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"This is the place on the highway 13 miles from Camp. I will write you a long letter monday. Love - Don -" The handwritten message from "Don"...
View full detailsSocial History: A bustling family message sent to Mr. & Mrs. Volkaert & Miss Bake in Springfield Gardens, Long Island. The sender writes a ...
View full detailsSocial History: The handwritten message from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Easton, Maryland, provides a personal look at daily life in July 1941: ...
View full detailsSocial History: The handwritten message from "Ella" to a "Dear Saidee" explains that Irving is taking a vacation as he is "in need of a change" an...
View full detailsSocial History: This card is a fascinating WWII "Home Front" artifact. Mrs. F. J. Halva used this free promotional card to request a "Fall & Wi...
View full detailsSocial History: The message is written by Pvt. Roy H. Bohn, a soldier stationed in San Francisco, to Mr. D.A. Lazer in Hollywood. Roy expresses his...
View full detailsSocial History: This postcard is a moving piece of military social history, capturing a brief holiday check-in from Pvt. Albert P. Marcelonis US...
View full detailsThis artifact represents an authentic piece of WWII U.S. military postal history. Mailed from Concordia, Kansas in December 1943, just months af...
View full detailsSocial History: The message reveals a snippet of daily life focused on domestic food preservation: "Dear Helen: Sept. 21 / Very glad to hear fro...
View full detailsSocial History: The card was sent from Nottingham to a recipient at 21 [Faded] Rd, Luton, Beds. Luton was a primary industrial target during the wa...
View full detailsSocial History: Written by a young nurse or medical student to her parents, documenting her first day moving into the hospital dorms: "Dearest M...
View full detailsAlma's message from Morenci, AZ, to Helen in Belmont, NC, capturing a slice of home-front life during World War II: "May I have a snapshot of...
View full detailsThis is a World War II patriotic military postcard sent by a Seabee stationed at the Naval Construction Training Center in Gulfport, Mississippi...
View full detailsSocial History: The handwritten message from "Emie" to Mr. Bert Couch in San Anselmo, California, is a powerful piece of disaster-related history: ...
View full detailsSocial History: Sent to Miss Bertha Levine, 423 Pulaski Street, Brooklyn, New York, with a humorous glimpse into wartime travel culture: "Dear...
View full detailsWritten during the height of WWII, the writer expresses a deep sense of homesickness while inquiring about their garden back home. "Dear Mrs Durb...
View full detailsThe short, handwritten pencil note—likely penned by a wartime clerk, military staff member, or intelligence analyst—offers a raw and humorous...
View full detailsSocial History: A sarcastic message written in dark blue ink by the officer to State Teachers College in Glassboro, New Jersey: "Hi Service...
View full detailsSocial History: This postcard offers a glimpse into mid-1940s Canadian tourism. It was postmarked on July 5, 1945, in Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré, Quebec—...
View full detailsSocial History: The message provides a rare look at mid-century medical travel: "Room 903 Wis. Hotel, Milwaukee Wis. Dear Friends—John was operated...
View full detailsSocial History: Following Japan's surrender in August 1945, thousands of American service members remained stationed on the captured island hub...
View full detailsSocial History: The sender writes to a "Dearest Jewel" in San Francisco about "Harry," who is in a nearby hospital. She mentions he can see the ver...
View full detailsSocial History: Typed by Pvt. John J. Reiser (Serial No. 43030851) to Mrs. Jerome B. Lister in Easton, Maryland while he was stationed at Fort Belv...
View full detailsSocial History: Mailed in July 1946, this card captures a moment when post-war travel was booming, but rationing and food shortages were still on p...
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