
A vintage WWII postcard that I came across was mailed from Mitchel Field, Schenectady, New York, to Ottumwa, Iowa. The card recipient, Agnes Dorothy Kittleson, has limited information available regarding her life. She was born in 1894, became a school teacher, and never married. Agnes died in 1973.
Pvt. Mary Charlotte Wallace, the card sender, was born on November 1, 1920, and enlisted in the Women’s Air Corps on November 11, 1943. She worked in the 1st Service Command Unit as a typist and a typesetter. These were important jobs to keep the paperwork flowing, essential tasks in the war effort.
It seems safe to say that Mary was Agnes’s student at one time and also a friend. Mitchel Field was a large training base during the war, and undoubtedly, Pvt. Wallace picked up Miss Kittleson’s card at the Mitchel Field BX store.
Mary Charlotte Wallace composed the following message within it:
“Pvt. Mary C. Wallace
A 702710
1st S.C.U.
Mitchel Field, N.Y.
Dear Kitty,
Decided it was time to let you know where I finally landed.
This is a grand field and I really like it here. My work is very interesting.
Have managed to see part of N.Y. already. There is so much to see.
I hope you are well. I imagine you are plenty busy with everything.
Maybe I will see you when I get a furlough. Charlotte”
Some women became pilots, but Mary wasn’t one of them. Private Mary C. Wallace was honorably discharged from military service in 1945. She was involved in an automobile accident on August 19, 1958, that killed two people. Mary Wallace was not seriously injured.
For the rest of her short life, Mary worked as a secretary for the Standard Oil Company. Miss Wallace died of bladder cancer on December 4, 1964, at the age of 44. She was buried beside her sister, Irene, in New Sharon Friends Cemetery in New Sharon, Iowa.
The Women’s Army Corps (WAC), established in 1942, enabled women to serve in non-combat roles within the U.S. Army during World War II. Members worked as clerks, mechanics, radio operators, and in many other essential positions, freeing men for combat duty and supporting the war effort. The WAC paved the way for greater inclusion of women in the military. Pvt. Mary Charlotte Wallace was one of these valuable personnel.
Thank you for your service!


