Bill’s blog archive: Daily Posts

WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942
WAC recruits at Fort Des Moines, Iowa, 1942

The Murder of WAC Private Byrl Babcock

Before she was Private Byrl Babcock, she was Byrl Mitchell, part-owner of a jewelry store in Oroville, California. She worked as a buyer for a stationery shop. She ran a beauty parlor out of the Gridley Hotel. Before any of that, she'd put herself through secretarial school and graduated at twenty-nine — not because she was slow, but because she was paying her own way. She'd also been married multiple times. None of them lasted. If there's a pattern in Byrl's life, it's this: She never...
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX
Mount Olivet Cemetery, Ft. Worth, TX

WW2 Dead buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Texas

Mount Olivet Cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas, is named after the Jewish cemetery in Israel. “Mount Olivet” means “Mount of Olives”; the Jewish cemetery is of ancient origin, famous for its many biblical associations, and still in use today. More than 60,000 souls lay at rest at its central Texas namesake in Tarrant County. Among them are fifty-two men who gave their lives for our freedom in World War 2. In late 2010, a private citizen – a hospital administrator and local resident,...