Mon. Jan 13th, 2025

Catonsville resident Karen Taylor shows a portrait of her mother, Vivian Elzie Taylor, who served with the 6888th Battalion — the “Six Triple-Eight” — during World War II. Photo by Robert Stewart/Capital News Service.

By Robert Stewart

After decades of hearing their stories only as family lore, if they heard them at all, the families of 19 Maryland women who served in the 6888th Battalion are watching those stories come alive – and enjoying the long-awaited recognition.

The 6888th is the predominantly Black postal unit that served in World War II and is the subject of Tyler Perry’s blockbuster move, “The Six Triple Eight,” released last month.

“I have wanted my mother and my aunt to be honored and to be appreciated for a long time,” said Catonsville resident Karen Taylor, “and now because of the Tyler Perry movie the world knows what they accomplished.”

Although not main characters in Perry’s movie, Taylor’s mother and aunt were both members of the postal unit featured in the film.

The Six Triple Eight, officially the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, deployed to Europe for roughly a year during World War II. Some 855 women came from across the U.S. to process mail in the European theater of war.

Lt. Col. Charity Adams Earley was commanding officer of the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, the first unit of Black women to go overseas in World War II. (Photo courtesy of the National Veterans Memorial Museum)

They were a twice-segregated unit, as women served separately from men at the time, and women of color served separately from white women.

The film release prior to Christmas has reanimated discussion of the unit, bringing their accomplishments into public consciousness. For descendants and family members, it’s a culmination of a multiyear effort to bring awareness to their family’s military service.

Taylor, a 78-year-old retired dental hygienist, points to her living room wall lined with pictures of family members in her apartment. Several items, including pictures, a U.S. flag, a certificate and a movie poster indicate a connection to the 6888th.

“These women were fighting for us,” Taylor said, “Even if someone tells you you can’t do something, you don’t let it go at that. You keep on going and prove that you can.”

Taylor says that’s how her mother raised her.

Taylor’s mother, Vivian Elzie Taylor, was one of 19 women who enlisted in Maryland and deployed with the 6888th. After serving in Europe and meeting and marrying her husband, Elyseo J. Taylor, in Paris, she settled in Salisbury.

She and her husband, a tanker in the first Black tank battalion, eventually divorced. Elzie Taylor went to teach art at the all-Black Salisbury High School in Maryland’s then-segregated school system.

From a segregated army to a segregated school system, Elzie Taylor’s mid-century career was emblematic of the challenges Black women faced in Maryland and around the country.

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She passed a lesson on to her daughter about persevering in the face of obstacles.

“My mom pushed me,” Taylor said. “She made me.”

After her mom died, Taylor began exploring the military oral history her mother had shared with her. It wasn’t just her mother who served. Taylor’s aunt, Marian Elzie Wilson, enlisted in Pennsylvania and also deployed with the 6888th.

The more she learned, she said, the more she understood the groundbreaking territory the group charted.

And she wasn’t the only one.

Vashti Murphy Matthews, from Baltimore’s multigenerational publishing family of the Afro-American Newspapers, also served overseas with the 6888th. She was a taciturn woman who – despite a drill-sergeant-like leadership style – never spoke about her time in the Army, according to her daughter, Betty Schuler.

“Had it not been for me finding some pictures, we would never have known that she served at all,” Schuler said. “Not one word did she speak.”

Schuler and her cousin first learned about the 6888th when a monument was being erected in honor of the unit. Researchers and fundraisers were reaching out to descendants and media organizations, which led them to Schuler and her cousin, Frances Murphy Draper, CEO and publisher of the Afro-American.

Members of the Women’s Army Corps 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion sort packages delivered by French civilian employees at the 17th Base Post Office in Paris, France, Nov. 7, 1945. (U.S. Army photo)

The Buffalo Soldier Educational and Historical Committee created a monument for the 6888th in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, outside of Kansas City, in 2018.

A few years later, Congress passed legislation awarding the unit the Congressional Gold Medal. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore even designated March 9 as a day honoring the 6888th in Maryland.

But it wasn’t until the movie that the unit really caught people’s attention. Draper compares “The Six Triple Eight” to other overlooked stories about people of color.

“I think it also speaks to the ‘argument’ about the need to really teach African American history,” Draper said. “There’s a whole history of people, and the more we understand about people … the more we understand that we have more in common than we have different.”

– Capital News Service is a student-staffed reporting service operated by the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism. Stories are available at the CNS site and may be reprinted as long as credit is given to Capital News Service and, most importantly, to the students who produced the work.