How these little-known black female WWII heroes lifted soldiers’ morale

I give it a year before this is turned into a 'highly acclaimed' movie that no one actually watches, but somehow wins like 10 Oscars. Alicia Keys she boon will star in the lead role with beta cuck soy white guys like Patton Oswalt star as the incompetent, blundering Military Brass that time and time again get outshined by the superior negroid intellect. This will be like Red Tails and Hidden Figures, both of which totally suck and are so historically inaccurate they come off as a comic book movie.


It was 1945, and warehouses in Birmingham, England, were filled with millions of pieces of undelivered mail. As the Allied forces swept across Europe, mail delivery had become difficult, but the lack of care packages and letters from back home was hurting morale.

Enter the 6888: The 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, a part of the Women’s Army Corps (WAC) of the US Army.

This all-black, all-female group of 855 women, both enlisted and officers, had a task that was both simple and nearly impossible: to deal with the mail backlog and then keep abreast of incoming deliveries.

While it all happened 76 years ago, these ladies are just now starting to get their due. In 2018, a monument to the 6888 was unveiled in the Buffalo Soldier Military Park at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. And a bill introduced in the House of Representatives, HR 1012, would award a Congressional Medal to the members of the 6888.
https://nypost.com/2021/08/07/how-th...lifted-morale/