Frank Gordon Bradley World War II correspondence

Frank Gordon Bradley's World War II correspondence is comprised of approximately three hundred letters and V-mails written from Bradley to his family in Connecticut between 1942 and 1945. Scattered among his outgoing letters are a few incoming letters from his family members, clippings, postcar...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bradley, Frank Gordon (Creator)
Collection:Frank Gordon Bradley World War II Correspondence
Collection Number:3548
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects and Genres:
Online Access:Link to finding aid
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Physical Description: 1.0 Linear feet ; 3 boxes
Access: The collection is open for research.
Summary: Frank Gordon Bradley's World War II correspondence is comprised of approximately three hundred letters and V-mails written from Bradley to his family in Connecticut between 1942 and 1945. Scattered among his outgoing letters are a few incoming letters from his family members, clippings, postcards, programs, and other ephemera that Bradley had collected. When HSP received the letters, the majority still in their original envelopes, they were bundled in groups according to Bradley's station, for example, all his letters from Fort Riley were together. Within each bundle, the letters were arranged chronologically. The letters have been unfolded and re-housed according to these groups and have been placed in chronological order. All incoming and outgoing letters have been filed together and the V-mail (both originals and microforms) only appears among Bradley's 1945 letters from Europe. Bradley, who signed all his letters as "Gordon," wrote most often to his mother and father and to his sister Janet, usually on the same or consecutive days. Even though he usually talked about the same topics in these letters, those to his mother and father tended to be more formal, while those to his sister were more relaxed. He also occasionally wrote to his other sister, Frances, but there are few of her letters in the collection. There are also a couple of letters to Bradley from other friends. These letters present a very cohesive narrative of Bradley's life between April 1942 and December 1945. Though he was not allowed to discuss the exact details of his work, his letters are far from vague. He often talked about the weather, his meals, the men he served with and under, his furloughs and travels to other cities, and his daily experiences. "Here your fourth child is in the dentist's office here at camp -- just getting my bridge fixed," he wrote on 14 August 1942, "...To tell the truth, I broke it eating one of those well-known Kansas steaks -- it was well worth it." He also sent many notes of thanks regarding care packages from his family. "Your wonderful box of cookies arrived in perfect shape," he wrote from Fort Riley on 28 June 1942, "and they were good...they are a delicacy in these here parts!" On occasion though, he wrote at length about certain aspects of his service. For example, on 6 March 1943, writing from Fort George G. Meade in Maryland, he discussed rifle practice, noting "we're shooting the Garand or M-1 at 200 or 300 yards slow and rapid fire. The rifle as you probably know is semi-automatic, gas operated and clip fed." Bradley was deployed overseas in late 1944. "Don't know whether it was a very quiet crossing or not," he wrote of his travel to "somewhere in England" on 24 November 1944, "it seemed to be, although the boat did rock a little a couple days....Very few were ill." His letters from Europe remained congenial and he continued to relay tales of the people he met and the places he went. He summed up his situation in a letter of 11 December 1944, "When I write about visiting places in England, and don't talk about my work, please don't imagine it's all just one tour, because we are all quite busy and working hard, but cannot, for reasons you can well understand, talk about what is or isn't even daily routine." He only made passing references to major events, such as D-Day, V-E (Victory over Europe) Day, and the Purple Heart he received for his participation in the Empire Javelin Disaster of December 1944. Among these letters are a few instances of censorship in the form of phrases that were cut out from his letters.
Frank Gordon Bradley was born in Branford, Connecticut, and served with the United States Army during World War II. He attended the University of Pennsylvania in the 1930s where he majored in journalism. In the 1950s he moved to Philadelphia, first to Germantown and then to Mount Airy. This collection consists of approximately three hundred letters written by Bradley to his family in Connecticut during World War II. His letters originated from various army bases throughout the country including Fort George Gordon Meade, Maryland; Fort Sam Houston, Texas; Camp Davis, North Carolina; Fort Riley, Kansas; and Camp Crowder, Missouri. In his letters, Bradley talked about family and friends, requested supplies, and discussed what he could about his daily life in the army. There are also a few scattered letters to Bradley from his family.