PIERCE COUNTY IN THE WORLD WAR Pierce County, Wisconsin Published September 1919 by the Red Wing Printing Company Red Wing, Minnesota *************************************************************************** This web site and its contents in the format presented, except where otherwise noted on the page, are copyrighted by Debbie Barrett and may not be copied, altered, converted nor uploaded to any electronic system or BBS, nor linked from any "pay-for-view" site, linked in such a manner as to appear to be part of another site including "frame" capturing, nor included in any software collection or print collection of any type without the express written permission of the author of this site, namely, Debbie Barrett. Please report any such violations to Debbie Barrett, mrsgrinnin@home.com. If you are caught in someone else's frame, please go to http://www.rootsweb.com/~wipierce and click on the link provided to free you. *************************************************************************** Page 142 & 143 Y.M.C.A. WORKER AND PEACE COMMISSION CARTOGRAPHER W.H. HUNT enlisted for overseas educational work in the A.E.F. on December 3, 1918. This work was then under the direction of the Y.M.C.A. Sailed for France on March 17, 1919, and was transferred into the army on April 16, all educational work of the army being taken over by the government at that time-and formed into a unit designated as the "Educational Corps". Mr. HUNT did lecture work under the direction of the College of Agriculture of the A.E.F. University located at Beaune, France. He worked with the 81st, 90th, 6th, and 4th Divisions and the 2nd Army Corps. His work took him through Northern and Eastern France and most of Germany west of the Rhine. PROF. C.G. STRATTON obtained leave of absence from the Normal School in October, 1918, to go to New York to work on a government inquiry, then at work in the building of the American Geographical Society at 3755 Broadway, N.Y. The purpose of the inquiry was to collect information and to prepare maps for the use of the peace commissioners when the war should finally end. This inquiry was at work over a year before the war closed. When the American Commission to Negotiate Peace was organized, the inquiry was made a part of it and the members sailed for France on the George Washington December 2, 1918, arriving in Paris December 14, 1918. Worked in the Map Room of the American Commission at 4 Place de la Concorde as assistant cartographer till June 1st, 1919. The chief cartographer was Prof. Mark JEFFERSON of Ypsilanti, Mich., who also left on June 1st. There were 16 map draftsmen, 4 photostat men, and several stenographers and orderlies continually at work in the map room till March 1st, after which date the force was diminished. A great amount of work was done, including the making of over 500 original maps, some in hundreds of copies, few in less than a dozen copies. Besides this, hundreds of maps and charts were being reproduced by means of the photostat machines and the engraving plant at General Headquarters in Chaumont. One of the most important phases of the work in the map room was the collection, cataloging, and distributing of printed maps. By April 1st there had been purchased or otherwise accumulated over 20,000 maps, for the use of the Peace Commission. Of these, very few were of American manufacture. They were mostly English, French, Italian, German and Hungarian. Mr. STRATTON'S work included the complete responsibility for this collection of maps, and the records connected with it, as well as the filing and cataloging of the manuscript and photostat maps. Out of this vast and complicated collection of maps he was expected to be able, at a moment's notice, to select any particular map named to him or to furnish maps of any particular region. He returned to work at the River Falls State Normal School July 1st, 1919.