Beyond the Call of Duty

Army Flight Nursing in World War II

Beyond the Call of Duty

At the height of World War II, five hundred Army flight nurses served with the Army Air Forces as members of thirty-one medical air evacuation squadrons located throughout the world on both the European and Pacific fronts. Their work was not insignificant—over one million patients were evacuated by air between January 1943 and May 1945. These specially trained Army nurses took nursing to new heights. Often decorated for their accomplishments, they exemplify the ability of a group of nurses to cope successfully with the challenges of war.

In her comprehensive book, author Judith Barger brings together information that is becoming less accessible as the former nurses succumb to age, infirmity, and death.

Barger interviewed twenty-five of these pioneering women in 1986 when their recall of their service experiences was still vivid and informative. Building on Barger’s earlier research, their stories and the numerous complementary photographs included in the volume bring to life this long overdue tribute to Army flight nursing in World War II.

Beyond the Call of Duty offers the only in-depth account of the events leading up to the formation of the military flight nurse program, their training for duty, and the air evacuation missions in which they participated. Readers of military history, women’s history, and nursing history will find all three interests represented in this book, which gives new meaning to a phrase in the Flight Nurse Creed of 1943: “I will be faithful to my training, and to the wisdom handed down to me by those who have gone before me.”

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Prologue

Ethel Carlson was “scared to death” and “wanted to turn around and go back” when she and her footlocker boarded a Chicago-to-Saint Louis train in the middle of the night in April 1943. The twenty-one-year-old, who never had been away from her hometown of Chicago except on family vacations, had earned her diploma in nursing from Englewood Hospital on the city’s south side in 1942 and recently had joined the army. She was on her way to her first duty assignment at Jefferson Barracks, an army air corps training base near Saint Louis.1

Carlson was one of more than fifty-nine thousand nurses who voluntarily joined or were already serving in the army during World War II. Some worked in stateside army hospitals where they helped wounded soldiers through the definitive surgeries and rehabilitation necessitated by combat wounds. Other nurses served overseas, often close to the front lines of battle, in the chain of field, evacuation, station, and general hospitals that met the surgical and medical needs of American and Allied troops in all the military theaters of operation. Fewer army nurses staffed hospital ships and hospital trains. Specially trained army nurses served with the army air forces aboard airplanes on medical air evacuation flights. Carlson wanted to be a flight nurse, and as her train left Chicago’s south side station, that dream and her resolve that “I had never been a quitter, and I had said I was going to do it” finally quelled her fears.2 Carlson’s determination paid off, for she eventually got her dream assignment as a flight nurse.

This book is about the army flight nurses of World War II. When twenty-five of these women, including Carlson, shared their wartime experiences with the author in 1986, they were in their mid sixties to late seventies. Their experiences augment the broader history of army flight nursing, offering firsthand accounts of the personal and professional challenges faced by women who served in air evacuation assignments during the war. All were registered nurses and had attended diploma schools of nursing located in thirteen states, mostly in the Midwest. All but one nurse had graduated between 1935 and 1942; the oldest among them graduated in 1929. Their work experiences prior to military service varied, with hospital, clinic, private duty, and industrial nursing all represented. Dorothy White, who had this last type of job, considered it ideal preparation for flight nursing, because it involved emergency cases and responses when a physician was not in attendance and supplies were limited.3 Eleven of the nurses already knew they wanted to be flight nurses when they entered the military; the others learned about this new field of nursing when at their first duty assignments.

Information was filtering down through official channels to army and army air forces hospitals, and nurses often learned about the new flight nurse program from notices and sign-up sheets on bulletin boards. For Carlson, Lee Holtz, Helena Ilic, Sally Jones, Eileen Newbeck, and White, the chance to be a flight nurse was the impetus for joining the military. For other more pragmatic nurses like Jo Nabors and Blanche Solomon, it was a ticket out of an unpleasant hospital assignment; they wrote their names on every roster promising duty elsewhere. Clara Morrey signed up for the cadres deploying to war zones, specifying “air ambulance only” before the flight nurse program had even begun, having heard about it from military contacts. Jenny Boyle, who heard about flight nursing on the radio, wrote directly to the office of the air surgeon, army air forces, for information and an application.4 All but one of the twenty-five nurses interviewed graduated from the army air forces flight nurse course at Bowman Field, Kentucky prior to starting air evacuation duties. Morrey, who was sent overseas with her squadron before the formal training course began, attended after completion of her overseas tour of duty.

Assignment to Bowman Field to train as a flight nurse was not automatic on entering the army, though Newbeck, who had prior experience as a civilian flight nurse in the Aerial Nurse Corps of America (ANCOA), was assigned directly to attend the flight nurse course at Bowman Field. The other twenty-four nurses interviewed were assigned first to an army or an army air forces base where they worked until accepted for flight nurse training. Boyle, Carlson, Denny Nagle, and an interviewee who wished to remain anonymous all began their military service in overlapping assignments at Jefferson Barracks. For White, who was stationed at George Field in Illinois, the wait for flight nurse training was only five months, but for many nurses the wait was longer.

After completion of their training, the nurses deployed to several theaters of operation. Louise Anthony, Boyle, Carlson, Grace Dunnam, Jocie French, Brooxie Mowery, Nagle, and Frances Sandstrom all went to Europe; the anonymous flight nurse, Hilda Chamberlain, Adele Edmonds, Holtz, Ilic, Jones, Alice Krieble, Nabors, Elizabeth Pukas, and Lucy Wilson went to the Pacific; Agnes Jensen, Morrey, and White began their tours in North Africa and the Mediterranean; and Newbeck flew in Alaska, Dorothy Vancil in Central Africa, Randy Rast in the China-Burma-India Theater, and Solomon in the North Atlantic. Their assignments represented at least fifteen of the thirty-one medical air evacuation transport Squadrons, later renamed medical air evacuation squadrons, activated during World War II; assignments sometimes changed so quickly that flight nurses were never quite sure to which squadron they belonged.Dunnam, Pukas, and Wilson were the chief nurses of their respective squadrons.

The nurses gave many reasons for joining the Army Nurse Corps and volunteering for flight nurse duty. Ilic and Mowery had wanted to be flight attendants, but those plans fell through when the airlines stopped hiring nurses, who were urgently needed in the military, at the beginning of the war.6 For these two women, flight nursing was a logical plan B. For Jensen the chance to travel and see the world provided the incentive; Solomon, who had to help support her mother, appreciated the financial security of army pay, which she said was $150 a month at the time. Newbeck, who had two brothers in the service, felt that she should be in the service too, and air evacuation meant flying, something she really loved.7 But by far the leading motive was one’s patriotic duty. It was not a question of whether to volunteer for military service, said Carlson. Men were drafted, but everyone did what they could. “And if your training put you in a spot like being in the Army Nurse Corps, this is where you went.”8

That military flight nursing was an option for them had much to do with the exigencies of a war that separated casualties from medical facilities able to treat them. But flight nursing itself had appeared in the previous decade in the civilian sector as ANCOA. Because of that organization’s attempts to forge a military link, and because some ANCOA nurses, Newbeck among them, traded their civilian wings for those of the army air forces, the story of flight nursing begins with the events that foreshadowed the program in which army nurses participated.

 

Notes

  1. Ethel Carlson Ceresale, interview with author.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Dorothy White Errair, interview with author.
  4. Carlson, interview with author; Ivalee (Lee) Holtz, interview with author; Helena Ilic Tynan, interview with author; Sara Ann (Sally) Jones Sharp, interview with author; Mary Eileen Newbeck Christian, interview with author; White Errair, interview with author; Josephine (Jo) Malito Nabors, interview with author; Blanche Solomon Creesy, interview with author; Clara Morrey Murphy, interview with author; Jenevieve (Jenny) Boyle Silk, interview with author.
  5. Newbeck Christian, interview with author.
  6. Ilic Tynan, interview with author; Brooxie Mowery Unick, interview with author.
  7. Agnes Jensen Mangerich, interview with author; Solomon Creesy, interview with author; Newbeck Christian, interview with author; Carlson Cerasale, interview with author.
  8. Carlson Ceresale, interview with author.

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