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to Estelle Spero
January 21, 1944
Diamond, Sidney, 1922-1945
Diamond writes that the "situation continues as usual", with everything "wet, damp, moldy" from the rain.
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Diamond informs Estelle that "the hunger for home grows increasingly great".
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January 22, 1944
Diamond writes that "there is little if anything new to report".
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Diamond describes his "politics" to Estelle.
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February 1, 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that the lack of mail has been caused by his being involved in combat, "front line stuff". He writes that he has "seen 'war' minus hollywood's beauty."
photocopy
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February 3, 1944
Diamond praises his men in their initiation into battle. He complains about the difficulty of seeing clearly on the front line, and also writes that he would give up a year's salary for a decent night's sleep.
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February 4, 1944
Diamond writes that he is "used to it by now. [His] nerves have settled down to their usual steady jangle."
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February 6, 1944
Diamond writes that he wants "home - out of this mess…"
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February 7, 1944
Diamond describes the telephone operator, Kallor, as a Jewish dress cutter from New York who is in Sidney's father's union.
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February 8, 1944
Diamond comments that he has never been ill during his army career.
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Diamond writes Estelle a "short note in field on message & overlay paper."
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February 9, 1944
Diamond writes that their "apartment will have a double apron barbed wire fence about it covered by a slew of machine guns to keep all relatives away…"
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February 10, 1944
Diamond describes the process of selecting new observation posts.
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Sketch of Stanley Diamond as a boy
1861-1877
Diamond writes that the mouth is "too feminine".
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February 11, 1944
Diamond again describes the process of selecting observational posts in trees.
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February 13, 1944
Diamond asks Estelle to send him a book once a month to entertain him.
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February 14, 1944
Diamond apologizes for having neglected Estelle on St. Valentines day.
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February 16, 1944
Diamond describes using the typewriter in terms of a battle offensive.
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Diamond informs Estelle that he intends to attend his battalion motion picture show that evening.
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February 18, 1944
Diamond writes that he imagines embracing Estelle.
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February 19, 1944
Diamond reports that that evening they had gone to the cinema to see the film, "The Affairs of Martha
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February 21, 1944
Diamond discusses the "present conflict" between labor and industry.
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Diamond talks of the constant rain, his desire for good cuisine and a recent nightmare about an air raid.
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February 23, 1944
Diamond writes that his outfit boasts "a washing machine, ice box, and recently a generator & electric lights
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February 24, 1944
Diamond describes his day as "quiet, dull, routine rot!"
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February 25, 1944
Diamond tells Estelle that he no longer has "that burning hatred of the jungle and its mysteries", commenting on how peculiar it is that "a man can adapt himself to this way of living".
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Diamond describes writing to the wife of one of his men about his death, an experience that made him realize the "ridiculous emptiness of words".
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February 26, 1944
Diamond describes the interior of his tent. He writes that it is "grand to be alive and well".
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February 28, 1944
Diamond tells Estelle that her "guy is getting along satisfactorily - nothing to write about of any consequence
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February 29, 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that his vocabulary is too limited to express how grateful he is for everything that she has done for him.
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1 March 1944
Diamond discusses his "bleak & uncertain" future.
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2 March 1944
Diamond writes that the day had been spent climbing steep hills to O.P.s (observation posts), and describes the view from them. Sidney gives Estelle some instructions pertaining to the "money order" enclosed and requests some garden seeds...
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3 March 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that she has become an integral part of his daily routine.
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5 March 1944
Diamond implies that since it was a leap year, Estelle should have proposed to him.
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6 March 1944
Diamond writes that they are working on maps and overlap. He comments that he doesn't feel "poetic, romantic, jocular".
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7 March 1944
Diamond mentions that "nearly everyone around has discovered someone they knew from back home
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9 March 1944
Diamond thanks Estelle for the New Yorker that she had subscribed to for him, and then proceeds to "rampage through the 'mag'
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11 March 1944
Diamond complains that they have termites in the camp.
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14 March 1944
Diamond writes that he is recovering from a 96 hour stretch without sleep: "I needed your shoulder badly".
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March 29, 1944
Diamond describes the closest to real fighting that he has experienced.
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March 30, 1944
Diamond comments on how sad it is "that man must come to destroy, scar, and burn."
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March 31, 1944
Diamond describes bumping into a girl from Coney Island.
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4 April 1944
Diamond writes that the oriental inscription on the ring that Estelle bought for him causes him embarrassment, as people assume that he "Got that off a Jap".
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6 April 1944
Diamond writes that he has heard that Passover is the following day, but that his "holidays are celebrated by destroying the enemy." Sidney describes firing on some "Japs".
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8 April 1944
Diamond writes that he thinks that he is at his zenith.
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10 April 1944
Diamond writes that he is using the lantern that Estelle sent him for the first time, and consoles her for the confusion that she is experiencing concerning her job.
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11 April 1944
Diamond writes on his birthday that he feels "one hundred years older." He recommends that she reads "The Robe" by Lloyd C. Douglas.
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12 April 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that he has gone from platoon leader to Company Executive Officer. He also mentions that they are now allowed to divulge that they are somewhere in the Solomon Islands
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13 April 1944
Diamond complains about being encouraged by the Army to read the periodical "In Fact", as it offends his liberal sensibilities.
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16 April 1944
Diamond writes that he worries about the administrative side of his job.
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Diamond writes that the "days are completely devoid of any activity." He mentions that a rotation policy is being started, whereby men who have spent between eighteen months and two years in overseas service will get an opportunity to go home....
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17 April 1944
Diamond describes the contents of a package that his parents have sent him. He recalls the day that he proposed to Estelle, and comments that nearly a year has passed since that date, May 18th. He then discusses how important Estelle is to him in...
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19 April 1944
Diamond writes that he is bored and "craves movement."
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to 82nd Chemical Battallion
20 April 1944
Beightler, Robert S., 1892-1978
Note commending the 82nd Chemical Battalion for the assistance that they provided the 37th Division with.
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21 April 1944
Diamond tells Estelle that he spent Passover participating in a push. He discusses the horrifying effect of encountering great masses of dead bodies.
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Diamond informs Estelle that he is writing the letter having just completed the previous one, so as "to prevent the continuity, the nearness from being disturbed."
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22 April 1944
Diamond writes that he has just returned from a musical entitled "Reveille with Beverly". He reports that sometimes, to break the monotony of his current existence, he goes to visit the units on the front.
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24 April 1944
Diamond reports that the rainy season has begun once more. He writes that he has finished reading Voltaire's "Candide".
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25 April 1944
Diamond writes that the day had served as a holiday for those not engaged in combat, as it marked the two-year anniversary of the existence of the 82nd Chemical Battalion. Sidney states that he craves movement.
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to the 82nd Chemical Battalion
Shimoneck, W.H., fl. 1944
Farewell letter from the departing Lieutenant Colonel. He writes of the battalion's reputation as "a crack outfit."
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26 April 1944
Diamond discusses the trials of being so far from one's sweetheart. He recounts the story of his former sergeant, who had been engaged, but whose ex-fiancee is now using the bedroom set that he had purchased with her new husband. He mentions that...
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28 April 1944
Diamond writes that his living standards have improved immeasurably since the "days of fox-holes and C rations." Diamond comments on the frequency that Shuster appears in "Time" magazine.
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30 April 1944
Diamond reports that his battalion has received several commendations for their work "during the recent show with the enemy."
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3 May 1944
Diamond discusses his opinions regarding pre-embarkation marriage.
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5 May 1944
Diamond writes that some day he hopes to visit New Zealand or Australia. He comments that he has read part 2 of "France et La Vieux".
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10 May 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that he broke the clasp of the bracelet that she gave him when disassembling a Japanese machine gun.
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11 May 1944
Diamond writes that he has enclosed a questionnaire that "concerns two misguided morons who for no other reason than lust, financial gain, and imbecility consider the problem of spending the rest of their natural lives making each other miserable."
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13 May 1944
Diamond passes comment on the previous night's entertainment. He also discusses an army film on England, which he writes gave "a direct, frank, and uncolored recognition of white prejudice towards the negro and an appeal…for understanding and...
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17 May 1944
Diamond writes the letter while "comfortably loafing on hospital bed", waiting for surgery on a cyst. He tells Estelle that if her cousin joins the infantry and goes into active combat, he will have tremendous respect for him: "Truly the infantry is...
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18 May 1944
Diamond writes "hot & bothered", with "bandages sticking". Diamond expresses frustration about the fact that all press about the "work" that has been done in the South Pacific accredits all success to the "God damned marines."
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19 May 1944
Diamond describes the experience of receiving surgery in the army hospital the day before.
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22 May 1944
Diamond expresses frustration about being "shackled" to his hospital bed while recuperating. He describes a conversation that he had with his "cell mate" from New Zealand, who had been amazed "at American soldiers not getting the fullest...
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23 May 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that he was menat to go to the general hospital to have his surgery, but instead he had managed to persuade the doctor to operate on him in the line hospital. Had he been moved, he "would have left on a certain morning on a...
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Diamond jokingly complains about his doctor and the ward boy, and their treatment of him.
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24 May 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that wherever she happens to be on her birthday, she should know that he will be thinking of her. He also writes that there is "nothing new to report from 'sick bay'".
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25 May 1944
Diamond writes that there are rumors that some nurses may be sent to the army hospital. If this transpires to be true, he states that they will be the first white women that he has seen in seven months.
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27 May 1944
Diamond responds to a number of Estelle's letters. Regarding "that hotel deal," he writes that he regrets not having had "those few moments free from fears of curious eyes, of parental scrutiny, - just to be alone -." He informs Estelle that once...
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30 May 1944
Diamond writes that he is still "sojourning at the 52nd Field Hospital." He then responds to a series of letters that he has just received. He relates an argument that he has had with "Bud", about the concerns of the soldiers overseas. He...
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May 1944
Diamond writes a short note informing Estelle that work has piled up, but that he is so happy that she is "the gal."
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to Sidney Diamond
Shelvelson, Harris, fl. 1944
Letter thanking Diamond for his informing the magazine that the poem that they published in their April issue appears on a tombstone in the Bronx, and not Indiana as they claimed. Diamond then appends the letter with a short handwritten explanation...
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Diamond describes his daily routine in the hospital.
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2 June 1944
Diamond describes the other patients in the officers' ward of the hospital.
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4 June 1944
Diamond informs Estelle that he does not want a large family, but that he plans on "consulting" Estelle first.
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5 June 1944
Diamond writes that the night before, the radio broadcast Fiji music, and he expresses surprise that "somehow the music - melody - intonation - of those not marred by civilization can be so completely expressive." He then goes into a lengthy...
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7 June 1944
Diamond discusses the "news of the continental invasion."
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8 June 1944
Diamond tries to understand why Estelle is angry with him.
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Diamond describes the Texan ward boy. He also explains that, although he had already written Estelle a letter that day, he "felt like being with [her]."
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Diamond informs Estelle that Mario Colin, presumably a friend, had written that "the average soldier doesn't know what he's fighting for" in a letter addressed to Sidney. Diamond then refutes this: "…I believe wholeheartedly in the way of government...
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9 June 1944
Diamond writes that he intends to break up the monotony of the day by getting a haircut, and going to an "artist" to have a picture of Estelle copied together with a portrait of himself, "just so we can see what we look like together…" Sidney...
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11 June 1944
Diamond responds to a series of points raised in Estelle's recent letters. He instructs Stella to "get the most out of [her] stay at Northwestern." He explains the "rotation deal" which could allow him some leave after two years spent overseas.
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13 June 1944
Diamond writes that he has now spent almost a month in hospital, and proceeds to describe to Estelle his schedule there.
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June 1944
Diamond complains about his "tyrant ward boy" in the hospital.
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15 June 1944
Diamond writes that he has been in the "purgatory" of hospital for twenty nine days. He includes a short poem to Estelle, and then playfully describes his fictitious history as a poet.
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16 June 1944
Diamond writes that, although he was meant to have been discharged that day, his physician changed his mind upon removing the bandages. He complains that the period of time for wounds to heal is extended due to the tropical climate. He expresses...
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18 June 1944
Diamond responds to the series of letters that he has received recently from Estelle. He mentions that he now has a punctured ear drum as a result of being exposed to constant and intense firing. He also writes that he cannot understand Natalie's...
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19 June 1944
Diamond writes that he has been released "after exactly 33 days in the hospital." He attempts to quell Estelle's jealousy about his having relationships with other women.
first two pages typed, rest handwritten
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23 June 1944
Diamond writes that they are "doing little else besides train and train some more." He describes a party that a Lieutenant Rubin had given in honor of his fiancée's marriage to another man: "killed a bottle of scotch - laughed - joked…" He also...
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24 June 1944
Diamond reports to Estelle that his housewarming party had been a success. He mentions that all is quiet, except for the sound of a radio, and "a whistle blows occasionally at a basketball game - a negro team is playing our team - It's a pleasure to...
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25 June 1944
Diamond writes that his "only gripe is some of the water training" that they do.
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28 June 1944
Diamond writes that his gardening is going well, and that he had gone to see a motion picture that evening.
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