From Military.com:
“How to Make the Doughnut That
Followed US Troops from World War I to D-Day and Beyond”
(Workers traveled in the Daniel
Boone, the first American Red Cross clubmobile to land in Normandy, France, in
July, 1944, following D-Day almost 75 years ago.)
In the wake of the initial
Normandy landings on D-Day, a strange vehicle hit the beaches: converted London
buses driven by three female volunteers from the Red Cross. Their mission was
to bring a taste of home to the soldiers fighting World War II. Their weapon of
choice was the doughnut. While their early food truck might have been a new
contraption -- 100 GMC trucks dubbed “Clubmobiles” were created for the D-Day
invasion -- the baked goods they were bringing to Hitler’s Fortress Europe was
not. This was their second world war, too.
(World War I "Doughnut
Lassies" serving U.S. Army soldiers in a trench.)
During World War I, some 250
female volunteers from the Salvation Army spent their days along the front
lines near No Man’s Land to give Americans in France the same fresh-baked
support they would give U.S. troops in later years. The “Doughnut Lassies”
risked their lives to fry doughnuts for the Doughboys, because life in the
trenches could be pretty miserable. “Doughnut Lassies” had considerably less to
work with than the Clubmobile volunteers of World War II. They rolled dough out
with spent artillery shell casings and cut the doughnuts out with their baking
powder cans. In 1938, Congress established the first Friday in June as National
Doughnut Day as a way to honor the Doughnut Lassies and the way they risked
their lives for American soldiers. It’s a good thing they did because these
brave women were far from finished. They would return to join U.S. troops in
every major war for nearly 40 years.
(In 1945, Red Cross clubmobile
workers Juanita Morrow and Wilhemina Barrow traveled 100 miles to deliver
snacks to troops during WWII.)
By World War II, life for the
invading female volunteers got a little better. The Clubmobiles had everything
they needed for their D-Day deployment, including the doughnut and
coffee-making gear that would take down Nazi Germany. The “Doughnut Dollies”
(as they now were called) had sleeping bunks in the truck, a mini-kitchen and a
lounge area with a record player for the GIs. The U.S. Army landed 10 groups of
eight Clubmobiles and three Doughnut Dollies each at Normandy that June. They
fanned out throughout Europe in the days and weeks after D-Day, either working
in the rear echelons or driving from military post to military post, serving
doughnuts and coffee to the soldiers there.They followed the Army deeper into
France, then Belgium and into Germany, every step of the way. Even after Nazi
Germany fell to the Allies on May 8,1945, the women and their Clubmobiles were
there. They stayed with the Allied occupation army until 1946.
When the Korean War broke out in
1950, the Doughnut Dollies again went to the front. This time, they ran clubs,
canteens and mobile vehicles to deliver the baked (or fried) goods to the GIs
in Korea. They weren’t exactly the Clubmobiles of Normandy, but they had
everything needed to keep spirits high, not only for the U.S. military, but all
the United Nations forces fighting on the peninsula -- even while they were in
combat. The Doughnut Dollies soon got an official name from the Defense
Department, the Supplemental Recreational Activities Overseas. Once officially
supported by the United States and the Red Cross, they were capable of making
up to 20,000 doughnuts a day for troops arriving in Korea.
(Red Cross worker Christine
Foerster and Sgt. Thomas L. Micka investigate the contents of his ditty bag at
Tan Son Nhut Air Base, Vietnam in 1970. Sgt. Micka was on guard along the Tan
Son Nhut air base perimeter in an armored personnel carrier.)
By the time the United States
entered the Vietnam War in force, the female volunteers of the Supplemental
Recreational Activities Overseas were there, too, and their old nickname came
with them. GIs in Vietnam also knew them as the “Doughnut Dollies.” They
weren’t limited to clubs, mess halls or hospitals. The Doughnut Dollies of
Vietnam could be found on Hueys or alongside tanks headed into the bush. They
were also there when some units came back with fewer men than had left.
This June 4, take a moment to
think of the Doughnut Dollies who were willing to risk their lives on D-Day or
at Da Nang just to do their part for the United States. Or take a few hours and
make the original recipe, as published by the National World War I Museum and
Memorial.
Ingredients for four dozen
doughnuts
5 cups flour
2 cups sugar
5 tsp. baking powder
1 tbsp. salt
2 eggs
1¾ cup milk
1 tub of lard
Powdered sugar
Combine all ingredients (except for lard) to make dough. Thoroughly knead dough, roll smooth and cut into rings less than a quarter-inch thick Heat the lard, drop rings into hot lard, turning occasionally When browned, removed doughnuts and allow excess fat to drip off Dash with powdered sugar, let cool and enjoy.
^ I knew there were people
(mostly women) who served a “Taste of Home” to Soldiers across the US and the
World whether it was in peacetime or wartime, but I didn’t realize the extent
of what these people actually did or the extreme danger they were like most of
the time. ^
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