War Letters, World War II

Gentzler, Eula - Coll. 131
Hawker, Jessee Marvin - Coll. Hawker
Hughes, James Clark - Coll. 53
Langsdorf, Edgar - Misc. Landsdorf
Martin, John A. - Coll. 54
Nickell, Joe - Coll 98.5
Reichart, Holly Marks - Coll. 220
Smith, Wint. - Coll. 57
Stephens, Harry T. - Coll. 103
Thompson, Niel Baird - Coll. 752
The best examples of Kansas war correspondence during World War II came from
the Pacific Theater of Operations. John Martin provided us with two letters,
including a sample of his V-mail, sent to his uncle. V-mail was one of the innovations
new at the time. Service personnel were provided with V-mail stationery. After
the writer wrote out his letter on the stationery, the letter would go to censors
to check for any classified, confidential, or secret information. Any letters
bearing information that was considered "classified" or higher was painted over.
Then the V-mail stationery was sent to a microfilmer, who would film hundreds
of letters at a time. A small and light-weight roll of microfilm (containing
hundreds of letters) could be easily flown to the United States, where the film
was developed, and the letters projected onto photo-sensitive paper for copying.
Then copied pages were inserted into envelopes and sent to the addressee.
Also included in this collection is a series
of three letters from or concerning Navy Ensign Paul Ramsey Stephens, a pilot
whose plane crashed in July of 1945. His last letter to his parents, a telegram
from the Navy, and a letter written by Paul's father (written to Paul in the
hopes that he might still be alive) are found here. It seems that Harry T. Stephens,
Paul's father, wrote this letter as a form of therapy, helping him deal with
the loss of his son.
In the case of World War II, the best and most
graphic descriptions of war are seldom found in letters. In keeping with the
needs of wartime secrecy, the good stuff was almost always censored out (a
loose lip could sink a ship). Knowing better than to write about things
they knew would be censored, servicemen instead wrote about how much they missed
their loved ones. The best primary source documentation from combatants appears
in memoirs, written after the fact. This collection includes no examples from
the European Theater of Operations, as the letters from ETO participants (in
the K.S.H.S. manuscript collections) did not include any noteworthy material.
Kansas War Letters Online
For more information concerning Kansas history
and the resources at the Kansas Historical Society, contact the Library
Reference Desk, 785-272-8681, ext. 117. People interested in donating letters,
memoirs, manuscripts, or photographs should contact Nancy Sherbert, 785-272-8681,
ext. 303. People interested in donating museum objects should contact Blair
Tarr, ext. 427.
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to individuals' use of this material. Requests for commercial use should be
directed to the Director of the Library & Archives Division.
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