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Barbara Tomblin - GI nightingales

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Weaving together information from official sources and personal interviews, Barbara Tomblin gives the first full-length account of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps in the Second World War. She describes how over 60,000 army nurses, all volunteers, cared for sick and wounded American soldiers in every theater of the war, serving in the jungles of the Southwest Pacific, the frozen reaches of Alaska and Iceland, the mud of Italy and northern Europe, or the heat and dust of the Middle East. Many of the women in the Army Nurse Corps served in dangerous hospitals near the front lines -- 201 nurses were killed by accident or enemy action, and another 1,600 won decorations for meritorious service. These nurses address the extreme difficulties of dealing with combat and its effects in World War II, and their stories are all the more valuable to womens and military historians because they tell of the war from a very different viewpoint than that of male officers. Although they were unable to achieve full equality for American women in the military during World War II, army nurses did secure equal pay allowances and full military rank, and they proved beyond a doubt their ability and willingness to serve and maintain excellent standards of nursing care under difficult and often dangerous conditions.

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title GI Nightingales The Army Nurse Corps in World War II author - photo 1

title:G.I. Nightingales : The Army Nurse Corps in World War II
author:Tomblin, Barbara.
publisher:University Press of Kentucky
isbn10 | asin:0813119510
print isbn13:9780813119519
ebook isbn13:9780813170206
language:English
subjectUnited States.--Army Nurse Corps--History.
publication date:1996
lcc:D807.U6T66 1996eb
ddc:940.54/7573
subject:United States.--Army Nurse Corps--History.
Page ii
Page iii GI Nightingales The Army Nurse Corps in World War II - photo 2
Page iii
G.I. Nightingales
The Army Nurse Corps in World War II
Barbara Brooks Tomblin Page iv Copy - photo 3
Barbara Brooks Tomblin
Page iv Copyright 1996 by The University Press of Kentucky Scholarly - photo 4
Page iv
Copyright 1996 by The University Press of Kentucky
Scholarly publisher for the Commonwealth,
serving Bellarmine College, Berea College, Centre
College of Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky University,
The Filson Club, Georgetown College, Kentucky
Historical Society, Kentucky State University,
Morehead State University, Murray State University,
Northern Kentucky University, Transylvania University,
University of Kentucky, University of Louisville,
and Western Kentucky University.
Editorial and Sales Offices: The University Press of Kentucky
663 South Limestone Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40508-4008
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Tomblin, Barbara
G.I. nightingales : the Army Nurse Corps in World War II / Barbara
Brooks Tomblin.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8131-1951-0 (alk. paper)
1. United States. Army Nurse Corps History. I. Title.
D807.U6T66 1996
940.54'7573dc20 96-1018
This book is printed on acid-free recycled paper meeting
the requirements of the American National Standard
for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials.
Picture 5
Manufactured in the United States of America
Page v
Contents
Preface
vii
1
Mobilizing for War
1
2
War Comes to the Pacific: U.S. Army Nurses at Pearl Harbor and in the Philippines
13
3
Across the Pacific: Nursing in the Central Pacific and Southwest Pacific Area
38
4
The Torch Is Lit: Army Nurses Support the Invasions of North Africa and Sicily
67
5
Fifth Army First: Nursing in the Italian Campaign
95
6
To the Rhine and Beyond: Army Nurses in the European Theater of Operations
120
7
The End of the Line: Nursing in the China-Burma-India Theater of Operations
153
8
They Also Served: The Army Nurse Corps at Home and in the Minor Theaters of War
172
9
Peace at Last! Demobilizing the Corps
204
Notes
212
Bibliography
232
Index
239
Illustrations follow page

Page vii
Preface
My fascination with World War II began in childhood and grew naturally from the memories of the war told to me by my parents, Florence and Sanford Brooks, and their friends who lived through those tumultuous years. My interest in Army nurses in World War II, however, arose in the late 1970s in response to publicity about the Women Air Force Service Pilots (WASPs). Their struggle to gain recognition for wartime service prompted me to learn more about women in the military during the war. I was surprised to learn that among the numerous histories and memoirs of World War II there were so few written by or about women in uniform. My local libraries offered few works about army nurses in World War II, but did include Theresa Archard's and Ruth Haskell's memoirs of nursing in North Africa and Sicily, which only whetted my appetite for more insight into the nurses' wartime experiences. With the exception of Maj. Julia Flikkes book on the Army Nurse Corps, published in 1943 before the war was over, little other information on army nurses was available at that time.
For the next several years I interviewed or corresponded with dozens of WW II women veteransArmy nurses, WACs, WAVEs, Women Marines, SPARS, and WASPs. Their stories and personal memories of the war were fascinating, but in the early 1980s few publishers were interested in a book about women in the military. Then in 1993 Dr. Linda Grant DePauw, founder of the Minerva Center and editor of Minerva: Quarterly Journal on Women in the Military, asked me to submit my chapters on the U.S. Navy Nurse Corps in WW II for publication in her journal. The fiftieth anniversary of the Second World War and growing public interest in the role of women in the military convinced me that the history of the Army Nurse Corps in WW II deserved a full-length study.
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