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Thursday, 7 December [1944] Lotes
[Continued from previous page] At 11 o’clock, a runner came calling for Lt. Arenstein.1David Arenstein (1920-1997), was born in Richmond Virginia, and was a first lieutenant in the B Battery of the 549th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Unit of the 87th Division in the U.S. Army. Arenstein was trained as a lawyer and was, on occasion, called on by the Army to prosecute crimes committed by GIs. On January 9th, 1945, Arenstein was called in to prepare a defense for a D Battery soldier accused of raping a Belgian girl. Arenstein kept a diary, very similar to that of Vernon Goetz, which can be found at https://joanpone.files.wordpress.com/2017/08/david-arenstein-book-with-spreads.pdf.  He received orders to move at 6 in the morning. We hadn’t actually gotten to bed yet so the separation of days is for chronological reasons only.

Friday, 8 December [1944] Lotes
We arose at 2400. Struck our tents in the rain and mud. March ordered our equipment in pitch darkness. It was cold, wet, and that goddamn mud was everywhere. We struggled and cursed, sweated & strained but at 6 am were ready to take off. We traveled over 300 miles today and met the B.C. at a little town east of Metz called Piennes.2Piennes is a small town in north-eastern France in the region of Lorraine. It stopped raining at 1900 & began to snow. Our itinerary included Rouens, Compeign, Reims, Soisson, Verdun, etc. all one big battlefield.

Saturday, 9 December [1944] Piennes
Up at seven, moved out at 0850. Arrived in Metz about 1000. Most of city in Allied hands. Two German forts still holding out. Being constantly shelled by our artillery. Noise is terrific. Spent the day working on equipment. At night we were able to do nothing. Complete black out. Shots rang out every once in a while from the few snipers who still remained. We are moving up Monday with the second combat team – the 34th regiment of the 87th div.

Sunday, 10 December [1944] Metz
Spent the whole day tuning up. Getting used to artillery now. Don’t even notice it till it stops. We were all loaded before dark and ready to take off in the morning.

Inserts


Insert 7— Thursday, December 7, 1944

Images on left–Two German postage stamps featuring image of Adolph Hitler and the words Deutches Reich, or German empire . The purple stamp cost 6 pfennig or pennies, and the brown stamp cost 3 pfennig.
Image on right– A second class train ticket from Unterhofen-Solgen to Metz. Unterhofen-Solgen was the German name given to the neighboring French towns of Secourt and Solgne, located in the Lorraine region of northeastern France, approximately 17 miles (29 km) southeast of Metz.


Insert 8b— Friday December 8, 1944

French stamps. The three stamps with the image of Mercury are 10 centime stamps. Above Mercury’s head , the small print reads “Republique Francaise,” suggesting that these stamps were issued before the German occupation and the establishment of the Vichy government, most likely between 1938 and 1940.


Insert 8a— Friday December 8, 1944

This postmarked stamp is a 50 centime stamp. The postmark came from Uckange, Moselle region of France, dated 1929.


Insert 8c— Friday December 8, 1944

This 1.75 franc stamp with the image of the Roman goddess, Ceres (bottom right) dates from around 1940.