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Collection Reference Number GLC09120.036
From Archive Folder Collection of WWII letters of Sidney Diamond to Estelle Spero 
Title Sidney Diamond to Estelle Spero
Date ca. 1942
Author Diamond, Sidney (1922-1945)  
Recipient Spero, Estelle  
Document Type Correspondence
Content Description Writes that he has enclosed ten very hard-earned dollars with the letter. Describes the ways in which he intends to save money. Outlines the day's schedule - a session on how to administer First Aid to gas attack victims, a lecture and film on map-reading and map-making, a drill in the afternoon and then another session with the rifle. Mentions that he refused to participate in a discussion on the "negro situation" as he believes that some people are simply born prejudiced.
Subjects World War II  Asia  Soldier's Letter  Love Letters  African American History  African American Troops  Science and Technology  Chemical Warfare  
People Diamond, Sidney (1922-1945)  Spero, Estelle (b. 1924)  
Place written Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland
Theme World War II; African Americans; Science, Technology, Invention
Sub-collection The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1860-1945
Additional Information Folder information: Sidney Diamond (1922-1945) enlisted in mid-April 1942, interrupting the chemical engineering degree that he was undertaking at City College. Diamond was sent to the South Pacific in June 1943, where he served as First Lieutenant to the Eighty-Second Chemical Battalion. On January 29th 1945, Diamond was killed by a Japanese knee mortar while acting as a forward observer during an assault on Fort Stotsenburg, north of Manila. Throughout his time in service, Sidney maintained an epistolary correspondence with Estelle Spero, his sweetheart and subsequently fiancée, the letters from which she preserved.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945