Balderston Family Collection, 1942-1947
| Archives of the American Field Service and AFS Intercultural Programs




Frederick “Fred” Emery Balderston (born August 15, 1923) and Robert “Bob” Walter Balderston (born November 10, 1924) grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in a prominent Quaker family. The United States had been involved in World War II for almost two years when Fred, then a student at Deep Springs College in California, and Bob, enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania, joined the war effort. As Quakers, they objected to fighting in the conflict and received permission from the draft board to serve as volunteer ambulance drivers with the American Field Service (AFS). On January 16, 1943 the brothers set sail from New York City with AFS unit ME 37 and arrived in Port Tewfik, Egypt on March 21, 1943. As part of AFS C Platoon of 485 Company, the Balderston brothers traveled alongside the British Army to Lebanon, Palestine, Yemen, Italy, and India between 1943 and 1945. During their service they transported wounded Allied and Axis soldiers, and sometimes German prisoners of war and Italian civilians, in ambulances donated by Americans through AFS.
Before volunteering, Fred worked as a mechanic’s apprentice in order to gain an understanding of automobile maintenance and repair. Because of his experience he was responsible for ambulance repairs in the field, in addition to his driving responsibilities. While assigned to the Monte Cassino area in Italy in May of 1944, Fred was driving his platoon commander and friend, Lieutenant Robert C. Bryan, and a British medical officer when their jeep was hit by enemy fire. Lt. Bryan and the British officer were badly hurt and Fred did his best to quickly pull them out of the vehicle. He enlisted the help of some nearby British soldiers in a truck to help dress their wounds, put them on a stretcher, and drive them to the nearest medical facility. Despite receiving medical attention quickly, both men died as a result of the attack. On July 19, 1945 Fred was mentioned in a dispatch for distinguished service by the British military for his courageous actions.
While volunteering with AFS, Bob worked as a clerk for his commanding officer, James R. Ullman, who described him as “charming and lovable” in a letter to his parents, C. Canby and Ida Balderston. In 1944 he was put in charge of the canteen for C Platoon. His responsibilities included purchasing, collecting, and securing food supplies, and he worked to supplement those supplies with fresh fruit and nuts available in the region. He also delivered the supplies to each post with the help of a driver. The canteen work required a lot of travel and could be difficult logistically, but it appealed to Bob because, by his own admission, there was always plenty to eat.
Both brothers were repatriated in 1945 upon the end of wartime hostilities. After the war, Bob attended the University of Colorado, Boulder, where he met Dorothea “Dode” Ellingson. After marrying, the couple moved to Oregon in 1950 to help manage the Ellingson Lumber Company. Fred enrolled in Cornell University, earning a B.A. in economics in 1948. After finishing a Ph.D. in economics at Princeton University, Fred accepted a position as assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley in 1953. He would remain at Berkeley in various academic and administrative roles until his retirement in 1991. Bob never had children but was described as a “favorite uncle” of Fred’s four children: Daniel, Jonathan, Sara, and Thomas Balderston. Throughout his life Fred remained active with AFS, helping to establish the organization’s student exchange program with AFS director Stephen Galatti and other wartime volunteers in 1946. He became an AFS trustee in 1969.
On October 18, 2007 Fred passed away at the age of 84 in Berkeley, California, survived by his children and his second wife, Elizabeth (his first wife Judith died in 1993). Bob passed away at the age of 88 on October 1, 2012. He was survived by Dode, his wife of 62 years, who passed away in 2013.

Ambulance drivers
American Field Service (American Ambulance Field Service)
American Field Service--Central Mediterranean Units (CM)
American Field Service--CM 100
American Field Service--IB 59-T
American Field Service--India-Burma Units (IB)
American Field Service--ME 37
American Field Service--Middle East Units (ME)
Balderston, Frederick E. (Frederick Emery), 1923-2007
Balderston, Robert W. (Robert Walter), 1924-2012
Cassino, Battle of, Cassino, Italy, 1944.
Civilians in war
Gordon, Lillian A.
India
Italy
Lebanon
Prince, Allan B. (Allan Bixby), 1924-
Quakers
World War, 1939-1945
World War, 1939-1945--Medical care

The Balderston Family Collection includes photographs, letters, v-mail, postcards, and other documents related to the experiences of brothers Frederick “Fred” and Robert “Bob” Balderston as ambulance drivers with the American Field Service in the Middle East, Europe, and India during World War II.
The bulk of the collection consists of correspondence, including handwritten letters and v-mail, between the brothers and their family and friends, written while they were volunteering overseas between 1943 and 1945. The brothers’ language in letters to their father, C. Canby Balderston, reflects their Quaker background, with words like thee and thy used in place of you andyour. Some of these letters are incomplete as portions were removed by censors. The letters contain details about other members of their platoon, their day-to-day duties, trips taken during leave, and requests for items from home like cigarettes or a sewing kit. There is also one photograph of the ship that carried the brothers overseas, which appears to have been enclosed with a letter by Fred to his father in 1943, and a photograph of Bob in his AFS uniform, which was enclosed with a letter to his father on August 19, 1943. In addition to the letters by and to the brothers, the collection includes several letters addressed to their father and stepmother C. Canby and Ida Balderston. There is one anomalous letter in the collection written by fellow AFS volunteer D. Robert Yarnall Jr. to his parents. It is not clear how the Balderston brothers came to be in possession of this letter.
In addition to the wartime letters, the collection also includes letters and 67 RSVP postcards addressed to Fred after the war concerning an AFS C Platoon of 485 Company luncheon. Frederick organized the event, which was held on September 28, 1946, at the Commodore Hotel in New York City.
Another significant part of the collection is the approximately 750 black and white wartime photographs taken by various members of the brothers’ platoon. It seems that Fred requested and collected these photographs, which range in size from 1” x 2” to 2.5” x 3”, from his fellow platoon members in order to create a memorial photograph album honoring Lt. Robert C. Bryan. Lt. Bryan was killed while volunteering in Italy on May 5, 1944. This album appears to have never come to fruition. The photographs Fred collected depict the work and leisure activities of his platoon in several theaters. Some of the photographs depict monuments or locations, such as an image of the Temple of Jupiter at Baalbek, Lebanon, or a shot of Mussolini's balcony in Rome. Others show the men of C Platoon and their ambulances ready for action or the destruction caused by war, such as an image of a woman walking through rubble or Polish soldiers worshiping in the ruined remains of the monastery at Monte Cassino.
In addition to the photographs, there is one undated ink drawing by an unknown artist, depicting Fred and another member of C Platoon walking back to their camouflaged ambulance after a German air raid.
The remainder of the collection consists of materials created by or about AFS, including an AFS Newsletter #27 from March 24, 1947, written by staff member Lillian A. Gordon, a lyric sheet for the song The Colonel and I, a roster of AFS service volunteers, a personnel list for C Platoon of 485 Company, and some handwritten notes on the wartime locations of C Platoon.