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Kowal, Harry E. (Second World War journal and photographs)
2022.073.w.r  
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Collection Details
 
Table of contents What's This?
  • Conditions Governing Access
  • Immediate Source of Acquisition
  • Arrangement
  • Biographical / Historical
  • Statement of Potentially Harmful Content
  • Preferred Citation
  • Content Description
  • Conditions Governing Use

  • Contributing Institution: Center for American War Letters Archives
    Title: Harry E. Kowal Second World War journal and photographs
    source: Kowal, Dan
    Creator: Kowal, Harry E., Second Lieutenant, 1921-2018
    Creator: Kowal, Katrina E.
    Identifier/Call Number: 2022.073.w.r
    Physical Description: .25 Linear Feet (1 folder)
    Date (inclusive): 1943 February 13 - 1943 September 16
    Abstract: This collection contains the one journal written by Lt. Harry E. Kowal, USA during the Second World War. Also included are transcriptions, photographs, and biographical information.
    Condition Description: Journal pages have become detached from the board.
    Language of Material: English .
    Container: WWII 81
    Container: 16
    Container: 1

    Conditions Governing Access

    This collection is open for research.

    Immediate Source of Acquisition

    Gift of Dan Kowal.

    Arrangement

    This collection is arranged by material type and chronology.

    Biographical / Historical

    Second Lieutenant Harry E. Kowal, United States Army (12/19/1921 - 5/11/2018) was born in Janesville, Wisconsin to Harry and Mary Kowal; one of seven children. He graduated from Janesville Senior High School in 1940 and entered the service in April 1942 and deployed to Brisbane, Australia in February 1943. He was one of four brothers to serve overseas, including:
    • Corporal Ernest P. Kowal, United States Army, 157th Regiment, 45th Division, 7th Army
    • Soundman Second Class George Kowal, United States Navy, served aboard a destroyer in the Pacific
    • Soundman Second Class Floyd Kowal, United States Navy, served aboard a minesweeper in the Philippines
    • Note: George and Floyd are twins; both enlisted November 9, 1942 and trained at Great Lakes Naval Training Station and Key West, Florida
    Harry earned his officers' commission at a candidate school in Australia in May 1943 and served prior to that with the 2nd Engineer Special Brigade in Australia and Papua New Guinea. He returned to the United States in September 1944 for hospitilization. While home he married Margaret E. "Peggy" Benzie on November 30, 1944. He was given a medical discharge on August 12, 1945.
    Harry later attended Milton College and worked for over 36 years for Gilman Engineering and Manufacturing, retiring in 1985. He and Margaret had seven children and 21 grandchildren. Margaret passed away July 10, 2016 and Harry followed her in May 2018 and the two are interred at Mt. Olivet Cemetery in Janesville.

    Statement of Potentially Harmful Content

    This collection may contain materials that are difficult to view, are potentially harmful, or use outdated and culturally insensitive language. Chapman University preserves and makes these materials accessible to researchers to ensure long-term accuracy of these historical records. This repository aims to not promote or otherwise celebrate this content, but to use it for educational and research purposes.
    Please see the National Archives and Records Administration's (NARA) "Statement on Potentially Harmful Content" for more information: https://www.archives.gov/research/reparative-description/harmful-content

    Preferred Citation

    [Item title / description; Box "n" / Folder "n"], Harry E. Kowal Second World War journal and photographs (2023.073.w.r), Center for American War Letters Archives, Chapman University, CA.
    For the benefit of current and future researchers, please cite any additional information about sources consulted in this collection, including permanent URLs, item or folder descriptions, and box/folder locations.

    Content Description

    This collection contains the one journal written by Lt. Harry E. Kowal, USA during the Second World War. Also included are transcriptions, six photographs, and biographical information.
    Also contained within this collection are transcriptions of Kowal's journal, as well as other letters, and notes from the donor. Also included are biographical information, reproductions of separation papers, reproduction photographs of Kowal and Margaret, one handwritten autobiography (photocopy), one short essay written by the donor's daughter Katrina (Harry's granddaughter) for her eighth grade class, an interview conducted by a student intern at the Middleton Veterans Affairs hospital in Madison, Wisconsin (December 2015), as well as a short memoir written by Harry of later recollections.
    The journal was written in the form of a letter to Margaret, to be delivered upon his return. It recounts his travel between Fort Dix, Fort Hamilton, and back to Fort Dix before embarking aboard a ship and eventually reaching to west coast. He then left for the South Pacific and details his experiences and things he had seen on the islands. This includes casualties and bodies left on beaches and in the jungle, with some discussion of combat and the state of the war.
    In the last passage written September 16, 1943 he discusses visiting Buna and the battlefields there (Battle of Buna-Gona, New Guinea Campaign, November 1942-Jan 1943). He discusses the destruction and the lingering bodies and skeletons, the cemeteries created there, and a recounting of some of the action he was told by others.
    When I was back in the States I, like everyone else, couldn't understand why we were so slow over here. Now I know. We fought through jungle so thick and swampy that it is almost impossible to pass through. The Japs had the benefit of well-built pillboxes and other prepared positions while we had to go in to get them.
    He continues with the history of the area, the battles, the Japanese hospital still with skeletons and the story of Japan leasing the area five years prior and secretly setting it up for the coming war which gave them an advantage. He says "They knew every little hill, stream and trail in this territory. No wonder they have been so hard to drive out."

    Conditions Governing Use

    There are no restrictions on the use of this material except where previously copyrighted material is concerned. It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain all permissions.

    Subjects and Indexing Terms

    Correspondence -- World War, 1939-1945
    United States. -- Army.
    World War (1939-1945) -- Pacific Area
    Kowal, Dan