More
of Dick’s diary:
May
14 – Got up pretty early. Boarded B-17 at 11, flew over Mundesley and the Ruhr
Valley, what gutted area. Landed North of Lyon (France). Went by truck to east of Reims. Got chowed up and typhus shot. Chicken, ice tea, white bread, butter,
corn & snap beans. Got going at 10:30. Rode truck into town, train pulled
out about 1:00. Weighed Tonight – 73 Kilos.
May
15 – Slow train 06:00. Stopped at Chaulnes for breakfast, milk, beans, diced
carrots, tuna, coffee and sliced peaches. (May 15 is the birthday of my son
Matthew Harvey and his son Wells.) Lunch – boned turkey, white bread, coffee,
orange marmalade and peach. Stopped train at Serqueux (?), saw close up of
first American girl WAC – got to St. Valery about 6:30 or 7, sweated out a
shower & delousing till after 12. In a large transit camp (Camp Lucky
Strike).
(Note:
The U.S. Army set up a series of what they called “The Cigarette Camps,” named
thus so the Germans wouldn’t know where they were located. Camp Lucky Strike
was situated at Saint Valery-en-Caux, France, on the northern French coast just
west of Le Harve, between Fecamp and Dieppe, on the site of a former World War
II German airstrip. Originally a transit camp for deployed soldiers during the
war, it became a collection area for POWs when the war ended. Twelve thousand
tents housed more than 100,000 soldiers. The military headquarters were located
in the Castle of Janville near the camp. )
“Still
Waiting”
May
16 – We sunbathed and laid around all day. What chow lives. Ran into Chuck
(Charles Doerring who was “The Miss Zeke’s” gunner) & Eide (Chester Eide, who
was “The Miss Zeke’s” ball turret gunner) tonight at Red X recreation hall.
May
17 – Just another day. Mailed two letters. Thought we were moving over “B”
area. Saw Phil (Phillip Crum, who was “The Miss Zeke’s” co-pilot. All three
crew members are shown here with my father.)
May
18 – Sick all day. Have the GI’s. Nothing to do anyhow. (My father said that
someone must have not washed the cooking pots very well. This was the first
time he had that sickness in all his time in Europe)
May
19 – Gordon & I went over to D area, picked up some GI shoes – This
afternoon walked over to the beach, small deserted French village, saw some of
the Atlantic wall. Went to bed after a 5 PM chow.
May
20 – Rained like H. Got rain coat & German haircut. Tonight Phil & I
went over to see Doerring & Eide – saw Duney Bowers, P38 Pilot shot down in
Jan.
May
21 – Still lying around. Went over to Doerring, Eide & Duney again, slept
all afternoon, saw John T. Wilson
May
22 – Rainy again. Went to personnel speech this afternoon by Lt. Col. Waldrop
Smith; General Eisenhower spoke to us also. He was quite a surprise. Tonight
went over to “D” area, saw an enlisted man from Lambert’s crew, Stober had a
lot of dope on the sqdn. Went down June 13.
(I
found this clipping from the newspaper Stars
and Stripes –
Ike
Pledges Freed PWs He’ll Get ‘Em Home---and Soon, Too
By
Charles F. Kiley, Stars and Stripes Staff Writer
ST.
VALERY, France, May 23 – Gen. Eisenhower yesterday told more than 40,000
repatriated American prisoners of war that he was personally doing everything
to get them home as soon as possible. The Supreme Commander, speaking over a
public-address system from atop a truck said he had issued orders for
American-bound ships carrying liberated PWs to be loaded to capacity event to
the extent of asking men to share individual bed and to sleep in shifts in
order to fulfill their wishes of getting home soon “even if we have to swim.” The
repatriates captured from two months to two years ago, have been here awaiting
shipment home. Some have been here only a few days, others three weeks. Gen.
Eisenhower spoke personally with more than 100 men during his visit and joined
one group for lunch. He reminded the men of the war still waged against Japan. “There
is a great deal of activity now in progress to take care of the war in Japan,”
he said, “and if we can supply the shipping for you immediately it is only
because we much also think of your fellow soldiers fighting in the Pacific. Speaking
for everyone in America, I was to express our gratitude to you all in helping
defeat Germany. You men carried the ball for us and we will not forget it.”)
May
23 – Just another day of laying around – all but four of the fellows went
May
24 – Went over to see Mitch, Doe and the boys – They have their clothes, looks
like we will be here a while
May
25 – Still waiting. Went over to see Mitch, Doe & the boys, Went to a
movie.
May
26 – Got our clothes today, sewed on clothes, wrote Anita
May
27 – This afternoon, Bud, Monk & I went into Cany (Cany-Barville), traded cigs
for liquor, went to bed pretty early
May
28 – Fooled around all afternoon. Sellers, Monk & I went into St. Valery.
Got back about 10:20
May
29 – Sellers, Monk & I went to Dieppe, nice town, but couldn’t say long as
M.P. ran us out. Tonight Bud, Monk & I went to Cany (Cany-Barville). Got
back about 10, pretty tired
May
30 – Laid around, got GI’s again. Moved to “D” area.
May
31 – Got physical and processed. Heard Alec Templeton (Welsh composer, pianist
and satirist who had a radio show in the 1940s) tonight. Was he good. Weight
153 – shoes & pants
My father traded some cigarettes with a German guard for a camera. He took most of these photos and many others with that camera. I'm so grateful to have these photographs like this one of some poppies on the side of a French country road. Only
a couple more entries of this diary to go.