Showing posts with label 9-September 1918. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 9-September 1918. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Letter 13 - Sep 4, 1918


Letter #13 to Mrs. J J Thompson
Sedona, Ariz
Postmarked Sep 5, 1918

Sep 4, 1918
133 Inf. Co. H
Camp Dix, New Jersey

Dear Mother

I am writing answer to two letters that I have got since I have been here. So you got the pay for two months. They did not pay you thirty $ a month. They told me when I mail the papers out that if I sent 15$ a month that they thought that the government would pay 15$. I guess when they sent you the papers to fill out they thought that I wasn’t supporting you.

There is lots of negro soldiers here. When we came here negros was about all that was here but all of Camp Cody is here now and there has been lots of new drafted men come in the last two days and they are still coming. This is a better camp than Camp Cody if it wasn’t so far from home. There is lots of trees here and that makes it look more like home.

You ask me about the picture that I sent. One of them was me and the other was a man from Texas by the name of Carl. Most near every body takes us for brothers. I don’t know which side I was on now without seeing the picture. You ought to tell which is me. I thought that it looked just like me. I will try and get a good picture taken while I am here.

We got our wool clothes today. I did not have any clothes that was fit to have my picture taken in while I was at Cody. I think that the war will be over this winter. We might have to go across the water but I don’t think that we will ever have to go to the front. Let us hope that we won’t have to go there anyhow. I would sure like to have some of them big juicy peaches. There is lots of good peaches grows here but they charge 5 c for two and I am broke till payday again. I think that we will get paid this week.

Well as I don’t know anything to write and I am getting sleepy I will go to bed, so good-night.
Your son, James Thompson


Jim Thompson on Left - His friend Carl on the right









Letter 14 - Sep 16, 1918 - to brother, Fred Thompson


Sept 16, 1918 

133 Inf Co H 
Camp Dix, New Jersey 

Dear Brother,

I
 got your letter three or four days ago but have been sick and did not feel like answering it. I have had the chills and fever. They moved us from Cody to this colder climate and clipped our hair off short and there is an awful lot sick. 

Well I don’t think that we will be here very much longer till we will be moving on to war in France so if you don’t get any more letters from me very soon you will know that I have gone over the water. We haven’t been drilling any for about five days. We have been drawing our over seas clothes. We get our over seas examination just before we get on the boat. 

Well I would like to see all of you folks before I leave but there is no chance. But I figure on coming back some day when I kill them Germans. Well if I don’t hear from you anymore here I will write the next chance I get. As I don’t know anything more to write I will close for this time, hoping to hear from you soon. 

Your brother, James Thompson









Letter 15 - Sep 16, 1918


Letter #15 to Mrs. J. J. Thompson
Sedona, AZ  Postmarked Sep 17, 1918

Sep 16, 1918

133 Inf Co H
Camp Dix, New Jersey

Dear Mother,

I will drop you a line or two for I don’t think I will be here many days longer till I will be on the road to France.  I had my picture taken the other day.  I wanted to wait till I got my coat before I had it taken but if I had waited till I got my coat I would not had time to had the picture finished.   So I had it taken without a coat.

Well I am expecting to leave here any time now so you need not write till you hear from me again but I will be back when the war is over.  I get an over seas examination before I get on the boat.  If I pass I go across the water.

Well I will close for this time.  Good-bye till I see you again. 

From your son,

James Thompson





Monday, August 13, 2018

Letter 16 - Sep 27, 1918



Letter #16 To Mrs. Maggie Thompson
Flagstaff, Ariz.  Box 91  c/o Fred Thompson
Postmarked Oct 7, 1918

Sept 27 1918
133 Inf  Co H
Camp Dix, NJ

Dear Mother,

I got your letter yesterday and sure was happy to hear from you again.  I am still at Camp Dix.  I guess I would have been in France now if it had not been for sickness.  Four companies had already started.  They are somewhere close to New York, quarantined. 

I was sick for a day or two but I am feeling fine now.  There was another Co. went across in our place and I don’t know when we will go now.   There is still many sick and lots of them are being shipped home in wooden boxes.  They are talking of shipping us back to some warmer climate for the winter but you can’t tell anything about it.  They may ship us across any day and may never go across.  I don’t look have to go across this winter now but we may any day.  You can’t tell anything about the army. 

I got a letter that you wrote me before you got any from me and I got that card that you sent me.  It is getting pretty cold here now and we are having lots of rain.  That is the reason that there is so many dying here.  It is so damp and cold that they did not take good care of their selves and they take pneumonia.

We haven’t done any drilling for about two weeks.  There has been so many sick that the doctors stopped the drilling.  Well I think that we will move to some warmer climate before long but I may get fooled.  We may go across the pond.  But if I do have to go across you can look for me back some day. 

Well you can tell Guy that I would sure like to see him but I don’t know when I will get to.   I sent you some pictures in the last letter that I wrote. 

Well as I don’t have anything more to write I will close for this time.  This leaves Charley and I both well and I hope that it finds you all the same.

Your son,
James T.




Wednesday, October 18, 2017

Letter 15 - Sep 2, 1918


Letter # 15 to Mrs. Maggie Thompson
Sedona, Ariz
Postmarked Sep 3, 1918

Camp Dix, NJ
Sep 2, ‘18

Dear Mother,

Received your letter yesterday.  All our mail is just cached up and sent right on here without even changing the address.  You can always send mail to my old address when I move until you hear from me as it is always sent right on.  We are not doing anything to day as it is Labor Day.  Jim and I took a walk this morning out in the big trees.  It is the first time I have been in the trees since I left home.  We live in barracks here.  Big two story buildings just one room below and one above.  We have the upper floor that I am on.  There in only about 10 men now but they may fill it up later.  It is about 50 feet one way and 40 the other. 

There is lots of peach orchards and tomatoes close here but I haven’t had any money to buy any since I have been here.  We may get paid tomorrow.  Jim and I both got weighed yesterday evening.  He weighs 141 and I weigh 169.  I am heavier than I ever was before. 

I don’t think we will be separated any more than we are now.  We are closer here than we was at Cody and I think the boys that are in his squad are all right.  We may never cross for we will be here a while yet and the war may end any time. 

Well, I don’t know anything more to write.

As ever, Charley




Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Letter 15A - Sep 2, 1918 (to brother, Fred)


Letter # 15A to Fred Thompson
Flagstaff, Ariz
Postmarked Sep 3, 1918

Camp Dix, NJ
Sep 2, ‘18

Dear Brother,

I got your letter before I left Cody but thought I would wait until seen where I was going before I answered.  I have been here three or four days now.  I like this place better than Cody.  Jim and I just come back from a walk in the big trees.  We are not doing anything today as it is Labor Day. Jim got a letter from you about the same time I did and he said he had wrote twice before. 

We sure seen lots of country coming here, traveled about three thousand miles since we left Cody and was in eleven states. 

I sure want that cow if you sell her but don’t know yet just how I can pay for her.  I was talking to a man here about getting some money and he said he would let me know how in a few days.   I don’t know what you want for her and it will take so long to get letters now I am so far away but if I can buy her I will write to Green so you can see him. 
Well I will close for this time, I got to write to Mother yet. 

As ever,
your brother Chas. Thompson 





Letter 16 - Sep 10, 1918

Letter #16 to Mrs. Maggie Thompson
Sedona, Ariz
Postmarked Sep 11,1918


Co B 134 Inf
Camp Dix, NJ  Sep 10

Dear Mother

I got your letter about a week ago but I had just wrote so I thought I would wait a while.  I didn’t intend to wait so long though as it takes so long for a letter to get from here back there.  Jim and I went out to a lake about three miles Sunday.  there is lots of trees there and the lake twisted all around through the trees.  We stayed out until about 3 o’clock so missed our dinner but got some apples on our way back.
It will sure be cold here a little later as it is cold here now of night and has rained several times since we been here.  Lots of days it is damp and foggy.

I have been having some work done on my teeth since I been here.  We are drawing all of our over seas clothes now and I guess we will go to New York from here and stay there a while. 

Well I don’t know any more to write.  Tell Pendley and Lizzie that if they ever wrote I never got their letters.  Well I would like to see you all but it is only at times that I get lonesome as there is lots of good boys here in the co. and we have been together so much more.

As ever, Chas. Thompson





Letter 16A - Sep 10, 1918


Letter #16 A
(in same envelope as previous letter to Maggie Thompson)

Co. B 13th Inf
Camp Dix N J Sept 10, 1918

Dear Brother,

I got your letter about a week ago but thought every day that I would be payed so I could send some money but I didn’t get payed until today.  I am sure glad you bought them cows but I don’t want you to go in debt too much for me as $25.00 a month is all I can send and that counts up slow but maby it will be enough to pay you interest on your money.  Well this isn’t much of a letter but I got to write mother one and you can read hers. 

Your brother,
Chas. Thompson


Monday, October 16, 2017

Letter 17 - Sep 18, 1918


Letter #17 to Mrs. Maggie Thompson
Sedona, Ariz
Postmarked Sept 19, 1918


Co B 12th Inf
Camp Dix NJ Sept 18, 1918

Dear Mother

I will write you a few lines this morning.  I got your first letter that was addressed to this place day before yesterday.  It was about 5 days coming from Flagstaff.  About half of our Co. are in bed with bad colds.  I felt down for a day or to but feel all right now.   I got weighed yesterday evening and weighed 181 lbs.  Haven’t been drilling much since I been here.  I got a raise in my wages.  I am a first class private now and they get $33.00 a month.  I wrote you a letter the evening I got here and I didn’t write to Fred until I had been here 4 or 5 days but he got his first. 

It is raining to day so we are not doing anything.  We have been here three weeks tomorrow.  This month is sure going fast.  We may leave here any day now unless this sickness holds us back. 

Well this is all I can think of to say.  I ought to get an answer to my first letter soon and then I will write again.

As ever,

Chas. Thompson





Saturday, October 14, 2017

Letter 18 - Sep 26, 1918



Letter 18 to Mrs. Maggie Thompson
Sedona, Ariz
Postmarked Oct 13 1918

Camp Dix NJ 
Sept 26, 1918

Dear Mother

I got your letter today.  It lacked only three days of being a month since I wrote my first letter from here and the letter I got was the answer to it.  Well sickness is sure keeping us here.  Over half of the Co. was sick for a while and there has been two died.  They call it influinzey that they have all got.  I have been feeling good the most of the time but I don’t like this climate here.  Cody is a whole lot healthier than it is here. 

We haven’t been drilling any for the last week.  There is to much sickness.  I still doubt if I ever go across as I look for the war to end.  I never wrote to but one of the girls that I got the address of and she wrote me a long letter.  She is a school teacher 24 years old.  She has a brother already in France.  I have seen several flying machines since I have been here flying in the air and seen one light. 

Well I guess Green has got my letter before this.  I will soon have another pay day so I can send him some more money.  This month has sure gone fast but the time to go home can’t come any to fast to suit me or any of the rest of the boys to hear them talk.  They all want to go home. 

Well I don’t know anything else to write.  Tell Grey I will be home before Christmas.  I hope so anyway.

As ever,
Charley,




Who Were Charles and James Thompson??

The Thompson family were early pioneers in Arizona.  The father and patriarch, Irish immigrant John James Thompson (born 1841), was the firs...