Skip to content

1918 - A postcard from home sent to a German soldier held at an American Prisoner of War Enclosure following the Battle of Belleau Wood

1918 - A postcard from home sent to a German soldier held at an American Prisoner of War Enclosure following the Battle of Belleau Wood

Click for full-size.

1918 - A postcard from home sent to a German soldier held at an American Prisoner of War Enclosure following the Battle of Belleau Wood

  • Used
  • very good
Condition
Very good
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States
Item Price
A$774.70
Or just A$743.71 with a
Bibliophiles Club Membership
FREE Shipping to USA Standard delivery: 7 to 14 days
More Shipping Options

Payment Methods Accepted

  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • PayPal

About This Item

"Hopefully you already have a lot of letters and parcels from us."

From Posen, Prussia (today Poznan, Poland) to PWE #2 (Prisoner of War Enclosure #2) at [Souilly], France, 1918

This postcard was sent to Unterofficier (Sergeant)Friedlaender, who was held captive at the U.S. Prisoner of War Enclosure #2 in Souilly, France, from Posen, Prussia via the American Central Records Office for Prisoners of War at APO 717, Tours, France. It was written on 20 October 1918 and bears a Posen postmark with the same date. There is a German "Uberwachungsstelle" (monitoring agency) handstamp in the lower right corner, a circular "55" censor handstamp over the postmark, and a double-square American Base Censor stamp in the lower-left corner. A records office clerk annotated the card, "PWC #2".

My German is very poor, but the card's content appears to discuss the weather, "Grosspapa" (grandfather), receipt of some of the sergeant's letters, and hopes that he had received many letters and parcels.

The card's address indicates that Friedlaender was a sergeant assigned to the German 461st Infantry, the best unit in the mediocre 237th Division which had performed poorly on the Eastern Front and been relocated to the Aisne-Marne sector in the Spring of 1918.

By June 3, it had dug into positions within the Bois de Belleau (Belleau Wood), a 1.6 square kilometer of tangled undergrowth with the 461st occupying the center of the line. On 6 June, the 6th Marine Regiment and the 1st Battalion of the Army's 2nd Engineer Regiment, both part of the Army's 2nd Division, began an assault into the woods. Attack and counterattack followed until 15 June when the exhausted Marines were relieved by the Army's 7th Infantry Regiment which continued to grind away at the German defenses until the Marine Brigade was able to rest and replenish its ranks before returning to the front a week later.

The stalemate continued until the afternoon of 25 June when the 2nd Division's three Army artillery regiments unleashed a devastating two-hour barrage on center of the German line which was held by Friedlaender's 461st Regiment. As the barrage lifted, five companies of Marines attacked, and after several hours of heavy fighting with the shell-shocked defenders in the smoke-filled woods, the Americans captured and held the German position

Although of little strategic importance, the Battle of Belleau Wood became one of the most celebrated actions of the war due to the purple prose of Chicago newspaperman Floyd Gibbons who had accompanied the Marines and was wounded during the engagement.

Freidlaender, who was held at the Army's Prisoner of War Enclosure #2, was no doubt captured during this battle as the remnants of the 461st Regiment saw little fighting for the rest of the war.

(For more information, see the Marine Corps History Division's The Bravest Deeds of Men, "We Were there Too: the US Army at Belleau Wood" at the Angry Staff Officer website, "German Defensive Plan at Belleau Wood" at worldwar1.com, the G.H.Q.A.E.F.'s Prisoners of War: Regulations and Instructions, 1918, and "Central Prisoner of War Enclosure No. 2" in the A.E.F Commander-in-Chief's Report: Report of the Provost Marshal.)

This is, perhaps,the only extant example of mail sent to PWE #2 and made even more desirable by its association with one of the most storied battles of WWI. At the time of listing, no other PWE #2 mail is for sale in the trade, and there are no auctions recorded at the Stamp Auction Network, Worthpoint, or the Rare Book Hub. Neither does OCLC show any institutional holdings.

Reviews

(Log in or Create an Account first!)

You’re rating the book as a work, not the seller or the specific copy you purchased!

Details

Seller
Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC US (US)
Seller's Inventory #
009728
Title
1918 - A postcard from home sent to a German soldier held at an American Prisoner of War Enclosure following the Battle of Belleau Wood
Format/Binding
Unbound
Book Condition
Used - Very good
Quantity Available
1
Date Published
1918
Weight
0.00 lbs
Bookseller catalogs
Military; History; Philately;

Terms of Sale

Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC

Sales tax of 6% required for books shipped to addresses in Virginia. Standard domestic shipping is free, however additional fees may be required for heavy, oversized, or unusually-shaped items.

Returns accepted for any reason for a full refund (less shipping) if we receive the return within 14 days of shipment and items are received in the same condition as sent. Advance notice of any return would be appreciated.

About the Seller

Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2003
Virginia Beach, Virginia

About Kurt A. Sanftleben, LLC

We always have an inventory of unique, primary source Americana on hand, that is, we keep a selection of personal narratives such as diaries, work journals, correspondence collections, photograph albums, scrapbooks, and similar items that shed light on some aspect of North American life, history, culture, or society.

We also have a nice selection of unusual ephemera and postal history items in stock as well.

Member: Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America, Ephemera Society, Manuscript Society, American Stamp Dealers Association, American Philatelic Society, U.S. Philatelic Classics Society, Military Postal History Society

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Poor
A book with significant wear and faults. A poor condition book is still a reading copy with the full text still readable. Any...

This Book’s Categories

tracking-