Letter from Carl E. Peyton to Jesse Dorsey, December 21, 1943.

Description: Peyton tells Dorsey that he is working as a dental technician. He is averaging 100 hours a week. He hopes people back home realize all the efforts put in for the victory. What keeps him going is remembering that freedom is the birthright of all mankind and how important it is to keep people down who want to take that away. He would love some leave to come home, but they may have to win the war first. He is sending him a paper with the news from there. This letter is part of a large group of letter written to or by Jesse G. Dorsey during World War II. Dorsey ran the community house for the Louisville Cement Company in Speed, Indiana. Being a veteran of World War I, he knew the value of providing support to the troops. He wrote letters and sent the company newsletter (Speedometer) to several hundred service men and women during the war. The community house also hosted weekend parties for soldiers from Fort Knox, Kentucky during the war.
Origin: 1943-12-21
Created By: Peyton, Carl Edward (Moose), 1921-1955.
Source: http://indianamemory.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p1819coll10/id/4516
Collection: Jesse G. Dorsey WWII Correspondence
Rights: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
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Subjects: Correspondence
ChristmasDentistsMilitary jobs--dental technicianWorld War, 1939-1945--Communications--Censorship
Sailors--Correspondence
United States. Navy--Military life
World War, 1939-1945--Personal narratives

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