"If only I had the time to write of this hell, but I can't. I will not be able to for some time yet, but the sights, the experiences will never die from memory." (Letter to his parents and Gertrude, August 6, 1918, page 89)
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Robert L. Wiley |
![Image of Robert L. Wiley](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081013190034im_/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/natlib/afc2001001/service/01962/ph0001001i.jpg)
Robert L. Wiley as college football captain, Camp Douglas, WI
[1917] | World War I, 1914-1920
Army
32nd Division
France; Germany
Captain
Chippewa Falls, WI
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![](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081013190034im_/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/natlib/afc2001001/vhp-stories/web/images/ex-war-card-bottom.gif) |
At his father's memorial service in 1961, Robert Wiley, Jr. was handed a large envelope containing letters his father wrote between the summer of 1917 and February 1919, covering 20 of the 24 months Wiley Sr. served during World War I. After a 1995 visit to Europe, Wiley Jr. reconstructed his father's experiences, drawing on his own readings of history and illustrating the memoir with then-and-now photographs of war sites. Wiley Sr. left the University of Wisconsin in his freshman year and obtained an officer's commission. He served in several capacities, including running a supply outfit and as commanding officer of a military police company. Though not on the front lines, he wrote eloquently about many scenes of devastation in letters to his mother, brother, and Gertrude, his sweetheart.
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