, paintings, sculptures, and
historical documents that were saved by these men are absolutely astounding.
Until you see the whole story and truly grasp the magnitude of what they
recovered and protected, the importance of this piece of history cannot be
adequately comprehended. So if you haven’t seen the film, it is definitely
worth checking out for the history alone. Or just skip the movie and pick up
the book. It’s usually hard to go wrong with that. Either way, it’s a story
that should be remembered, preserved, and shared.
For more on the history of The Monuments Men, check out some of the links below.
The Monuments Men: Allied Heroes, Nazi Thieves, and the
Greatest Treasure Hunt in History
by Robert M. Edsel
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1599951495/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1599951495&linkCode=as2&tag=smithsonianco-20&linkId=BWSPJUPE535PGUA3
by Robert M. Edsel
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1599951495/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1599951495&linkCode=as2&tag=smithsonianco-20&linkId=BWSPJUPE535PGUA3
Saving Italy: The Race to Rescue a Nation's Treasures from
the Nazis
Friday, August 8, 2014
War Halts Television Production!
When World War II began, television sets were just emerging onto the scene. Manufacturers were busy figuring out how to make the television as prevalent as the radio in American households. World War II stopped everything, however. All commercial production of television equipment was banned for the duration of the war, and TV broadcasting schedules were reduced to a bare minimum. As soon as the war ended in 1945, manufacturers went right back to producing television sets. In 1946, RCA put out the 630-TS TV, which was the first mass-produced postwar television. In that same year, “Hour Glass,” the first musical variety show, and “Faraway Hill,” the first soap opera, aired. Here are some other interesting early television facts for TV lovers:
• In 1947, there were about 44,000 TV sets in American homes compared to 40 million radios.
• On September 30, 1947, the New York Yankees played the Brooklyn Dodgers in the first telecasted World Series game.
• On November 6, 1947, “Meet the Press” first aired. It is the longest-running program in television history.
• In December 1947, “The Howdy Doody Show” aired, becoming the first nationally televised children’s show.
• In 1948, only one in ten Americans had seen a television set, but television production and sales were rapidly increasing.
• In 1949, television sets hit the 2,000,000 sold mark.
• On June 27, 1949, “Captain Video and His Video Rangers,” the first science fiction television series, aired.
• In 1950, television sets sold reached 8,000,000.
• In 1951, television sets sold reached 13,000.000.
• On October 15, 1951, “I Love Lucy” aired.
• In 1952, an estimated 10.6 million homes were watching “I Love Lucy”.
• By the mid-1950s, half of all U.S. homes had a television.
Sunday, July 13, 2014
Never Forget. Never Again
This past week I have been reading first-hand accounts from soldiers who helped liberate concentration camps in Germany. These two accounts below will truly make your heart sick and proud of these American soldiers’ part in the war. An estimated six million Jews were murdered by the Nazis during World War II.
“We visited a German political internment camp. The camp had been liberated only two days and the condition of the camp has changed very little. The American Red Cross just arrived.
The inmates consisted of mostly Jews, some Russians, Poles and there were six American pilots that they shot almost immediately.
When we first walked in we saw all these creatures that were supposed to be men. They were dressed in black and white suits, heads shaved and starving to death. Malnutrition was with every one of them.
We met one of them that could speak English so he acted as a guide for us. First we saw a German monument that stated 51,600 died in this camp in three years. They were proud of it. Second we went in the living barracks. Six sq. ft. per six people. Hard wood slats six ft. high. Then we went down through rows of barbed wire to a building where they purposely infected these people with disease. Human guinea pigs for German medics.
In this medical building were exhibits of human heads in jars and tattooed human flesh or skin on the walls.
After that we went up to the torture dept. Here were beating devices that I won’t explain. The clubs, by the way, are still lying there with blood on them. In another room in this building were 8 cremator furnaces. The doors were open and in one I noticed one body ½ done. A horrible sight. After I snapped a few pictures I walked out side and noticed a truck with 50 naked bodys piled up six deep. Turning my head away from that I looked over against the wall and here were about 30 more. Their eyes open, their mouths open, blue, purple, cut and some with holes in them.
The guide told us that he lived with some of these men for years. He said most of them died with-in the past 24 hrs. In fact a Red Cross man told us they were dying like flys. Nothing can be done for them. It’s too late. They are much too far gone.
There is another place I never told you about. The latrine. I won’t tell you about it, because you won’t believe me. It’s unbelievable.”
1st Lt. James Carroll Jordan writing to his wife about the Buchenwald Concentration Camp,War Letters.
“You have heard the stories over the radio – I don’t want to add much more – the most striking picture I saw was the ‘death train’ – I saw picture, no not picture, but carload and carload full of corpses, once upon a time people who were alive, who were happy and people who had convictions or were jews – then slowly but methodically they were killed. Death has an ugly face on these people – they were starved to death – the positions they were lying in show that they succumbed slowly – they made one move, fell, were too weak to make another move, and there are hundreds of such lifeless skeletons covered by some skin.”
1st Lt. Fritz Schnaittacher, a German-born Jew serving with the U.S. Army writing to his wife about the Dachau Concentration Camp.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Feasting on the War Front!
Ever wonder what a World War II soldier ate? A soldier at the frontlines ate K-rations, which were three individually wrapped boxed meals. Breakfast consisted of biscuits, canned ham and eggs, a cereal bar, a fruit bar, powdered coffee, sugar, water purification tablets, chewing gum, and cigarettes. Dinner (lunch) consisted of a canned cheese product, biscuits, caramels, a powdered beverage, sugar, salt, chewing gum, and cigarettes. Supper consisted of canned meat, biscuits, a bouillon cube or powder, a chocolate bar, powdered coffee, sugar, cigarettes, and toilet paper. All meals came with a twist key or can opener and a wooden spoon. The meals gave soldiers about 3,000 calories a day, which for many in intense situations was not enough. Soldiers who were not at the frontlines and had more time for meal preparation ate C-rations, and soldiers in emergency situations ate D-rations, which contained heat-resistant chocolate bars fortified with vitamins. Sounds appetizing, right? Love how Uncle Sam made sure our soldiers got their Lucky Strikes!
“Like Sheffield, the country and soldiers everywhere now turned their eyes toward Japan. James’s next letter both rejoiced over the possible end of C-ration stew and hash and contemplated his more than likely move to the Pacific front.”
Songbird, Chapter 54
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Tuesday, June 17, 2014
First Hand Account of Omaha Beach on D-Day
Last week, I wrote about the book War Letters I am rereading and shared some sweet letters that soldiers throughout American history sent home to their families. This week, I have to share with you one more letter I found from the book recalling a soldier’s memories of D-Day to his wife Mildred. His name is Dom Bart. He was a part of the 29th Infantry Division and in the first wave of soldiers to arrive on Omaha Beach. Read his words and honor the men who fought for our freedom now 70 years ago.
“The elements were at their worst and our landing craft was half filled with water. We used our helmets to throw it overboard and I never thought we would make it. Some of the boats never reached shore. It was a horrible sight.
Finally the word came – Let’s go – and there we were in combat, something new in my life. But oh, what an experience.
We didn’t have a chance to fight back, as we were dropped in water over our heads. No one’s fault as the entire beach was strewn with mines. With a stream of lead coming towards us, we were at the mercy of the Germans and we had all to do to reach shore and recuperate. I floated around in water for about one hour and was more dead than alive. Tried to land at several places, but always had to withdraw. It was impossible to get ashore.
I lost all hopes and said my last prayer to the Good Lord. The prayer was a passage to safety, but I sure was in a bad way. Got to the beach half frozen and almost unable to move and then I passed out. How long I remained there, I don’t recall, but when I came to, the fighting was at a climax. Pulled myself together and sought a rifle and around I went trying to locate my outfit. It didn’t take long to spot them and was I glad. But gracious Lord, what was left of them, just a handful, about 25 out of the 160. The battalion was almost wiped out, 800 casualties out of 1,000 men.
Our position was desperate, but with sheer will, fear and luck we overcame all obstacles and pushed inland to capture Vierville-sur-Mer, our first town. The price was high but covered ourselves with glory and for that we received the Presidential Citation. Later on we received another at Vire, France.
Yes darling, our outfit can be proud for the part it has played in helping to win the war. Whenever there was a tough nut to crack, the 1st BN., 116th Infantry, 29th Division was called on and always came through with flying colors. I’m very proud of it.”
Pfc. Dom Bart
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
War Letters
I am rereading a wonderful book. It is War Letters edited by Andrew Carroll. The book is a collection of letters, giving special insight into the Civil War, World War I and II, Vietnam, Korea, the Cold War, and the Persian Gulf. It contains priceless, first-hand accounts of the Battles of Antietam and Gettysburg, the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the Port Chicago explosion, and many more. What struck me this week in the midst of all the tragic stories were the tender letters sent home by soldiers to their families. Here are a few of the best! They will touch your heart.
“Patience what shall I write you? Shall it be more word of friendship? Oh no, my heart prompts my pen to the most wedded love. If I had never known you that flame would have been unkindled in this bosom but once set burning it will burn forever. You are associated with every thought and every action of my existence. Last night while lying on the parapet (for I slept there) viewing the starry heavens, I almost lived over the last two years. They were associated with many happy recollections. There was but one solitary cloud to mar my future happiness (this bloody war) and I hope very soon it will be dissolved. I will then be the happiest of the happy.” Sgt. Maj. James Black, Civil War soldier, writing to his wife Patience. After the war, he returned home to his family.
“My girl, my girl, how I do miss you. I didn’t think it possible for one to be possessed of the longing I have for you. At night I lay awake and think and think of you, the roar of the big guns, giving way before the press of mental pictures of you. I go back and retravel again the entire road that we have known together.” 2nd Lt. Francis M. Tracy, World War I soldier, writing to his wife Gertrude. He was killed in action September 27, 1918.
Momie & Dad: It is pretty hard to check out this way with out a fighting chance but we can’t liveforever. I’m not afraid to die. I just hate the thought of not seeing you again. Buy Turkey Ranch with my money and just think of me often while your there. Make liberal donations to both sisters. See that Gary has a new car his first year of hi-school.” Lt. Tommie Kennedy, World War II soldier, writing to his parents. He died a prisoner of war in 1945.
Friday, May 30, 2014
General George B. McClellan
Do you know who once called President Abraham Lincoln a “well meaning baboon”? The answer is George B. McClellan, the Civil War General for whom Fort McClellan was named. If you want to know more about the man behind the name, here are some interesting facts:
- George B. McClellan was born on December 3, 1826 in Philadelphia, PA.
- He graduated from West Point in 1846, ranking second in his class.
- He fought in the Mexican-American War from 1846 to 1848.
- After leaving military service, McClellan became the President of the Ohio and Mississippi RiverRailroad.
- He married Mary Ellen Marcy and had two children.
- In 1861 when the Civil War began, McClellan reentered military service and commanded Ohio’s volunteer army.
- After winning a series of small battles in West Virginia, he was given command to organize the Army of the Potomac.
- In November 1861, McClellan was named the General-in-Chief of the Union Army.
- Unhappy with McClellan’s hesitancy to attack the Confederate Army, President Lincoln removed McClellan as General-in-Chief in March 1862.
- In 1864, McClellan ran for the presidency as the Democratic Party candidate against Abraham Lincoln and failed.
- He served one term as governor of New Jersey from 1878 to 1881.
- McClellan died in 1885 at the age of 58.
Thursday, May 22, 2014
We Can Do It!
Have you ever wondered just what exactly “Rosie the Riveter” did for the war effort? This fictional wartime heroine based on hundreds of women throughout the United States helped to build airplanes by shooting rivets into metal plates with a gun. She worked as a team with another woman called the “bucker”. The bucker flattened or smoothed out the rivets on the other side. According to one real-life female defense worker the job of riveting took more skill, but the job of bucking took more muscle. Which would you have preferred?
Between 1942 and 1944, five million women joined the American workforce. They filled many jobs formerly only held by men, working as welders, mechanics, crane operators, and bus drivers. Employment gave women confidence and a new sense of purpose. They liked making their own money. Women in Huntsville, AL earned $1,400 a year as assembly line workers at the Huntsville Arsenal, and women in Mobile, AL earned $3,600 a year working as welders in the shipyards. The majority of these women were not ready to give up their newfound independence after the war. A 1944 Labor Department study found that 80% of working women desired to continue working after the war. Unfortunately, most of the women were laid off soon after the war, but regardless, World War II changed women’s lives forever.
“Rosemary had found a personal resolve and identity in her work that didn’t include her family, her background, or a man. Her work was for her what music was for Ava, except that instead of it being primarily an outlet for her emotions, it was a vehicle of self-worth and importance. Ava breathed in and looked away, knowing that she, Rosemary, and the whole country would be all right after the war…”
Songbird, Chapter 55
Friday, May 16, 2014
Love and War
While World War II produced innumerable soldiers, tanks, and warships, it also produced something else – marriages! With the uncertainties of war, couples across the country rushed to the altar before men were shipped overseas to enter the war. The 1941 marriage rate, 12.6 per 100,000 population, was the highest recorded rate ever in the United States.
Anniston, AL was no exception. The Anniston Star reported in January 1942 that during the month of December 1941 alone at least 150 marriage licenses were issued and about three marriages occurred daily. The 27 Division from New York was preparing to depart for the Pacific warfront, and the men were eager to marry before leaving. Many married hometown sweethearts, and others married Alabama girls they met while training at the fort. Wartime romances were often sincere, but others were impulsive and fleeting, as shown by the increased postwar divorce rate.
In December 1941, Edward N. Burke of Fort McClellan and Lila Marie McCary of Anniston were married. James Joseph Sergio of Fort McClellan and D. Virginia Knight of Anniston were married, and Herbert Dorman of Fort McClellan and Alice Virginia Williams of Anniston were married to name a few. I wonder what happened to these wartime lovers.
Anniston, AL was no exception. The Anniston Star reported in January 1942 that during the month of December 1941 alone at least 150 marriage licenses were issued and about three marriages occurred daily. The 27 Division from New York was preparing to depart for the Pacific warfront, and the men were eager to marry before leaving. Many married hometown sweethearts, and others married Alabama girls they met while training at the fort. Wartime romances were often sincere, but others were impulsive and fleeting, as shown by the increased postwar divorce rate.
In December 1941, Edward N. Burke of Fort McClellan and Lila Marie McCary of Anniston were married. James Joseph Sergio of Fort McClellan and D. Virginia Knight of Anniston were married, and Herbert Dorman of Fort McClellan and Alice Virginia Williams of Anniston were married to name a few. I wonder what happened to these wartime lovers.
Friday, May 9, 2014
There's Big opportunities in the Big City!
When Jason and I talked to older adults at the Fair on the Square a few weeks ago, they all had the same thing to say about Anniston, AL in the 1940s. They said it was a “booming” town. People from the rural surrounding areas and soldiers from Ft. McClellan poured into the city to work, shop, eat, and watch a movie.
Many cities throughout the United States experienced a similar population growth during World War II as men and women left the farm for new work opportunities. Other Alabama cities such as Mobile, Huntsville, and Childersburg grew rapidly as people came looking for jobs in defense industries. Mobile alone employed nearly 60,000 people in defense jobs. In Georgia, the quiet town of Marietta was changed forever when the United States Army and the Bell Aircraft Corporation began building a bomber plant in 1942 which would employ about 30,000 people. In California, San Diego doubled its size, and in Illinois, Seneca quintupled its size. Military bases and defense work changed many Americans’ way of life and transformed cities across the United States.
“Rosemary and Ava had never seen so many people inside or outside the store. On the weekends, people from the surrounding countryside poured into Anniston, and the city turned khaki-colored from all of the Fort McClellan soldiers that swarmed the populated streets.”
Songbird, Chapter 6
Many cities throughout the United States experienced a similar population growth during World War II as men and women left the farm for new work opportunities. Other Alabama cities such as Mobile, Huntsville, and Childersburg grew rapidly as people came looking for jobs in defense industries. Mobile alone employed nearly 60,000 people in defense jobs. In Georgia, the quiet town of Marietta was changed forever when the United States Army and the Bell Aircraft Corporation began building a bomber plant in 1942 which would employ about 30,000 people. In California, San Diego doubled its size, and in Illinois, Seneca quintupled its size. Military bases and defense work changed many Americans’ way of life and transformed cities across the United States.
“Rosemary and Ava had never seen so many people inside or outside the store. On the weekends, people from the surrounding countryside poured into Anniston, and the city turned khaki-colored from all of the Fort McClellan soldiers that swarmed the populated streets.”
Songbird, Chapter 6
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Monday, May 5, 2014
Memories of War Time
Here is another clip form the amazing Mrs. Elsie Wheeler. In this piece she tells us about meeting her husband after WWII and the time he spent as a POW in Japan.
Please help Share Mrs. Wheeler's wonderful memories and support our preservation efforts, Like us on Facebook and subscribe to the "War Stories" blog for updates on stories and upcoming events.
Thursday, May 1, 2014
I Won’t Have to Cross Jordan Alone
I have
said before that Songbird is a
musical in words. The book is full of popular big band music from the 1940s,
which I absolutely love, but it is also interlaced with gospel music. Gospel
music is a big part of my family’s heritage. My great grandparents loved to go
to “singings” and would often stay up until the early hours of the morning
singing songs from church. One of my Paw Paw’s favorite gospel hymns was I Won’t Have to Cross Jordan Alone. Ava
sings the song with her family at a tent revival in the second chapter of the
book. Enjoy this version by Johnny Cash!
Brother
Penny said “Amen,” and her family and cousin Jude began to assemble themselves
at the front of the tent. Sheffield motioned for his sons to begin playing, and
Ava began to sing.
“When
I come to the river at ending of day, when the last winds of sorrow have
blown,” she sang out by herself.
It was I Won’t Have to Cross
Jordan Alone, her mother’s favorite song about heaven, and she was always
careful not to get any of the words wrong. Just then a commotion occurred
outside the tent. Mrs. Valencia Boozer was approaching the food tables with
three young soldiers, and everyone was greeting them like rich relatives.
Songbird,
Chapter 2
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Elsie Wheeler: On The Day of Infamy
Meet Elsie Wheeler of Jacksonville, AL. We were lucky enough to be able to talk with Mrs. Wheeler during our last event and within minutes it was clear that she not only had an unmistakable energy about her, but she was a wealth of memories and stories from the World War II era. If ever the need and importance of preserving our oral histories were in question, this all too brief conversation laid those doubts to rest. As this amazing lady, at the age of 94, explored the fair on the Jacksonville Square, she took the time to share with us in vivid detail her memories of where she was and what she was doing on December 7, 1941.
These are the stories that beg to be captured and shared. It can be as simple as writing a blog or sharing a story of Facebook or even uploading a cellphone video to YouTube, but memories like this deserve to be documented, preserved, and shared with the world before they are gone forever.
Please help Share Mrs. Wheeler's wonderful memories, Like us on Facebook to support our preservation efforts, and subscribe to the "War Stories" blog for updates on stories and upcoming events.
Monday, April 28, 2014
Charles White: Witnessing History
In an earlier post we learned about the burning of the Alabama Hotel in 1944 and the tragic death of a young war bride. We had the honor this past weekend at the "Fair on the Square Living Museum" in Jacksonville, AL. to meet Charles White. Mr. White was actually in Anniston the day of the fire and remembers the event vividly. Check out this video for his first hand account.
For more info on the fire you can read our original post at: http://www.thewarsongseries.com/#!Tragic-Irony-in-Alabama-Hotel-Fire/c13o8/E1B28340-8027-4B21-BC7B-1CD578302FCD
And don't forget to subscribe to the "War Stories" Blog to receive E-mail notifications of new posts and more videos like this.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
A Piece of History
I will
be in Jacksonville, AL this weekend for the city’s Fair on the Square, Living
Museum. At my table, I am excited to have my grandfather’s rationing book from
World War II! It is amazing to hold a piece of history like this in your hands.
The federal government began rationing in May 1942 on goods that were high in
demand and needed for the war effort. A ration book was issued to each family
indicating how much sugar, coffee, meat, processed foods, gas, tires, and other
products one could purchase. To deal
with the shortened amount of items, women altered recipes and got together to
swap coupons. If you are in Jacksonville this weekend, come see an actual World
War II ration book!
“To begin her
meeting she had called for a rations swap, which all of the women eagerly
engaged in. Myrtle smiled down at her extra meat rations as Victoria silenced
the chattering group.”
Songbird,
Chapter 14
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
Play Ball!
Did you know that Anniston, AL once had its own minor league baseball team? Between 1904 and 1950, Anniston’s baseball team was called the Nobles, the Models, the Moulders, and finally the Rams. The famous Ty Cobb played one season in Anniston in 1904. The team took three years off during World War II, but returned in 1946 for play. Unfortunately, in 1950 the team played its last season, losing 73 games and winning 21. Attendance was low, and the people of Anniston were unable to financially support the struggling team.
I thought you might enjoy this tidbit of history for the beginning of baseball season. Go Atlanta Braves!
Tragic Irony in Alabama Hotel Fire
“I don’t believe it,” Ava said, watching the demise of the once grand building… The dazzling chandeliers, burgundy carpet, and suited bellboys absorbed her thoughts and sickened her heart. The waste was overpowering, and she could now understand how the wreckage of war stimulated Ernie Pyle’s writing.
– Songbird, Chapter 49
It is heartbreaking to me when an old building rich with history is destroyed. This story from 1944 touched my heart, and I just had to include it in Songbird. On September 15, 1944, the Alabama Hotel in Anniston, AL burned to the ground. What makes the story truly tragic is that two persons lost their lives to the fire. Ironically, one was a 17 year-old war bride visiting her husband at Ft. McClellan. While she and her family focused on the safety of her husband, it was her life that was lost too soon. Read below:
A policeman was shouting, “Step back,” and the crowd moved and pushed backward. The news that someone might or had lost their life lessened the importance of the structure and turned Ava’s thoughts horrifically to the people affected. She looked back up at the top floor, her eyes scanning the windows of the rooms that still existed. Is someone still in there? Who could it be?
The newspapers the next day answered all the city’s questions. Two people died, a man who attempted to lower himself to the ground with a chain of sheets and a Mrs. Violet Hemmert. Ava read and wept over the untimely obituary that interested many who never knew the young woman. She was a soldier’s wife visiting her husband at Fort McClellan. The fire not only destroyed a prized landmark, but it also emblazed the name of an unknown woman into the memories of a whole town.
- Songbird, Chapter 49
When Affordable Health Care Truly Was
A new hospital just opened next to our subdivision this week. Fittingly, during my research time this week, I read about the first hospitals in Anniston, AL where I was born. This account from Annie’s Town Revisited: A Picture History of Anniston, AL by Tee Morgan was amazing! Oh, how times have changed! She writes this account of a patient’s stay at the old Garner Hospital:
“In an entry in the diary of Maximillian B. Wellborn on February 22, 1940, he writes of his surgery: ‘I stayed in the hospital for nine days & he (Dr. Hugh Gray) dressed it every day & when I went home 3 or 4 more times. Expenses at the hospital $77.95 which includes room (private with bath) $7.50 a day, operating room $10.00, medicines & etc. $2.95. The room was good & the food too. So I have only kind words for Garner Hospital. Dr. Gray’s fee $150.00. Mutually agreeable.”
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D-Day
In the Spring of 1944, Americans anxiously awaited news of a European invasion. Radio reports announced D-Day on June 6, 1944.
The figures of her father and grandpa, sitting close by the radio, broke through her wistful thinking. She was surprised to see them. Normally, they would already be out feeding the animals. Her father’s neck was bent forward over the black box, his elbows were upright on his knees, and his whole body was stiff. Grandpa Chester was more relaxed, but his arms were limp by his slouching sides, and his eyes were fixed on the ceiling above. Ava didn’t dare move another step or say a word. Instead, she held her breath and listened to the clear, authoritative male voice coming through the box.
“Under the command of General Eisenhower, Allied naval forces, supported by strong air forces, began landing Allied armies this morning on the northern coast of France.”
There was a long pause, and a more somber male voice spoke.
“You have just heard Colonel Ernest Dupuy, Eisenhower’s press aide, confirm the invasion of Europe on June 6, 1944.”
There was a loud sigh from her parents’ bedroom, and Ava realized that her mother was also listening. They each knew that they had just been told where James was.
Excerpt from Songbird, Chapter 47
Its Been a Long Long Time
Songbird is a musical in words, celebrating big band and gospel music from the 1940s. My favorite song in the book is “It’s Been a Long, Long Time.” I love this song! Listen to Harry James and his band perform this song in 1945.
Greetings From Fort McClellan
The small town of Jacksonville, AL and neighboring Fort McClellan form the backdrop for Songbird and The War Song Series. During World War II, Fort McClellan brought the world to this small corner of east Alabama in the form of soldiers from all over the nation and German POWs from half way around the globe. Both of which would touch and change forever the lives of Ava Stilwell and her family.
Spoils of War
"Ava sighed at how the war gave confidence to and made heroes out of normal men and joined the most unlikely of individuals." Songbird
Like many who lived through the harsh reallity of World War II, Suzie Fowler found the love of her life on the battlefields of Europe while serving in the American Red Cross. But while occasionally fate turns war on its end to bring together two souls that might otherwise have never met, Suzie traveled half way around the world only to fall in love with a boy from home.
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