The Australian Jungle

1 min WW2

Lieutenant Colin Simper had never held his baby son Douglas when he wrote this letter from the jungles of Borneo. He was killed eight days later, trying to save a wounded mate.

Colin Simper → Irene Simper 1945-06-01
Tarakan, Borneo, Indonesia

Four Hours as Husband and Wife

1 min WW2

Second Lieutenant Haruo Araki married his childhood sweetheart at 11 PM and had four hours with her before flying his final mission. He was 21 years old.

Haruo Araki → Shigeko Araki 1945-05-11
Chiran Air Base, Kagoshima, Japan

The Submarine Man

1 min WW2

A submarine communications officer writes to his wife about their newborn son — whom he has never seen. His submarine was sunk 25 days later. All hands lost.

Harold 'Hal' Jensen → Rae Jensen 1945-04-11
Subic Bay, Philippines

The Cherry Blossom Winds

1 min WW2

A kamikaze pilot's final letter to his young wife, written the day before his mission. The letter is composed in careful calligraphy and includes a death poem.

Lieutenant Kenji Yamamoto → Yuki Yamamoto 1945-04-05
Kanoya Air Base, Kyushu, Japan

The Hungarian Bride

1 min WW2

On Christmas Eve 1944, with Budapest under siege and the Soviets approaching, Ilona wrote her 300th letter to her husband István — who never received a single one.

Ilona Kovács → István Kovács 1944-12-24
Budapest, Hungary

The Last Christmas

1 min WW2

On Christmas Eve 1944, surrounded by Germans in the frozen foxholes of Bastogne, Private First Class Robert Giordano wrote to his wife Rose in Brooklyn. He was killed the next day. The letter was found frozen in his hand.

Robert Giordano → Rose Giordano 1944-12-24
Bastogne, Belgium

The Czech Exile

1 min WW2

Sergeant Jan Novák hadn't seen his wife Hana or Prague since 1939. He wrote this letter from the siege lines of Dunkirk, fighting for a country he feared he might never see again.

Jan Novák → Hana Nováková 1944-10-05
Dunkirk, France

The Dutch Nurse

1 min WW2

A Dutch nurse betrayed for helping Allied airmen wrote this letter from her prison cell. She bribed a guard to smuggle it out. He kept it for 50 years before returning it to her family.

Liesbeth van der Meer → Pieter van der Meer 1944-08-25
Amsterdam, Netherlands

A City of Ashes and Song

1 min WW2

Smuggled out of burning Warsaw by a Home Army courier, this letter was written by a young medic to her brother, a POW in Germany. It would not reach him until after the war.

Krystyna Nowak → Jan Nowak 1944-08-15
Warsaw, Poland

The D-Day Wife

1 min WW2

On June 6, 1944, Audrey Gerrans stood on Snips Hill waving a white handkerchief as her husband's convoy rolled past in the dark. She didn't know if he saw her. She wrote him this letter anyway.

Audrey Gerrans → Joe Gerrans 1944-06-19
Sittingbourne, Kent, England

The Garden We Never Planted

1 min WW2

Written the night before D-Day, this letter was held by the Red Cross and delivered to Eleanor six months after Thomas was reported missing.

Thomas Whitaker → Eleanor Whitaker 1944-06-05
Southampton, England

The Night Before D-Day

1 min WW2

Written the night before loading onto transports for D-Day, this letter was found in Bobby's barracks bag after he was killed when his C-47 was hit by flak over Utah Beach.

Sergeant Robert "Bobby" Sullivan → Margaret "Maggie" Sullivan 1944-06-04
Upottery Airfield, Devon, England

On the Hills of Cassino

1 min WW2

A young Italian partisan writing to his wife during the Battle of Monte Cassino. The letter was smuggled out by a medic.

Giovanni Rossi → Lucia Rossi 1944-02-15
Monte Cassino, Italy

A Letter Never Sent

1 min WW2

Found hidden in the walls of a Berlin apartment during renovations in 1998. Hannah wrote this letter to her husband Karl, who had been taken to the Eastern Front. She died in a bombing raid before she could mail it.

Hannah Weiss → Karl Weiss 1943-09-12
Berlin, Germany

The Resistance Courier

1 min WW2

Smuggled out of a Gestapo prison by a guard who pitied him, this letter is the final testament of a 22-year-old Resistance courier executed three days after his capture.

Étienne Mercier → Céleste Mercier 1943-07-14
Lyon, France

In the Shadows of Lyon

1 min WW2

A French resistance doctor writes to his wife from hiding in Lyon, having just treated a hidden Jewish child. The letter was smuggled out and hidden in a hollow book.

Dr. Antoine Lefèvre → Madeleine Lefèvre 1943-05-20
Lyon, France

From the Rubble

1 min WW2

Smuggled out of the burning Warsaw Ghetto during the uprising, this letter was written by an 18-year-old Jewish fighter to his younger sister — the only surviving member of their family.

David (Dawid) Lerner → Rachel Lerner 1943-04-22
Warsaw Ghetto, Poland

The Pianist of the Ghetto

1 min WW2

On the first day of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, concert pianist Samuel Rosenberg played Chopin one last time on the last piano in the ghetto. His letter to his wife Leah was sealed in a jar and found in the rubble of a bunker after the war.

Samuel Rosenberg → Leah Rosenberg 1943-04-19
Warsaw Ghetto, Poland

The Volga Remembers

1 min WW2

An unsent letter found among Lieutenant Dmitri Volkov's belongings after he was killed at the Red October factory. He writes by the light of a burning building as the Battle of Stalingrad rages around him.

Lieutenant Dmitri Volkov → Natasha Volkov 1942-10-15
Stalingrad, USSR

The Filipino Love Letter

1 min WW2

Captain Miguel Santos of the Filipino Scouts wrote to his wife Maria on the eve of Bataan's fall. He survived the Death March but died in a POW camp. The letter was carried by a fellow prisoner and delivered to Maria in 1945.

Miguel Santos → Maria Santos 1942-04-08
Bataan, Philippines

The Moon Over Changsha

1 min WW2

Found in the lining of a sergeant's cap after he fell defending the bridge approach at Changsha. He wrote this by moonlight on scrap paper, knowing he would not see the morning.

Sergeant Liang Weiguo → Lin Mei 1942-01-04
Changsha, Hunan Province, China

The Greek Parting

1 min WW2

Captain Nikos Stavros of the Greek army wrote to his wife Eleni from the frozen Pindus Mountains, where Greek forces were pushing Mussolini's invasion back into Albania. He was killed a month later.

Nikos Stavros → Eleni Stavros 1940-11-14
Pindus Mountains, Greece

Through the Blackout

1 min WW2

Written by candlelight in a basement during the Blitz, this letter was never sent — Evelyn didn't know Harry's POW address. It was found 53 years later, tucked inside a copy of Mrs. Dalloway.

Evelyn Pearce → Captain Henry 'Harry' Pearce 1940-10-15
London, England

Above the Clouds

1 min WW2

Written at dawn on Battle of Britain Day — the decisive air battle over England. Jimmy was shot down hours later. The letter was found in his locker at RAF Middle Wallop.

Flight Lieutenant James 'Jimmy' Armstrong → Rose Armstrong 1940-09-15
RAF Middle Wallop, Hampshire, England

The Polish Pilot

1 min WW2

Squadron Leader Tadeusz Kowalski of 303 Squadron RAF wrote this letter on the eve of the decisive Battle of Britain engagement. He fought for England but dreamed of Poland — and the wife and daughter he left behind in Warsaw.

Tadeusz 'Tadzio' Kowalski → Anna Kowalski 1940-09-15
Northolt, England

The Diary That Never Stopped

1 min WW2

After her RAF pilot husband was shot down over France, Doreen Wright wrote him a letter every single day for three years — 1,095 letters — even after she knew he was dead. None were ever mailed.

Doreen Wright → Gilbert Wright 1940-06-15
Coventry, England

The Norwegian Ski Soldier

1 min WW2

Norwegian ski trooper Erik Solberg wrote to his wife Ingrid from a mountain cabin during the Battle of Narvik. His letter was found in the pocket of his white camouflage jacket, stained with snow and blood.

Erik Solberg → Ingrid Solberg 1940-04-15
Narvik, Norway

The Letter That Crossed an Ocean

1 min WW1

Bostonian James O'Sullivan fell in love with a French girl while training. He wrote proposing marriage. She received his letter the same day his commanding officer's letter arrived — he had died at the Argonne. She kept both in a locket for 70 years.

James O'Sullivan → Amélie Laurent 1918-10-08
Meuse-Argonne, France

Christmas Eve, 1917

1 min WW1

Written on Christmas Eve during one of the coldest winters of the war. Friedrich describes the unofficial ceasefire and the carols drifting across no man's land.

Friedrich Müller → Greta Müller 1917-12-24
Verdun, France

The Baby I Never Held

1 min WW1

Italian soldier Marco Nardi's wife gave birth to their son while he was at the front. He received a photograph but never held the baby. This letter was found on his body after the Austro-German breakthrough at Caporetto.

Marco Nardi → Elena Nardi 1917-10-24
Caporetto, Italy

From the Ridge, with Pride

1 min WW1

Written from a captured German dugout on the heights of Vimy Ridge on the morning after the victory. Tommy's letter is a love letter to his wife and a declaration of a nation's coming of age.

Thomas "Tommy" MacKenzie → Eleanor MacKenzie 1917-04-10
Vimy Ridge, France

The Nurse from Étaples

1 min WW1

An Australian soldier writes to the Scottish nurse who saved him, describing the moment he knew he loved her. He died at Messines Ridge three weeks later.

Jack Gallagher → Margaret 'Molly' Sinclair 1917-03-14
Étaples, France

The Locket

1 min WW1

Captain Harry Cromie was too shy to propose when he saw Vera on leave. He wrote her a letter on the eve of battle: 'By this you will know that I have been killed. I meant to ask you to be engaged to me but when I was on leave I was too frightened to say anything — I loved you very very much.' He was killed 13 days later.

Harry Cromie → Vera Vereker 1916-10-10
Lesboeufs, France

Cups of Tea and Gentle Hands

1 min WW1

Edith, a VAD nurse at the vast Étaples base hospital, writes to her sister Margaret in London as the wounded from the Somme pour in like a tide. She describes the horror, the humour, and the small graces that keep her going.

Edith Baker → Margaret Baker 1916-08-15
Étaples, France

My Dearest Margaret

1 min WW1

Written on the eve of the Battle of the Somme, this letter was found in William's tunic pocket after he fell on the first day of battle.

William Clarke → Margaret Clarke 1916-07-14
Somme, France

The Boy Who Died on His Wedding Day

1 min WW1

Thomas married his childhood sweetheart Emily at 8 AM on July 1, 1916. By noon he was on the front. By 4 PM he was dead. His letter was found in his breast pocket, still smelling of her perfume from the ceremony.

Thomas Fletcher → Emily Fletcher 1916-07-01
Albert, France

I Never Got to Say Goodbye

1 min WW1

Henri wrote to his wife Marie from the hell of Verdun, describing a daughter he had never seen. The letter fell from his pocket as he died. A German soldier kept it for ninety years before it was returned to Henri's granddaughter.

Henri Dubois → Marie Dubois 1916-06-04
Verdun, France

The Russian Snow

1 min WW1

A Russian Imperial Army officer writes to his wife during the Brusilov Offensive, describing the snow on the Carpathians and the cherry blossoms of their orchard. He was killed by shellfire four days later.

Dmitri Volkov → Natasha Volkov 1916-06-04
Lutsk, Ukraine

Letters Across the Indus

1 min WW1

Besieged and starving in the ancient city of Kut, Havildar Amar Singh writes to his wife Priya in the hills of Kumaon, knowing this letter may never reach her. It was found among the debris of the garrison after the surrender.

Havildar Amar Singh → Priya Devi 1916-04-15
Kut, Mesopotamia (now Iraq)

My Darling Zen

1 min WW1

Frederick Key wrote 42 letters and 15 postcards to his beloved Zen Hall. This was his last — written on Valentine's Day 1916. He died on the first day of the Somme. She wrote in her diary: 'Letter came saying my darling killed... went to Lichfield.'

Frederick Key → Zen Hall 1916-02-14
Guillemont, France

The Serbian Soldier's Promise

1 min WW1

Written during the Great Retreat across Albania, this frozen letter was found in Zoran's hand after he succumbed to hypothermia and starvation in the Albanian mountains.

Zoran Petrović → Jelena Petrović 1915-11-27
Mojkovac, Montenegro

The Piper of the Scots

1 min WW1

A Highland piper writes to his wife on the eve of the Battle of Loos. The next morning, he went over the top playing 'The Flowers of the Forest.' He was killed within minutes.

Angus MacKenzie → Fiona MacKenzie 1915-09-25
Loos, France

For This Soil, For Home

1 min WW1

Sergeant Mehmet writes to his wife on the night of May 19, 1915 — the day of the great Turkish counterattack at Anzac Cove. He speaks of Kemal, the enemy ships on the sea, and the wheat fields of home he will not see again.

Mehmet Çavuş → Ayşe Hanım 1915-05-19
Gallipoli Peninsula, Çanakkale

The French Jewish Soldier

1 min WW1

A French soldier of Jewish faith from Alsace writes to his wife on the morning of the Second Battle of Artois, blending French and Hebrew in his final farewell.

David Lévy → Rachel Lévy 1915-05-09
Artois, France

The Cliffs of Gallipoli

1 min WW1

Jack writes to his sister Mary from the cliffs of Gallipoli, describing the chaos of the landing, the heat, the flies, and the strange beauty of a place that was meant to be their finest hour.

Jack O'Brien → Mary O'Brien 1915-05-02
Anzac Cove, Gallipoli, Turkey

If I Should Fall

1 min WW1

A French soldier's letter to his sweetheart, written before the Second Battle of Ypres. Jean-Luc was a poet before the war.

Jean-Luc Moreau → Claire Dubois 1915-04-22
Ypres, Belgium

The Christmas Truce Letter

1 min WW1

A German theology student writes to a woman he has never met — falling in love with her photograph during the Christmas Truce of 1914. The letter was found in his kit after he was killed.

Klaus Weber → Alice 1914-12-25
Ypres, Belgium

The Professor's Letters

1 min WW1

A classics professor from Heidelberg — a man who taught Homer and Goethe — volunteers for war and writes to his wife from Flanders. He was killed at Langemarck, one of the 'Kindermord' — the Massacre of the Innocents.

Johannes Richter → Elfriede Richter 1914-11-10
Langemarck, Belgium

The Belgian Last Stand

1 min WW1

A Belgian soldier writes to his wife from the Yser River, describing the desperate flooding of the land to stop the German advance. 'We are drowning our country to save it.' He died three days later.

Pieter Van Der Waals → Liesbeth Van Der Waals 1914-10-28
Yser River, Belgium

The Last Night Before the War

1 min WW1

A French farmer conscripted in August 1914 writes to his wife of two months on the eve of the First Battle of the Marne. He died the next day.

Antoine Roussel → Colette Roussel 1914-09-05
Meaux, France
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