Clubmobiling in Occupied Germany 1946

Then there were three: Flo, Janet and Mary

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 106

The clubmobile crew of Mary McAuliffe, Janet Potts and Florence Wick in occupied Borgen, Germany. The women are now allowed to wear pants and have been issued handsome uniforms.
After having to scrounge vehicles to deliver donuts throughout 1944 and 45, the crew finally got its own clubmobile, the SageBrush. It had been attached to the 70th Infantry Division.
Flo’s note on the back of the picture
Ready for business in the SageBrush
Janet poses with donuts in the new/used clubmobile
Serving coffee and donuts in what looks like a break in an archery or shooting competition
Working during halftime at an army football game
Flo and Janet
Mary McAuliff joined the crew in late 1945. She had probably served with another crew, but I can’t find more information about her. She doesn’t appear in “The Arc in the Storm,” the one book that lists the clubmobile women, but neither do most of the others who joined the North Africa/Italy campaign.
Mary, Janet, Flo
With “C” Company 3oth Infantry at Borken Germany
Flo and “her boys”
I’ve no idea why the soldiers are wearing helmets in these pictures. The war was long over.

Ch. 107: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/27/3rd-signal-co-hosts-a-bbq-supper/

At the 7th Infantry House

Hershfield Germany

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 105

Flo did a good job of identifying the people in pictures on this page in her album relaxing at the 7th Infantry house. I’ve no idea where the child came from.

Flo pasted some ephemera on this page which includes a newspaper story about her receipt of an award. Flo was later awarded a bronze star. This is an award called a service star. The story reads: Miss Florence Wick of Yakima, who served with the American Red Cross in the European war theatre, has received the presidential citation ribbon with four bronze battle stars on the European theatre of war ribbon for her service with a division at the front. She is now in Germany and hopes she will be able to come home by Christmas.

Flo’s 3rd Div. officers club membership card 
Army exchange ration card
What’s the difference between L. soap and T. soap?
In February 1945 the clubmobilers were issued new uniforms
This currency was issued by the Allied Military Government during the occupation, replacing the German Reichsmark. It was used for transactions in the occupied zones of Germany and was a part of the effort to stabilize the economy and control inflation after the collapse of the Nazi regime. Fünfzig Pfennig means fifty pfennigs in German. AI says this type of currency is collectible and significant in the context of post-war German history.

Ch. 106: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/23/clubmobiling-in-occupied-germany-1946/

Traveling in Switzerland

Flo meets up with some GI buddies on their Swiss leave

My Mother and Audie Murpy Ch. 104

Visiting Ascona Switzerland on the Italian border
Shrine at Sacred Mountain

Ch. 105: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/19/at-the-7th-infantry-house/

Swiss Leave December 1945

Near Locarno, Switzerland

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 103

At the end of the year Flo scored a leave to Switzerland. She didn’t give enough detail on this page of her album to tell if she was traveling alone or with someone but it seems she was traveling alone.

Famously neutral during the war, the Swiss managed to pull it off, never being bombed or invaded. Switzerland had entered the war determined to remain neutral yet fully prepared to defend itself. In August 1939, days before Germany invaded Poland, the Swiss government mobilized its military, signaling that neutrality would be backed by force. Surrounded by Axis powers, Switzerland relied on its rugged geography, fortified defenses, and a vigilant air force to deter invasion. Swiss pilots even engaged German aircraft that violated their airspace, shooting down eleven while losing only three of their own. At the same time, the country became a refuge for some of those fleeing the conflict and a hub of quiet diplomacy, hosting negotiations and humanitarian efforts that underscored its role as a neutral intermediary.

Swiss businesses continued to trade with Germany, a reality that later raised ethical questions about the limits of neutrality, while the government struggled to preserve independence under constant pressure. Public sentiment, however, strongly opposed Nazism, fueling what became known as “spiritual defense”—a shared cultural and moral commitment to protect Swiss democracy against totalitarianism. Through military readiness, diplomatic maneuvering, and civic resolve, Switzerland managed to navigate the war’s dangers and emerge with its sovereignty intact.

Flo didn’t identify the three men in her picture.

Ch. 104: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/17/traveling-in-switzerland/

At the 3rd Division Command Post

Bad Hotel, Bad Wildungen

Flo photographed some of her coworkers and visitors at the CP

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 102

I love this picture of Flo in uniform. There are the Red Cross and Clubmobile Captain patches on her shoulder. She looks happy.
Maj. Carey, Col. Drain, Maj. Duncan, Maj. Royce, Maj. Schut
The “Mad Majors” with Flo
Maj. Perkins, Maj. Dwan, Maj. Duncan
The “Mad Majors” at ease
Major Carey
Lt. Leland Nelson
Third Division CP, Bad Hotel, Bad Wildungen
Maj. Duncan AG
Written on the back of the picture of Major Duncan. But who is HW?

Ch. 103: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/15/swiss-leave-december-1945/

A Sweet Love Poem to a Flyer

But who was Flo’s intended recipient?

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 101

This poem, written on a small slip of paper, fell out of Flo’s album, and I can’t be sure where she meant to place it. I believe she wrote it herself: she made a correction in the text, and I could find no reference to it anywhere else. The poem is addressed to a flyer, yet none of her Third Division friends–nor her fiancé–were flyers. So who was she writing to? I found one possible clue in a letter she wrote to her sister Ruth in August 1944:

“When I returned from Sorrento, Ruth, I found some tragic news awaiting me. A letter I had written Johnny on July 19 was returned to me and on the envelope in red ink was written “accidentally killed in training flight July 15, 1944 near NY.” I simply can’t believe he is dead – he was so alive and so anxious to get over here and do his part. He had had nothing but bad luck since getting into the air Corps. His last letter told me he was just recuperating from pneumonia – common due to flying in sub zero altitudes. It is easier to “take” over here than it would have been at home because you develop a different philosophy, but it is hard nevertheless. His poor mother – both sons killed in airplanes!”

The poem implies that Johnny was more than just a friend. But Flo never told me about him and I can find no other reference to him in her papers. The poem must have been enclosed in her returned letter.

Ch. 102: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/11/at-the-3rd-div-command-post/

Front Line Publishes Special Edition

3rd Division souvenir paper tells history of the division

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 100

Don’t throw this away! admonishes the Front Line newspaper of their post-war special edition. Flo didn’t throw it away. She saved it and tucked it into her album. The issue consists entirely of stories which appeared in the big and little dailies of the nation about the Third Division.

From the introduction: “During the rush of battle few men were able to get a hold of a newspaper published in the states, much less take time to read it thoroughly….Hence, this special edition. 

“We hope you hang on to your copy as the supply is limited to one per man. If you want to send it home, go ahead. All the material in it was censored by Sixth Army Group censors before it could appear in the home town papers.”

The Front Line is the official newspaper of the Third Infantry Division. In the interest of archiving, I’m posting the whole six-page paper. You can read it by pinching out the image.

Ch. 101: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/07/a-sweet-love-poem-to-a-flyer/

Christmas & New Year’s 1945

Gen. Schmidt’s New Year’s party celebrates Third Division

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 99

The card shows the route of the 3rd Division from Africa to Germany
Third Infantry Division New Year’s party
Flo captioned this “Blackmail material”
Flo didn’t ID these guys
General Schmidt hosted the party
Christmas ‘C’ company 30th Infantry

Ch. 100: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/03/03/front-line-publishes-special-edition/

Parachute Regiment Throws a Party

They celebrate Armistice Day in occupied Berlin

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 98

While they were in Berlin for the football game between the Third Division and the 82nd Airborne, Flo and her comrades were invited to a party hosted by the 504th Parachute Regiment. To celebrate Armistice Day in occupied Berlin must have been especially poignant so soon after the end of this second world war. 

Flo saved the wine list which listed no wine, but more cocktails than I knew existed. I recognize a few—Manhattan, Martini, Gin Fizz—but not most. I wonder if modern bartenders are still making any of these drinks. The list notes that champagne and beer are available, but there is no mention of wine, at least on this page. Maybe Americans were just not partial to wine in the year 1945.

Ch. 99: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/02/27/christmas-new-years-1945/

Images of War-Torn Berlin

Flo and comrades get a look at the German capital

My Mother and Audie Murphy Ch. 97

By the end of World War II, Berlin was no longer a city so much as a vast field of ruins. After enduring 363 air raids and a final, catastrophic ground assault, the German capital lay shattered—famously described by its own residents as a heap of rubble. Street by street, block by block, the urban fabric had been torn apart, leaving behind a landscape of collapsed buildings, twisted steel, and drifting ash.

Flo at the Brandenburg Gate, built in 1791. It would soon be incorporated into the Berlin Wall, dividing the city into East and West sectors during the Cold War.

Nearly 80 percent of Berlin’s city center had been destroyed. Across the wider metropolis, some 600,000 apartments were reduced to dust and broken brick. Infrastructure collapsed alongside homes: in the final days of fighting, 128 of the city’s 226 bridges were blown apart, a quarter of the subway system was deliberately flooded, and running water, electricity, and rail transport virtually ceased to function. Iconic landmarks suffered the same fate as ordinary neighborhoods. The Reichstag and Brandenburg Gate were battered by artillery and close-quarters combat, while along the grand boulevard Unter den Linden, only 16 of its 64 buildings remained standing.

Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church and the city center

The human cost was staggering. Civilian deaths from bombing raids alone are estimated at between 20,000 and 50,000. During the final Battle of Berlin, another 125,000 civilians are believed to have died amid the chaos of street fighting, shelling, and firestorms. At least 450,000 people were left homeless, and the city’s population collapsed from 4.3 million in 1939 to just 2.8 million by the war’s end—a mass exodus of refugees, evacuees, and the dead.

All photos from Flo’s album

Unlike many cities that later erased the physical traces of war, Berlin chose to preserve parts of its devastation as visible memory. Bullet holes and shrapnel scars still mark walls in districts like Mitte and Charlottenburg. The shattered spire of the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church stands deliberately unrepaired, a permanent anti-war monument rising from the city center. Elsewhere, mountains of rubble were piled into artificial hills—Teufelsberg and Volkspark Humboldthain—turning the wreckage of war into silent landmarks.

Some monuments survived

These images of destruction are not only records of ruin. They are reminders of the scale of collapse, the human suffering beneath the debris, and the deliberate choice to remember, rather than forget, what war reduced Berlin to in 1945.

The grand boulevard of Unter den Linden
The Berlin Cathedral
Major Dan Wickersham in the US zone

Ch. 98: https://mollymartin.blog/2026/02/23/parachute-regiment-throws-a-party/