Skip to main content

Correspondence, 1944 January 1 - 1944 May 31

 File — Box: 3

Dates

  • 1944 January 1 - 1944 May 31

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research use.

Extent

From the Collection: 2.5 Linear Feet (6 boxes)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The Calvert C. McCabe World War II Letters consist of approximately five hundred letters and V-Mail (Victory Mail) items written by McCabe and addressed mostly to his widowed mother, Mrs. C.C. McCabe. The correspondence, from June 1942 through October 1945, spans McCabe's entire military career.

The letters provide an overview, almost diary-like description, of the life of a non-combatant officer serving in the European Theatre. Comments in certain letters suggest McCabe contemplated writing a compilation of his experiences after the war (see letter of 6/2/45.)

The letters discuss mostly the non-military aspects of this administrative officer's life: commentary, social and recreational activities, daily life concerns, descriptions of living quarters, surrounding countryside, weather, etc. Comments regarding food, the mail service, and requests for items appear very frequently. McCabe actively collected antiques while in England and Scotland. He was interested also in architecture and fashion (in Paris, he visited the Patou designer house). The acquisition of war souvenirs, while upon the continent, later become his main collecting focus.

Topics discussed include McCabe's attitudes toward women (12/20/43 and 6/8/45), African-Americans (11/28/43), United States men not serving with the military (10/26/44), married versus single United States soldiers (1/10/45), the German people (4/23-25, 1945), the French people (8/28/45), and American civilians (4/11, 6/2, 8/24/45). Some remarks concern Baltimore society and its activities. Letters recording McCabe's reaction to V-E Day (Victory in Europe Day), the dropping of atomic bombs, and V-J Day (Victory over Japan Day) provide additional insight.

Comments upon notable individuals and celebrities appear throughout the letters. Persons mentioned include golfer Bobby Jones (many references), Franklin D. Roosevelt's son, Elliot Roosevelt (4/11/44), Admiral Richard Byrd (11/18/44), Mickey Rooney (4/23 and 4/24/45), and Bob Hope (8/26/45). Reactions to Franklin D. Roosevelt's death (4/13/45) and Churchill's election defeat (8/31/45) are noted also.

McCabe describes displaced people, victims of the Nazis, and the chaos of post-war Europe. The plight of displaced persons was noted in letters from 4/5, 6/5, and 6/17/45. Concentration camp descriptions (they appear not to have been witnessed personally by McCabe) can be found in letters from 4/19 and 4/20/45. Testimony of tortures inflicted at Buchenwald, as described by a former inmate of this camp, appear in a 4/23/45 letter. Former German soldiers (prisoners of war?) though still in uniform, replete with field gear, labor in the French city of Laon (8/28/45) months after the cessation of conflict. Reflections on an impoverished, aristocratic Russian lady appeared in a note from 4/11/45.

The letters also provide descriptions of wartime European cities and include the following: Normandy (8/6 and 8/12/44), Paris (9/3/44, 3/18, 9/1 and 9/2/45), Cannes (3/4/45), Rheims (8/24/45), Laon (8/28/45), Marsielles (10/2/45), Aix-en-Provence (10/8/45), Brussels (9/20/44), various German cities/areas (3/30, 5/1, 6/24 and 8/16/45). McCabe also described London, England and certain cities in Scotland.

The McCabe letters cover also the months in Europe after V-E Day and V-J Day. From mid-August to October 11, 1945, McCabe endured an almost continual string of postponements before returning to the United States.

Creator

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750