Army War Show 1942
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Click on the above image for a bigger picture.
I first became aware of the Army War Show in 1991 when my father's
youngest brother Richard F. Gretsch lent me this book. The book was published by
Albert Love Enterprises, Bona Allen Building , Atlanta, Georgia in 1943. Click on the images below to read pages 8 and 9 from the book which provides a history of the Army War Show.
On the inside covers of the book, all the cities
which the War Show traveled to between June 12 and December 20, 1942 are listed. They are
Baltimore, Philadelphia, Akron, Detroit, Milwaukee, Des Moines, Chicago,
Cleveland, Louisville, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Dallas, Houston, New Orleans,
Birmingham, and Atlanta.
The copy of the article reads: There are several autographs in the book written specifically to Dick Gretsch. These autographs appear next to the picture of the signer, much the same as one might find in a high school year book. All of the inscriptions are full of praise, for example they refer to Dick as " a great guy" and "A great man with the kleigs and an earnest friend." I wonder if the writer knew that Dick had an Aunt, Frances Kliegl Sommer, was who the daughter of one of the men who invented Klieg lights. Click on the page below to see a photo of Dick Gretsch and his fellow officers. . Two letters of commendation for Dick Gretsch are pasted onto the end pages of the book. Click on the images below to read them
There was a radio contingent to the show. This was something which would have interested my mother very much. Since she was ten years old, she always imagined herself working in radio. She studied Radio at Northwestern University and worked at a radio station in Wichita Fall, Texas. Stg. Bert Parks and Stg. Bob Waldrop used the radio as a promotional devise to get the message of the Army War Show out to as many people as possible. According to the Army War Show book, "more than 60 radio stations cooperated with the War Department by broadcasting War Show programs." In fall of 2007, Professor Alf Luedtke from Erfurt, Germany used this book for a class he taught at the University of Michigan on war and everyday life. Most importantly for me, reading about the Army War Show and my uncle's part in it, gave me a pretty good idea of what my elusive father was thinking about at this time. My parents were not yet married. My mother was working in California. Just before her birthday on September 14, she sent a telegram to my father asking him to come to California for her birthday. My father didn't make the trip out west to see my mother.
Rather, he sent a telegram from New York to his brother in Cleveland on the 18th
of September, exactly the day when the Army War Show was playing there. The quote below is from the American Society of Military Insignia Collectors website: "The show was a huge success with sold out and held over performances in every city that it visited. Unfortunately, the show came to an end without much fanfare during a rainy December weekend in Atlanta. There was no special ceremony dissolving the unit nor were there any special certificates or documents given out to any member who had participated in the show. Basically, the unit just faded away with troops returning to their original duty stations. By the time the show had come to an end approximately 2,300 officers and men had served with the unit. Later, because of the show's huge success and the clamor for more, local Army Commands would continue the tradition and provide the public with further war shows. But, the days of a central War Show that would travel throughout the country was over, War demands made the logistics of continuing such a venture impossible." For more information about the Army War Show please go to: http://www.asmic.org/asmic_v1/tradepost/years/tponline2003/jan03/armywarshow.htm
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This page was last edited on 10/18/2007 |