Showing posts with label Marston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marston. Show all posts

Thursday, September 15, 2022

June 14 and 26, 1940

Over two weeks passed before Johnnie wrote Lucile again. In a postcard dated June 14, 1940 and postmarked from Atlanta to her College Park address, Johnnie referred to Lucile as having been sick. Perhaps that was why he didn’t make the trip to Red Oak.

Dear Lucile, 

I received your card and was glad to hear from you. I am sorry you had the sore throat. Bill said Hello to all of you. This card makes us even again so start writing. 

Lots of Love, Johnnie x x x 

 


June 14, 1940 postcard

Trouble was brewing between Johnnie and his friend Demp, who apparently was not following through on promises to give Johnnie a ride to Red Oak. Johnnie complained about Demp in a postcard dated June 26, 1940, postmarked from Atlanta to Lucile at her College Park address.

Dear Lucile, 

Please excuse me for not writing sooner. But I been expecting to be down there. I would have if it hadn’t been for Demp. He was supposed to pick me up at my house. We made a date to come down, three times the last two weeks, but I haven’t saw him yet. So, I just quit trusting him anymore. If I can I will be down there this weekend. Try to be up here Sunday. If I don’t show up down there. 

Love, Johnnie x x x x x 



June 26, 1940 postcard

Thursday, September 1, 2022

January 3 and February 16, 1940

It was five months before Johnnie mailed another postcard to Lucile, at least that we know of. This one was postmarked January 3, 1940 from Atlanta and addressed to Lucile at the same College Park address as the previous postcards. Like people often do after a year changes, he wrote 1939, the old year instead of the new year, 1940.

Dear Lucile, 

I haven’t much to say, except I hope to see you Friday night if nothing happens. Tell Dot, Dent sent his love and I will give you my when I see you again. Tell Nellie I bring her a boyfriend. 

All my love, Johnnie



January 3, 1940 postcard

By February 1940, things must have started getting serious between Johnnie and Lucile. In a postcard dated February 16, 1940, he addressed her for the first time with a term of endearment. This postcard is addressed to Lucile at the same College Park address.

Dear Sweetheart, 

Just a line to let you know I haven’t forgot you and thanks for the valentine. I am coming down Thurs evening if I have to walk this weekend. You just don’t know how much I miss you. 

So, Lots of Love, Johnnie



February 16, 1940 postcard

Thursday, August 18, 2022

Early family life

The fifth child of John Henry Marston Sr. and Hattie E. Prather, John Henry Marston Jr. was born in Atlanta, Georgia on February 23, 1920. At the time, his parents lived on Woodward Avenue near Grant Park in Southeast Atlanta. Johnnie’s parents already had three children—daughters Louise and Kate and a son named William. Another son named Curtis, born in 1917, did not survive infancy and had died in 1918. His mother had three additional children after Johnnie—Evelyn, born in 1922, and twins Nellie and Ned, born and died in 1925. 


Johnnie and his sister Evelyn (ca. 1925)

Johnnie's grandfather, also named John Henry Marston, was a carpenter by trade but also a musician. He played tuba in Atlanta concert bands that included “the Atlanta Zouave Band, the Wedemeyer Band, the Fifth Regimental Band, the Elks Band, Capital City Band,” and even twice with John Philip Sousa.


Johnnie's grandfather, John Henry Marston (ca. 1942)

Johnnie attended the sixth grade at Lee Elementary School in Atlanta during the 1934–35 school year. Although he only missed six days during the school year, he struggled with Social Science, Arithmetic, and Language. It wasn’t enough to hold him back though and he was promoted to the seventh grade at the end of the school year. Johnnie quit high school after only two years. Little did he know at the time that he would soon become part of the greatest generation to serve in the United States Armed Forces during World War II. 


Sixth grade report card, Lee Elementary School, 1934-35 school year (click to enlarge)

In 1938, the Marston family lived at 653 Boulevard NE, Apt. B4 in Atlanta. His father worked as a dental technician near Grady Stadium in downtown Atlanta. His mother was a housewife.


Johnnie

Johnnie was 19 years old in 1939, the year he met his future wife Lucile Myrtle Stacks, a pretty young woman living with her parents in Red Oak, Georgia, near College Park. He met Lucile through his friend Dent, a driver for the Coca-Cola Company. Dent delivered Coca-Cola at a country store near Lucile’s house. He met Lucile and her sisters during a delivery and thought enough of them to go home and tell Johnnie he should go meet them as well. Johnnie did and it wasn’t long before he asked Lucile for a first date—to a picnic.  

Lucile was the 5th child of 11 born in College Park, Georgia to Sam William Riley Stacks and Leola Edith Lemons on April Fool’s Day in 1922. Her father worked at the family sawmill in Red Oak. The family consisted of six girls—Frances, Nell, Lucile, Dorothy, Mary, and Betty; and four boys—Cecil, Earl, Geral, and Melvin. In addition to being sisters, Lucile and Nell were lifelong friends.


Lucile

Thursday, August 11, 2022

Introduction

The two shoeboxes of letters were tucked away—memories of long ago. Lucile (Stacks) Marston didn’t want to share them with her children until she was gone. They were personal—letters her husband Johnnie lovingly wrote to her, from pre-marriage in 1939 until he came home from Italy at the end of World War II in 1945. This is their love story, as told through Johnnie in over 300 letters he wrote to Lucile. Johnnie’s love for his darling Lucile comes out loud and clear in his letters. That love is what kept him going the years he spent with the U.S. Army during the war.

It was important to Johnnie that he wrote regularly to Lucile. He tried to write every night even though that wasn’t always possible. He wanted her to write him regularly as well. It’s evident that he looked forward to mail call every day. When it was time for mail call, he didn’t want to walk away empty handed.

You won’t find anything earth shattering in these letters. Johnnie was on the frontlines—he couldn’t and didn’t tell Lucile what was happening in the war. Johnnie most often wrote Lucile to tell her how he was doing and to inquire as to her well-being. Johnnie worried about Lucile’s health. He constantly told her to take care of herself. He often asked about family members and wrote about sending money to her. The letters are repetitive. You might read the same thing for days in a row, but it was the fact that Johnnie was thinking about Lucile all the time that was important to him.

Johnnie also exchanged letters with his father and stepmother, his mother, Lucile’s parents Sam and Leola (Lemons) Stacks, as well as several of Lucile’s brothers and sisters. Lucile kept some of these letters with her letters from Johnnie, so they’re included here as well.

Unfortunately, this conversation is one-sided. Lucile’s letters to Johnnie didn’t survive the war so can’t be included. We’ll have to use our imagination to hear her side of the story.


Johnnie and Lucile (Stacks) Marston (1943)


One of two boxes of letters from Johnnie, stored away for 65 years