Wednesday, June 8, 2011

December 8, 1953

Tues Dec 8, 1953

Dear Mom, Dad, and Snapper

I thought I had better write you a letter so you would know I was still thinking of you.  I studied last night and didn’t have time to write.  I thought I would give my talk tomorrow but I wont give till Thursday.  I haven’t had any mail for a couple of days.  I have some mail at the post office but when I went over to get it tonight they were closed.  I will get it tomorrow.

School is going OK so far.  I took a test the other day and got 29 out of 30.  That was on CBR.  We had a map reading test today but I don’t know the score on it yet.  I think I did ok on it.  Thursday I also will give my PT test or class.

 I went to the show tonight and saw Return to Paradise with Gary Cooper.  It was a good picture.

 Time goes fast here and it won’t be long till I’ll be back at the company.  I hope I can get over 900 points while I am here.  So far I am doing OK and I haven‘t had any demerits or gigs yet.  Well I don’t know much more so I will close for now.  I have a lot to do.  I’ll write again later.
Love, Ted

December 6, 1953 (letter to Snapper)

Sunday  Dec 6, 1953

Dear Snapper

How are you.  I guess you are being a good boy like you always were.  How do you like school.  What would you like to have Santa bring you for Xmas.  Your Daddy is in school now and I am learning jus like you are.  I sent Baba some Korean money.  10 Hawn, 10 Won, 5 Won.  Hawn and Won are the same thing.  It takes 180 Won to make one GI Dollar. I also sent some military script.  That is what we use in place of silver.  They have 5, 10, 25, and 50 cents in the same size.  The one dollar is a little bigger and the 5 and 10 dollar ones are larger than the one dollar.  I got you letter the other day.  You sue can write good.  Your daddy has one stripe now so I will send you one for your jacket and also a patch that I got from the Korean PX.

Monday, June 6, 2011

December 6, 1953

Sunday  Dec 6, 1953

Dear Mom, Dad, and Snapper

Well I  have finished my first week now.  It wasn't to bad.  I give my first talk  Wed  Dec 9.  It will be for 10-12 min and on anything you want to talk about.  I think mine will be on the Phonetic Alphabet.

I was on guard Friday night and didn't get much sleep.  Last night I went to the show and saw Kansas City Confidential.  I saw it once before. 

This is the first letter I have written you sense Thursday so you will probably go awhile before you get any letters.  Yesterday I sent  some more gifts home to you and Dad.  Remember I sent 2 things home once before.  They have mail order places here at the school.  I sent 3 things this time.  They said it will be about 60 days before you get it.  There isn't to much but I thought the things I sent were pretty and that you might have some use for them.  I hope everything gets there in good shape.  Let me know.  I could not afford to send them airmail so I sent them parcel post.

I still have my cold.  I can't seem to get rid of it.  I am really tired of it.  It doesn't bother me except for my coughing  . 

Yesterday I gave my squad drill.  I think I did OK on it.  I don't know what I made on it.

I wrote Llewellyn a letter.  I think you saw his picture in one that I sent home.  He is a red headed guy.  He use to be in my squad in basic and bunked next to Martin and myself.  He is from Center, Mo. 

I guess the mail is slow because it is during the Xmas season.  Xmas cards and packages.  I mailed Mr. Sharps and Jacques Xmas cards to their old address.  I forgot they moved.  I hope they get it.  The only two people I missed was Corley and Stafford. 

How did you like Ted Lewis?  He is an old timer isn't he. 

Well I hated being away on Thanksgiving but it is just the way is is.  I will be here at the school over Xmas.  I am going to try to go back to the company Xmas and see the boys.  All the packages you sent will probably come here.  I think it probably takes  a day or two  to get here from the company even though it is only two miles away.

This will be my first Christmas away from home.

I have just had 3 letter s from you, Nov 23, 24, 25 and one package.  The cookies sure were good.

How did Jim and Roslyn like it at Thanksgiving.  Daisy sure wrote a nice letter.  Not long but she has nice writing and spelling.

Guthmiller and I were going to go back to the company today but I don't think I will.  I sent some clothes to the laundry last night and I also got my 2 shirts back from the tailor.  They are pretty nice.  They have cuffs on them, patch, stripes, pockets in the sleeve, seems sewed in them, name plates etc.  I got hold of a couple of fatigues shirts before I came here to school and had them fixed this way. 

The school is going OK.  Seems funny, there are Sgts, corporals, etc int he class and they don't have anymore say than I do.  Well guess I will close now.
Love, Ted

Monday, May 16, 2011

December 3, 1953

Dec 3, 1953

Dear Mom, Dad, and Snapper

I got a letter and a package from you tonight.  The cookies wee really good.  I was glad to get Lewellen's address.  I wrote to him a while back but haven't heard from him.  He said he was in the 65th Rgt.  They are just down the road about 3 miles. 

Today was a fairly good day.  We just had classes.  Yesterday was a real day.

About 4 PM a major came to our class and asked for 12 people to go on a raid on a camp just outside of the school area.  He said it may be a communist group or guerrilla outfit.  I think about everyone raised their had to go.  I was one of the guys who got selected.  We got 4 clips of ammo and left.  I knew that they had some money and clothes stolen in our camp area and other GI stuff.  Also women had been found going in and coming out of GI tents in the night making money off the boys.

We slipped up to where the camp was ans spread out in a line.  We attacked the camp and moved in.  Another guy and I were the first ones there and we ran up on some one laying on the ground covered up with blankets.  We held our rifles on them and hen took hold the blanket with our other hand and pulled it off.  There were two moosie (note: Korean women) sleeping there.  We liked to scared them to death.  After they calmed down they thought we had come up to see them but the Major showed up.  We searched the mossie or GI money, they had all kinds in the blanket.  We also caught a Japanese boy running away.  The other squad caught 3 mossie one Korean civilian boy and another one got away.  We took the 5 mossies and the other two back to camp.  The major said the boy could be a red agent and he would let us know if they could find anything out.  It was an interesting experience and I will probably always remember it. (note: he might have always remembered it but he never mentioned it later in life, at least not to me.)

Well last night I went to the show and saw a fairly good pictured with Guthmiller.  Tonight I got a haircut and my laundry and took some more shirts to be tailored.  I got guard tomorrow night - I will be on the gate. 

Well I guess that's about all I know for now.  I'll try to write again later.  I got a letter from Jim Prather tonight also.  That lets me know where everyone is except Reynold and Thiderman.
Love, Ted

PS: The cookies were really good, thanks.

Sunday, May 15, 2011

A Slite Departure

Spy Dad

Dad left me two items when he died. One was a box of letters he had mailed home from the time he went into the army until he was discharged. The other was an envelop with letters from a woman who I shall call Marcia Smith. The letters dad sent home are interesting and when I read them it is sort of like visiting with him when he was 25 years old. Those letters will comprise a section of my blog at a later date.

The letters from Marcia however were the letters I had waited several years to review. There were about 12 letters. They were mailed the first of each month to Dad while he was in Korea. The letters are a little newsy, nothing romantic, just friendly little tid bits of information from back home. Marcia however lived in Eldon, Missouri and Dad of course was from Independence. Marcia was doing something very common back then, sort of a patriotic thing - writing the boys who were fighting the bad guys to keep them remembering what they were fighting for.

My name was mentioned a couple of times in the letters but mostly just in response to letters Dad had apparently sent her. For the most part the letters were humdrum, poorly written many times, awkward sentence structures, but I guess for a soldier far away any news about the home front is welcome. So why might you ask yourself had I been looking forward to reading these letters for several years.

When I retired from the military Dad told me that he had a box of letters with my name on it and when he died he wanted me to open it and read the contents. He then went on to tell me that there was a series of letters in the box from a Marcia Smith of Elden, Missouri and I was to pay special attention to those letters. Marcia he said was his "handler." He went on to tell me a story.

After receiving some special training by Naval Intelligence, Dad and some other men were sent to different parts of Korea. Their job if they happen to be captured was to supply information through letters handled by the Red Cross as to what was really happening in the POW camps. The information the army had been receiving about those camps were incomplete and confusing and together with the fact that there had been fewer escapes from prison camps than in any other war, they wanted to know why.

They gave him an address of Marcia Smith, 221 Elm Street, Eldon, Missouri. After he arrived in Korea he was supposed to write her, send information in code to keep from losing the skill he had committed to memory, and she in turn would write back in code answering questions he might have asked and asking new ones. They continued their correspondance for a year.

Dad said that the last letter he sent to Marcia said he was returning home the following month and would really like to meet her. She responded that she did not think that would be a very good idea because the boy friend she had now was the jealous type and it would just cause problems. Dad said he wrote back and told her he understood and it had been nice visiting with her and would send her a Christmas card or some such thing. She wrote one more letter back and said that that would not be a good idea either but she would make it a point to keep track of him and if she ever needed anything she would contact him. Dad dropped the issue, will almost.

When he got back to Independence one of the first things he did was to borrow a car and drive to Eldon. He found that 221 Elm Street did not exist.

Twenty years went by Dad was a chief flight instructor for Wilson Flying Service. One of his students was a local secret service agent who wanted to learn to fly so it would be easier to transfer to the border patrol. He said the service was sort of boring anymore. The agent said he just stood around and watched people and made pointless contacts for other agenicies. After one of the lesson the agent said he had a friend that wanted to meet Dad. Sure Dad said, where and when. The agent told dad that the parking lot at Wilson's would be fine and how about midnight that night.

Dad was a little taken aback, but went along with the plan. Dad did not recall or choose to tell me the conversation that took place that night but the up shot was that the guy he met asked Dad if he would be interested in running an airport for the firm he represented. Dad said he might be but where was it exactly he was talking about. The guy told Dad he could not tell him right then, but it was some place in southeast Asia. The guy told him they did not need an answer right then but did in a day or two. He would be in touch. "Oh, by the way," the guy said in parting, "Marcia says hi."

Dad turned down the job and never mentioned anything about it to anyone except my grandfather and me.

At Dad's funeral there were two retired FBI agents as honorary pallbearers and some flowers from some one that only signed the card, "Thanks, MS"

Friday, May 13, 2011

December 1, 1953

Dec 1, 1953

Dear Mom, Dad, and Snapper

I finished another day today.  About the same as yesterday.  I got the pictures back that Guthmiller took one day.  They were developed in the Korean PX.  They don't do to good a job but I thought you might like to have them anyway.  I think my first talk will be a week from tomorrow.  It will be 10 to 12 min long. I don't know what I will talk about yet.

I got you letter you mailed Nov 23.  I forgot about Corley and Stafford (note: neighbors.) I am glad you had their address on that piece of paper.. 

You asked about the school.  It is about 2 or 3 miles down the road from the 5th RCT.

I haven't got the packages you wrote about yet.  Not since the Thanks Giving package.  I will probably get all the packages here and a little later.  I will be here Xmas too.  I think I will try to go back to the company. 

It rained and hailed last night and today.  Hardest I have seen it.

I am squad leader for 3 days now.  We change every 3 days.  I may get to be platoon Sgt or leader before I leave. 

I bet you all look nice in your new clothes  I am glad you get to buy new clothes once in awhile. 

I got paid today and drew 93 dollars.  I put 50 in deposit.  Next month I may put a little more.  I should draw 109 next month.  I still have my cough.   It doesn't bother me to bad but enough to wake me up once in awhile and make me a little horse.

Well I don't know much more to write.  I don't have much time to write but I will try to write as much as I can.  I clean up every night and clean my rifle and then I study for awhile each night.
Love, Ted

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

November 30, 1953

Nov 30, 1953

Dear Mom, Dad, and Snapper

I finished my first day.  This morning a Col talked to us and that was the first hour.  After that we had a class on map reading, PT, and leadership.  My first talk will be next week some time.  It will be from 10-12 min.  I don't know what to talk about yet.  I hope I make it OK.  We have two more talks after that, one for 18 min and the other for 25 min.  You have to get 700 points to graduate and if you get 900 points you get a promotion when you get back to your outfit.  There are 1000 points altogether.

Our food here is plenty good compared to what we get at the company.  Tonight I took some fatigue shirts to the laundry and bought some PFC stripes and patches at the Korean PX.  I got a hair cut at the PX last night.  They have a movie here every night but I haven't gone yet.  We wear our thermo boot here in the morning.  They have had 5 cases of frost bite in the last class.  Today was payday.  I didn't get paid yet.  I think they will bring my money up tomorrow.  I don't really need it though.  Well I don't have much more to say.  My mail will be 2 or 3 days getting here.  I'll try to write a letter every day.
Love, Ted