The Letters of Roy J. Diehl (Jay Roy Diehl)

From 1917-1919, Roy J. Diehl, a railroad worker from Pennsylvania, wrote a series of letters to Stella Custer, his future wife, while he was enlisted in the 281st Aero Squadron. Most published letter collections consist of letters penned by men of education, rank, or fame. Roy J. Diehl was neither highly educated, highly ranked, nor famous, but his letters provide an interesting and valuable look at the life of an ordinary enlisted man, untainted by the notion that he may be writing to a wide audience or that anything beyond his relationship with Stella, his future betrothed, rests on what he says. Still, his letters display the usual characteristics of war-time correspondence; Sergeant Diehl omits potentially sensitive information about activities in his Squadron, treats probably disgusting or horrific situations with a certain amount of nonchalance, speaks in cliches of patriotism, and continually thinks of movement and distance.

April 10, 2011

Back Online

Quite obviously, I was not able to post when I promised. Now, however, I have a functioning computer with a USB port, and have been able to catch up.

A few comments about the previous letters:

1) Stars and Stripes, which Roy mentions, is a military newspaper which was founded during the Civil War and is still operational today.

2) Roy mentions creating a picture frame out of a French spad propeller. Such things were done quite often with found objects, particularly, I imagine, when soldiers were just waiting around for orders and didn't have much to do. I wish I knew what has become of the picture frame or if Roy ever finished it... Quite apart from being valuable, Trench Art is just plain interesting.

3) Note that Roy finally received the picture he asked Stella for nearly a year earlier. Nowadays they'd already be fb friends and he would have albums and albums to look through. Imagine waiting so long for just one photo...

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