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Collection

Andrew Babicki collection, 1916-1936

1 linear foot — 4 oversize folders — 238 MB

Online
Collected papers documenting the role of Michigan in World War I, including the Allied intervention in Russia, 1918-1919, the "Polar Bear Expedition."

The collection includes diary (1918-1919) of Henry Ahrens, 330th Field Artillery; scrapbook (1916-1936) of Ernest Kaser, 126th and 128th Infantry; papers of Thomas J. McCarthy, 339th Infantry, chiefly relating to disability and insurance; papers of Carl G. Olson, 337th Infantry, including a letter received from relatives; papers of Jesse H. Stage, 160th Depot Brigade, Camp Custer, including letters received from relatives; pamphlets from the YMCA, Red Cross and other publishers; ration cards, artifacts, and photographs.

Photographs and postcards of Camp Custer, Mich.; group photos of members of 32nd Division in the Army of Occupation in Germany, 1919; 160th Depot Brigade, Camp Custer; oversize group portraits of members of 41st Machine Gun Battalion; 107th Supply Battalion; 214th Field Signal Battalion; 330th Field Artillery; Company B, 337th Infantry; 339th Infantry; 2nd Company, Officers' Training School, Camp Custer; and survivors of the troop ship Tuscania; portraits of members of 339th and 340th Infantry; photos of 126th and 128th Infantry in scrapbook of Ernest Kaser; postcard of military parade in Flint, Mich.; 330th Field Artillery pennant.

Collection

Lila Sandall correspondence, 1918-1919

11 items

This collection is made up of 10 letters that United States soldiers in France, Germany, and Russia wrote to Lila Sandall of Grand Rapids, Michigan, from October 1918-April 1919, as well as a letter that one soldier wrote to Blanch O'Brien of Lake City, Michigan. The soldiers commented on their experiences abroad during and after the war.

This collection is made up of 10 letters that United States soldiers in France, Germany, and Russia wrote to Lila Sandall of Grand Rapids, Michigan, from October 1918-April 1919, as well a letter that one soldier wrote to Blanch O'Brien of Lake City, Michigan. The soldiers commented on their experiences abroad during and after the war.

Sandall received letters from members of the 310th Field Signal Battalion (Company A), Ambulance Company 5, and the 339th Infantry Supply Company. W. M. Clark of the 5th Ambulance Company wrote 5 of the collection's letters. Victor Strandell of the 310th Field Signal Battalion wrote about German planes and the liberation of a prison camp in October 1918. Other soldiers commented on life in Mayen, Germany, during the Allied occupation. Sandall's correspondents mentioned victory celebrations, Prohibition, and an ambulance accident. Rudolph R. Traeumer, a member of the 339th Infantry Regiment, wrote to Sandall about his time at the front near Archangel, Russia, in March 1919, during the U.S. intervention in the Russian Revolution. The collection also contains one letter that C. C. Shellman of the 126th Infantry Supply Company wrote to Blanch O'Brien, in which he discussed the noise at the front and commented on German airplanes (July 19, [1918]).