Armistice Day was celebrated as an end to The Great War in Europe.  Subsequently it was called “Veterans Day” in the United States in 1954. In Canada and most of the Commonwealth, it is observed as “Remembrance Day.”

Those decorated envelopes were sent by  “Tid” Myers, my great grandfather, to his son, Pvt. Walter Myers, while  Walter was stationed in France. I remember Uncle Walter as an almost  blind old man whose hobby was amateur (HAM) radio.  I was too young to  understand his hobby, and didn’t know enough about WWI to ask him what  I’d ask him now. Uncle Walter passed on in 1978 and I never knew what he  had gone through until decades later.
The following are transcripts of letters  sent by Walter Myers to his parents.  He was in the U.S. Army Signal  Corps in WWI.  The Signal Corps used balloons to survey the German  trenches and movements, and was a very risky business.
The messages below are as is, without editing.
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France, August 27, 1918
Dearest Mom and Dad,
Was under fire for the first time recently.  No casualties. Believe me  you have never heard such an unearthly  noise. Everything quiet then all of a sudden “Boom” s-h-h-h sh-sh-sh-sh.  The boom is when the shell bursts and the “sh” sounds like the wind  whistling through a crack. The “sh” is caused by flying splinters. The  damned Dutch can’t hit a barn so we should worry. We have dugouts.
Sorry I can’t tell more. This may be cut  out. I don’t think it will though because there is no information. I  guess the Dutch remember shooting at us.  So this letter wouldn’t give  them any “info.”
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October 25, 1918
On the Front
Dear Mom and Dad:
Well, as per usual. A short ‘un. Have had  some excitement lately but I get so darn used to excitement that it  takes something more daring each time to satisfy me.  We lost another  balloon the other day.  Burned by a boche airman. God knows but maybe  our machine guns didn’t give him “H” but he got away with it. Our  observers landed safe in their parachutes.
The Boche shelled us the other night and  one shell landed about ten feet from your truly’s tent. Say, boy, you  ought to have seen our gang high-tail it for the dugouts.  It was in the  middle of the night and we all had to get out of bed but you didn’t see  anybody in their under clothes for we never take our clothes off. I  haven’t had my clothes off for about three weeks and Lord only knows  when I got a bath last.  There is an old shell hole about ten feet from  my  tent which is full of water and I am going to take a bath there if  I  freeze my “arse” off.
You want to know if I “ever” had the  cooties.  Well, I’ll tell you. I have ‘em most of the time.  But they  aint so worse after you have ‘em  a while. I “kinda” got used to ‘em.   We call the Boche, “Jerry.”
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November 14, 1918
For the first time away from the front since July 5th.
In a camp, behind the lines.
Dear Mom and Dad:
Well, of all the wonderful things that  could ever happen. The war is “won.”  As the French say, “Fini la  Guerre.”  Every Frenchman we meet hollers, “Fini la Guerre, Merci!   Beaucoup.”  It means– the war is over, thank you many times.  We are sure  some glad bunch.  I sure will have a lot of stuff to tell you when I  return.  And that won’t be long.  We are now away from the front for the  first time.  I just got rid of a bunch of cooties yesterday.  I hope  that they will be the last, too.  They are sure the cause of one hell of  a feeling.
Well, this is all for the present.  So long and hoping to see you soon.
Soldier Bill
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[Crossposted here.]