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Box 4253.006

 Container

Contains 11 Results:

Correspondence, 1943

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 005
Scope and Contents From the Series: This collection contains correspondence from Private O.E. Bruce Jr. to his parents. Most letters are written on government stationery from Camp Wheeler, Georgia, during World War II. He informs his parents about the harsh conditions, the injuries of others, and the dangers of serving in the Army. He writes about how he is constantly busy and tired, and his superiors make them do drills at night. He writes his parents of his wife Genevieve's visit to him. He is injured while serving and put...
Dates: 1943

Correspondence, January-March 1944

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 006
Scope and Contents From the Series: This collection contains correspondence from Private O.E. Bruce Jr. to his parents. Most letters are written on government stationery from Camp Wheeler, Georgia, during World War II. He informs his parents about the harsh conditions, the injuries of others, and the dangers of serving in the Army. He writes about how he is constantly busy and tired, and his superiors make them do drills at night. He writes his parents of his wife Genevieve's visit to him. He is injured while serving and put...
Dates: January-March 1944

Correspondence, April 1944

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 007
Scope and Contents From the Series: This collection contains correspondence from Private O.E. Bruce Jr. to his parents. Most letters are written on government stationery from Camp Wheeler, Georgia, during World War II. He informs his parents about the harsh conditions, the injuries of others, and the dangers of serving in the Army. He writes about how he is constantly busy and tired, and his superiors make them do drills at night. He writes his parents of his wife Genevieve's visit to him. He is injured while serving and put...
Dates: April 1944

Correspondence, June-August 1944

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 008
Scope and Contents From the Series: This collection contains correspondence from Private O.E. Bruce Jr. to his parents. Most letters are written on government stationery from Camp Wheeler, Georgia, during World War II. He informs his parents about the harsh conditions, the injuries of others, and the dangers of serving in the Army. He writes about how he is constantly busy and tired, and his superiors make them do drills at night. He writes his parents of his wife Genevieve's visit to him. He is injured while serving and put...
Dates: June-August 1944

Correspondence, September-December 1944

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 009
Scope and Contents From the Series: This collection contains correspondence from Private O.E. Bruce Jr. to his parents. Most letters are written on government stationery from Camp Wheeler, Georgia, during World War II. He informs his parents about the harsh conditions, the injuries of others, and the dangers of serving in the Army. He writes about how he is constantly busy and tired, and his superiors make them do drills at night. He writes his parents of his wife Genevieve's visit to him. He is injured while serving and put...
Dates: September-December 1944

Correspondence, 1945

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 010
Scope and Contents From the Series: This collection contains correspondence from Private O.E. Bruce Jr. to his parents. Most letters are written on government stationery from Camp Wheeler, Georgia, during World War II. He informs his parents about the harsh conditions, the injuries of others, and the dangers of serving in the Army. He writes about how he is constantly busy and tired, and his superiors make them do drills at night. He writes his parents of his wife Genevieve's visit to him. He is injured while serving and put...
Dates: 1945

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 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 011
Scope and Contents From the Series: This collection contains correspondence from Private O.E. Bruce Jr. to his parents. Most letters are written on government stationery from Camp Wheeler, Georgia, during World War II. He informs his parents about the harsh conditions, the injuries of others, and the dangers of serving in the Army. He writes about how he is constantly busy and tired, and his superiors make them do drills at night. He writes his parents of his wife Genevieve's visit to him. He is injured while serving and put...
Dates: 1940 - 1950

Correspondence, January-July 1943

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 001
Scope and Contents From the Series: The collection contains 111 letters from Major William W. Davis of the United States Army Medical Corps Tenth Evacuation Hospital to his wife, Mary Davis of Louisville, Kentucky, while he was stationed in New Guinea from 29 January 1943 through 19 September 1943. In October 1943 he was transferred as a patient to the 363rd Station Hospital and then to the Forty-Second General Hospital in Australia to recover from typhoid fever from January through March 1944. He writes to his wife Mary about...
Dates: January-July 1943

Correspondence, August-November 1943

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 002
Scope and Contents From the Series: The collection contains 111 letters from Major William W. Davis of the United States Army Medical Corps Tenth Evacuation Hospital to his wife, Mary Davis of Louisville, Kentucky, while he was stationed in New Guinea from 29 January 1943 through 19 September 1943. In October 1943 he was transferred as a patient to the 363rd Station Hospital and then to the Forty-Second General Hospital in Australia to recover from typhoid fever from January through March 1944. He writes to his wife Mary about...
Dates: August-November 1943

Correspondence, January-February 1944

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 003
Scope and Contents From the Series: The collection contains 111 letters from Major William W. Davis of the United States Army Medical Corps Tenth Evacuation Hospital to his wife, Mary Davis of Louisville, Kentucky, while he was stationed in New Guinea from 29 January 1943 through 19 September 1943. In October 1943 he was transferred as a patient to the 363rd Station Hospital and then to the Forty-Second General Hospital in Australia to recover from typhoid fever from January through March 1944. He writes to his wife Mary about...
Dates: January-February 1944

Correspondence, March 1944

 File — Box: 4253.006, Folder: 004
Scope and Contents From the Series: The collection contains 111 letters from Major William W. Davis of the United States Army Medical Corps Tenth Evacuation Hospital to his wife, Mary Davis of Louisville, Kentucky, while he was stationed in New Guinea from 29 January 1943 through 19 September 1943. In October 1943 he was transferred as a patient to the 363rd Station Hospital and then to the Forty-Second General Hospital in Australia to recover from typhoid fever from January through March 1944. He writes to his wife Mary about...
Dates: March 1944