Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Milwaukee woman honored for pivotal role during WWII

Robertson’s postal battalion helped buoy soldiers’ morale

- La Risa R. Lynch

No fanfare, no ticker-tape parade, no award ceremony greeted Anna Mae Robertson when she returned home from War World II in December 1945. That all changed this week.

The 98-year-old Milwaukee resident received several standing-room ovations during a ceremony to recognize her military service as part of the famed Six Triple Eight, the only predominan­tly Black female postal battalion to serve in the war.

“They broke barriers,” said Kenya Robertson, 47, of her grandmothe­r and of the other women in the battalion. “It took about 70 or so years for the world to know the role of Anna Robertson and the women of Six Triple Eight played in War World II.”

That role was significant. The 855 women who made up the battalion played a vital part in boosting the morale of battle-weary soldiers fighting in Europe.

Sent to Birmingham, England, in 1945, the women were tasked with clearing a two- to three-year logjam of mail destined for homesick American troops on the front line awaiting word from back home. The Army gave them only six months to complete the task. They cleared it in three.

“These women ... changed how the Army processed mail. The system they set up was more efficient and effective than what the Army had before.” Carlton Philpot a retired U.S. Navy veteran, committee chair and project director of the Buffalo Soldiers Monument

With the slogan of “No Mail, Low Morale,” the women, including Robertson, worked 24 hours a day processing an average of 195,000 pieces of mail in three eight-hour shifts.

Conditions were tough. Sometimes they had to work under the threat of enemy fire.

The women processed more than 17 million pieces of mail in three months while stationed in England, breaking all Army records for sorting mail. The women repeated the feat in France, where they were sent to clear a similar backlog.

“They put forth the effort and said, ‘We are going to do what they think we can’t do,’” the younger Robertson said. “(It) doesn’t matter when or if anyone recognizes you. What matters is that you deliver your best as the women of Six Triple Eight did.”

Their accomplish­ments were finally recognized in March. President Joe Biden signed legislatio­n to award the Congressio­nal Gold Medal to members of the Women’s Army Corps’ 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, or the Six Triple Eight, as they are better known.

Nearly 100 well-wishers attended the ceremony Monday at the Milwaukee County War Memorial Center. Among those in attendance were Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson and former interim Mayor Marvin Pratt, a retired Army Reserve major.

The long road to recognitio­n

Anna Mae Robertson was presented with a replica of the Congressio­nal Gold Medal. A formal presentati­on of the medal at the White House will come at a later date. Robertson also was given a framed copy of the act signed by Biden.

She also received a coin embossed with an image of the Six Triple Eight standing at attention. U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore, who introduced the legislatio­n to award the battalion the medal, sent greetings via video.

The recognitio­n is a long time coming for these women, said Edna W. Cummings, a retired Army colonel. She and Moore worked together with others to secure the medal for the women.

Cummings now is working with the U.S. Mint to design the medal.

Cummings learned about the women accidental­ly in 2015. A post about the group popped up in her newsfeed online. A 26-year Army veteran, Cummings knew of the Munford Point Marines and the Tuskegee Airmen, but nothing about the Six Triple Eight.

“I felt disappoint­ed because I’ve read about Black men who served during War World II, but nothing about Black women,” Cummings said.

Nearly 7,000 women served during the war, including Black nurses and nearly 600,000 Black Rosie the Riveters. Since then, Cummings made it a mission to not only honor these women but to also educate the public about their accomplish­ments.

“Since the Revolution­ary War, Black women have been patriots, serving the country in some capacity,” she said. “The story of Black women has not been at the forefront, have not been part of the historical narrative. This is an opportunit­y to bring their story to light and to know their service matters.”

In 2018, a monument was erected in their honor at the Buffalo Soldiers Monument Park at Fort Leavenwort­h in Kansas. The monument lists the names of 500 battalion members and includes a 25-inch bronze bust of its leader, Lt. Col. Charity Adams.

Black excellence in the military

The battalion was also featured in a 2019 documentar­y and will be the subject of an upcoming play called 6888 The Musical, produced by actor Blair Underwood.

“… These women are so unique and their achievemen­ts so significant because they changed how the Army processed mail. The system they set up was more efficient and effective than what the Army had before,” said Carlton Philpot, a retired U.S. Navy veteran, who is committee chair and project director of the Buffalo Soldiers Monument.

Philpot was instrument­al in the effort to create the monument, which is among six others honoring military contributi­ons by African Americans. It is important, he added, for these women’s achievemen­ts to be made visible.

“Too often when it comes to Black history the ink of writers and historians is invisible,” Philpot said.

Denise Muhammad was overwhelme­d by all the accolades her mom received.

“Before she became a mom, she was this dynamic Black woman that was a trailblaze­r,” said Muhammad, who traveled to Milwaukee from her home in Atlanta for Monday’s celebratio­n.

At 19, Robertson joined the Army in 1943 along with her brother after their mother died. Robertson’s decision to join went against norms for Black women of that era. Instead, Muhammad said their mother cut her own path in life.

“That takes a lot of courage,” she said. “When she did that it wasn’t because there was this big push or a movement saying, ‘We want more women to be in the military.’”

That left an indelible mark on the family, especially for Robertson’s seven daughters. Muhammad said her mother encouraged them to find their own path, relying on faith and inner strength.

“A lot of the things that she used to tell us when we were younger really helped us … to be progressiv­e in our thinking as women,” she said. “We didn’t need a woman’s movement. Our mother was the movement.”

The story of the Six Triple Eight is more than just about sorting mail for Tiffany Koehler, a 14-year U.S. Army veteran. The women of the Six Triple Eight fought on many fronts.

They had to battle racism, sexism and the Nazis. But their work and bravery are a testament to the military service of women, which often goes unrecogniz­ed, said Koehler, who spoke at the event.

When the women were called up for service, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower described their duties as chauffeurs, secretarie­s and “companions­hip for the thousands of Negro troops” already overseas, Koehler said.

These women proved more than that. They went through boot camp and trained to jump over trenches, climb ropes, identify enemy aircraft, handle weapons and did long marches with rucksacks on their backs as well as any man, Koehler said.

“They trained just as hard, even harder because as a woman, we have to prove ourselves over and over again. People expect us to fail,” she said, noting that these women didn’t enlist, but volunteere­d to go off to war.

“We served because we wanted to be there,” Koehler said.

 ?? PETERSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ANGELA ?? Edna Cummings, left, and Carlton Philpot hold the legislatio­n for Anna Mae Robertson, who was awarded the Congressio­nal Gold Medal for her service in WWII on Monday at the Milwaukee County War Memorial Center.
PETERSON / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ANGELA Edna Cummings, left, and Carlton Philpot hold the legislatio­n for Anna Mae Robertson, who was awarded the Congressio­nal Gold Medal for her service in WWII on Monday at the Milwaukee County War Memorial Center.

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