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V is for V-Mail #AtoZChallenge

By Joyweesemoll @joyweesemoll

V is for V-Mail #AtoZChallengeThe A to Z Challenge asks bloggers to post 26 posts, one for each letter of the English alphabet, in April. Most of us choose to make these posts on a particular theme. My theme for 2023 is 1943 Washington D.C., the setting of the novel that I'm writing. Visit daily in April for a new post on my topic.

V is for V-Mail

V-Mail (Victory Mail) was a service provided by the government for easy, fast delivery of letters between people at home to service people abroad.

To send V-mail, the letter-writer filled out a special form. The form had space for the addressee, the return address, and a short message. Single forms were free at the post office and 25¢ for a 25-pack from stores.

V-mail letters were microfilmed. The films were sent by air to their destination where they were printed at 60% size for the final reader.

The main advantage to the government was that a collection of microfilmed letters was much smaller than print letters.

According to the Office of War Information, as preserved by the Library of Congress:

It is only 1/65th the weight of ordinary mail and saves ninety-eight percent of the cargo space required for ordinary letters. 1,600 letters can be placed on a roll of film little larger than a pack of cigarettes

Here is a clerk microfilming V-mail at the Pentagon in 1943.

Throughout 1943, drugstores and stationery stores advertised V-mail packs in the Washington Post.

Their selling points were:

  • Patriotism - make your soldier feel cared for while saving cargo space for war materials.
  • Speed - V-mail was air-shipped as a priority item.
  • Cost-saving - the stamp was 3 cents, no matter where in the world the final delivery would take place.
V is for V-Mail #AtoZChallenge

About Joy Weese Moll

a librarian writing about books


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