By Jennifer Gavin
This is a guest post by Sarah Rouse, a volunteer in the Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division.
“War experience just hypnotizes young men.” So said Victor Lundy, a World War II veteran who recorded many of his war memories through his sketchbooks, now donated to the Library of Congress.
I interviewed Lundy for the Library’s Veterans History Project, and his drawings — and memories — are worth a visit on Veterans’ Day 2010.
“I never listened, I was busy sketching,” said Lundy. And could he sketch! The gentle portrait of Finey Towery in France really caught my attention. Staff Sgt. Towery hailed from Kentucky , and Lundy still recalls the song Towery often sang: “In the Pines.”
Lundy was in college, studying architecture, when he enlisted in a special Army engineering unit during World War II. He ended up instead at a boot camp in South Carolina , in 1944.
He’d use a pocket-sized pad to portray the daily routines in the PX, scenes of men dozing, and training sessions. He sketched while his ship crossed the Atlantic — the drawing “Goodbye Broadway, Hello France” captures the excitement. He sketched his unit landing at Cherbourg on Sept. 7 — the first big convoy in Normandy since D-Day on June 6. “I realized we were part of a very significant occasion,” he said. Lundy recorded French farmhouses and villages, battle scenes, Allied planes, and casualties he witnessed while serving as a squad leader.
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