Helen's parents knew first hand about serving in the Red Cross during war time. In the spring of 1942, Bill left the United States to take charge of Red Cross operations in Great Britain. Leaving a lucrative law practice in order to assist with the war effort, Bill served as American Red Cross delegate to Great Britain until November 1942, at which time he became ARC delegate to North Africa. His main responsiblity was the establishment and administration of relief for the troops of the American Fifth Army as they advanced from North Africa, through Sicily and into Italy.
Eleanor,
better known as "Bumpy," joined her husband as a Red Cross worker in Great
Britain and was also transferred to Africa, serving as a recreational worker
in Algiers. Following the Allied invasion of Italy, Bumpy served
for eight months between 1943 and 1944 with a Clubmobile unit, working
- often under fire - at Salerno and Anzio. Bumpy published her impressions
and experiences with the American Red Cross in her book, I Knew Your
Soldier. Through their own work in the Red Cross, Bill and Bumpy
instilled a sense of responsibility and understanding in their daughter
which helped make her a valuable and effective ARC recreational worker.
By early November 1950, following a week of training in Washington, D.C.,
Helen was aboard a Royal Canadian Air Force plane en route to Japan with
three officers, some thirty enlisted men, and several other women.
All were headed to the Far East to contribute to the war effort in Korea.
The women were all recreational workers with the American Red Cross.
Helen arrived in Japan on November 3, 1950. A small group of women were setting up the first Red Cross club located in the city of Pusan, South Korea. Due to the fluid lines of battle in the first winter of the Korean conflict, the Red Cross was not permitted to establish any more clubs until the spring of 1951. In the meantime, Helen was sent to the Fifth Station military hospital at Johnson Air Base in Irumangawa, Japan. Daily, wounded soldiers were flown to Johnson for a period of recuperation before either being sent home to the states or back to the front. It was during the soldiers' stays at the hospital that they came into contact with the Red Cross women, who spent between twelve and fourteen hours a day comforting and entertaining sick and injured soldiers.
Despite the importance of her work in Japan, Helen was eager to get to Korea. She was so eager, in fact, she tells her family that on the fifth of April, when she received her orders to go to Korea, "I was so thrilled and excited, I nearly hit the roof."
On April 13, 1951, Helen arrived at the ARC
club in Pusan, on the wall of which the Red Cross women hung a sign describing
the purpose of their presence in Korea:
| "With the hope that this little piece of America transplanted in Pusan may be a source of comfort and hapiness, this Club is affectionately dedicated to the men of the U.S. Armed Services and to their friends in the United Nations Forces." |
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"Comfort and happiness" was provided in the
form of platonic companionship, coffee, and doughnuts. "As many as
8,000 in one day," either heading to or returning from the front, "invaded
the Club" at Pusan and were greeted by only a handful of Red Cross women.
The women answered questions, listened, shared a smoke, and played games
with the men, who if only briefly, were permitted simultaneously to forget
where they were and remember what they were fighting for.
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While Helen did work in the club, she was primarily assigned to the clubmobile while in Pusan. A converted Russian truck, the clubmobile carried Helen and a co-worker to isolated units in the areas surrounding Pusan. From this truck, coffee and doughnuts were dispensed, always along with "a witty line of chatter." Helen remained at the club in Pusan until October 1951, at which point she was transferred to a club at K13 Suwon Air Base. She continued her work along the same lines until she left Korea for home in January 1952.
This exhibit is a chronicle of Helen's time
in Japan and Korea, using photographs and text from her personal papers
to tell the story of one woman's experiences living in the war theater.**
*All quotes and images in this exhibit are from the Robert B. and Helen Stevenson Meyner Papers, Skillman Library, Lafayette College.
**This exhibit contains only a small sample of the riches contained in this collection dealing specifically with Helen and her family's work with the American Red Cross. Helen's impressions and experiences as related in her diaries and letters home are vivid, entertaining, and often moving and insightful. She comments on her work, her social life, her surroundings, the war situation, issues of race and, of course, the soldiers. And while at first glance, Helen's letters may appear a mere recounting of her daily tasks in both Japan and Korea, they contain a startling glimpse into the hearts and souls of both the soldiers sent to fight on foreign soil and the women who risked their lives to make that fight easier.
The Robert B. and Helen Stevenson Meyner Papers contain Helen's correspondence to her family during this period, as well as scrapbooks and photographs. Of additional interest may be Helen's diaries and correspondence with her parents written between 1942 and 1944, the time during which her parents served in Europe and Africa with the Red Cross.
Those wanting to learn more about
Helen and her work in Korea & Japan, as well as her family's history
of service with the American Red Cross, are encouraged to explore more
deeply the Robert B. and Helen Stevenson Meyner Papers, which are available
for research in the Special Collections & College Archives of Skillman
Library, Lafayette College.
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· Lafayette College · Easton, PA 18042
Last updated 18 August 2000