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dc.creatorHays, Joseph Warren
dc.date.accessioned2020-09-02T18:33:04Z
dc.date.available2020-09-02T18:33:04Z
dc.date.issued1945-03-27
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.tcu.edu/handle/116099117/40712
dc.descriptionHays got to California. Says not much to do, now that the war is over. Took a trip to L.A. with a friend.
dc.format.mediumpaper
dc.languageen_US
dc.relationJoseph Warren Hays Papers (MS 159)
dc.rightsPrior written permission from TCU Special Collections required to use any file.
dc.sourceSeries I, Box 1, Folder 6
dc.subjectWorld War II
dc.subjectUnited States Army
dc.subjectUnited States Army Air Corps
dc.titleHays letter to family
dc.typeDocument
dc.description.transcription3-27-45Dear Folks,Again I’m writing while trying to get a long distance call through. For fear you won’t get much out of the call since all the lines sound like I have a poor connection even when I’m calling the operatorI’ll start at leaving Sioux Falls and bring you up to date.We didn’t fly out here as you gathered from my card that I wrote from El Paso. We came by day coach all the way and it was one hell of a trip. We were crowded four to a seat so I slept or that is, spent the nights, three of them, on the floor in the kitchen car. The whole shipment was officers so we had to do our own K.P. etc, and I must admit morale didn’t run too high. So far as I know, no one died on the trip and only four got sick enough to betaken off of my coach and put in hospitals en route. Yours truly made it just fine.No one from my crew came with me but I am running around with a kid by the name of Jim Vader. He went all the way through training with Johnny and I knew him in Tucson. I ran into him again in Sioux Falls. He has an aunt, very well to do incidentally, that lives in Los Angeles. We spent Sat. nightand Sunday with her and her husband and had one swell time. It was just like a weekend party in the movies except that they didn’t have a private swimming pool. I sure hope I don’t wear my welcome out there any time soon.From the looks of things I won’t have a chance to as we are going to be busy around here. There is absolutely nothing for us to do except wait for our discharges but the C.O. of this field says that we are still getting army pay and that we are going to be kept busy 10 hours a day even if we aren’t doing any thing but going to worthless ground school, now that the war is over, and taking P.T. I spent all of today processing and have two more days of that to look forward to then my P.T. and ground school starts. It would take a miracle to get me out of the army in time to go to school this fall so for a while I was thinking about staying in the army until mid term oreven ‘till next fall. I could get into A.T.C., build up my flying time, and make a nice little wad of money. I don’t know what I’m going to do when I get out, until school starts, and there are other good reasons why I should stay in for a while, but every time I get to seriously thinking about it something like that train ride, or standing in line all day processing, and getting nothing done, or being told to go to school all day whether there is anything worthwhile to teach me or not comes up. Then I decide again to get out at the earliest opportunity. I may change my mind again but right now I would get out, if I could, if there weren’t any such thing as school, and I were going to starve to death within a week after getting out.________. ________. _________. _________. ___________. _________. __________. _________. Right here is where I got my call in. I know I’m not going to stay in the army now.________. ________. _________. _________. ___________. _________. __________. _________. I believe I’ve told you everything I know now so I’ll quit and go to bed. Got a hard day of standing in line a head of me again tomorrow.Ruth, the telephone conversation was awfully short and I didn’t get to ask you about Dub. Write me and tell me all you know especiallyif he is coming home soon. He may come through here instead of L.A.


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  • Joseph Warren Hays Papers [162]
    The collection includes a complete set of letters written by Joseph Warren Hays to his family while serving in the Army Air Corps during World War II. The letters detail his aviation training across the United States and his service in Europe toward the end of the war. In his later years, Mr. Hays wrote recollections of his missions over Europe. The collection also includes printed publications, newspaper clippings, a scrapbook, a photograph of Hays, and ephemera.

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