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Articles, Essays, MemoirDecember 26, 2015

Brass Pounder

In the ‘World Wide Wireless’ of October 1921, however, he gives a facetious account:

“My set was located at 48th Street, NYC, and at this strategic point I most effectively jammed “Pick” at “WA” (the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel’s station), as well as our present assistant treasurer, Mr. Payne, who was then chief operator at “NY,” 42 Broadway.

He took photographs and bought picture postcards of the damaged town and its people. As a radio operator, he was apparently pressed into service with the United States forces.
“Pick” bawled me out so many times by telephone, and Payne having threatened me with arrest, I was forced to escape to sea in 1912. Having read R. L. Stevenson, Joseph Conrad, Jack London and Nick Carter, I looked forward to pirates, buried treasure, man-eating cannibals, and at least one shipwreck on a desert island. Alas, I saw nothing wilder than half-starved West Indians, one or two seventh-rate bullfights, and señoritas of somewhat chocolate-hued complexion.”

In 1914, Pierre happened to be on a ship in the harbor of Vera Cruz, Mexico. The Mexican Revolution of 1910-1920, and a German overture of alliance with Mexico, had strained relations with the United States. In April 1914, Americans were evacuated from Mexico City, and American warships shelled Vera Cruz. Refugees crowded aboard American ships, which took them to New Orleans via Galveston, Texas. Pierre wrote three eyewitness accounts of this episode, one titled ‘The American Occupation at Vera Cruz’. He took photographs and bought picture postcards of the damaged town and its people. As a radio operator, he was apparently pressed into service with the United States forces.

Another glimpse into this period comes from ‘The Story of a Naval Reservist’, notes written during 1949 for a projected book.

“In 1914, I am at sea on board the British luxury ship the SS Byron. A close call when we are intercepted by a German cruiser off the coast of Brazil, whose skipper did not know that war had been declared between England and Germany. Wireless was pretty unreliable in those days. On return to New York, I try to join the French naval forces, but a consular bureaucrat discourages me, so I apply for U. S. citizenship and forsake France forever.”

From 1915 to 1917, he took three correspondence courses in business English, to make up for a lack of formal schooling. “Later went to NYU and Columbia for special courses in writing”, he wrote. He repeated this claim in published profiles, but it may be an exaggeration. On May 24, 1916 in New York, he became a naturalized citizen of the United States.

On December 5, 1916, Pierre started work as a “correspondent” for Montgomery Ward Company in New York. Today we would call this kind of work direct mail marketing. He describes it in 1942 in the “Prologue” to his Greenland book.

“It is the year 1917. The month is April. There has been some sort of a shamble war going on in Europe ever since August 1914. My adopted country, the United States, has been trying hard to keep out of that war, and President Wilson has been reelected on the platform of “He Kept Us Out of War”. But it looks mightily as if we shall soon be in it. An organized naval reserve is in the making. At age 26, already a seagoing veteran and minor participant in the Vera Cruz occupation of 1914, I think I had better get into a branch of the service I am best fitted for.

At this time I am holding down a very prosaic desk job learning the mail order business with Montgomery Ward. I have visions of a dreary future rising from a correspondent at $16 per week to assistant superintendent of correspondence ten years later at the larger remuneration of $25 per week. A colleague sits next to me grinding out 125 letters a day to New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania farmers telling them how to buy farm lighting plants, silos, and living room suites on easy terms.

One day, he shows me a brand new passport and his number as a volunteer ambulance driver with the French Army. He is a slightly built young fellow, a Yale graduate who is going in for serious writing when the farmers’ problems ease up a bit. He wears pince-nez myopic glasses and has been rejected as a volunteer in our own army long before there is talk of a draft. Here is a native-born American who is anxious to be off to the wars to help my native France. I will be a slacker if I do not do something about it. I feel pretty low down. My beautiful stenographer stops saying “good morning” to me.”

Address books from this time contain names in Paris, including some Boucherons, two of whom are in infantry regiments. Did Pierre write to them? There is also an entry for:

Corp. J. E. Boucheron

80th Field Artillery

Battery D – 7th Division

American Expeditionary Force, France

This could be his younger brother Jean Edouard Boucheron, born in 1893. If so, Pierre had another reason to feel like a “slacker”. Why did he not enlist in the regular army or navy? He wore glasses, so there may have been a medical reason. Instead, he took a step that would be decisive for the rest of his life. From ‘The Story of a Naval Reservist’:

“I join the USNRF (You Shall Never Reach France) on May 1, 1917 as an Electrician (R) 2nd Class. As such, I instruct a mixed class of ensigns, lieutenants and “strikers” for radio. I make 1st Class, then happiest of days, I am a CPO!”

The initials stand for United States Naval Reserve Force, which soon lost the final word. He was an instructor at the United States Navy Electrical School in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. To judge by this, and later comments, he sought promotion. From June 19, 1917 to January 22, 1918, he served as Chief Electrician on the USS Aloha, under Admiral Cameron McRae Winslow (1854-1932), who had been recalled to active duty. From ‘The Story of a Naval Reservist’:

“We cruise within the twelve-mile limit off the Atlantic coast. Admiral Winslow comes aboard his flagship as Inspector of Naval Districts. I meet a descendant of Vikings in the person of E. J. Hendrickson, Chief Yeoman USNRF. The influenza of 1918 nearly decimates the entire crew at Norfolk Navy Yard. 

I stagger into the Navy Department at Washington, meet the Chief of Naval Aviation, Lt. Towers, now Vice Admiral, who turns me down for overseas duty as a naval action observer. Whereupon I wind up again at Building 1, Brooklyn Navy Yard, as an inspector-investigator of illegal wartime radio activities. I am appointed a Warrant Gunner (R). Repeat travel orders from Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels. Reunion with the wireless operator clan of Horn, Muller, King, Eltz, et al.”

In the “Prologue” to the 1942 Greenland book, he gives another account of this period. After the stenographer snubs him in 1917:

“The next day, I enroll in the United States Naval Reserve Force as an enlisted radio operator. I wait a shameful month before I am called to duty. Finally I am assigned to a seagoing war vessel and shortly thereafter made an officer. Since the ship I am on does not rate a specialist officer, I have to go back ashore to round out the war as a sort of illegal radio station sleuth. My job consists of running down crackpot reports from would-be patriotic informers. In every loose wire hanging from clothes line poles in the city, and in discarded rural telephone lines in the Adirondack Mountains, they see a German spy radio station.

‘We are at war’, my superiors warn. ‘You never know. One day a real spy will be caught red-handed with codes and ciphers and a 50-kilowatt transmitter hidden in a corn crib. All reports must be investigated.’

I never catch even one, lone, 110-pound scoundrel. Oh, the shame, the ignominy, the ingloriousness of this duty!”

About this time, he lived at 20 Fulton Street, Maspeth, New York, then moved to 147 Pierrepont Street, Brooklyn, New York. He spent “three months at a U. S. Navy school to study navigation, international law, and naval regulations . . . a sort of cram course”, and took a qualifying examination. On February 17, 1919, he was promoted to Ensign. In August 1919, he was released from active duty. He wrote about his experience in a four-part article ‘Radio Detective’, published in 1920 in ‘Electrical Experimenter’ magazine.

He traveled for this work, perhaps as far as Hartford, Connecticut. On October 16, 1919, he married Wilhelmina Herman, who lived in Hartford. Ten months older than he, Wilhelmina was known by the nickname “Billie,” and later to her grandchildren as “Dodie”. She came from a large family of German-Americans. Her mother Helen Hoffman had been born in Germany and brought to the United States as a child. Her father, Frederick Herman, was a textile designer. Wilhelmina graduated from high school, what is now Northfield Mount Hermon, and she worked as a secretary. Bride and groom were both thirty years old on their wedding day.

The marriage was troubled, perhaps from the start. Wilhelmina had a strong personality and a sharp tongue. In 1960, she lived near us in North Syracuse, and after a fall that broke her hip, with us. As a child, I combed her yellow and white hair while she told me about her childhood and early adult life. One scene featured her husband in a rage — he picked up a “butcher knife” and chased her. She was indignant about his affairs with other women. Although he asked more than once for a divorce, she refused.

By 1920, the couple lived at 328 Carmita Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey. Income tax returns for 1920 and 1921 show this address. There, on September 11, 1921, they had a son, Pierre, Jr., who would be their only child.

Robert Boucheron is an architect in Charlottesville, Virginia. His stories, essays, poems and reviews appear in Bangalore Review, Gravel, Grey Sparrow Journal, Milo Review, New Haven Review, North Dakota Quarterly, Poydras Review, Short Fiction, The Tishman Review.

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One last love letter...

April 24, 2021

It has taken us some time and patience to come to this decision. TMS would not have seen the success that it did without our readers and the tireless team that ran the magazine for the better part of eight years.

But… all good things must come to an end, especially when we look at the ever-expanding art and literary landscape in Pakistan, the country of the magazine’s birth.

We are amazed and proud of what the next generation of creators are working with, the themes they are featuring, and their inclusivity in the diversity of voices they are publishing. When TMS began, this was the world we envisioned…

Though the magazine has closed and our submissions shuttered, this website will remain open for the foreseeable future as an archive of the great work we published and the astounding collection of diverse voices we were privileged to feature.

If, however, someone is interested in picking up the baton, please email Maryam Piracha, the editor, at [email protected].

Farewell, fam! It’s been quite a ride.

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