** One person wrote: "Spam became a substitute for real meat and, for years after the war, one of my favourite foods. We served it up as batter-fried fritters or just grilled thick slices of it and served it with chips. Genuine Spam became a luxury compared with cheaper substitutes, most of which came from Denmark."
** In wartime Britain, a 10-ounce tin cost 12 ration book points or 1 shilling and sixpence in old money.
** 100 million pounds of Spam were issued as a Lend-Lease staple in rations to American, Russian and European troops during the war.
** GIs called Spam "ham that failed the physical."
** The Red Cross parcels that were distributed to POWs in Germany contained Spam. A can of Spam could be traded for three packs of cigarettes in the camps.
** President Dwight D. Eisenhower, in a letter acknowledging the role that Spam had played in the war, stated that he ate his "share of Spam along with millions of other soldiers."
The letter was sent to retired Hormel president H.H. Corey in 1966. A copy of the letter is on display in the World War II section of the Spam museum.
--GreSpam
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