I was ecstatic to find Ted's letter in my mail box. Here is what it said:
Greetings
May I call you Margie? As happened so often during the war that
influenced so many young lives, I barely got to know your uncle Jack,
and then he was gone. I understand that you found my little item
about your uncle in Austin Goodrich's book . I had written that item
hoping that someone, somewhere, who knew John Seaton, would see
it and would know that he was remembered and missed by his
colleagues. While memories are sometimes faulty on some details,
and at 85 years mine is as fragile as any, here is what I remember
about John.
Like your uncle, I was a kid from the sagebrush country, but from
Oregon instead of Montana. We talked a bit about that, and I had
to acknowledge that his winters were longer and colder than those
we had in the Central Oregon ranch coutnry where I grew up, which
was much colder and dryer than Portland and the Willamette Valley
where I had gone "away to college." Like John, I had attended a
state university and was required to take ROTC. John and I were
commissioned at Fort Benning, Ga. , after finishing our third year
of college in the Army. We were sent to the 86th Division, then in
the pine woods of central Louisiana , and from there to various
army bases in California where we practiced beach landings with
navy and marine units in preparation for island battles in the Pacific.
We were suddenly pulled out of our South Pacific preparation and
sent to Europe to replace a division that had been destroyed in the
"Battle of the Bulge." Fortunately for most of us, the worst of the
fighting in Europe was about over by the time we got there.
Luedenscheid was a small town in the Rhur where we suffered
some losses. April 13, while we did not know it then, was only
about three weeks from the end of the war in Europe. It must have
been particularly sad for the Seaton family to receive the news
about John and then a few days later to learn that the European
part of the war was over. Our division left Europe and, after short
leaves at home, we were reassembled at an army base in Oklahoma
and then sent to the Philippines to invade Japan. Fortunately, for
the 86th Division as well as for the people of Japan, the war ended
the way it did without an invasion, which would have killed at least
a million more Americans, and many millions of Japanese.
I would be most interested in hearing from you, how you came to
Oregon, and more about the Seaton family, of which I knew so little.
I still miss that young lieutenant, your Great Uncle Jack.
Sincerely Ted Goodwin
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
the letter
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