Tuesday, January 31, 2012

October 14, 1943


Sgt Stanley W Safford 39539976
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

October 14, 1943

How did the deer hunting come out?

My dear Mother:

I am finally getting down to this letter which I have planned on writing all day and part of yesterday.  But last evening I became stalled at the Service Club and did not get home until too late to write a letter.
I received the box with the wrist watch and the other things (the) day before yesterday and I am quite pleased to again have the watch and to know the time when I want it.  I also want to thank you for the delicious candy and the roll of film and I will soon have some pictures of myself for you which were taken on the balance of the roll in my camera.
The night before last it really rained here but yesterday morning I certainly noticed the cold when I got up and this morning I noticed it much more.  When the time comes for the wool I will be quiet glad to get into them.  I am growing quite tired of these khaki anyway since they are so hard to keep looking like anything and they are always at the cleaners.  The wool will also cut down the bills.
I really liked the pictures a lot, especially the ones that were taken at Aunt Maibelles’ and Ed’s.  Those on my camera are not as very bad either.  You can go ahead and send for a set of them for me.  I am planning on getting a letter off to him either tomorrow or the next day.  I received such a nice one from him.  And what surprises me is that I wrote Miss Mosher a letter on the second day back and I have not heard from her yet.  She has always been so very punctual in answering letters before this.  You might call her as just a casual check and inquire about it.
I imagine that the Christmas carols which you speak of are quite nice and I would like to hear them.  You showed me the material for your house dress and I liked it quite a bit.
It was too bad that you could not get tickets to the Ice Follies for you would have liked them if they were anything like they were when we went.
They use the gas here in the hospital once in a while and it is usually a mixture of two or three kinds and they use a mask affair hooked up to a set of small tanks.
I have mentioned the child of Cousin Gertrude just as tho she knew about it for I supposed that she did and I have not mentioned anything else about it.
I will be on the look out for lonely fellow and if I run across any of them I will send their names to you.  I think that it is a very good idea.
Your mentioning Christmas cards reminds me that I will have to get busy and get my lists ready and get the cards and get them addressed and already to send, and then I won’t have to worry about when the time comes.
Well we have had a hard day and they do become tiresome and then all I have done is a lot of paper work and my eyes become tired after a day or so of it.  But believe it or not I am well caught up in my work in fact more so than I have ever been.
Here it is getting late and my bed time, so Good Night for now.  And I will write again soon,

Your Son,
Stanley

October 10, 1943


Sgt Stanley W Safford 39539976
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas
 
October 10, 1943

My dear Mother:

It is raining outside today and it is beginning to dampen down the dust and wash the dust from the beginning to smell and look a little better.
Went into town yesterday and had dinner at a very nice cafeteria and after that went  to a show which I thought very good and you very likely will think the same when you see it.  Johnnie Come Lately[1] with James Cagney.
I have seen two shows in the past week, which is more than I had seen in the previous two months.  The other one I speak of is “The Constant Nymph[2] (the one you had seen) which was very good.  Mrs. Tedesco and myself went to dinner at an Italia place here and after that we went t the show.  In all we had a very enjoyable evening and the dinner was very good even tho I did get some of it on my shirt, which I had just put on clean that evening.  Gladys was planning on going to dinner with us but we received the news that her house had burned down the night before so she called and said that she would be unable to come along.  Fortunately I had not as yet given her the little Redwood vase or it would have been gone and she said it would be something for her to start again with.
Enclosed you will find a money order for twenty dollars which will be part payment on what I owe you.  The balance will come later and my next check will be a little larger anyway.  I am sorry that I am so tardy in paying you.
I received a letter from Ray Coates a couple days ago.  He was home on furlough from the 1st to 15th September and is now stationed at Camp Mystic[3] which is about 15 miles from here and he has been asked to help organize the Special Service office there by the lead of Special Services in this area.
It may turn into something good for him.  It is a camp for convalescing patients.  We now have about 400 of them here at  FSH.  They are keeping them in some of the large barracks.
Also received a letter from Alvin Whitney now T/5 and he had also been home on a furlough.  He as always had a lot of interesting news and he is planning on coming down one of these week-ends.
Today I received a letter from Marshall and he is starting back to school now and he speaks as tho he were not too happy there because of the attitude of the people etc.
I certainly feel sorry for him in his present position.  He certainly wrote a nice long letter and as always in his style quite nice.  I am about the same as yourself when it comes to looking ahead I never plan on anything because if I do I am very apt to be quite disappointed.  And as every day goes by my patience become quite stronger and I live with the thought in mind of keeping busy and waiting.  I suppose that is why I work so hard here and why I am always on the run.  Yes, I can well understand what you mean that perhaps is another reason why I do not have to go to town and get drunk.  I keep myself busy all the time and don’t allow myself to become idle.  That is also a reason why my money goes so rapidly.
I wanted to more or less surprise you about the Sgt’cy and I did nothing other than put the return on Jay’s letter the same as yours.  It did not coma as a surprise to me tho, and I have earned it where a lot of them did not.  And I have been told that it is a shame that I can go no farther.
As for the OCS, I have just about given up hopes and the reason is that they are really having a shake-up in the schools and are changing things quite a bit.
So maybe it won’t ever come my way.  But when I give up hopes it will come.
Major Grubin here in P&T Office says now that Major Skinner can have the job when he gets back, and he will go on DS to the hospital to study, so maybe it won’t be so bad after all.  He is a pretty good person even tho he is a Jew.
The dog operations were just experimental and I did not exactly approve of the last two since it is giving the dogs a lot of pain and they are very slow to recover.
We are expecting to start wearing the wool about the fifteenth of October although nothing definite as yet.  The nights here have been quite cold and we have to wear a field jacket in the morning to keep warm.
This last week they took twelve men from us to use on a train of trucks going to San Francisco POC.  They will be used as guards and will have a layover of three or four days in California.  Of course I never get in on anything of that type.  Only Mexicans and the rest of the louts get that type of thing.
Well the afternoon draws on and I still have some work to do on some more lists and be glad to get them done for we have been working on them for three days.
John Langstadt is in Denver and he expects to be leaving soon.  I well have to write him also very soon or he will get away.
I am wondering if Dad had any luck deer hunting or if he came back empty handed.
How is Aunt Nina getting along.  Has she had her operation yet?
Well I close giving you all my love as ever,

Your son,

Stanley


[3] Camp Mystic is a summer camp for girls on the South Fork of the Guadalupe River three miles southwest of Hunt in central Kerr County. It was established in 1926 by E. J. (Doc) Stewart, former head football coach at the University of Texas, who had founded Camp Stewart for boys in the same area two years earlier. Camp Mystic, known originally as Stewart's Camp for Girls, provided facilities for outdoor activities and instruction in roping, marksmanship, music, painting, and drama. In 1937 the camp was purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Gilespie Stacy and in 1968 was owned by a group of investors that included Stacy family members. The camp has remained in continuous operation since its founding, except for the years 1943–45, when it was leased by the federal government as a convalescent camp for army air corps veterans of World War II.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Frank R. Gilliland, Kerrville, Texas: A Social and Economic History (M.A. thesis, Stephen F. Austin State College, 1951). Kerrville Daily Times, February 25, 1968.
Rebecca J. Herring, "CAMP MYSTIC," Handbook of Texas Online - http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/xvc01 -  accessed January 31, 2012. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.

October 3, 1943


Sgt Stanley W Safford 39539976
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

October 3, 1943

My Dear Mother:

Here it is again Sunday and another letter to you.  For the first time in quite awhile the sun has come up in the morning nice and bright.
Will the story is now that the First Auxiliary Surgical Group was flown over to England when they went over.  I am still waiting for a letter from the boy that I knew in the group.
Last evening the clerk in HdQ and myself went up town and he bought a couple things to take home with him when he goes this coming Monday night.  He is going to be there in LA because his aunt lives there in Hollywood.  He is the one who is Jewish and has only been here in this country about four or five years.  Don’t be surprised if he calls you up, he mentioned doing so.  He bought a couple of those hand painted wooden trays and also a couple day hand painted piggy banks which were both exceptionally pretty especially the bright colors on the trays.  I think that I will send Ann Reid next door a little bank for I think that she would like one of them although they have to be broken when you wish to get the money out of them but they are so inexpensive.  While down there I also bought a couple of those very beautiful feather picture cards which I am going to enclose one of in this letter.  You will like them. I am going to get some more and have you keep them for me. So that someday I may frame them.
Well Major Skinner kept his promise this time as you have noticed by this time by the return address.
The clipping which you enclosed in your last letter about the heat in L.A. was a nice one, but I believe that it was about Thursday that I heard they were having a heat wave in L.A.
 I wish that I had had a lot more time at home when I could have enjoyed my phonograph and the records which I have and also those which you brought while I have been gone, and I could have had a lot more time for the garden also.
I received a card from Jay the other day and it was one of Luccas(?) so evidently he had eaten there for he spoke of not having the same waitress and of also having more olives.
The ointment is spelled Whitfeilds[1] I believe but I will get the correct spelling later.  Also I will get those things sent to Aunt Nina (Blue glass) before long.
I did accomplish the writing of twelve letters this last week-end and still have a few more to write although nothing urgent.  I will write Cousin Gertrude in the next couple days since I received a letter from her before I came home so it is about time that I write her one.
If you get a box of wild pecans one of these days don’t be surprised for one of these days I am going out down along the creek and gather a few.  They are just beginning to ripen and they should be very good for the wild ones always have a task which is entirely different.
The trees around here are now beginning to look as tho winter were really coming because they have shed all their small leaves and all that is left is the large one.  And the lawns around the large homes are beginning to become covered with them.  No longer is the Crape Myrtle in bloom and they are also beginning to look quite ragged.
I went down also yesterday and looked for some more elephants for Aunt Maibelle but they had none which were different than what I had already sent her. SO I will look somewhere else and try and find some that are different but not too expensive.  Could you sometime when down in Chinatown get a hold of a small package of Jessamine tea and sent it to me.  I was telling Mrs. Tedesco about it and she said that she had never tasted any of it.  What brought the subject up was she asked me if I liked hot tea and I told her yes.  She then said that she was going to have me and a couple others over some rainy afternoon for tea.
The picture of her in the blazer which I sent you, are very poor of her.  But you know what some of these amateur photographers are.  While on the subject she has a very pretty set of Blue Glass wine bottle and glasses which she bought down at the same place which those of mine came from.  She also has a wonderful lace table clot which is very old which she used at one of the buffet suppers I went to.
Well the afternoon drags on and I shall soon run out of news.  Major Kuhns was just in and is on his way out to pick up his father who has never had a plane ride out, at the airport for when he heard of the baby’s arrival he decided to fly down.
Give my regards to Aunt Nina and I will close now with lots of love,

Your son,

Stanley

5th Auxiliary Surgical Group Promotions 30 September 1943





September 30 (1943)


Sgt Stanley W Safford 39539976
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

Thursday Sept 30

My dear Mother,

I received your very welcome letter and the pictures today and was very glad to receive them.  I had been wondering about them.  Yes, the pictures of Joe very likely would quiet weird of him.  He has some very nice ones of himself all made up with stage material and the Chinese furniture.  But that was years ago and he of course has changed since then.  His mother told him to take all that junk off, but he still insisted so we took them.  What do you think of the Chinese furniture and screen which he painted?
Tonight we are going out on a night problem of Map Reading and it should be quite interesting.  We have not had one since I have been here.
Well, Major Grubin is back now with all his fancy and elaborate ideas of how an office should be run.  His idea of the more paper the better certainly outdoes anything that I have seen.
Major Skinner is going to be gone to Chicago for about fifteen days for the American Board and also for ten day leave.  He is going to try and make a special list’s rating in EEMT work.  He has been studying quite hard for it and I sure hope that he makes it.
They are going to have some more operations on the dogs here during the next few weeks and they should prove quite interesting.  I may even get a chance to assist with one or two of them. So far the officers have done all that type of thing but they perhaps will change and have a technician assist as scrub nurse or third on the operating team.
Well here we are in again after the field map reading and what a mess, we could not find any of the stakes and all I or shall I say, we, got out of the deal was wet feet and tired of walking around in the dark.  So finally we got tired and came in and we haven’t heard anything of it since then.
Here it is the next day and we have not heard anything yet of the map reading yet.
After we went to bed last night it rained quite hard but this afternoon or rather this morning it was quite clear and we went on the usual hike and I rather enjoyed it for it was just warm enough and nothing extreme as it was before in some cases either too hot or too cold.
If this letter seems confused it is because they are having interviews in here this afternoon and I have to be in here for the purpose of calling them in and the rest of the things that go to having these interviews.  The rest of the boys this afternoon are all off because they went out last night but here the office crews still is.  Always that way.
Major Skinner left today for Chicago and will be gone for about fifteen days.
I am going to miss him.  His friend Major Kuhns will also be gone for about 12 days since his wife had a baby recently.  He is quite overjoyed and has handed out about three boxes of cigars and is still going strong.  He is the one which I spoke of as being such a gentleman and quite diplomatic.  He is a dental officer and from what I hear he is one of the best dental officers we have.
Mrs. Tedesco said that Captain and Mrs. Foster of the Medical Service School was over to the house the other evening and they both raved over them.  I did not know it but her husband collects bookends and she has books for them all.
I am going to see Gladys one of these evenings and give her the little Redwood vase.
Well the afternoon drags on and the boys come in and out and the same old questions are asked again and again.
Sgt Ryan and Cpl. Moore asked me to go to town with them this afternoon but here I am sitting here.
Well I guess that I had better be closing now but I will write again soon and keep up on my writing to you folks at home.

As ever lots of love,
Your son,

Stanley

Sunday, January 29, 2012

September 26, 1943


Cpl Stanley W Safford
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

September 26, 1943

My dear Mother

Received your letter yesterday and as you guessed I was quite overjoyed at receiving it.  Mail s one of the things that I always look forward to with great anxiety and then after I get it I always feel quite happy for awhile especially after a letter from you.
You mentioned the expense of my trip.  Well it did not cost me so much as I thought it would and the expense was and is a small matter when it comes to my being able to be home with you.  You will never know how much it meant to me to be able to be home with you for even so short a time.
I have me amazed to write several letters in the last couple days and have quite a few more to write and then will be caught up with my letter writing and then can start answering them.
I want you to charge me for the telephone calls which I made and I will and intend paying you for them.  You also ask if you may send anything? I can not think of anything and besides you have done so much for me right now.  You are very likely still tired from all the work you done for me when I was home.
The day after my return we went on a hike out in the country and it did not tire me at all.  Then yesterday we marched up to the main post where they had a very interesting airplane exhibit for the purpose of airplane recognition and they really had some very fast as well as pretty airplanes and some of them really had the speed.  One of them dived down from an altitude of about 7000 feet to about 50 feet off the ground and then headed straight again.  They told us that almost ten percent of our ships brought down in the Pacific area were brought down from our own guns on land due to the great resemblance of the Jap ships to our own.  That is quite a high percentage.  They are also putting a blue circle around the entire insignia on our military planes in place of the red now on them since the red resembles the Jap so closely.
One of these days soon I am going to send home the Reader’s Digest which I have accumulated here on to you where you may read them and put them away for me.  I have just received the October issue and there are a couple very good articles in it already of what I have read and it has a very pretty Autumn cover on it. 
I have not seen Mrs. Tedesco as yet but will see her tomorrow.  She went to Fort Worth on the day that I arrived.  I hope that she likes the book ends.
It has been trying to rain all day here and has finally started.  I am very glad to have the rain since things really have needed it for some time.  Everything is so dusty out in the country.  The trees here have already begun to turn then leaves blown and they have begun to fall.  Things have really changed from hot summer to cool fall here in the very short time that I was home.  But we may still have some real warm weather after this spell of rain is over.
Mrs. Tedesco’s father says that they are going to have an early winter this year and a cold one.
We have had our afternoon meal already and it consisted of potato salad which was very good for a change but nothing like yours, cold sliced meat, cheese and hot chocolate and cookies.  Rather filling but we don’t need too much where we are not doing anything on a Sunday.
In my absence they brought back all the boys from the hospital which were on detached service so our company is quite full now but they well weed out a few more bad ones and then before we leave they will take something more out in the way of excess technicians which we have a few extra.  They are also beginning to place us all in groups or Surgical Teams and I hope that we will get a chance to do some actual work together before we go into action.  Did I tell you that the First Auxiliary had already arrived in England.  Which, of course, is one more sign towards is going to the Pacific since they already have three in Europe and Sicily and none so far in the Pacific area.  They have, in London, counting the First Aux., two such groups.  Rather indicatory of the future battle trends or where they expect to need them.
We now have 33 of our total of 132 officers needed.  This is not as fast as the First Aux. was in getting theirs.  Of course they take their sweet time about things of this type and they may do with us what they have done with the one in Sicily.  They have broken it in half and made two separate groups out of it.
My clerk is going on his furlough the fifth of October so I expect to be rather busy at that time but none of this work will interfere with me letter writing which I shall do a little more of from now on. I will have more time with winter coming to do such things.
Cpl Moore is back from the hospital now and his appendectomy is or was all right so he of course is very glad to be back after such a long time in a GI Hospital and I don’t blame him there one bit for they are a mess.
Sgt Ryan went up and specialled (?) his case for a week or so after his operation and the hospital seemed quite glad to have him do it.  They are very short of help especially good help.  And yet they do not seem to make any extra effort to get good help when the occasion arises for them to do so.  They have a lot of hopes running around there with four or five stripes on their arms that I had as students at the Service School and they were sure my prize students then.
I went to church this morning and the Lt. Col. Chaplain gave an interesting type of talk sermon which was very good and he also said that this was his last Sunday here and that he was going to be transferred to the head of a large section of churches etc.  He has always been a very good chaplain and yet he is no well bred high class type of person either.  He uses words such as “ain’t” and a few other of that same type. But they all come and go and there is also politics in their branch also, and they have to be just as crud as any others in the Army elsewhere.
Well the day drags on and I am beginning to run out of things to write about so will draw this letter to a close and will write again soon.
They operated on some digs here while I was gone and Sgt Ryan has them to take care of.  And I like to tell him that he is a fine male nurse now and if only his friends could see him now.

Always lots of love from your son,

Stanley

Sept 24, 1943


Cpl Stanley W Safford
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

Sept 24, 1943

Dear Folks,

Arrived here at 6:00pm last evening quite tired and dirty, the same as upon my arrival home.  Was too tired and had so many things to do that I did not have time then to write you a line so will do so now.
They have certainly got to sell me a Pullman ticket next time I come home for never again will I take a ride like that one.  The car was no better than the first one but I did at least have a seat and was it hot coming thru Yuma and of course there was no air conditioning so that was of course a great help, and was the wonderful delicious lunch a great for I only went to the dining car once on the entire trip and I want you to know how much I appreciate your firing(?) it for.  The venison sandwiches were certainly delicious.
Well, it seems that the group has certainly been having a time of it with special inspections and all the rest just to see how near ready we really are towards going overseas and a few are quite excited but the balance are not very excited and the Col. Has brought his wife down to live here for awhile which of course may be taken two ways.
That candy that Mrs. Miner gave me was certainly delicious and you should have taken some of it.
Come to find out I have that income tax thing here and was using it as a bookmark n that so I will look it over and see what I can make of it and send in whatever I have to mail in.  What was it that you said I had to do about it?
I want to write Nelson and I do not have his address so will you send it to me if you think of it in your next letter.  I believe that I have all the other addresses here that I will want.
The office here as it always did have a lot of changes and there are still a lot of things to be done and a lot more changes to be made but they will have to wait their turn.  They have discarded a lot of the bad ones from the group and perhaps will do more in the future.
This morning to start things off with a bang I took or rather went on one of their hikes and I was not a bit tired when I came back but some of the others who have come back from furlough sure felt weak and quite exhausted but of course from what I hear they didn’t spend too much time at home and all of it running around so there is very likely the reason for it.  I regret that I did not spend more time at home than I did because time was so short and I am not going to forget it for a long time and I am going to be looking forward to coming home on another furlough and then of course I would be more than glad to go home for good.
You certainly tried and succeeded in making my stay at home an enjoyable one and you perhaps are still tired from the work and the trouble I put you to.
I will have to get busy and write several short letters and once again get started on some correspondence and that will keep my time well occupied and I have made up my mind that from now on it is going to be a different story and I am going to do my work well but am not going to break my neck while at it as I have done in the past and I will get just as much out of it.  Because I get back to find the rest of them not exerting themselves any all because they are now at the top of their ladder and then can go no further.  I still have in the back of my mind of getting out of here and trying to get somewhere that I will be able to work up.
Well my time is growing short so will close now and will start another one very shortly and give you more details of my trip and make it a much longer one.  I want to thank you so very much for everything you have done for me and I shall never be able to repay you for it all.

Lots of love,

Stanley

Furlough September 1943


September 5, 43


Cpl Stanley W Safford
5th Auxiliary Surgical Group
Dodd Field
Ft Sam Houston
Texas

September 5, 43

My dear Mother:

This will more than likely be the last time that I will write you before coming home. I will send you a telegram prior to my leaving to let you know of what train I will be on and also when if I know I will arrive.  But if you are planning on meeting me you might play safe by calling the depot to find out when the train will arrive.  That way it will save you from waiting too long.
I am going into town this afternoon to buy my ticket and get that part of it done and taken care of.  I will have to go to the Southern Pacific Depot for it and then I will know how to get there when I leave here at twelve o’clock Tuesday night and actually get on the train at two o’clock.
Perhaps the Spider Lily will bloom for me when I am home.  I am really going to enjoy being among at my flowers again, and I am just dying to see my cymbidiums again, and my antiques will also be a welcome sight.
Well, we have had dinner which was very good and some very cold water which was very good tasting since the day is so warm.  We also had a banana cake of some kind which as so good although heavy.
I received a letter today from you and from Mrs. Matson which had a couple of pictures of Jonny which were very good.
I am like you in a way too excited to say very much now, so will close for now and will wire you when I leave.

Love from your son,

Stanley