Lee F. Pickett Papers, 1917-1927


Summary Information
Title: Lee F. Pickett Papers
Inclusive Dates: 1917-1927

Creator:
  • Pickett, Lee F., d. 1918
Call Number: Wis Mss MA

Quantity: 0.2 c.f. (1 archives box)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)

Abstract:
Mainly World War I letters written by Lee F. Pickett, second lieutenant of Company I, 102nd Infantry, giving his impressions of France and describing the Second Battle of the Marne, at which he was wounded. Letters from his army associates to his mother offer condolences upon Pickett's death at the Battle of the Argonne Forest in 1918 and describe his military career. Several citations to Pickett for bravery are also included.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-wis000ma
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Scope and Content Note

Papers, 1917-1927, of Lee F. Pickett, 2nd Lieutenant, Company I, 102nd Infantry, in World War I. These papers consist of correspondence, military orders, citations for bravery, and other records connected with his participation in the war and his death, and the marking of his grave in France.

Most of the letters are those written by Lieutenant Pickett to his mother and sisters at Spencer, Wisconsin. The earliest letters in the collection are those written from Fort Sheridan, Illinois in June, 1917. Beginning in February, 1918, there are letters from France in which he describes, insofar as the rules of censorship permitted, his impressions of France and the French people, and his life at a training camp and on the battlefront. During the summer and early fall his letters speak frequently of military engagements, and of events while he was on leave at a hospital base at Nantes, for treatment of wounds received in action at the battle of Belleau Woods.

There are a number of letters written to his mother, Mrs. Agnes Pickett, after her son's death on October 30, 1918. These letters were written primarily to reconstruct for Mrs. Pickett, as far as possible, the events in the last few weeks of her son's life. Among the writers are the secretary in charge of the surgical department of the hospital unit, another lieutenant, and a Frenchman who served as interpreter.

Administrative/Restriction Information
Acquisition Information

Presented by Merle Pickett, Manitowoc, Wisconsin, February 1942.