Love Letters: The Letters of Corporal John Leslie Johnson and His Family
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Len Johnson
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
John Leslie Johnson was almost 38 when he joined the AIF in 1940. He was unusual not only because of his age but because he also had a wife and seven dependent children and lived in the rural Victoria at a time when men with children were not automatically accepted to fight, nor were men from the land who were needed to maintain Australia's primary industries.But John Johnson was accepted, trained in Melbourne and shipped overseas.Love Lettersare just that. The letters between Corporal John Johnson and his wife and children, the letters that Josie Johnson kept and that Corporal Johnson carried with him through Palestine, Egypt, Libya and, finally, at Tobruk.The letters were returned to Josie Johnson when her husband died at Tobruk in 1941.For years they were kept in 'Dad's Drawer' protected in the soft cloth of a flour bag. Len Johnson first read them in 1946 and vowed never to touch them again because they were so emotionally painful. But sixty years after his father's death, Len finally printed them - with explanatory links - in a limited edition for his family. They were a record of life at home and on the Front - and of a strong, clear love of a man and a woman and their children.All the letters are now preserved in the Australia War Memorial in Canberra.
Author: Len Johnson
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
John Leslie Johnson was almost 38 when he joined the AIF in 1940. He was unusual not only because of his age but because he also had a wife and seven dependent children and lived in the rural Victoria at a time when men with children were not automatically accepted to fight, nor were men from the land who were needed to maintain Australia's primary industries.But John Johnson was accepted, trained in Melbourne and shipped overseas.Love Lettersare just that. The letters between Corporal John Johnson and his wife and children, the letters that Josie Johnson kept and that Corporal Johnson carried with him through Palestine, Egypt, Libya and, finally, at Tobruk.The letters were returned to Josie Johnson when her husband died at Tobruk in 1941.For years they were kept in 'Dad's Drawer' protected in the soft cloth of a flour bag. Len Johnson first read them in 1946 and vowed never to touch them again because they were so emotionally painful. But sixty years after his father's death, Len finally printed them - with explanatory links - in a limited edition for his family. They were a record of life at home and on the Front - and of a strong, clear love of a man and a woman and their children.All the letters are now preserved in the Australia War Memorial in Canberra.
Description
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Len Johnson
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
John Leslie Johnson was almost 38 when he joined the AIF in 1940. He was unusual not only because of his age but because he also had a wife and seven dependent children and lived in the rural Victoria at a time when men with children were not automatically accepted to fight, nor were men from the land who were needed to maintain Australia's primary industries.But John Johnson was accepted, trained in Melbourne and shipped overseas.Love Lettersare just that. The letters between Corporal John Johnson and his wife and children, the letters that Josie Johnson kept and that Corporal Johnson carried with him through Palestine, Egypt, Libya and, finally, at Tobruk.The letters were returned to Josie Johnson when her husband died at Tobruk in 1941.For years they were kept in 'Dad's Drawer' protected in the soft cloth of a flour bag. Len Johnson first read them in 1946 and vowed never to touch them again because they were so emotionally painful. But sixty years after his father's death, Len finally printed them - with explanatory links - in a limited edition for his family. They were a record of life at home and on the Front - and of a strong, clear love of a man and a woman and their children.All the letters are now preserved in the Australia War Memorial in Canberra.
Author: Len Johnson
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 240
John Leslie Johnson was almost 38 when he joined the AIF in 1940. He was unusual not only because of his age but because he also had a wife and seven dependent children and lived in the rural Victoria at a time when men with children were not automatically accepted to fight, nor were men from the land who were needed to maintain Australia's primary industries.But John Johnson was accepted, trained in Melbourne and shipped overseas.Love Lettersare just that. The letters between Corporal John Johnson and his wife and children, the letters that Josie Johnson kept and that Corporal Johnson carried with him through Palestine, Egypt, Libya and, finally, at Tobruk.The letters were returned to Josie Johnson when her husband died at Tobruk in 1941.For years they were kept in 'Dad's Drawer' protected in the soft cloth of a flour bag. Len Johnson first read them in 1946 and vowed never to touch them again because they were so emotionally painful. But sixty years after his father's death, Len finally printed them - with explanatory links - in a limited edition for his family. They were a record of life at home and on the Front - and of a strong, clear love of a man and a woman and their children.All the letters are now preserved in the Australia War Memorial in Canberra.
Love Letters: The Letters of Corporal John Leslie Johnson and His Family
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