Well, Happy and Safe
Letters from an Everyman in WWIIFrank D. "Babe" Mauro
Born, Oct. 9, 1924
Died, May 4, 1945
Archives
Links of Interest
- 168th Infantry Regiment Entry on Wikipedia
- 34th Infantry Division Association
- 34th Infantry Division Entry on Wikipedia
- 5th Army Mobile Radio Station Scrapbook
- Hooah Wife and Friends
- Letters from WW II
- Military Postal History Society
- PBS 'War Letter' Documentary Site
- Red Bull Rising
- War Department Pamphlet No. 21‑1
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Vito Mauro
Learning More About Tracking Army Post Office Movements
January 28, 2012 Leave a Comment
I recently corresponded with Richard V. Horrell, who runs WW 2 Connections and lists his home in Nashville. His website says he uses his passion for World War II history to create profiles of military personnel that he “researches and creates for his clients. His clients share with him the desire to remember what these men and women did for us 60 years ago.” I came across him through AllExperts.com.
Horrell responded to my questions about how to track APO numbers, which appear in the return address of all Babe’s letters. He responded on one of the APO numbers, but I realized Babe’s APO changes a few times, so I went looking for a source. I stumbled on this blog post from someone doing genealogical research, with a link to a PDF called “Numerical Listing of APOs, January 1942 to November 1947. It seemed like what I was looking for. I have it available on my site here. (While trying to validate its authenticity, I found it apparently listed in a Smithsonian Institution index). Read more of this post
Filed under Commentary Tagged with Algeria, APO, Casablanca, Morocco, North Africa, Oran