Father of 10 Will Go into Service
World War IIDearest Reader,
Among my mother’s papers that have survived all these years, it the newspaper clipping about Chester J. Barrett and his family of ten children.
The Barrett family lived directly across the street from my mother in Concord, New Hampshire. I remember her speaking about the Barrett twins. In fact, the Barrett twins can be seen in photographs taken at my parents’ wedding reception, which was held in the front year of my grandparents’ home. This family was not strangers in a newspaper article; they were a family she knew personally and part of her neighborhood.
The story attracted attention because Charles Barrett, the father of ten children, had been called into military service during World War II. This article addresses an economic reality. Barrett worked for a local granite company and earned a modest income supporting his large family. According to the newspaper, military pay combined with government family allotments would provide more monthly income for his wife and children than he was earning in civilian life. At a time when many families struggled financially, military service offered a measure of economic security.
This photograph shows ten children gathered around their mother and father, facing an uncertain future while their father prepared to leave home and serve his country. I am sure my mother saved this clipping because the Barretts were her neighbors. She knew the family, the twins, and understood that behind the headline was a real family facing the realities of wartime America.
Dr. Nancy Watson
Rambling With Nan
Washington
Read More From Nancy
Winged Victory
In a letter dated September 3, 1944, a friend of my father wrote from wartime California. The letter location was written, Santa Ana, California. Santa Ana Army Base was one of the largest Army Air Forces training and processing centers during World War II. Thousands of young men passed through its barracks for classification and […]
Transportation Request for my Father
Among the military papers preserved by my family is a wartime transportation request issued to my father, Roger E. Watson, in June 1944. At first glance, it appears to be a little more than a train ticket, but documents such as this played an essential role in the movement of millions of servicemen across the United States […]
Six Days After Pearl Harbor
In another passage of her December 13, 1941 letter, my grandmother reveals how personally the attack on Pearl Harbor was being felt, even far from Hawaii. The war was no longer an abstract headline, it had names, faces and families attached to it. She wrote: “Vincent McDowell was at Schofield Barracks in Honolulu. Mrs McDowell […]