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Table of contents What's This?
  • Conditions Governing Access
  • Immediate Source of Acquisition
  • Arrangement
  • Biographical / Historical
  • Preferred Citation
  • Content Description
  • Conditions Governing Use

  • Contributing Institution: Center for American War Letters Archives
    Title: Richard W. Hood Second World War poetry
    source: Henn, Sharon
    Creator: Hood, Richard William , Sergeant, 1925-1987
    Identifier/Call Number: 2019.176.w.r
    Physical Description: 0.01 Linear Feet (1 folder)
    Date: 1950
    Abstract: This collection contains four poems written by Sgt. Richard William Hood, USMC during the Second World War, as well as two copies of photographs and a biography.
    Language of Material: English .
    Container: WWII 153
    Container: 10
    Container: 1

    Conditions Governing Access

    This collection is open for research.

    Immediate Source of Acquisition

    Gift of The family of Richard William Hood USMC, donated by Sharon Henn.

    Arrangement

    This collection is arranged by material type; biography, photographs, poetry.

    Biographical / Historical

    Sergeant Richard William Hood, United States Marine Corps (5/20/1925 - 2/1987) was born in Ridgewood, Queens, New York to J. William Hood and Frieda Nick Hood. He enlisted in the Marine Corps after dropping out of high school his junior year in July 1942. He trained at Parris Island, Camp Legeune and San Diego before being deployed to the South Pacific with Company M, 3rd Battalion, 24th Marines and first saw action at Namur, Kwajalein.
    He served with Richard K. Sorenson, Wilbure "Joe" Woltmon, T.C. Gillespie and two others. Sorenson threw himself onto a grenade and saved the others' lives, earning him the Medal of Honor. The four named Marines reunited periodically over the years "to celebrate their good fortune and to occasionally tease Sorenson for being dumb enough to jump on a live grenade." (donor provided biography).
    Hood was wounded in Saipan and sat out the invasion of Tinian but rejoined the unit before their landing on Iwo Jima where he was wounded again, carrying the shrapnel for the remainder of his life. He was discharged from the Marine Corps in November 1945 and returned to New York where he married Peggy Krug and raised four children. He later remarried to a woman named Ann Davis and had a fifth child. (more information about postwar life provided in bio).
    Health issues caused Hood to retire early and travel, though he passed away in February 1987 at the age of only 61.

    Preferred Citation

    [Item title / description; Box "n" / Folder "n"], Richard W. Hood Second World War poetry (2019.176.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 four poems written by Sgt. Richard William Hood, USMC during the Second World War, as well as two copies of photographs and a biography. The poetry is rewritten in the hand of Hood's wife, with side notes written by Hood in reference to people and locations. The photographs include one of Hood in uniform and one of he, Richard K. Sorenson and Wilbur "Joe" Woltmon take at his daughter's wedding in June 1982 (the donor's sister). The donor also included a link to Sorenson's story: http://www.mohconvention.com/tn-recipient/398/richard-k-sorenson/.

    The poems are entitled:

    • "Liberty Goes," aboard a ship going into Pearl Harbor for the last liberty before Iwo Jima, December 1944-January 1945
    • "Machine Guns Up," aboard a ship heading for Iwo Jima, January 1945
    • "Dream Valley," aboard a ship heading for Iwo Jima, January 1945
    • "A Marine Speaks," aboard a ship two days out of Pearl Harbor on the way to Iwo Jima, January 1945
    The donor believes the poetry was rewritten sometime in the 1950s for legible copies to be sent to Leatherneck Magazine. The publication has no record of their publishing.

    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

    World War (1939-1945) -- Poetry
    Poetry.
    World War (1939-1945) -- Marine Corps
    Henn, Sharon
    Sorenson, Richard K.
    Woltmon, Wilbur