Conditions Governing Access
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Arrangement
Biographical / Historical
Preferred Citation
Content Description
Conditions Governing Use
Contributing Institution:
Center for American War Letters Archives
Title: William G. Clay First World War correspondence
source:
Pearson, Mary Clay
Creator:
Clay, William Graves
Creator:
Pearson, Acy L.
Identifier/Call Number: 2016.184.w.r
Physical Description:
.4 Linear feet
(6 folders)
Date (inclusive): 1918 January 23 - 1919 April 25
Abstract: This collection contains letters, military documents, and ephemera from Pvt. William G. Clay, AEF to his family during the
First World War.
Physical Description: One fragile letter in Series 1 encased in plastic coversheet. Note: sharp needles from army sewing kit in brown pouch, Series
6 Ephemera.
Language of Material:
English
.
Container: WWI 4
Container: 10-15
Container: 1-6
Container: Specimen box 2
Container: 1
Conditions Governing Access
This collection is open for research.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Gift of Mary Clay Pearson. This is a legacy collection from Andrew Carroll.
Arrangement
This collection is arranged by author, recipient, and date. Series 1. Correspondence to Tully Family -- Series 2. Army and
Medical Records --
Series 3. Correspondence from Tully family to William G. Clay --
Series 4. Correspondence from Homefront Friends to William G. Clay -- Series 5. Correspondence from Acy L. Pearson to Mother,
Mrs. W.S. Pearson -- Series 6. Ephemera of William G. Clay
Biographical / Historical
Private William Graves Clay, American Expeditionary Force was born in Honey Grove, Texas and was a high school instructor
prior to enlisting in the armed forces. He was 5'6" with blue eyes, dark brown hair and a fair complexion. At the age of 29,
with no wife or children, Clay enlisted in the army on May 23, 1918 at Texarkana, Texas. Pvt. Clay of Company "C" 127th Machine
Gun Battalion, Army Serial # 1415483, suffered from acute rheumatic fever and rheumatoid arthritis, was hospitalized months
after enlisting, and thus did not serve in any battles, skirmishes, or expeditions. He was honorably discharged in April,
1919. After the war, Clay attended the North Texas State Teachers College and in 1940, earned a Master of Arts in Public School
Administration. His thesis was titled "An Evaluation of the New Boston Secondary School." He later became the superintendent
of New Boston, Texas and served in that position for 24 years. His daughter, Mary Pearson, described her father as a quiet,
intelligent, caring man that never talked about the war and had a dislike of guns and war. She noted he always observed events
on Memorial Day and other patriotic holidays.
Preferred Citation
[Item title, Box number, Folder number], William G. Clay First World War correspondence (2016.184.w.r), Center for American
War Letters Archives, Chapman University, CA.
For the benefit of current and future researchers, please cite any additional information about sources consulted in this
collection, including permanent URLs, item or folder descriptions, and box/folder locations.
Content Description
This collection contains letters from Pvt. William G. Clay, AEF to his sister Bessie Tully and brother-in-law Percy Tully
during and after the First World War.
Also included in the collection are correspondence from Bessie and Percy Tully to Clay, letters from female homefront friends
to Clay, letters from Acy L. Pearson, Clay's mother, Mrs. W.S. Pearson, as well as Army records, hospital records, deposition,
and hospital pass and ephemera of William G. Clay: photo, song book, sewing kit with chevron patch, WWI dog tags, mirror,
reading material.
Conditions Governing Use
There are no restrictions on the use of this material except where previously copyrighted material is concerned. It is the
responsibility of the researcher to obtain all permissions. For further copyright information, please contact the archivist.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
Lost and found possessions
War letters -- Lost and found
Correspondence -- World War, 1914-1918
World War (1914-1918)
World War (1914-1918) -- Homefront
World War (1914-1918) -- Hospitals.
Photographs
Military training camps
Pearson, Mary Clay