Traveling
Tuesday: Utah
Last month, the state of Utah welcomed home the
remains of two of its World War II veterans with a Dignified Transfer. The Defense
POW/MIA Accounting Agency searches for missing U.S. servicemen and women then works
with the Armed Forces Medical Examiner System using DNA technology to locate
the soldier’s family members. In addition to sending these young men and other
citizens, the state of Utah played an important role during the war.
Near Salt Lake City, Fort Douglas (an installation
since the Civil War when Col. Connor’s California Volunteers took up residence)
became a processing center for recruits. Hill Field was established in 1940
supported the West Coast’s aeronautical logistics requirements being
equi-distant from three major military centers: Seattle-Portland, San
Francisco, and Los Angeles-San Diego. At its peak, Hill Field employed 15,000
civilians, 6,000 military, and house several thousand POWs. In all, Utah had
fourteen military installations during the war.
Rich in natural resources, Utah contributed coal,
iron, dolomite, limestone, alunite, copper, gas, and refined products to the
war effort. A significant contributor was Geneva Steel Works in Orem that
accounted for nearly two-thirds of the funds for Utah from the Defense Plant
Corporation. GSW produced 634,010 ton of plate steel and another 144,280 ton of
shaped steel.
Established since 1921, the Ogden Arsenal grew
exponentially to become a manufacturing, storage,
As with the rest of the country, men enlisted and were
drafted by the thousands, and women stepped into fill the void. In addition,
Utah created the Minute Women, part of the Volunteer Salvage Corps, a division
under the federal War Production Board. Each woman was in charge of educating
her neighbors about salvage initiatives as well as coordinating salvage
operations in her area. They collected
tin cans, organized paper drives, and recruited dry cleaners to clean donated
clothing. They helped with bond drives, surveys, footwear exchanges, bottle
collections, and volunteer recruitment. With hunting as common pastime in the
state, the Minute Women set up stations where hunters could leave deer and elk
fats.
A big state with a big heart for the war effort.
___________________________
Emma O’Sullivan is one of the first female doctors to
enlist after President Franklin Roosevelt signs the order allowing women in the
Army and Navy medical corps. Within weeks, Emma is assigned to England to set
up a convalescent hospital, and she leaves behind everything that is familiar.
When the handsome widower of the requisitioned property claims she’s
incompetent and tries to get her transferred, she must prove to her superiors she’s
more than capable. But she’s soon drawn to the good-looking, grieving owner.
Will she have to choose between her job and her heart?
Archibald “Archie” Heron is the last survivor of the
Heron dynasty, his two older brothers having been lost at Dunkirk and Trondheim
and his parents in the Blitz. After his wife is killed in a bombing raid while
visiting Brighton, he begins to feel like a modern-day Job. To add insult to
injury, the British government requisitions his country estate, Heron Hall, for
the U.S. Army to use as a hospital. The last straw is when the hospital
administrator turns out to be a fiery, ginger-haired American woman. She’s got
to go. Or does she?
Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/2qU0ZcF
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