Cross-posted from Vintage Everyday
In 1944, Doris Roy and Thelma Popp who were 21 years old and just
graduated from college, made a plan to ride bicycles from their home in
Buffalo, New York, to Cairo, Illinois, where the Ohio River met the
Mississippi.
"World War II affected our college life as most of the male student body
joined one of the services. Women assumed some of their roles by taking
jobs in armament industries. During the summer, I worked from early
morning to evening in a public school caring for infants whose mothers
were working in aircraft factories or other related industries."
"But now, before starting our careers, we decided that the coming summer
after graduation would be the ideal time to have our adventure. We had a
limited period of time to accomplish this. I had signed a contract to
begin teaching first grade in Middleport, New York, on the Erie Canal on
September 4, 1944. And so - with the leanest of equipment - we made our
preparations and were ready to leave on June 22, 1944."
They camped outside, slept in barns, hitched rides on riverboats, went
to church on Sundays, and worked at a Walgreens serving Cokes when their
money ran low. They wrote letters to their families, and nearly every
day Thelma wrote in her diary. The entire diary was transcribed and can
be read here. [Read the full article ...]
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