I have been working up to writing this long series of transcribed letters for some time. It is to be an emotional journey, revisiting these stories once again. I hope you will enjoy them, and think of your family as you read.
Joseph Henry Thompson (known as ‘Mac’ in RAF circles) was born in June 1925. He was my Uncle, though I never knew him. The eldest of 4 children, and brother of my father (dad being the youngest).
He was born in Birmingham, England’s second largest city, in a relatively poor neighbourhood. His father had died in 1941, leaving his Mother a widow and WWII raging.
Joe ‘joined up’, along with thousands of other young men, in 1943 at the tender age of 18. The RAF was his chosen destination, and he said goodbye to his family and left for training in December, which is where these letters begin.
After 65 years secreted away in a plastic bag, the letters were re-discovered by my family last year. They had been in my Aunt’s possession (inherited after the death of my grandmother) but unseen by myself or my Dad.
They represent the most precious cargo, for these letters were written between 1943 and 1947. They were tokens of love between my grandmother (at home, husbandless, with 4 kids to support), and her eldest, handsome, brave boy Joseph who joined the RAF and went to fight the Nazis.
The letters are full of love, adventure, fear, deprivation, cold and disaster. Joe’s crew was shot down on their virgin mission in a Lancaster Bomber. He met a girl and talked of marriage. His mother wasn’t sure that this was a good idea.
Most of the letters from Joe to his mom ends with the words “God Bless and Keep Smiling – I do! xxxxx”
These little bite-sized memoires are treasures enough in themselves, but for one fact. Joe survived the war and was posted to Singapore, but in 1947 the letters cease abruptly. Joe passed away from cancer in a military hospital at the age of just 22 years. Far from home, his mother restricted by the ability to travel due to the cost and the presence of 3 small children, he continued to write, wobbly-handed shorter notes, upbeat and witty.
His final letters tell her that he’s fine and she must ‘keep smiling’.
As a child, I failed to recognise the significance of the photograph which steadfastly took pride of place on the mantelpiece, year after year. As a grown woman and mother, I become emotional every time I see these letters, and ashamed of my former ignorance of the story of this man, my uncle, our family hero.
So I hope to do justice to Joe, so that he may be remembered always, and inspire others to recognise the value of the keepsakes which they own. Our objects hold wondrous family stories, and the people we love hold even more. It is a tragedy that we find such a lack of interest in ourselves that we fail to pass these stories on.
Time will make all things which hold love precious, so I urge you to preserve your memories whilst they are still fresh. A birthday card written today to your child will be clutched to their chest in 20 years time when it is rediscovered.
A home is just a home, and a letter is just a letter, but your memories will last a lifetime.
Please subscribe to receive all letters in the series, and use the share buttons to involve your family and friends in Joe’s marvellous stories.
All Posts in this series:-
Letter 1, 29 December 1943 – arrival at RAF Recruitment Base for basic training
Letter 2, 31 December 1943 – getting to grips with 5 ‘Joes’
Letter 3, 5 January 1944 – confined to Barracks!
Letter 4, 8 Jan 1944 – a boxing champ and £1 in wages
Letter 5, 10 Jan 1944 – a theft and wrongful punishment
Letter 6 – 13 Jan 1944 – preparing to leave basic training camp
Letter 7 – 13 Jan 1944 – high jinx and punishing parades
Letter 8 – 14 Jan 1944 – being posted to Bridlington!!
Letter 9 – 18 Jan 1944 – Arrival at Bridlington (the dump!)
Letter 10 – 21 Jan 1944 – an introduction to firearms
Letter 11 – 25 Jan 1944 – fellow cadet killed in rifle accident
Letter 12 – 27 Jan 1944 – pork pies, live rounds and dim wits
Letter 13 – 29 Jan 1944 – 10 fillings & the Browning machine gun
Letter 14 – 31 Jan 1944 – Don’t worry, Mum
Letter 15 – 3rd Feb 1944 – 3 ‘Joes’ and top test scores!
Letter 16 – 10th Feb 1944 – Meeting Monty & military secrets
Letter 17 – 15th Feb 1944 – Clay pigeons and dirty washin’
Letter 18 – 17th Feb 1944 – 9 days ’til leave
Letter 19 – 21st Feb 1944 – A ‘date’ planned and condemned billets
Letter 20 – 6th March 1944 – Camp number 2 – Bridgnorth, Shropshire
Letter 21 – 13th March 1944 – Eatin’, stealin’ and flirtin’!
Letter 22 – 18th March 1944 – Gigalo Joe sits in his first gun turret
Letter 23 – 26th March 1944 – Meeting a War Hero
Letter 24 – 31st March 1944 – Man v the Potato Peeling Machine
Letter 25 – 6th April 1944 – Passing Exams & Fending off Girls
Letter 26 – 10th April 1944 – Bonnie Scotland, here we come!
Letter 27 – 12th April 1944 – The coal heaving incident
Letter 28 – 15th April 1944 – ‘Mae Wests’ and Smashin’ WAAFs!
Letter 29 – 21st April 1944 – Bad rain stops play
Letter 30 – 24th April 1944 – Oops! Runaway guns!
Letter 31 – 27th April 1944 – Cutting the engines at 8000 feet!
Letter 32 – 29th April 1944 – Neighbourly gossip
Letter 33 – 8th May 1944 – Runway calamities and shooting seagulls
Letter 34 – 14th May 1944 – The one where Joe plays Matchmaker
Letter 35 – 20th May 1944 – Exams and pocket money
Letter 36 – 23rd May 1944 – Stripes and Beret in the bag
Letter 37 – 14th June 1944 – Welcome to the Sergeants’ Mess!
Letter 38 – 15th June 1944 – Long Johns? Are you kidding me?
Letter 39 – 17th June 1944 – Painting on Numbers
Letter 40 – 22nd June 1944 – “She’s a sweet kid, I like her a lot”
Letter 41 – 23rd June 1944 – A scorched backside and pigs’ toenails
Letter 42 – 23rd June 1944 – Bale Out and Dinghy Drills
Letter 43 – 24th June 1944 – Crew Tactics
Letter 44 – 28th June 1944 – Turning 19
Letter 45 – 2nd July 1944 – Coffee, Music and Sarnies at 16000 feet
Letter 46 – 9th July 1944 – Sleeping with your clothes on
Letter 47 – 13th July 1944 – Gunning with Cine Film
Letter 48 – 22nd July 1944 – Burning in the Bomb Bays
Letter 49 – 26th July 1944 – Complimented by the boss
Letter 50 – 2nd August 1944 – Stinky feet and bringing a girl home to mum
Letter 51 – 5th August 1944 – A letter from Mum
Letter 52 – 8th August 1944 – RAF incompetence and final exams
Letter 53 – 10th August 1944 – Family news and clean socks
Letter 54 – 20th August 1944 – “Oh to devastate an apple pie!”
Letter 55 – 2nd September 1944 – On the move again
Letter 56 – 4th September 1944 – Marching around a dump
Letter 57 – 4th September 1944 – A quick note from Mum

A lovely tribute to your Uncle.
What a wonderful treasure to have! So much from those times have been lost and forgotten. A wonderful way to keep your family history and story alive. (sorry history buff here- my focus is civil war and WWI and WWII)
Gotta love a history buff. Thanks fro popping in. Hope you will enjoy following Joe’s story!
Pingback: Letters Home, WWII; Letter 4, 8 Jan ’44. « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Letters Home, WWII; Letter 5, 10 Jan ’44. « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters Home, WWII; Letter 6, 13 Jan ’44. « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters Home, WWII: Punishing schedules & High Jinx « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters Home, WWII: Posted to Bridlington! « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: Arrival at Bridlington for 6 weeks training « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: Introduction to firearms…. « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: A fellow RAF cadet is killed in training « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: Pork Pie, Live Rounds and ‘Dim Wits’ « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: 10 fillings & the Browning machine gun « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: Don’t worry, Mum « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: Three ‘Joes’ and Top Test Scores « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
These are really brilliant and it is great to see some one bothering to make this material available – family ‘archives’ are important, if we allow them to lost, forgotten or unshown we fail our ancestors.
Thanks so much. I couldn’t agree more!
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Clay Pigeons & Dirty Washin’” « SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
What a heartbreaking story, and yet what strength of character.
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “9 days ’til leave!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
You’re so lucky to have these letters! What a wonderful piece of history , can’t wait to read more!
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “A ‘Date’ planned, & Condemned Billets!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Camp Number Two – Bridgnorth, Shropshire” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Eatin’, Stealin’ and Flirtin’” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Gigalo Joe sits in his first gun turret” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
These letters are just wonderful. It’s the detail that makes them so important, historically. My dad wrote about the exact kit he was issued with too: years after he was able to remember this with great clarity.
I see Joe went to Bridlington rather than Whitley Bay. I was born in Whitley Bay and became very excited that he might be moved there!
You’re so right, Trish. Every tiny detail brings the era to life. Joe writing about the phone box being full of coins and having to call the operator – I bet he never thought there’s be a day when we’d laugh at such a then-’modern’ thing! Thanks for your lovely comment. By the way, I LOVE Whitley Bay!!
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Meeting a War Hero” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Reality Bites: A Pal is Killed” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Man vs the Potato Peeling Machine” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Passing Exams & Fending Off Girls!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Bonnie Scotland, here we come” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “The Coal Heaving Incident” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: National Archives how to find War Diaries - World War 2 Talk·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “‘Mae Wests’ & Smashin’ WAAFs” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “‘Bad rain stops play” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Oops. Runaway Guns!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Cutting the engines at 8000 feet! | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Neighbourly Gossip” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Runway Calamaties & Shooting Seagulls” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “The one where Joe plays Match Maker” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Exams & Pocket Money” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Stripes and Beret in the Bag!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Welcome to the Sergeants’ Mess!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Long Johns? Are you kidding me?!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: Lest we forget | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “She’s a sweet kid, I like her a lot” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Thank you for the letters. Letters can allow people into private thoughts and life. They can become more valuable with time to family.
Indeed, they couldn’t be more precious after 70 years
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “A scorched backside & pigs’ toenails” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Bale-Out and Dinghy Drills” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Crew Tactics” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
That’s such a young age to be taken away. Those letters must be so precious to your family. He seems like a really lovely man!
You’re so right on all counts. I feel incredibly protective of this man I never knew…silly eh?
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Turning 19″ | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Coffee, Music & Sarnies at 16000ft” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Sleeping with your clothes on” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Gunning with Cine Film “ | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
What a treasure trove… thanks for sharing!
You are most kind. Thanks for visiting!!!
What a memorable book these letters would be. So much of reality history is found in letters, perhaps still preserved in boxes or trunks, waiting to be found. Our family has packets of letters written in Russian by our parents in the early 20th century. They are fading, waiting to be translated. Your letters inspire us to move on with it.
That’s wonderful! I do hope you can find a way to get them translated. Who knows what treasures you might find!!? Thanks so much for your kind words
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Burning in the bomb bays!” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Complimented by the boss” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Stinky feet & bringing a girl home to mum” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “A letter from Mum” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “RAF incompetence and Final exams” | SaveEveryStep – family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Family news and clean socks” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Oh, to devastate an apple pie” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “On the move again” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Marching around a dump” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Awesome things here. I am very glad to look your
article. Thank you so much and I am having a look ahead to touch you.
Will you please drop me a mail?
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “A quick note from Mum” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Marking time” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “Is the war nearly over?” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “A ‘Prang’” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “All the ‘gen’ from home” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·
Pingback: Joe’s Letters, WWII: “2 miles to breakfast” | SaveEveryStep - family stories past & present·