Letters From Home: Hope and Dreams of Reunion in Wartime
November 10th, 2025James “Jimmie” Coffin (1914-1998) enlisted in the Army Air Corps following the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. From recruitment in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, his postcards and letters begin soon after in spring 1942, writing from Jefferson Barracks outside St. Louis. A month later, he found himself back in Illinois at the Air Corps Technical School at Chanute Field. By September of that year, his station had changed to the Army Air Base in Walla Walla, Washington, with the 99th Bombardment Group (BG). His stay in Walla Walla was short, as he quickly found himself on his way to the front lines.


The 99th BG trained with B-17s and moved initially to North Africa, assigned to the Twelfth Air Force. From there, strategic bombing missions were carried out against targets in Tunisia, Sardinia, Sicily, and Italy. By December 1943, the 99th was transferred to the Fifteenth Air Force station in Italy, where they remained until the end of the war.
For the most part, Jimmie Coffin’s letters at Spencer were addressed to his future wife, Fern Berniece Nelson (1914-2018), with a few letters from Fern to Jimmie preserved in the collection as well. His letters from the front lines focus on the personal rather than the military actions going on. Censorship prohibited writing about missions – not even mentions of the weather were permitted. He writes about what he’s fed, new movies he’s had the chance to see, and responses to the many inquiries of her letters. But most importantly, he repeats how much he misses her and misses home.

As the war progressed, Jimmie’s letters moved from the North African Theater of Operations for the U. S. Army (NATOUSA) to Italy. The collection of letters ends in 1945 with the conclusion of the war. Coffin stayed in the service for several years thereafter, receiving his discharge in 1952 as a Technical Sergeant (T/SGT). After leaving the service, he led a career as a pharmacist.
The James and Fern Nelson Coffin collection (Call Number: RH MS 1501) offers a powerful, intimate window of the human experience of war. The letters show the enduring power of love and the pain of separation. They serve as a poignant reminder of the lifelines of family and home amidst global conflict. This collection is but one example of countless stories, both documented and untold, that bridged the long distances of the home front and front lines. May their words ensure the hopes and dreams of reunion not be forgotten.
Happy Veterans Day.
Phil Cunningham
Kansas Collection Curator