Charles Gillispie Wartime Letters,

The collection consists of thirteen letters from Charles Gillispie home to his parents, Raymond Livingston Gillispie and Virginia Coulston, while he was stationed with the United States Army in France, Germany, and Austria during the final months of World War II in Europe in 1945. Letters are addres...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gillispie, Charles Coulston (Creator)
Format: Kit
Language:English
Subjects:
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520 2 |a The collection consists of thirteen letters from Charles Gillispie home to his parents, Raymond Livingston Gillispie and Virginia Coulston, while he was stationed with the United States Army in France, Germany, and Austria during the final months of World War II in Europe in 1945. Letters are addressed from France, often from his army post near Rouen, (March 9th to March 25th; April 9th to April 13th), Germany (March 30th; April 19th to May 1st), Austria (May 5th to May 8th), Bavaria (June 4th), and Camp Shelby in Mississippi (August 25th). In his detailed letters, Gillispie describes the state of the citizenry and infrastructure in the French and German countryside; the living conditions of the soldiers; learning of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's death, and later, the death of Adolf Hitler; abysmal conditions at German prison camps for United States prisoners of war; the perception of African American soldiers by southern white soldiers in integrated military units; visiting Hitler's mountain retreat in Bavaria; his anticipation of future military service in the Pacific; and other topics. Most of the letters are typed versions of handwritten letters, and several exist in two drafts. Included with Gillispie's June 4th letter from Bavaria is a printed map titled "Obersalzberg, Hitler’s Mountain Retreat." 
520 3 |a Consists of thirteen letters from Charles Gillispie (1918-2015) home to his parents, Raymond Livingston Gillispie and Virginia Coulston, while he was stationed with the United States Army in France, Germany, and Austria during the final months of World War II in Europe. His letters, which span from March 9th to August 25th, 1945, are addressed from France, Germany, Austria, Bavaria, and Camp Shelby in Mississippi, and describe the conditions for American soldiers and prisoners of war in Europe, the state of the people and infrastructure in the German and French countryside, and other topics 
610 2 0 |a Princeton University 
650 0 |a Soldiers' writings, American  |v Correspondence  |y 20th century 
650 0 |a World War, 1939-1945  |v Correspondence  |x Campaigns  |x Europe 
650 0 |a World War, 1939-1945  |v Correspondence  |x Personal narratives, American 
651 0 |a France  |v Correspondence  |x History  |x German occupation, 1940-1945 
651 0 |a Germany  |v Correspondence  |x History  |x Bombardment, 1940-1945 
651 0 |a United States  |v Sources  |x History  |y 1933-1945 
655 7 |a Correspondence  |y 20th century  |2 aat 
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