Translate

Tupac Amaru Shakur — “I'm Losing It… We MUST Unite!”

Where To Start

Start Here Start at 1619. Move forward.

The Arc is the spine of this project: 40 essays, one chronological argument, five analytical lenses.

The 40 Arc Essays — Canon Index → Full reading order · 1619 to the present · All 40 essays live

This site should read like a structured archive, not a loose category list. The Arc is the entry point; the lenses help you move through it with intention. Empty sections stay hidden until they are live.

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Little Known Black History Fact: 6888th Battalion

The 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion was an all-Black battalion of the Women’s Army Corps, whose main function was to ensure mail delivery to troops fighting in World War II and to boost morale. Nicknamed the “Six Triple Eight,” the battalion’s motto was “No Mail, No Morale.”

In 1944, Mary McLeod Bethune used her deep connection with Eleanor Roosevelt to create a role for Black women in the war. The military was still racially segregated at the time, and morale among the troops began to drop as they were missing thousands of pieces of correspondence from loved ones.

From February 1945 to March 1946, the Six Triple Eight helped clear a two-year backlog of mail using warehouses in England and France. Sorting mail wasn’t the only function of the battalion, as many of them were already members of the WAC and held various support roles. To date, it is the largest number of Black women to serve overseas in a military capacity.

In 2009, President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama honored the battalion, and in November 2018 Fort Leavenworth honored the women as well.

PHOTO: 


HEAD BACK TO THE BLACKAMERICAWEB.COM HOMEPAGE

 

 

 



from Black America Web http://bit.ly/2MB6rLr
via