Why Germans Were Stunned By What They Found In A Captured GI's Pockets
When German soldiers searched the pockets of fallen Americans during the Battle of the Bulge in December nineteen forty four, they found something that quietly changed how they understood the war. Not weapons. Not intelligence documents. Ordinary objects. A waxed K ration box the size of a paperback novel, packed with chopped ham and eggs, biscuits, soluble coffee, sugar tablets, chewing gum, and four commercial brand cigarettes. A brown paper packet of sulfanilamide powder. A glass morphine syrette manufactured by E R Squibb and Sons. A folded photograph of a wife or mother. A V mail letter from Iowa or Oregon that had crossed the Atlantic in nine days. A Pocket Guide to Germany. A bar of soap with a brand name on the wrapper. This investigation traces how those small items came to be in those pockets, beginning in nineteen thirty seven with a quiet meeting between an Army Quartermaster captain named Paul Logan and the Hershey Chocolate Corporation in Pennsylvania, and ending with the recorded private conversations of senior captured German officers at Trent Park outside London, where the British military intelligence service listened to them admit, in their own words, what those small American supplies had told them about the war they were losing. Drawing on documented sources including the Hershey Community Archives, the Smithsonian National Postal Museum, the Armed Services Editions records, the recordings preserved by the British listeners at Trent Park, and the official interrogation reports filed by United States Army intelligence units in nineteen forty five, this episode examines what the contents of an American soldier's pockets actually revealed about an entire industrial civilization at war. The K ration, the morphine syrette, the sulfa packet, the V mail letter, the rayon escape map, the Hershey D bar, the Tropical Chocolate Bar, the Carlisle First Aid Dressing, the small ordinary objects that ended up scattered across the battlefields of western Europe in the winter of nineteen forty four to forty five. Each item was a small piece of evidence about a country three thousand miles away that had decided what one of its young men was worth. The story of how those decisions were made, what they cost, and how the soldiers on the other side of the line came to understand them. Subscribe for more material histories of the Second World War, the small specific details of how the war was actually fought, the production decisions and the supply chains and the personal effects that almost never appear in the standard documentaries but that say something true about how the conflict was won and lost. Featuring verified historical research on Hershey Field Ration D production, K ration design under Ancel Keys at the University of Minnesota, the Squibb morphine syrette, sulfanilamide and the Bayer Prontosil patent, the Armed Services Editions program, the V mail postal system, the Aeronautical Chart Service rayon escape maps, the M I nine British escape and evasion program, the Volksgrenadier divisions of late nineteen forty four, the Battle of Kasserine Pass in February nineteen forty three, the Ardennes offensive of December nineteen forty four, Albert Speer and the German armaments ministry, Hans Jurgen von Arnim at Trent Park, and the comparative industrial production figures that defined the outcome of the war in Europe. Sources and further reading: Hershey Community Archives, Ration D Bars: https://hersheyarchives.org/encyclope... Smithsonian Magazine, When Hershey's Crafted a Special Treat for the Troops: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smiths... National Museum of American History, Chocolate Bars in the Second World War: https://americanhistory.si.edu/explor... America in WWII Magazine, Chocolate, The War's Secret Weapon: http://www.americainwwii.com/articles... Smithsonian National Postal Museum, Victory Mail Exhibition: https://postalmuseum.si.edu/exhibitio... Smithsonian National Postal Museum, How Did V-Mail Stack Up: https://postalmuseum.si.edu/exhibitio... U.S. Naval Institute, You've Got V-Mail, Naval History Magazine: https://www.usni.org/magazines/naval-... WW2 US Medical Research Centre, Carlisle Bandage History: https://www.med-dept.com/articles/his... WW2 US Medical Research Centre, Morphine Tartrate: https://www.med-dept.com/medical-kits...

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