Posted on Jul 15, 2015
LTC Stephen F.
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I was recently reminded me of the importance and significance of mail call especially in the days before email, cell phones and texting existed in the 1950's 1960's, 1970's and I think through the 1980's. Waiting with anticipation in formation as a young enlisted man in sun, snow, rain or wind for mail call. The weather was much less important than hearing the names of friends called out to get mail and then hearing my own name which was wonderful. Going back to the barracks to smell envelopes from girl friends, read the letters on my bunk.
Later as a cadet at West Point one of the duties of the freshman class known as plebes was to distribute the mail to the upper classmen. It was a very important function and seemed to release a sense of common humanity and a brief period of humane treatment.
After I was commissioned in 1980, my mail was delivered to me except when we were away from home station when we would have mail call or else wait until the operation was over and then mail would be distributed.
Images: mail call wingen 70th ID WWII; Korean War early afternoon mail call brought these Thunderbirds in the 279th Infantry; Mail call! Pfc Glen Zachery of the 19th Army Postal Unit brings a sack of mail to the
Edited 4 y ago
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Responses: 377
PO1 Richard Nyberg
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Yea mail call was the high light of the day, especially in Vietnam. It fun to watch and see who got those most mail and the care packages. It was sad to see the guys who didn't get mail too. I remember one day I went to mail call and the mail clerk gave me a small bag of letters from my high school in Frankfurt, Germany. One my teachers put my address in the school bulletin and I got a bunch of letters. I remember my last year in high school we wrote to guys in Vietnam, this was in 1966 and I never thought it would be me the next year in 1967. It helped us get through the loneliness helped us get through the time over there. My Mom and grandmother would send me a package and would send me packs of Koolaide, In used to give it to the mess Sgt and he would make us Koolaide.
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
5 y
Thank you, for responding PO1 Richard Nyberg that mail cal was the highlight of your day especially when you were deployed to Vietnam. I expect many of your fellow sailors and other service members appreciated the Koolaide your mom sent you - as you gave the packets to the Mess Sergeant and he made Koolaide with sugar I expect :-)
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PO1 Richard Nyberg
PO1 Richard Nyberg
>1 y
[~563704:LTC Stephen Ford. I was in the Army then, I enlisted in july 1966 and was in Vietnam in Jan 1967. I got out of the Army in May 1975 and in Sept 1976 I enlisted in the Navy until I retired in Jan 1988. I had a good career.
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SSgt Boyd Herrst
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We had a few guys with names that were in the last 6 letters of the Alphabet.. Our MTi handed the mail to our Flight chief and he would go through occasionally and do those guys on the back end first. I held that position the last 4 weeks of training.. I kept up that idea.. I would go through and do those Airmen in the middle, we had 12 with names in the middle 7 or 8.. gave somebody else a chsnce to be in the first dozen to get their mail quicker..
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PO1 H Gene Lawrence
PO1 H Gene Lawrence
5 y
Good on you Brother
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
5 y
Thank you, for responding, my friend SSgt Boyd Herrst I am glad to learn that your mail call order of distribution periodically shifted so the last would be first. That is great news IMHO. I wonder if anybody else had that experience in mail call?
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SGT Larry Cooper
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Mail call was second only to pay call.
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
>1 y
Thank you for responding SGT Larry Cooper. I certainly concur with you that mail call was something which motivated us with hope to receive something in the mail. Unlike pay call when we got what was due, sometimes mail call was disappointing either because of no mail of disappointing news.
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SrA John Monette
SrA John Monette
>1 y
before my time. I had a post office box when I was in Germany and North Dakota. I guess we did have mail call during basic and our specialty training, though.
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SFC Ralph E Kelley
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Edited >1 y ago
Highlight of the Day - yes we used highliters too. and grease pencils, and maps, and compasses, and canteen cups. and steel pots. and web gear. Wow! - am I old or what?
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
6 y
Thank you for responding SFC Ralph E Kelley that mail call was a highlight of the day. I well remember grease pencils, combat acetate and non-permanent markers. Every now then some newbie would use permanent markers and learn the lesson of life :-)
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SFC Greg Bruorton
SFC Greg Bruorton
6 y
Yep, you're old, Ralph!
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Lt Col Charlie Brown
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Only at OTS. Everywhere else we had mailboxes.
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
6 y
Thanks for letting us know Lt Col Charlie Brown. Based on your response I image you entered the military in the 1980s.
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SSgt Gary Andrews
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Worst mail call ever......received a box of chocolate chip cookies from my mother while in boot camp. Not fun!!!!
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
7 y
Ah yes, mandatory sharing of a gift meant usually for you was no fun SSgt Gary Andrews
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SSgt Gary Andrews
SSgt Gary Andrews
7 y
Sometimes you shared.....everyone got on but you. In my case, I had about 30 seconds to cram the whole box down.....my chewing and swallowing did not keep up with the speed at which the D.I. was shoving them into my mouth. It was years before I could eat another chocolate chip cookie!
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SSgt Gary Andrews
SSgt Gary Andrews
7 y
That's harsh!
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Cpl Gabriel F.
Cpl Gabriel F.
6 y
With you on the cookies Andrews. One girl that my dumb ass had dated and neglected to mail a 30 second " Do Not Send Me Anything Letter" went down the Marine recruiter that happily advised her "Sure you can sent him lots of goodies" got my Parris Island address and sent soft cookies wrapped in cellophane and chocolate cake wrapped in foil. When the box was pulled and my named called out could not understand how this happened to me. Ordered to eat the cookies now, started to unwrap the cellophane got a very quick kick and a "Oh no, waste not want not" eat it all. Cellophane was stretched across my teeth down my throat along soft cookie goo with me doing my best to swallow the whole mess when he held up the foil wrapped cake making my fillings hurt at the thought. " Would the maggot care to donate this to the drill instructors coffee fund ? Sir, yes sir trying not to spit cookie goo. The drill instructor shouted for the house mouse to bring one cup of hot water on deck. Told to drink it down and then do bends and thrusts for the rest of mail call near enough for motivation tap by the drill instructor. Hungry all the time so did not throw up to his disappointment.
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SSG Bob Klement
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Absolutely! Also remember reporting for pay!
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LTC Stephen F.
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Sgt Daniel J. Daly
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I remember standing mail call in Staging Bn. at Camp Pendleton, CA. The postal clerk calls out all the names. He then says does anyone know someone in Belmar, NJ. I yell out I do. A family friend had written me a letter, but put my uncle name on the letter of whom I am named for, but he is Daniel Kenney . Back during WWII she had dated him prior to his going over to England. He was a S/SGT in the Army Air Corps on a B-17 as a waist gunner. Shot down over the North Sea and was captured by the Germans and held in a POW Camp for 22 months.
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
>1 y
Thank you for responding Sgt Daniel J. Daly and letting us know that you remember standing in formation at the Staging Bn. at Camp Pendleton, CA.
It is interesting that a family friend wrote a letter to you but put your uncles name [ Daniel Kenney] on it instead of your own. That must have brought back memories of family history to you because your uncle Daniel Kenney "was a S/SGT in the Army Air Corps on a B-17 as a waist gunner. Shot down over the North Sea and was captured by the Germans and held in a POW Camp for 22 months."
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MAJ Hugh Blanchard
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I remember sitting at a desk in the American Express Bank with a .45 at my right hand and two MPs with shotguns on either side when we held Pay Call at Hohenfels. We paid our soldiers in cash in those days, long before direct deposit. Yes, I also remember mail call.
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
6 y
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SGT Program Coordinator
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There wasn't no standing in formation for mail call, never. Just a Cluster F$%K of guys crowded by the mail clerk.
Anyway what do I know, only got two letters in my 4 years.
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LTC Stephen F.
LTC Stephen F.
6 y
Thank you for responding, my friend SGT (Join to see) and making us aware that mail call was very informal by military standards :-)
"Cluster f*ck of guys crowded by the mail clerk."To be honest two pieces of real mail in four years may not be a lot. Nowadays junk mail seems to be the bulk of mail delivered too many.
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SGT Program Coordinator
SGT (Join to see)
4 y
LTC Stephen F. - Thank you Sir, you're right, alot of Junk Emails.
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