War Diaries (February 23) (nonfiction): Difference between revisions
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* [https://blog.churchillbookcollector.com/uncategorized/a-unique-wwii-archive-from-churchills-nurse-2/ A unique WWII archive from Churchill’s nurse] @ churchillbookcollector.com | * [https://blog.churchillbookcollector.com/uncategorized/a-unique-wwii-archive-from-churchills-nurse-2/ A unique WWII archive from Churchill’s nurse] @ churchillbookcollector.com | ||
=== Mirjam Bolle: February 23, 1943 === | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Half-Past Midnight | |||
This is no life, but hell on earth. My hands are trembling so much I can barely write. This is all getting too much. This is more than anyone can bear. Another transport is leaving this evening. I had planned not to go to bed too late. Aunt Dina is staying with us at the moment. I already wrote to you that she stays at our house during the day because she has been left at home on grounds of illness and now she fears being taken away, which is what happens in all of these cases. At home on Saturday morning, she got such a bad crick in her back that she couldn’t move, not even in bed. It was awful, because it meant she wouldn’t be able to come and stay with us on Monday, as Jews aren’t allowed in taxis. | |||
</blockquote> | |||
[[Mirjam Bolle (nonfiction)|Mirjam Bolle]] of Amsterdam wrote at a time when conditions were particularly gruesome for Dutch Jews. Because the sick were among the first to be carted off in transports to concentration camps, people who were ill often piled into the homes of able-bodied relatives, creating cramped households. Bolle discusses the many people her family is attempting to house in this excerpt from her diary of letters to her fiancé that she wrote but never mailed. They were published in English in a book, “Letters Never Sent” by Yad Vashem in 2014. | |||
== In the News == | == In the News == |
Revision as of 10:25, 9 May 2020
War Diary quotations for February 23.
Previous: February 22 - Next: February 24
Diaries
Mother Mary Cecilia Bailly: February 23, 1865
Charlie Carney, a young man that has been in our service several years, goes off on the night train to escape the draft. Poor boy, where does he go[?] I do not know.
In the Sisters of Providence Archives there is a bound transcription of the diary of General Superior Mother Mary Cecilia Bailly. She served as general superior after the death of Mother Theodore Guerin in 1856 until 1868, covering the turbulent years of the Civil War, 1861-1865. The diary consists of entries about the day-to-day activities of Mother Mary Cecilia, the Congregation and local and national happenings. Some entries are very short — one sentence — while others are more detailed.
- Civil War diary entries by Connie McCammon @ swsmw.org (May 9, 2012)
Dorothy Pugh: February 23, 1943
Bed bathed P.M… Mrs C as an audience – not a very pleasant job – still all was well. P.M. very sweet.
Dorothy Pugh (1919-2014) was Winston Churchill’s wartime nurse. Pugh kept a diary; it is signed by Churchill.
- A unique WWII archive from Churchill’s nurse @ churchillbookcollector.com
Mirjam Bolle: February 23, 1943
Half-Past Midnight
This is no life, but hell on earth. My hands are trembling so much I can barely write. This is all getting too much. This is more than anyone can bear. Another transport is leaving this evening. I had planned not to go to bed too late. Aunt Dina is staying with us at the moment. I already wrote to you that she stays at our house during the day because she has been left at home on grounds of illness and now she fears being taken away, which is what happens in all of these cases. At home on Saturday morning, she got such a bad crick in her back that she couldn’t move, not even in bed. It was awful, because it meant she wouldn’t be able to come and stay with us on Monday, as Jews aren’t allowed in taxis.
Mirjam Bolle of Amsterdam wrote at a time when conditions were particularly gruesome for Dutch Jews. Because the sick were among the first to be carted off in transports to concentration camps, people who were ill often piled into the homes of able-bodied relatives, creating cramped households. Bolle discusses the many people her family is attempting to house in this excerpt from her diary of letters to her fiancé that she wrote but never mailed. They were published in English in a book, “Letters Never Sent” by Yad Vashem in 2014.
In the News
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
- Mary Cecilia Bailly (nonfiction)
- Winston Churchill (nonfiction)
- Dorothy Pugh (nonfiction)
- War (nonfiction)
- War Diaries (nonfiction)
External links
- Civil War diary entries by Connie McCammon @ swsmw.org (May 9, 2012)
- A unique WWII archive from Churchill’s nurse @ churchillbookcollector.com