Edward Wirt wrote this letter on one of his first days aboard the transport that was taking him from America to England to fight in World War I. His unit, the 302nd Infantry Regiment of the 76th Division, was one of the first to be shipped overseas. The conditions aboard the transport were crowded and stuffy. Beyond those discomforts, though, the largest concern about crossing the Atlantic was the presence of German submarines, a new tool of war, that this country used very effectively in the war. By October, 1917, submarines had sunk more than 8 million tons of shipping, but the British instituted the convoy system (large groups of merchant ships protected by destroyers) and by the time of this letter, the threat had substantially lessened. On the last page Wirt refers to a censor. To prevent sensitive information from leaking out, censors, usually junior officers attached to the unit, had to read every piece of outgoing mail and cut out offending words or sentences. There are ninety letters from Mr. Wirt to Miss Bartlett in the PVMA collection, some of which are included on this site.
Wirt, Edward Roswell. WWI letter to Emily Gladys Bartlett. July 5, 1918. Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, American Centuries. https://americancenturies.org/collection/l01-013/. Accessed on October 15, 2024.
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