| The
Christmas of 1942
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
A war was raging across the globe
and there were many vacant chairs at dinner tables that
Christmas of 1942. They were vacant either through the absence
of a loved one serving his country in some far flung place
across the world, or sadder yet the chairs may have been
made permanently vacant to due death from war action.
On the world scene that Christmas the gallant forces of
the Red Army were holding the line in Russia against the
relentless fascist hordes of the Nazi army. The Russians
bagged more than 110,000 Nazi soldiers in six days of fighting
105 miles from Rostov-on-the-Don. American and British troops
were battling the Germans in North Africa. In the Pacific
heavy bombing raids by Allied planes battered the major
Japanese base at Rabaul on New Britain. The Allied forces
still saw many grim tasks before them on their way to victory
on two fronts.
On the home front it was announced that more than 140,000
pounds of silk and nylon were salvaged from 2.8 million
pairs of hosiery for use in the war effort.
The sports world was shocked at the death of 1928-1929 Army
All-America football player Red Cagle, who died after fracturing
his skull in a fall down some subway steps.
Locally, according to Postmaster Frank Plankenhorn, the
Williamsport post office handled 1,143,195 pieces of mail
during the Christmas 1942 season. Much of the mail was bound
to soldiers serving their country. Parcel post almost doubled
from 1941 levels.
W.F. Miller of 18 E. Jefferson St. built an elaborate train
layout, containing three trains and an Army camp, an airport,
a village and many other items. Robert Tompkins, son of
Mr. and Mrs. R.S. Tompkins of 312 Louisa St. was home on
leave from the Army and he constructed several train layouts
at his parents’ home. At his Army camp he had been
requested by several officers there to build several Christmas
train platforms for them.
Tommy Richardson, local well-known car dealer and president
of the Eastern Baseball League received Christmas greetings
from well-known comedian Joe E. Brown.
At movies here in Williamsport, the Keystone Theatre was
showing “Little Joe the Wrangler,” starring
Tex Ritter and Johnny Mack Brown. The Karlton was showing
“Flight Lieutenant” with Pat O’Brien and
the “Fighting Texan” with Ken Maynard. The Rialto
had “Whistling Dixie” starring Red Skelton,
Ann Rutherford and Guy Kibbee. And the Capitol’s feature
was “The Black Swan” starring Tyrone Power and
Maureen O’Hara.
The Gazette and Bulletin, Williamsport’s morning newspaper
cost just 4 cents an issue.
The Gazette and Bulletin on December 24, 1942 editorialized
in part, “Lustful, bloodthirsty tyrants have risen
in a world which should today be echoing a message of peace
on earth and goodwill toward men, and those tyrants must
be suppressed with all the power the force of might can
muster.
Christmas day 1942 may not be merry in the old sense, but
it offers opportunity for the strengthening of faith and
courage and the repeating of the first message to the Judean
shepherds -- a message that is the most complete expression
of men’s desire and "a desire yet to be won.”
|