Army Geospatial Center cataloger takes part in mom's WWII legacy

By Ms. Joyce P Martin, US Army Geospatial CenterNovember 8, 2019

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1 / 4 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Maybelle Campbell (center, left) along with other living members of the WW II 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, were joined on stage by a narrator for the telling their legacy, Oct. 26 at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington D.C. for a live... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
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On the day after Veteran's Day nearly 10 years ago, Melody Campbell came to work at the U.S. Army Geospatial Center with no idea of her mother's legacy of military service as part of the Women's Army Corps 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion.

With approximately 150,000 women serving in WWII, Campbell's mother, Pfc. Maybelle Campbell was not only one of them, her commander was the first African American woman to be commissioned into the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps in the summer of 1942.

The Six-Triple Eight, as they have been called, under the command of Lt. Col. Charity Adams, was the first and only, all-black, all-female, Women's Army Corps unit to be deployed overseas during WWII.

"My mother's unit replaced another group," said Campbell. "The mail was piled to the ceiling and my mother's unit had nine months to turn it around."

The Six-Triple Eight's mission was to clear several years of backlogged mail in the European Theater of Operations.

"They did it in three months," Campbell said. Their motto was, "No mail, low morale."

Campbell had been at AGC nearly 10 years, supporting geospatial analysts finding maps and other references as a cataloger, before she knew the story.

Maybelle had mentioned doing pushups in the mud and rain over the years to her three children. Then, in 2018 the Six-Triple Eight was first recognized with a monument in the Buffalo Soldier Military Park at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Campbell had not heard the story of her mother's WWII experience, as she spoke to other families in attendance. The thing, she said, they all strangely held in common, is no one came back from WWII and discussed what happened with their families.

"When the unit came to the U.S. there was not a public mention of their existence. No welcome. No parade," Campbell said. "They were celebrated in Britain and France, but not in America."

It took 70 years to thank the unit on the home front. "One thing I hate is, at her age, she does not fully understand all that has happened in her honor due to suffering from dementia," Campbell said.

The elder Ms. Campbell, 98, uses a walker to get around. Her body is frail in comparison to the spirited 19-year-old who pushed ahead in spite of being told she was too young to join the Army. Her memory has faded from those early days.

Since 2018, there have been ceremonies, parades, articles, and even a Dream Flight, where Maybelle donned her gear and sat in the front of a restored 1940s Boeing Stearman, open-cockpit, biplane from WWII.

"An actor who was familiar to me came up to us and pointed out my mother as Six-Triple Eight. He said, 'I know all about you. Thank you!'"

Terry Crews narrated the story of the more than 800 women who served with the Six-Triple Eight, Campbell said. Of those women, only seven lived to see this recognition. All of them were in attendance.

"It was breathtaking," Campbell said. "They set the standard not just for black women, but for all women in the Women's Army Corps."

Melody Campbell and her family will be tuning in, with her mother, Maybelle, this Veterans Day to watch American Valor with an entirely new perspective about military service than she started with when she came to work at the Army Geospatial Center 11 years ago.

"My mother is a hero, a trailblazer," Campbell said. "I'm so proud of her."