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                    <text>[Manley 005]
[Page 1]
February 17, 1945
5:00 P.M.
Sweetheart-We just got off duty a short while ago. At 10:00 A.M. we reported and had movies and lectures
on Army Life. We have to report back Monday morning at 7:00 A.M. Tonight at 6:00 P.M. we
report for roll call and then find out who reports for K.P. duty tomorrow. I’m hopin’ and prayin’
I don’t get called for it.
My Army pants and overcoat are not yet ready from being altered, so I can’t go to the movies,
recreation hall, or Sports Center. I’m going to try to call you on the phone as soon as I can.
Gee, but it’s lonesome here.
[Page 2]
2.
Not being with you-- not hearing your voice is something that gives me that lonely feeling. I love
you more than anything in the world my darling. When I come home, I coming home to you and
then we’ll have our “Someday.” Gee, but you’re beautiful though. A few minutes before I started
writing this letter, I took out my wallet and looked at the picture I keep of you. Being away from
you is hard Jean. I’m not kidding either, But there’s one thing that will keep a smile on my face
and that is that you’ll always be just mine and mine alone. And by the way, I’ll be yours
exclusively, for always, forever, eternally, and everything else.
It snowed here pretty hard last night (2 to 3 inches), but the sun came out today and melted it
quite a bit. Right now I’m sitting in
[Page 3]
3.
the barracks on my cot.
This morning, we had our Classification Tests. If I pass them I might get to go to school for quite
awhile. We’ll find out the results probably on Monday.
I just finished the last of the chocolate bars my mom put in my bag. All the boys on the train had
some of [?] fudge.

�We all hope to be (was just called for roll call, Didn’t get any K.P. It’s now 8:45. Wrote you a
letter from Telephone center after roll call. Wrote my mother a letter and ate. I shipped out of
here [text strikethrough] by Tuesday. Will telephone you from here if possible and also from my
new base.
I’ll have to close now my darling. Please take good care of yourself for me. I’ll always be yours
darling, so please be
[Page 4]
4.
just mine for always.
And we’ll have our “Someday,” just wait and see.
I’ll see you in Dreamland my dearest. I’ll see you in my dreams and
I’ll be loving you
Always,
Ned

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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
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She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 006]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
February 17, 1945
6:08 P.M.
My dearest Jeannie-While I was writing a letter a little earlier today (around 5:00) back at the barracks I was called
out to find whether I had K.P. or not. No this time, I was lucky. I’m at the Telephone Center now
but I won’t be able to call you tonight. I’m going to try tomorrow morning or around noon
though.
I love you Jeannie sweetheart and I always will. I think you’re wonderful. You and I are going to
be married “Someday.” We’ll have our own home and everything we’ve planned and dreamed
about.
After I finish this letter, I’m going over to the P.X. and get something to eat. Then I’ll probably
go back to the barracks, finish the letter I [text strikethrough] was writing, and
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
then I’ll get to bed. I’m going to Church tomorrow at 9:00 A.M. I won’t have to get up ‘til 8:30
(I hope). Right after Church, I’m going to try to call you on the phone.
Please write to me Jean. I want ever so much to hear from you. We were told to tell everyone not
to write to us for we might leave soon, but you can write and if I’m gone, it will be forwarded to
me.
I’m going to write a letter to mom now so I’ll close this letter to the dearest, sweetest girl on
earth.
Take care of yourself darling, Jeannie. Remember that I’m think of you all of the time and that
I’ll be loving you,

�Always_
Ned
P.S. Someday
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]

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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 007]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
February 18, 1945
10:25 A.M.
Dearest Jeannie-I’m as the telephone center now waiting for a call to be put through to you. I hope you are home.
I got up at 4:45 this morning and got cleaned up and went to breakfast. Then I went back to my
barracks and waited for work call. I didn’t get any, so I helped the others sweep and mop up the
floor. Then I went to Church at 9:00 A.M. From there I came over here.
How is everyone at your house? All well I hope.
Gee, but I think the world of you darling. You’re the most wonderful, the most beautiful girl in
the whole wide world. And you’re all mine. That’s what makes me feel good. That feeling that
someone loves you just as much as you just as much as you love them. I love you
[Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
my dearest and I always will. And by the way, we’re gonna have our “Someday,” aren’t we? But
definitely!!!
All of our dreams will come try Jeannie sweetheart. I want you to be my wife “Someday.” All
you have to do is be a good girl and take care of yourself. If anything ever happened to you or I
lost you, I wouldn’t know what to do. I love you so much, you’re on my mind all day. You’re
mine Jean, and you’ll always be mine. I’ll always be yours too.
Some of the men and boys here left their wives and sweethearts and are quite worried whether
they’ll be true to them or not. Gee, but I’m awfully lucky to have a sweetheart like you. I’ll never
worry about whether you’re true to me or not. I just know you always will be. And I promise you

�darling, I’ll always be true to you. I’m darn proud to have you and I’ll never let you go. Oh Jean,
I love you so.
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]
[Page 3]
3.
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
I hope you can read this writing because I’m writing it on the arm of a chair here in the
Telephone Center.
Gee, how I wish I could see you right now. I wish I could hold you in my arms and kiss you and
hear you say you love me. Gee but it’s lonely without out.
You’re worth waiting for Jean and I’m going to wait. Gee it’ll be swell when I’m back home
again with you. I’ll get a good job as a swoon-crooner and we’ll get married and _oh, it’ll be so
gosh darn wonderful.
I think I’ll close now dearest Jeannie. Please take care of [text strikethrough] (Pardon me. I wrote
myself instead of yourself. I wish you could take care of me though!) yourself and write as soon
as you can. My address is on the envelope.
I’ll be loving you Sweetheart
Always_
Ned
P.S. “Someday”—we’ll be
married and then you’ll be
Jeannie MANLEY
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 008]
[Page 1]
February 18, 1945
12:20 P.M.
Dearest Jeannie_
I’m sitting on the floor of my barracks waiting for work call. If they don’t call our group for it,
we get the afternoon off.
Gee, but it was swell hearing your voice on the phone today. After I called you I found out later
that I could have talked longer. I wish I knew about that before I called you.
Oh Jeannie dearest, I love you so—more than anything in the whole wide world. Your mine
exclusively, and you’ll always be.
“Someday”, you and I are going to be married. It’ll be
[Page 2]
2.
really wonderful being with you all the time, never to leave you again.
I’ll have to close now darling. We’re having the call in a few minutes. Take care of yourself, be a
good girl, and say a little prayer for me.
So long sweetheart_
I’ll be loving you
Always
Ned
P.S. “Someday”
Our home
You Me
Jeannie and Ned and the “28”

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 009]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
February 18, 1945
9:55 P.M.
Dearest Jeannie_
I’m at the telephone center and just finished a letter to my mother. I went and saw a movie
tonight. It was called “Objective Burma.” It was swell. I have to be in bed by 11:00 P.M.
How is everyone? Tell them I said “hello” and was asking how they were.
Gee, I miss you an awful lot, my darling. I’d give the world to be back with you, never to leave
you again. I love you so darn much, and you mean so much to me.
Please take care of yourself all the time. I love you again my darling.
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]
[Page 2]
2.
I’m going back to my barracks now and hit the hay. I hope that I dream of you.
Be a good girl Jean and don’t worry—I’ll be a good boy. Honest.
“Someday”, we’re going to be married and then all our dreams will come true.
Goodnight sweetheart. I love you so very much.
I’ll be loving you sweetheart_
Always,
Ned
P.S. “Someday”
Goodnight Jeannie darling.
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]

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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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[Page 1]
FROM: Pvt. EDWARD MANLEY-35858080
ARMY RECEPTION CENTER
CAMP ATTERBURY, INDIANA
Sweetheart_
After we’re married, you’ll have to bake some bread for me. I love home made bread.
I’m going to try to see a movie tonight. It’s “Objective Burma.”
Oh yes in nine more days we’ll have our 18th anniversary.
Always,
Ned
I LOVE YOU—Someday
[address]
Miss Jean Worthington
14247 Superior Rd.
Cleveland Hts. 18, Ohio.
[picture postcard text
“THIS IS THE WAY WE BAKE OUR BREAD”
CAMP ATTERBURY, INDIANA]

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&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
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She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 011]
[Page 1]
February 19, 1945
4:40 P.M.
Dearest Jean,
Today, I finished processing. I got my “dog tag”, arranged for insurance and War Bonds, and had
an interview to determine my qualifications. Tonight at 6 P.M. we have a roll call for K.P. or
special duty.
I passed my qualifying tests with pretty fair marks. For Officer’s Candidate School, I qualified
with a better than average mark. In the mechanical aptitude test I got a better than average mark
and for radio code, I did average. I hope that it will do me some good.
Gee, but it’s lonesome here.
[Page 2]
2.
I miss you ever so much my darling. More than you’ll ever know. But in the not too distant
future, I’ll be back with you, to be with you for always, forever, eternally, and everything else.
Life out here at Camp Atterbury isn’t so tough. It’s all in the way that you go into it. Today,
before and after our interviews, I was playing the top part of the piano and another fellow was
playing the base and a lot of the boys were singing. The food they serve isn’t so hot, but we can
get wieners an hamburgers at the P.X. any time.
I wish I could see you right this very minute. I bet you look awfully pretty. Honest sweetheart, I
think that you’re the most beautiful girl in the whole wide world. And by the way, I think you’re
the most wonderful girl also.
[Page 3]
3.
If I can, I’ll write you another letter tonight. I might go to a movie. None of the movies they
show here have been released to the public as yet.
There’s a lot of talk that we might move from here to some camp tomorrow morning for our
basic training. I sure hope we do. In that event, I won’t go to the movie. But after the movie, I’ll
stop in at the Telephone Center and write to you.

�Here in the barracks (that’s where we live) we can’t lie or sit on our beds from 4:45 A.M. to 4:30
P.M. so we have to sit on the floors as there are nothing but cots up here. I sleep on the second
floor and my bed is right by a window facing toward the east. Gee I wish I could see you this
very minute.
I love you, Jeannie darling, more than anything in the whole wide
[Page 4]
4.
and I’ll always love you, honest I will. I think you’re swell. Please just be mine for always. I’ll
always be yours.
I’m going to close now darling. Please take care of yourself and remember
I’ll be loving you,
AlwaysNed
P.S. “Someday” we’ll be married. Gee, it’ll be swell having you as Mrs. Manley. I love you so
much Jeannie and it’s awful lonesome here without you.
Remember “Someday”
So long Sweetheart,
Ned

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The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
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She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
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Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 012]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
Feb. 19, 1945
9:35 P.M.
Dearest Jeannie_
I’m just on my way back from a show I saw. It was fair.
Well, I’ve got K.P. call at 4:00 A.M. tomorrow. It’s really not so hard though.
I love you my darling, more than anything in the whole wide world. I think you’re swell. Gee,
but I miss you. And by the way! We’re going to have our “Someday.” It’ll sure be swell being
with you all the time then.
I’m going to go get some sleep now dearest. Until “Someday” take care of yourself. I’ll take care
of you after that.
Think of me and please write to me.
Goodnight Sweetheart_
I’ll be loving you
Always—
Ned
P.S. “Someday”
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]

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&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 013]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
February 20, 1945
8:05 P.M.
Sweetheart_
I’m writing this letter while sitting on my cot. I just came back from saying “Goodbye” to some
boys in Barracks #5. At 6:00 P.M. today, my name was called to ship out tomorrow.
Today, I got up at 4:00 A.M. and did K.P. all day. In the morning, I and a German prisoner of
war made pineapple turnovers and in the afternoon I peeled potatoes.
I love you dearest, oh ever so much. I think you’re the most wonderful and the most beautiful
girl in the whole wide world. Oh Jeannie darling I love you, I love you, I love you.
I wish that I could be with you right now. Last week this time I was.
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead
CAMP ATTERBURY
Atterbury, Indiana]
It’s wonderful being with you. You mean more to me than anything in the world. You’re swell.
“Someday” dearest, we’ll be married and have our own little home and all the things we’ve
talked and dreamed about. It’ll be so wonderful, sharing the rest of my life with you.
I love you again darling, and that goes for always, forever, eternally, and everything else.
Tomorrow, we ship out Jeannie. If I’m allowed to write en route to my new base I will, and how.
Please write me won’t you.
Take care of yourself Jeannie, please—for me. I want you for always.
Goodnight Sweetheart

�I’ll be loving you Jeannie
Always—
Ned
P.S. “Someday—you’ll be Jeannie Manly.
I“ll love you—Sunday, Monday and Always”
[letterhead: Written at the TELEPHONE ROOM]

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 014]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
Feb. 23, 1945
10:30 P.M.
My Sweetheart_
I don’t have much time to write as I have to be in bed by 11:00 P.M. We were out all day for
lectures, an interview, a little marching to do some sight seeing and see what the Fort is like. It’s
not such a bad place.
At the end of 15 weeks here (starting Monday) I’ll get a furlough. (I hope). Then I might go to
Officer’s Training School and become a [text strikethrough] commissioned officer.
Gee but it’s lonely here without you darling. I miss you_ more than you’ll ever know.
I love you Jeannie dearest, more than anything in the whole wide world.
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
I think you’re the most wonderful and the most beautiful girl in the whole wide world too.
Honest I do.
I’ll always love you sweetheart always. I keep your picture with me all the time_ right next to
my heart.
I have to get to bed now dearest, so I’ll have to close. Please take care of yourself and write me. I
love you again.
Goodnight sweetheart_
I’ll be loving you
Always_
Ned
P.S. Someday we’ll be married. It’ll be swell sharing the rest of my life with you
Goodnight sweetheart.

�See you in “Dreamland”

�</text>
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&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 015]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
February 24, 1945
10:10 P.M.
Dearest Jeannie_
I just finished writing a letter to my mother. How is she? Please tell me when you write to me.
I hope by now, you have received at least one letter from me. Don’t worry if you don’t get a letter every
day. They told us that all incoming and outgoing mail is always late. It will probably take 2 or 3 days
before your letters reach me or my letters reach you. I’m writing to you every day, my darling. I love you
_ oh ever so much. More than you’ll ever know. I think you’re swell.
Gee but your beautiful tho! The most beautiful and wonderful girl in the whole wide world. And by the
way sweetheart,
[Page 2]
2.
we’re going to have our “Someday” because we love each other.
You can expect me home in May, unless I go to Officer’s Training School. How is your job coming
along. Please take care of yourself dearest Jeannie. If anything ever happened to you, I wouldn’t know
what to do. You mean so much to me.
I carry your picture with me all the time. As soon as I can, I’ll send you a large picture of myself in
uniform. Please send me a picture of yourself. I want one a lot.
I’m going to get my hair cut tomorrow, and I won’t have much left. It’ll grow back in quick though.
Monday, we start our regular training in the field. It’s easy if you take it in the right frame of mind.
It’s 10:30 now darling, so I had better go now. Taps is at 11:00 and if we’re not in bed then we’re marked
A.W.O.L and then court-martialed.
Please take care of yourself and be a good girl and remember that [text strikethrough] “From taps ‘til I
hear hear reveille, I dream, my dear of you.”
Goodnight Jeannie sweetheart
I’ll be loving you dearest_
Always,
Ned
P.S. “Someday” [curved line pointing down]
[arrow pointing towards] we’ll be married.

�Goodnight sweetheart,

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 016]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
February 25, 1945.
8:00 P.M.
My dearest, sweetest Jeannie_
Gee, but I miss you so. Not hearing your voice and not seeing you every day is getting harder
day by day.
In my pocket, right next to me heart, I carry your picture. Golly, you’re beautiful tho! The most
beautiful and the most wonderful girl in the world.
Today, I cleaned my bayonet and rifle, put all my clothes and belongings away neatly in my foot
locker, and helped clean the barracks up. I went to Church at 11:00 A.M. this morning. Our
regiment has a very beautiful chapel.
If you ever should come to Alabama one of the things you’d notice is how
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
bright the moonlight is. “Someday”, we’ll come down here together, and we’ll look at the moon
together, and– woo woo!!!
I love you Jeannie, more than anything else in the whole wide world. I’ll love you for always,
forever, eternally and everything else. I think you’re swell.
You belong to me darling, and please don’t ever forget it. I’ll always remember that and I belong
to you. If I ever lost you, I wouldn’t know what to do.
Right now, I wish I was with you. And perhaps during the evening I could have some pie,
Johnny Cake, and a few thousand lipstrich sandwiches. (Raspberry flavor, please.)
Tuesday is our 18th anniversary. Gee, it’s been a wonderful 18 months. Honest it has darling.
[Page 3]

�3.
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
Our training here lasts for 15 weeks. The I.R.T.C. means—Infantry Replacement Training
Command. Please don’t tell my Mother that unless you have to.
I’ll be here for 15 weeks starting tomorrow unless I got to O.C.S (Officer’s Candidate School).
That schooling lasts for 90 days and you come out a commissioned officer. (Sec. Lieut.) I’ll have
to take this basic training for 6 weeks tho’ to be eligible.
I got my haircut today—G.I. style of course. It’s just like when I always get a short haircut.
I’m starting to get sunburned already. The sun is pretty strong down here.
As for how soon I’ll get a furlough, I really don’t know. I’ll let you know though as soon as I
find out.
[Page 4]
4.
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
How is your Mother and Father and all the rest. All O.K. I hope. Tell them all I said “hello”.
I hope your job is agreeing with you.
Please take care of yourself, won’t you Jeannie. I love you so gosh darn much, and I miss you
so_ more than you’ll ever realize. You mean ever so much to me darling. I’ll always love you
Jeannie_ please just love me and be true to me always. Oh I know you will. You’re swell.
I’m going to close now. Got some things to do. Be good darling and write to me as much as you
can.
Goodnight Sweetheart!
I’ll be loving you,
Always
Ned
P.S. “Someday”—It’ll be wonderful.
See you in Dreamland my Sweetheart

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 017]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
February 26, 1945.
10:00 P.M.
Dearest Jeannie_
I’m writing this letter outside my barracks. The moon is my only light and down here, the moon
is bright.
Gee, how I wish we were together right now. East of here, there is a mountain range. Every once
in awhile a red flare is shot up in the air from somewhere in the mountains. In the distance you
can hear rifle fire. Some companies are out on maneuvers.
I love you sweetheart, more than anything in the whole wide world. I think you’re swell.
“Someday” darling, you and I will
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]
be married. It’ll be swell then, being with you forever.
Oh I love you so. I want you Jeannie, ever so much. I always will.
If I ever lost you, I wouldn’t know what to do, so please just be mine and don’t ever leave me.
I’ll always be true to you Jeannie, I promise. I’m yours exclusively.
I wish I could be with you tomorrow. It’s our 18th anniversary. Oh sweetheart, it’s been a
wonderful 18 months. Honest it has. I didn’t get any mail except the 2 letters from you, that I got
at Atterbury. Mail here is awfully slow.
[Page 3]
3.
[letterhead:
U.S. ARMY]

�I’m going to get ready and go off to Dreamland now darling. We were on the go all day and I’m
pretty tired.
Please be good and take care of yourself. Say “hello” to everyone for me.
Goodnight Sweetheart.
I’ll be loving you_
Always
Ned
P.S. “Someday” you’ll be Jeannie Manley.
Goodnight Sweetheart.
Your loving [arrow] Ned

�</text>
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&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 018]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
U S O]
March 4, 1945.
12:15 P.M.
Sweetheart_
I’m writing this letter from one of the five U S O Clubs here in Anniston (a small town 5 miles
or so from the Fort.) I got a pass last night good until 11:00 P.M. tonight. I stayed at the Front
last night and saw “Bring on the Girls.” It was pretty good. See it when it’s in Cleveland. I know
you’ll enjoy it.
I was going to write to you from the Main P.X. after the show last night but when I got there it
was closed. When I got off the bus
[letterhead: THE YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS • THE NATIONAL
CATHOLIC COMMUNITY SERVICE THE SALVATION ARMY • THE YOUNG
WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS THE JEWISH WELFARE BOARD • THE
NATIONAL TRAVELERS AID ASSOCIATION
U S O IS FINANCED THROUGH THE NATIONAL WAR FUND]
[Page 2]
2.
at Co. “B. it was almost 11:00 P.M. and I had to get in and was unable to write. I’ll make up for
it tho! When I get back to the Fort this evening. I’ll write you another letter.
I went to Church here in Anniston this morning. I got here by bus and arrived at about 9:15 A.M.
By the way darling, I only wish you could have seen a certain house I passed on the way here.
Just the kind I’d like to have “Someday.”
I had pancakes, sausage, milk, and apple pie with ice cream for breakfast in a restaurant here. I
also had coffee (ugh) and donuts here at the USO Club.
I sent a telegram to my mom. I’m going to try to call her around 1:30 P.M. today I told her to call
you and tell you to be down at my
[Page 3]
3.

�[letterhead:
U S O]
house if possible. I hope I can get a call there.
I got a super- wonderful letter from you yesterday Jeannie. Oh, it was swell tho!
I love you dearest, more than anything in the whole wide world. I think you’re swell.
The other day, we had Johnny Cake. It was pretty good but didn’t taste half as good as the kind
you make. If it wouldn’t be too much trouble or expense, do you suppose that, once in awhile
you could send me some things you’d bake. I’d sure appreciate them sweetheart.
[letterhead: THE YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS • THE NATIONAL
CATHOLIC COMMUNITY SERVICE THE SALVATION ARMY • THE YOUNG
WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS THE JEWISH WELFARE BOARD • THE
NATIONAL TRAVELERS AID ASSOCIATION
U S O IS FINANCED THROUGH THE NATIONAL WAR FUND]
[Page 4]
4.
Gee but I miss you Jeannie. More than you’ll ever know. I’ll always love you darling. I wish I
could be with you and never leave you. I wish I could live [text strikethrough] forever in your
arms. I mean it Jeannie. I miss you so much. You mean so much to me and I love you so.
I’m going to have something to eat now and then I’m going to try and call home.
Please take care of yourself Jeannie. Be a good girl
So long sweetheart.
I’ll be loving you
Always
Ned.
P.S. “Someday” you’ll be Mrs. Edward Arthur Manley! I love you and always will.

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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 019]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
U S O]
March 4, 1945.
3:45 P.M.
Dearest Jeannie_
I just came back from the bus station from where I’m trying to call you. I’m now at the U.S.O
Club. They said I should come back in about an hour.
Gee, but I’m in love with you Miss W. I love you more than anything else in the whole wide
world. Oh I do Jeannie, I do love you. Much more than you’ll ever know. Since I wrote you
earlier today I’ve had 2 hamburgers, a milk shake, some crackers and a glass of milk.
[letterhead: THE YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS • THE NATIONAL
CATHOLIC COMMUNITY SERVICE THE SALVATION ARMY • THE YOUNG
WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS THE JEWISH WELFARE BOARD • THE
NATIONAL TRAVELERS AID ASSOCIATION
U S O IS FINANCED THROUGH THE NATIONAL WAR FUND]
[Page 2]
2.
In the lounge room, there is a corporal who is playing the piano, and even tho’ one of his fingers
is missing he can sure hit the ivories.
I miss you Jeannie, ever so much. I wish I could be in your arms right this very minute. Knowing
that you’re waiting for me and that “Someday” you’ll by my wife keeps things pretty bright tho!
But I still wish I could see you, hold you close and kiss you. I love you darling, more than you’ll
ever know.
You asked me when I’d be coming home in one of your letters. I’ll
[letterhead: THE YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS • THE NATIONAL
CATHOLIC COMMUNITY SERVICE THE SALVATION ARMY • THE YOUNG
WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS THE JEWISH WELFARE BOARD • THE
NATIONAL TRAVELERS AID ASSOCIATION
U S O IS FINANCED THROUGH THE NATIONAL WAR FUND]

�[Page 3]
3.
be home about the middle of June. Our 15 week training period ends then.
I’m going to get something to eat now darling. (Don’t worry—I won’t get fat.) Then I’m going
to see how the call is coming.
Take care of yourself Jeannie. Be mine forever_exclusivly.
So long sweetheart
I’ll be loving you
Always
Ned
P.S. “Someday”
[letterhead: THE YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS • THE NATIONAL
CATHOLIC COMMUNITY SERVICE THE SALVATION ARMY • THE YOUNG
WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS THE JEWISH WELFARE BOARD • THE
NATIONAL TRAVELERS AID ASSOCIATION
U S O IS FINANCED THROUGH THE NATIONAL WAR FUND]

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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[Page 1]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 5, 1945
9:45 P.M.
My dearest Jeannie—
I love you_ I love you_ I love you_ I love you_ I love you. Well, I’ve told you that I love you.
I do so love you Jeannie, more than anything in the whole wide world. I’ll love you for always
too darling. Honest I will.
I’ve been kept pretty busy today. I had a ride in a jeep. Once it went [text strikethrough] 65 m.p.h
I awfully tired tonight, for I’ve had quite a bit to do.
Right after dinner, I changed uniform and swept out the Company Orderly Room. That’s our
headquarters. Then I made up my field pack and put my laundry away and straightened out my
foot locker. I then changed uniforms again and went to the P.X. and got a pint of chocolate ice
cream,
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
some cookies, and some orange pop. Altogether, I’ve changed my uniform 5 times today. I had a
pint of vanilla ice cream right after supper also.
Tomorrow we have Gas Mask Drill and go thru the Gas Chamber. Wednesday we’ll throw 2 live
hand grenades. We practiced with them today.
I received 3 swell letters from you today Jeannie. Oh, you’ll never know just how wonderful they
are and how much they mean to me.
We have to get up at 5:20 tomorrow and be ready to leave for our training area at 5:55 A.M.
I have your picture right next to my heart dearest. I always carry it with me. Even when I change
uniforms 5 times a day.
[Page 3]

�3.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
I miss you Jeannie. I miss you_ more than you know. It’s tough on this heart of mine when it’s
away from you. I love you so.
Please forgive the terrible writing. I’m writing on the mantel of a fireplace in the Day Room.
I’m going to shave now dearest so I’ll sign off now. Take good care of yourself_ for me.
Goodnight Sweetheart
I’ll be loving you
Always,
Ned
P.S. we’re going to have our “Someday.” Then you’ll be Jeannie Manley.

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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 022]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 6, 1945.
9:30 P.M.
My dearest Jeannie—
I’m writing this letter sitting in a chair outside of the Day Room. It’s pretty windy out here. Nice
and cool tho! It was awfully hot during the day.
All morning we had gas drill. They set off several gases and also some smoke screen and signal
smoke which is of different colors. One of the gases set most of us choking for awhile.
We were also shown how the “Thermite” grenade works. It doesn’t explode, it just burns at
about 5000° F.
Then we entered a tear gas chamber [?] and then again only this
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
time, we removed out gas masks before we left the room. This gas stings the skin and makes
tears run from your eyes.
Then we entered, stayed in, and left the chlorine gas room. Then the next time, we went in and
after we were in, we then put on out masks.
All afternoon was spent in drill marching, battle tactics, and calisthenics.
During a time out [?] (10 min.) they played Crosby’s “I’ll be seeing you,” and “Magic is the
Moonlight” by Andy Russell. First records I’ve heard since I left home.
Tomorrow we’re going out and toss hand grenades. We have to be up before 5 A.M.
[Page 3]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]

�Gee I wonder what you’re doing right now. Wish I could be with you_ close in your arms and
being kissed by you.
I love you Jeannie, and I miss you so. I wish I never had to leave you. I’ll be the happiest boy in
the world when I’m back with you again.
You and I are going to be married my darling and then our “Someday” and all our dreams about
it will come true. It’ll be so swell.
I’m getting pretty tired dearest, so if you don’t mind, I’ll close now. I’ll be thinking of you
Jeannie and when I’m not I’ll be dreaming of you.
Please take care of yourself and don’t ever forget that I’m yours—forever, and exclusively.
(OVER)
[Page 4]
4.
I love you Jeannie and I think you’re the most wonderful and most beautiful girl in the whole
wide world. I always will too. You’re stuck with me Miss Worthington.
We’re going to have our “Someday” darling. It’ll be swell too_ you being my wife.
Goodnight my Sweetheart—
I’ll be loving you
Always,
Ned
P.S. “Someday,” we’ll have our own little home and 28. Remember Jeannie “All or Nothing at
All.”
Goodnight, my love. I’ll see you in “Dreamland” Jeannie. For always I’ll be your ever loving—
Ned.

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 023]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 7, 1945.
9:50 P.M.
Sweetheart_
I got a swell letter from you today. Gee, it was wonderful.
I’ve been thinking and dreaming about you all day. I’m awfully lonesome Jeannie, much more
than you’ll ever know. I want so much to be with you.
A little while ago, some fellow was playing “Jeannie with the Light Brown Hair.” I felt like
crying, just as I do now. I’m so lonely. Oh Jean, I love you. I’ll always love you, honest darling.
Please don’t ever leave me. I couldn’t bear it. If I ever lose you, I’ll lose everything. I want you
so darn much for my [text strikethrough] wife “Someday.” Oh please be mine for always Jean.
Don’t ever leave me. I love you my dearest. I couldn’t go on without you. You mean, oh ever so
much to me.
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
I want you to be Mrs. Manley, my sweetheart. You’ll make a wonderful wife, and also a very
wonderful mother.
“Someday” all out dreams will come true. Jeannie dearest, because I love you and I know you
love me.
I’m going to try to call home “Sunday.” If I do manage to call, I’ll send a telegram to your house.
That way, I’ll get to talk to you
How is everyone at your house? I hope all are O.K. Tell them I said, “Hello.”
I’m awfully blue tonight. Have been ever since I got your letter. I’m so lonesome for you. You’ll
never know how I’m longing to see you, to hold you in my arms, and to kiss you. I’d give the
world if I could. I have your picture right next to my heart. It’ll be under my pillow when I go to
bed in a little while. And it’s also gonna get kissed too—and how.

�[Page 3]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
Most of the others here are sore and tired. We marched about nine miles today with full field
pack, rifle and a lot of other stuff. It was pretty heavy.
In the morning we practiced camouflage technique and in the afternoon, we threw hand
grenades.
Gee, but I bet you’re the most beautiful girl in your class at school. I think you’re the most
beautiful girl in the whole wide world.
I love you darling, for always, forever, eternally, and everything else. I think you’re swell.
You’re the most wonderful girl in the world my dearest. Oh I love you so darn much. I wish you
were holding me close in your arms right now.
You mean more than anything in the world to me Jeannie. Please just be mine forever. I’m yours
forever. I wouldn’t and I won’t ever leave you. I love you too much and I want you so.
[Page 4]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
I’m going to close now darling. I’m pretty tired. Please take care of yourself, for me. And be
mine for always.
Be a good girl and by the way—I’ll see you up in Dreamland.
Goodnight Sweetheart_
I’ll be loving you
Always,
Ned
P.S. My transfer for the Air Corps didn’t go thru. I’m going to try for Officer Candidate School
though.
I love you, Jeannie, oh ever so much. When I come back, I’ll never leave you. I’ve been away
from you nearly a month and it’s almost unbearable. I’m awfully lonely since you’re not around.
Take care of yourself for me. See you in my dreams.
Goodnight Jeannie_
Your ever loving Ned.

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 024]
[Page 1]
1.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 8, 1945.
9:05 P.M.
My dearest Jeannie—
Gee, but I miss you, darling. It’s terribly lonesome here, without you. You’ll never know how
much I miss being held in your arms, being kissed by you, and hearing you say that you love me.
I know you love me Jeannie. I love you too. Have ever since Aug. 27, 1943. I’ll always love you
sweetheart you mean so much to me. And by the way, “Someday,” you’ll have to have your
name changed. You’ll then be Jeannie Manley.
I didn’t get any letter from you today, but that has to be expected as the mail service is slow and
irregular.
I had one of my teeth pulled this afternoon. It was a wisdom tooth and was about an inch long.
The top of it was all chipped off. I’m glad it’s out.
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
Right next to my heart, I have, as I always do, your precious picture. I always carry it. I haven’t
been able to have my picture taken, but as soon as I do, I’ll send you it. We’re kept pretty busy
and only get a few hours off at night and then everything is closed.
I get a very lonely feeling every night. My heart tells me it’s because you’re so far away. I wish
you were with me right now. It’s rather cold out, but we could take a walk and I’d keep you
warm and vice-versa.
I love you, more than anything in the whole wide world Jeannie. Since I’ve been gone, I feel as
tho’ some part of me is missing. You are a part of me Jean. The most important part of me there
is. I love you and miss you so. I’d give the world for just one look at you. You’re the most
beautiful and the most wonderful girl in the

�[Page 3]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
whole wide world. “Someday,” we’ll be together, never to part again. I’ll never leave you
darling. I’m yours for always, forever, eternally, and everything else. Please just be mine, and
don’t ever leave me. I couldn’t bear it if I lost you.
In a little while, I’ll be going to sleep, and I do hope I dream of you. I hope I do, for I’m thinking
of you all thru the day. I keep thinking of “Someday”—of how wonderful and beautiful you are_
of the sweetest girl in the world. I keep thinking of you_ the one I love, I miss, I dream about.
I hope your Mother and Father and the rest are all well. Say “Hello” to them for me. If you have
any pictures of yourself, would you please send them to me sweetheart. I’d sure appreciate them.
Oh, you’ll never know how much they’d mean to me.
I hope you don’t have too much trouble reading this letter. I’m tired

[Page 4]
4.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
I’m awfully sorry, but I can’t write very well.
I love you my darling, and I always will_ more than anything in the whole wide world. You’ll
never know how much I miss you or how much you mean to me. “Someday,” we’ll be together,
and then we’ll always be close to each other. That’s where we belong. My dearest_ we belong
with each other_ in each other’s arms.
I’m going to turn in now Jeannie. I’ll try and dream of you.
Take good care of yourself_ for me. Because “Someday” you’ll be Mrs. Edward Manley.
Goodnight Sweetheart
I’ll be loving you_
Always
Ned
P.S. We’re going to have our “Someday.” I always will be yours_ exclusively too. Honest
Jeannie. I love you so darn much.

�Goodnight Sweetheart.
Your ever loving – Ned

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 025]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 9, 1945.
10:00 P.M.
Dear Jeannie_
I received a swell letter and postcard from you today. They were both wonderful.
I love you Jeannie, my darling, more than anything in the whole wide world. I’ll always love you
too Jeannie_ honest.
I’ve been thinking of you all thru the day. I hope I can dream of you tonight.
It gets pretty cold down here at night. Now if you were here, you could keep me warm. WooWoo.
Oh, but I miss you Jean. Much more than you’ll ever know. I wish I could be with you right now
and never leave you again. I tell you in my letters the same thing all the time. But dearest
Jeannie_ it’s all coming from
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
deep inside my heart. I do love you, oh ever so much. I miss you and wish that I could be held
tightly in your arms this very minute.
“Someday,” I want, oh so much, to be your husband Jean. I’ll try ever so hard to be a good one. I
know that you’ll be the best wife there ever was, is, or will be. We’ll have our own little home.
It’ll all be so wonderful. You and me together_ forever.
I’m practically falling asleep now Jeannie, so if you don’t mind, I’ll close.
Please take good care of yourself for me, won’t you.
Goodnight Sweetheart
I’ll be loving you,
Always

�Ned
P.S. “SOMEDAY” you’re gonna be Jeannie Manley.

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 026]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 11, 1945.
9:30 P.M.
Sweetheart_
It was really swell and it meant ever so much to me today, hearing your voice on the phone. I
was so afraid that you had all given up hope of my calling and that you might have left for home.
You’ll never know how wonderful it was.
I love you Jeannie my dearest. More than anything else in the whole wide [text strikethrough]
world. That goes for always, forever, eternally and everything else. If you weren’t mine Jean, I
know what I’d be today. I’d be the lonsomest person in the world_ Just like I was before you
came into my life.
August 27, 1943 is a day that will live forever in my mind and my heart. That’s the day I met
you Jean. You, the one
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
that means so much to me and who is my whole life and future.
I want you Jean, and you only. If I didn’t have you, I’d be lost. I know that we were meant to
love each other. “Someday” we’ll be married Jeannie, and ev’ry little dream we’ve dreamed will
then come true. I’ll try so hard to be a good husband, because you certainly deserve one darling.
You’re the best girl a fellow could ask for, and I know you’ll make the best wife in the world.
You’ll never know what it means to me, having you, knowing you love me, and knowing that
“Someday” you’ll be my wife.
I love you Jean. Love you so much that it’s torture being away from you. I’d give the world to be
held in your arms, to have you kiss me, and to hear you say that you love me. But when the war
is over, I’m sure going to make up for it. Better stock up on the Don Juan sweetheart, you’ll need
it.
I miss you Jean, oh so much. I want so much to be with you. I love you so.

�I’m pretty tired now my darling and we have to get up at 3:00 A.M. so I’ll be closing now.
Be the good girl I know you are and please take good care of yourself—for your future husband.
Goodnight Sweetheart_
I’ll be loving you
Always,
Ned
P.S. Goodnight sweetest Jeannie. I’ll see you in my dreams. I love you oh so much. I always
will. Don’t forget that I’ll always be your ever loving—Ned

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 027]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 13, 1945.
10:10 P.M.
My dearest Jeannie_
I’m awfully sorry I didn’t write to you yesterday, but I and most everyone else was kept busy til
very late. I didn’t finish ‘til after 10:30 P.M. and we had to be in bed by 11:00 P.M.
We were up yesterday morning at 3:30 A.M. We marched a lot. We were run over by tanks
while we lay in foxholes.
Today we had classes and instruction in rifle all morning. We had more instruction all afternoon.
After supper we were taken out for night work. We crawled on our backs under barbed wire
emplacement, crossed ditches, etc. And all thru all of these thing, your precious picture was close
to my heart.
I love you my dearest, more than you’ll ever know. I received two letters from you yesterday,
and one today. They and all your other letters mean ever so much to me.
[Page 2]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
I’ve been thinking of you all day, my darling. It’s lonely without you Jean. I’m more lonely than
I’ve ever been before in my whole life. I hate being away from you.
“Someday,” though, we’ll be together for always. I’ll never leave you, never. You’re so
wonderful, so beautiful and I love you so much. I’ll always love you too my dearest.
There is room over in our Chapel where we may play records if we wish.
You said something about school not coming along very well. I was hoping it wouldn’t happen.
Jeannie, I just want you to remember one thing. When the time comes, will you be too prepared
to meet all the hardships and duties of married life, and would you be able to raise children? Just
keep that in mind my darling. And by the way, as far as I’m concerned, I think you’ll make a
wonderful wife and a swell Mother. You’re the only one who really knows, besides me, of
course. I think you’re absolutely
[Page 3]

�3.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
positively, and without a doubt the most wonderful, the most beautiful, the sweetest girl in the
world.
You said I was going to get kissed when I got home. Here I come. Woo-Woo!!!
I long for your kisses more than you’ll ever know Jeannie. They mean so much to me.
We’re going to have our “Someday,” darling. And how we are! You’ll be Mrs. Manley, and I’ll
be the happiest boy in the world. I’ll try to be a good husband, honest I will Jean. I’ll try so hard.
I’m going to close now dearest, and hit the hay. Please take good care of yourself, for me. I’ll
always be yours, exclusively.
Goodnight my Sweetheart.
I’ll be loving you for
Always,
Ned
P.S. “Someday” will be so wonderful. I’ll be so happy when you become my wife. See you in
my dreams, Jeannie. your ever loving- Ned

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
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ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
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She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 028]
[Page 1]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
Jeannie, what sweater were you wearing when it was taken and by the way—who took the
picture and where was it taken. Oh, but is that picture swell. I felt like crying when I first saw it.
My heart started beating faster and I got a lump in my throat. My Jeannie_ oh darling I’m so in
love with you. You mean so much to me. I hate being away from you, I want so to be held tight
in your arms, to kiss you, and to hear you say you love me. I know you love me Jean.
I’ll always love you and I’ll always be true to you. I mean that from the deepest part of my heart.
I could never leave you Jean and I promise you sweetheart I won’t ever leave you. How could I
when I’m so crazy in in love with you. If I ever lost you, then I’d be lost, completely Jean.

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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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                    <text>[Manley 029]
[Page 1]
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
March 22, 1945.
9:40 P.M.
Dearest sweetest Jeannie_
I’m awfully sorry I didn’t write you yesterday, but we were out ‘til ten o’ clock last night darling.
We had athletics yesterday. They marched us out at 9:30 A.M. to play baseball, football etc. I
played football. Then we were out all afternoon and at night again.
Today we marched 3 miles, pitched tents, ate dinner, marched back to our area about 3 miles.
Gee, but we’ve been very busy lately. I got three swell letters from you yesterday and received a
super-super one today.
Jeannie, I haven’t even had time to read the magazines you sent me. I read a few pages out of
Fantastic Adventures and a page or two of “Frankie.” I’m going to read them as soon as I can. I
think it was
[Page 2]
2.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
awfully sweet of you to send them to me.
We don’t get much time here to do what we’d like such as reading, writing, sleeping, etc. They
really keep one going. One thing tho! I’ve been thinking of you darling. I always do. I’m now
listening to a radio in the Day Room. First one I’ve sat down and listened to in a long time_ since
I left home. “Here’s to Romance” is now on. They’re playing “Right as the Rain.”
I got a swell picture of you in one of your letters yesterday. All the boys thought you were very
good-lookin, cute, sharp, etc. Oh and how you are. You’re the most beautiful and the most
wonderful girl in the whole wide world. Oh I love you so my dearest Jean_ more than anything
else in the whole wide world.
It’s hard_ really hard having to be away from you like this. I’m so gosh darn lonesome for your
arms, your kisses. I miss you terribly Jean and I love you_ just as I always will.

�[Page 3]
3.
[letterhead:
UNITED STATES ARMY]
Someday, you and I will be married. It’ll be so wonderful when you become Jeannie Manley. I’ll
try ever so hard to be the kind of husband that you deserve_ for I love you so dearest.
I’m going to close now as I’m going to write to Tom Caine. Then I’ll try to write you another
letter to make up for tomorrow.
Please take good care of yourself Jean. I love you so and don’t know what I’d do if anything
happened to [text strikethrough] (Excuse please) you. I’d be lost darling.
Goodnight my Sweetheart
I’ll be loving you for
Always,
Ned
P.S. “Someday” you’ll be my wife_ woo-woo!!! It’ll be so darn wonderful.

�</text>
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                  <text>A collection of letters and photographs from Edward "Ned" Manley, a soldier in the U.S. Army, and his girlfriend Jean Worthington, a teenage schoolgirl in Cleveland, Ohio, dating from 1945-1946. &#13;
&#13;
The content of Jean's letters describes everyday life of a teenage schoolgirl living in Cleveland, Ohio, with her parents during the war, including frequent mentions of friends, popular songs, movies, pets, and cooking, and visits to Edward's family, and her love for Edward. Edward's letters to Jean mostly concentrate on sentiments of love and the hope of marriage after the war. He also describes experiences and duties as he undergoes training with a variety of weapons and ordnance, his singing with a USO show, requests for transfer to the U.S. Army Air Corps, his volunteering for parachute infantry training, and descriptions of Nagoya during the American occupation of Japan. Both correspondents mention the anniversary of their first meeting (27 August 1943), and often use the word "Someday" in quotation marks which seems to refer to the then-popular song "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You." There is constant good-natured joking from both about the 28 children they will have once they are married.&#13;
&#13;
ean ("Jeannie") Allaine Worthington was born on 1 November 1928 in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents were Archibald ("Archie") Augusta Worthington (1896-1979), a tool worker, and Lena L. Fritchell (1904-1985); she had one younger sister, Shirley C. Worthington (1934-2012). In 1945 and 1946 she was living with her parents at 14247 Superior Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio.&#13;
&#13;
She met Edward Manley on 27 August 1943 in Cleveland when she was 14 and he was 16, but it does not seem likely they attended the same school. During 1945 she was attending high school and had a job after school. There is no evidence that they subsequently married; in Cleveland in 1971 or 1972 she married John Krasnicki, Sr. (1906-1986), who was twenty-two years her senior. She died on 8 September 1994 in Garfield Heights and is buried in Lake View Cemetery in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward ("Ned") Arthur Manley was born on 25 December 1926 in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. His parents were Patrick Sanfield Manley (1895-1952), advertising manager for a Cleveland newspaper and Leonarda Gallagher Manley (1896-1970); he had five siblings: Edith Manley McNamara (1928-1958), John Vincent (1930-1988), Narda Patricia Daly (1931-2007), Alicia Ann Gramuglia (1932-2006), and Patrick A. (1934-2011). The family emigrated from Canada to the United States in the 1930s and by 1940 were living in Cleveland.&#13;
&#13;
Edward Manley enlisted in the U.S. Army as Private on 15 February 1945 in Cleveland; that same day he entrained for the Army Reception Center at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. In late February he had been assigned to Company B, 30th Battalion, 3rd Regiment at the Infantry Replacement Training Center at Fort McClellan, Alabama. A request to be transferred to the Army Air Corps was turned down. After a twelve-day furlough, Edward was transferred in late July to Company B-1-1, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 3 at Fort Riley, Kansas for a few days before being passed on to 3rd Platoon, Company M, 4th Regiment, Army Ground Forces Replacement Depot No. 2 at Fort Ord, California. In early August he was placed in 1st Platoon, Casual Company 12 in preparation for shipping out to Japan for occupation duties. By 13 September he was in Luzon in the Philippines as part of the 666 Replacement Company, A.P.O. 291, shortly to be assigned to Battery B, 8th Field Artillery Battalion, A.P.O. 25. Edward arrived in Japan in early October and was assigned to an antitank Company in the 27th Infantry Regiment. By the end of June 1946 he was still in Japan, but he repeats a rumor that they would be coming back the United States in October 1946.&#13;
&#13;
Manley was discharged in October 1946 and returned to California to find that Jean was engaged to be married to a man named "Shorty." Manley lost contact with Jean shortly thereafter. By 1952 he had moved to Los Angeles, California and at some point married Antoinette T. Manley (born 1940). They had one son, Darren Anthony Manley (born 1984). Edward applied for naturalization on 17 May 1945 in Anniston, Alabama while he was stationed at Fort McClellan, and became a U.S. citizen on 19 May 1945.</text>
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