Home For Christmas 1945
Christmas, 1945, was bittersweet. Sweet, in the sense that World War II
was over and the boys would be coming home. Bitter, in the sense that
thousands of service men would never come home. They were buried in
military cemeteries in Europe, North Africa, Asia, and the Islands
of the Pacific and entombed in sunken naval vessels on the bottom of
the oceans.
After VE Day, many of the soldiers from the European theater were shipped
to the United States, enjoyed a brief furlough, and were ordered to report
to army bases on the west coast to undergo training for the inevitable
invasion of Japan.
General George Marshall’s plan to invade Japan, island by island, was
estimated to cost half-a-million American lives. The atomic bomb saved
these lives as well as those of about 400,000 prisoners of war and
civilian detainees held by the Japanese.
On a bitterly cold, wintry evening a Chicago railroad station was filled
with hundreds of homecoming troops. My roommate and I also waited for
a train that would take us to Northern Michigan for the Christmas
holidays. Many of the soldiers were still shaky from a rough trip across
the Atlantic Ocean in mid-winter. These were corn-fed boys, who had gone
to war in 1941 and were now returning, thin and pale, who would never
forget the horrors they had witnessed on the battlefields of Europe.
Returning servicemen from the South Pacific were not yet acclimated to
the frigid weather of the Midwest and shivered with cold.
As the train pulled out of the station and traveled through Northern
Illinois, more dischargees boarded at Port Sheridan and Great Lakes
Naval Station. The diner was packed so we bought sandwiches from a vendor in Milwaukee, a slice of bologna between two slices of dry bread.
As the train approached the small towns in Wisconsin, snow-covered
figures waited for their returning heroes. We Inflatable Water Slide watched the emotional reunions through the frost-covered windows of the coach. At one
particular town, a large, beautifully lit Christmas tree stood on
the platform, surrounded by a noisy crowd. At the corner of the
platform a group of carolers sang Christmas songs. When a young
soldier stepped off the train, two burly men lifted him above their
shoulders, while everyone cheered his arrival. They gently placed him
down and a pretty young girl rushed up and embraced him. The servicemen
in the car whistled and cheered as the train pulled away from the station.
The voices of the carolers drifted into the car and my roommate who
had a lovely voice, joined in song. From the other end of the car,
the voice of a tired baritone sang along with her and the two
harmonized the beautiful old carol, Silent Night.
After they had finished, everyone in the car applauded and the mood
brightened considerably. Someone passed around a flask of brandy,
the conductor passed out Pullman pillows and turned up the heat
in the car. We fell into a restless sleep.
The next morning, I woke with a scratchy throat, a headache and a
temperature. The train was moving very slowly, plowing through huge
snow drifts as we finally reached our destinations. Dad was waiting
with the old Packard, which he drove skillfully over the ice, through
the snowdrifts to our home.
After a hot bath I went to bed, where I remained for the entire
vacation, missing the welcome home parties and visits from friends
and relatives.
On January 1, 1946, having recovered from the flu, I boarded the old
train for the trip back to Chicago. On my way back to the University,
I met a handsome naval cadet who told me he was from California and
was anxious to get back to the sunshine. As that moment, I decided I
would marry this young man, who could take me away from this cold
city, and eleven months later, I did.
By Marijune Hauta Wissmann