Local veterans reminisce wartime correspondence at Churchill Museum's "Mail Call' exhibit

Honor Flight, Postal Customer Council host tour; US Postal Service unveils Medal of Honor Stamp for Korean War Army, Navy

Bill Wolff of Columbia and Richard White of Fulton swap stories about military service and mail while deployed. Central Missouri Honor Flight and the National Churchill Museum hosted veterans for the traveling Smithsonian exhibit "Mail Call." Many veterans learned about mail before and after their service times and recalled their own mail call stories.
Bill Wolff of Columbia and Richard White of Fulton swap stories about military service and mail while deployed. Central Missouri Honor Flight and the National Churchill Museum hosted veterans for the traveling Smithsonian exhibit "Mail Call." Many veterans learned about mail before and after their service times and recalled their own mail call stories.

Nearly 70 years later, World War II veteran Richard White can still picture the letters that came from his wife during his service.

"The letter was always sealed with her lipstick kiss on the back of it," White, a Fulton resident, said Thursday.

White was one of dozens from the area to tour the traveling Smithsonian Exhibit "Mail Call" at the National Churchill Museum. Central Missouri Honor Flight and Central Missouri Postal Customer Council organized the trip for veterans. Many made the trip via buses in Columbia but some who lived closer, like White, drove on their own.

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AP

A float depicting the cow that jumped over the moon passes during a Thanksgiving Day parade Thursday in Detroit.

The exhibit shows the history of correspondence from those at home to those serving during war or conflict from the Revolutionary War days to modern times.

Some attendees Thursday said it spurred memories as they recollected sending and receiving mail while deployed. White said he would receive a dozen letters at a time, mostly from his wife and sometimes from his mother and sister, because being in the Navy it was difficult for mail to find its way to the constantly-roving ship. White served in the Navy 1944-46.

Bill Wolff of Columbia said he was impressed with the exhibit and learned a few things.

"It's amazing. I would not have imagined something like that," Wolff said, gesturing to a photo of marines carrying a load of mail almost as large as themselves on their backs during the Korean War.

Wolff, an Army Korean War veteran, said his brother's job was to deliver the mail to a dry docked ship "and supply the ship with ice cream" - which he noted was an important job.

Korean War veteran Harold "Smitty" Smith lives in Columbia now, but still calls Clarksburg home, recalled sending 341 letters home to Moniteau County.

"Sometimes it only said, "It's raining today,'" Smith said.

He said his mother saved them all. They were eventually stored in buckets in the smokehouse until his father died and the farm was sold in 1969. But Smith and his brother had to wait until winter to retrieve the buckets because wasps had overrun the smokehouse. The letters lived in storage at his brother's home for a while until 2003. When planning a trip to Korea, Smith re-read the letters he had sent to his parents.

"I knew what hill I was on," Smith said, noting the letters jogged his memory of the landscape.

The Moniteau County Historical Society helped him archive copies of his letters in a book and the originals are currently stored at the state archives.

Air Force veteran from the Korean War Bill Hobbs said he enjoyed the exhibit, finding Civil War and World War I mail history interesting. Hobbs said he usually wrote to his parents about where he had traveled for the weekend, restaurants he had eaten in and sometimes about a girl he met.

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AP

A washed-up lobster trap and tangled line sit on a beach earlier this month in Biddeford, Maine.

Following tours of the exhibit, veterans and volunteers gathered in the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury atop the museum for the unveiling of the U.S. Postal Service's Korean War Medal of Honor stamps for the Army and Navy, which are now available for purchase.

In his remarks introducing the speakers for the event, Westminster College President Barney Forsythe reminisced about his own mail call experiences in the Army. He would email home daily from Afghanistan in 2003, but said it was physically getting a package in the mail that was the most exciting correspondence.