In the early 1940s war raged throughout the world – nearly every country was fighting somewhere. Millions of young men were gone from their home, family and sweethearts.
Against the backdrop of those years of loneliness people fell in love, often by mail! The letters crisscrossed the globe from country to country, year after year, often heavily censored.
For a time they were even microfilmed and reduced in size to what was called V-Mail. They could stop millions of young men and women from revealing military secrets or of any direct mention of the war but they could not censor love – it always found a way.
One way young lovers could reveal their feeling without actually writing it in so many words was the “Language of the Postage Stamps.” The way you placed the stamp on the envelope told your guy or gal receiving the letter the secrets of your heart. Mothers, fathers and little sisters could take your letter to the corner mailbox without realizing the message right before their eyes.
Letter writing during the war was larger than anyone can now imagine. Everyone wrote letters. Many high school girls wrote to as many as 20 or 30 servicemen. Most of them were family, neighbors, schoolmates and sweethearts but often they were to complete strangers. It did not seem strange to write to “a girlfriend’s brother” or to her own brother’s “foxhole buddy who didn’t get much mail.” It was a pastime for many girls who sat home on Saturday night alone because all the young men her age were gone fighting the war.
I am not sure how the “Language of the Postage Stamps” became popular, but by 1943 it was known throughout the country. The U.S. Post Office required the 3 cent stamps on letters to be placed on the upper right hand corner of the envelope but there were no restrictions as to how the stamp was placed there. And they were not too fussy as to where the stamp was placed as long as there was a stamp on the envelope. Considering the difficulty of communications during the early 1940s it is amazing the accuracy with which letters were received to and from both theaters of war. The “Language of the Stamps” may have been the best kept secret as no military censorship was every imposed on the lovely little postage stamp.
If you find old letters in a shoebox or a trunk written to servicemen from 1942-1945, take a close look at them to see if the envelops reveal any long-forgotten secrets. As a poor soldier in a fox hole received a letter from home he could be either delighted or heartbroken depending on the message implied.
The Language of Postage Stamps: