George Wilson Writes
from Cuba
U.S.S. Vestal
Guantanama Bay, Cuba
Feb. 16, 1919
Dear Editor:
We are now at the southern drill grounds but expect to be back
at Hampton Roads by the middle of April. The Atlantic fleet will assemble there
then and the various ships will have a regatta, boat racing, ball games, etc.
The weather here is ideal, warm, most too warm. A sameness.
We get all the fresh fruit and vegetables we want here. Bananas cost us 15
cents per dozen (5 cents each in R’ham). Oranges and grapefruit cost 20 and 25
cents per dozen, and we get the best.
While in Hampton Road we had several cases of flu, but have
none here.
With best wishes to the paper, and assuring you I look for
it eagerly, I am,
Yours very truly,
George T. Wilson
-=-
Wm. J. Covington
Writes
Battery C, 151st.
F.A.
42nd
Division, Germany, Jan. 21st, 1919
Dear Parents:
Hope you are all well; am well myself and getting on nicely.
We spent Christmas in Germany and had a good time, though of course we longed
for home and missed the “home” touch. But we are here for business, and we make
the best of things.
We have fairly good weather here; rains but little and not
very cold. In France we had rain almost all the time.
It makes a fellow almost boil to think how terribly France
has been devastated by the Huns, and then to see the contrast of these sleek
Germans who cried “quits” before their own land had been touched. Seems like
justice for the Huns to have had the same medicine the French got.
Haven’t heard from you all since I came over. My mail seems
to have gone wrong. Hope we’ll soon start back for the states. Give my love to
my relatives and friends.
William J. Covington
-=-
Letter from Walter
Shaw
St. Blin, France
Jan. 28, 1919
Editor Post-Dispatch:
Just a short letter to thank you for the good old home town
paper received through Corp. Furman Jones who is a close friend of mine. We
boys from old Richmond county stick together and we all hope to come back to
Rockingham some old day and meet all of our good friends. We are now in a small
village of about 500 and a very old town. We are about 20 miles of Joan of
Arc’s home and we visit it very often.
Well, as I am writing this by candle light, and it’s not
very good, I will close. I want to say a good word for the Red Cross. They have
been our best friends and always ready to do anything they can for us.
With best wishes for them all and with love to all of my
friends,
Walter W. Shaw
Battery C 316, F.A.
American Expeditionary Forces
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