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Authors: We Band of Angels: The Untold Story of American Nurses Trapped on Bataan

Tags: #World War II, #Social Science, #General, #Military, #Women's Studies, #History

Elizabeth M. Norman (47 page)

BOOK: Elizabeth M. Norman
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But I stray. I started out to tell a story and promised to let the details of that story speak for themselves. So, one last time, let me go back.

•   •   •

I
N 1980 SIXTEEN
of the nurses, members of the large veterans group The American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor, returned to the Philippines on a special tour. The men and women retraced their wartime steps, visiting the battlefields, the prison camps, the old bases. One morning the group was driven to the top of Mount Samat on Bataan to dedicate several memorials. One of these monuments, a stone with a brass plaque, had been erected by the men of the Death March to honor the nurses.
2
Its inscription, in part, can easily stand as history’s final word:

In honor of the valiant American military women who gave so much of themselves in the early days of World War II.… They lived on a starvation diet, shared the bombing, strafing, sniping, sickness and disease while working endless hours of heartbreaking duty.… They truly earned the name “The Angels of Bataan and Corregidor.”

Acknowledgments

I
AM GRATEFUL TO
many people who graciously shared their expertise, insights and experiences.

Most of all, I am indebted to the twenty Angels who told me their stories: army nurses Earlyn Black Harding, Sally Blaine Millett, Ruby Bradley, Hattie Brantley, Helen Cassiani Nestor, Dorothea Daley Engel, Bertha Dworsky Henderson, Helen Gardner Rozmus, Eleanor Garen, Peggy Greenwalt Walcher, Eunice Hatchitt Tyler, Verna Henson Hively, Jeanne Kennedy Schmidt, Dorothy Scholl Armold, Madeline Ullom, Lucy Wilson Jopling; navy nurses Dorothy Still Danner, Peg Nash and Mary Rose Harrington Nelson; and civilian nurse Denny Williams, who returned to the Army Nurse Corps after the war.

I also thank relatives of the Angels who cooperated with my requests for interviews and gave me permission to use published and unpublished material: Mina Aasen’s niece, Gladys Bruhn; Maude Davison’s stepson, Robert Jackson; Eleanor Garen’s niece and nephew, Doris Sante and Dennis Kennedy; Dorothy Scholl Armold’s children, Carolyn Torrence and Harold Armold. And especially Mr. Edward Nestor, a World War II veteran of the European theater, who offered his opinions and recollections about his life with “Cassie.”

The candor and generosity of two people who knew the Angels well, Samuel B. Moody, a Bataan Death March survivor, and Terry “Little Cassie” Myers Johnson, provided different and important perspectives on the group.

Archivist Susan Sacharski and nurse Sharon Eifried spent hours interviewing
several Angels and locating archival material. They were of enormous assistance during the years I was shaping this project.

I also came to rely on a network of active-duty and retired military nurses: World War II veterans Dr. Jeanne Quint Benoliel and Signe Cooper; Army Nurse Corps historians Major Nona Bice-Stevens, Major C. J. Moore, Colonel Mary Sarnecky, Lieutenant Colonel Iris West, Brigadier General Connie Slewitzke USA (retired), and Rear Admiral Fran Shea Buckley USN (retired) helped me understand the American military culture and locate crucial information about the Angels, some of which had been lost for almost fifty years.

Historians across the country not only gave me full access to material in their collections but also shared their particular expertise. Among these are: Alan Aimone, United States Military Academy Special Collections Division, West Point, New York; Paul Grey, National Personnel Records Center, St. Louis, Missouri; Harry Noyes III, U.S. Army Health Services Command, Fort Sam Houston, Texas; curators Thomas McMasters and Ronald Burkett, U.S. Army Medical Department Museum at Fort Sam Houston, Texas; Paula Ussery, Admiral Nimitz Museum, Fredericks-burg, Texas; and Brigadier General Wilma Vaught USAF (retired) and her staff at the Women in Military Service to America headquarters in Virginia.

I also wish to thank those at the following archives: the National Archives in Suitland, Maryland; Philippine Archive Collection in Washington; the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery of the United States Navy; and the Center for Military History in Washington, D.C. These collections contained four valuable resources—the Army Nurse Corps archives at the Center for Military History held Josie Nesbit’s personnel rosters and her 1945 unpublished report listing names, dates and descriptions of Manila, Bataan, Corregidor, Santo Tomas Internment Camp (STIC); the Army Nurse Corps Oral History interviews, conducted from 1983 to 1984 with thirty-one of the army and navy POWs, provided details from those nurses who had died or were too frail to meet with me; the National Archives in Suitland, Maryland, had boxes of classified testimony that the nurses had given to judge advocate officers in 1945 for use in war crimes trials (these interviews offered details of specific prisoner-of-war incidents after surrender); the Philippine Archive Collection at the National Archives in Washington, D.C, held Bataan hospital rosters, diaries, unit records and memorabilia, which furnished the senior medical commanders perspectives on the war.

I received photographs through the goodwill of individuals from the
American Red Cross, Washington, D.C.; the U.S. Naval Hospital, Oakland, California; the Minot
Daily News
, Minot, North Dakota; and the Scott and White School of Nursing Archives in Temple, Texas.

Other scholars and experts assisted me in filling in crucial gaps in the Angels’ story. Mr. Richard Arnold from the Rutgers University Foundation helped me locate Terry “Little Cassie” Myers Johnson; Elizabeth Ann Watkins and other librarians from Dana Library on the Newark campus of Rutgers University uncovered many books and articles; Dr. Davis Joel Steinberg, president of Long Island University, shared his expertise of Filipino activities during the war; architect Andrew Attinson, AIA, helped in the description of the buildings at Santo Tomas University; former Veterans Administration officials Dorothy Starbuck, Charles Lucas and Edward Rose candidly recalled the events of the 1983 POW reunion; and Alice Booher, Southeast Business and Professional Women (SE/BPW), kindly invited me to the 1992 POW celebration in Washington, D.C., which gave me an opportunity to observe the Angels as a group.

My mother, Dorothy Riley Dempsey, was a source of information and cultural references from the war years. After a half century, her memory remains sharp, especially about the music of that era. My dear, late father, John J. Dempsey, spoke often about his time in combat as a young lieutenant in a tank destroyer unit of the 2nd Armored Division in Europe. He taught me a great deal about the long-term impact of war on veterans.

I thank Esther Newberg for her tenacity and forbearance, and Bob Loomis for his craftsmanship and steady guidance.

A
POET, TEACHER
and friend, Jean Armstrong lent her skill, helping me to pare down and reorganize the manuscript. I deeply appreciate her generosity, patience, skill and good humor.

I collaborated on this book with my husband, the writer Michael Norman. He spent six months every day helping to reshape the manuscript and polish the prose. We have been married for more than twenty-five years. After so long working and living together, it is hard to know where my sentences end and his begin.

A
WORD ON
the title: I was against using the word “Angels” there. Men—not women—apply that appellation to nurses and most of us find
it denigrating, insulting and just plain silly. Men use it to remind women to sacrifice, to work long hours for low pay and not complain. It is meant to idealize women, to push them to be perfect, because that is the kind of woman, the kind of nurse, men want.

I’m no angel, and neither were the gritty women of Bataan. They were human beings, as brave and as fearful as their male comrades, but after much thought, and a little prompting from literary friends, I came to see the word “angel” as the only metaphor that married the conflicting ideas of bravery and compassion, heroism and care.

The nurses of Bataan and Corregidor were in every sense “at war,” side by side with men. The difference was that they carried a battle dressing instead of a gun. They fought, and fought fiercely, to preserve life as everyone around them was bent on taking it. In that light “Angels” seemed just right.

Finally, for the record, the title is meant to echo two lines from Shakespeare’s
Henry V:
“We few, we happy few, we band of brothers. / For he who sheds his blood with me shall be my brother.”

M
ONTCLAIR
, N
EW
J
ERSEY
1998

Appendix I: C
HRONOLOGY OF
M
ILITARY
N
URSES IN THE
P
HILIPPINE
I
SLANDS, 1940
-
1945

 

March 1941
War maneuvers and air–raid drills begin.
Summer 1941
Douglas MacArthur assumes command of U.S. forces in the Far East. More troops and nurses arrive from Stateside. Military dependents and unnecessary civilians leave for the States.
July 1941
Miss Maude Davison promoted to captain, replaces Miss E. Valine Messner as Chief Nurse USA in the Philippines.
November 1941
Last army transport leaves Manila for the United States. Eighty-seven army nurses on duty, double the number from one year earlier. Twelve navy nurses at Canacao Naval Hospital, outside Manila.
December 7–8, 1941
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, bombed. Guam, Wake Island and Midway attacked. In the Philippines, Camp John Hay in Baguio and Clark Field at Fort Stotsenberg bombed. Five army nurses from Sternberg Hospital in Manila go to Stotsenberg Hospital to help. President Roosevelt declares war.
December 10, 1941
Canacao Naval Hospital in Cavite shelled.
December 11, 1941
Canacao Naval Hospital evacuated. Twelve navy nurses move to Sternberg Hospital in Manila. They are assigned by the army to various makeshift medical facilities.
December 13, 1941
Fort McKinley, seven miles from Manila, evacuated. Twenty army nurses move to Sternberg Hospital and are reassigned around the city.
December 22, 1941
Two hundred miles from Manila, Camp John Hay evacuated. Two ANC leave this post with other medical personnel and attempt to walk to Bataan to join the allied forces there. Major portion of General Homma’s army lands at Lingayen Gulf, north of Manila.
December 24, 1941
At 11:00
A.M
. Stotsenberg Hospital near Clark Field ordered evacuated. Twenty nurses arrive at Sternberg Hospital at 4:00
P.M
. ANC begins to evacuate Sternberg. Twenty-five American (twenty-four ANC, one NNC) and twenty-five Filipino nurses ordered to Bataan via trucks. General MacArthur leaves Manila for Corregidor. MacArthur declares Manila an open city.
December 25–26, 1941
ANC ordered to be ready to evacuate all personnel still in Manila. Twenty ANC leave the city by ship; nineteen go to Bataan to begin to set up Hospital #2, one to Bataan Hospital #1 at Limay, Bataan. Seven other ANC arrive on another boat at Limay.
December 25–28, 1941
Ten ANC, one physiotherapist, evacuate from Sternberg Hospital, arrive at Corregidor. Twelve ANC and one dietitian remain behind in Manila.
December 28, 1941
Two ANC, Ruby Bradley and Beatrice Chambers, return to Baguio and surrender. They are interned at Camp John Hay, now a POW camp. The physicians and other medical personnel remain in the mountains and continue their attempt to get to Bataan.
December 29, 1941
Twelve ANC and one dietitian evacuated from Sternberg Hospital to Corregidor. Corregidor is bombed for the first time. Military personnel begin to move underground into Malinta Tunnel.
December 31, 1941
Last ANC, Floramund Fellmuth, leaves Manila on a provisional hospital ship, eventually arrives in Australia. The last army military personnel leave Sternberg Hospital. Eleven navy nurses with other naval medical personnel at Saint Scholastica Girls School in Manila. First patients, two surgical, one medical, admitted to Hospital #2 on Bataan.
January 1, 1942
Four wards functioning at Hospital #2, Bataan. Josie Nesbit arrives from Corregidor to become chief nurse at #2.
January 2, 1942
Japanese enter Manila. Eleven navy nurses surrender. They are held at Saint Scholastica Girls School with patients and other medical personnel.
January 9, 1942
Seven wards functioning at Bataan Hospital #2.
January 16, 1942
One hundred eighty-two major operations performed at Hospital #1, located at Limay, Bataan.
January 23, 1942
Medical personnel travel into the Bataan jungle to a spot nicknamed Little Baguio and begin to set up a new site for Hospital #1.
January 25, 1942
Eighteen nurses leave Limay about 9:00
A.M
. Hospital #1 relocated to Little Baguio to avoid enemy bombings.
February 6, 1942
Forty-eight ANC and twenty-three Filipino nurses working at #2 with seventeen wards functioning. Japanese reinforcements land on Luzon.
February 10, 1942
Edith Shacklette named chief nurse at Hospital #1. She replaces temporary head nurse, Rosemary Hogan.
February 20, 1942
Nurses hold first of two dances at Hospital #1. Lull in the Bataan fighting.
March 1, 1942
Quinine on Bataan exhausted.
March 8, 1942
Eleven navy nurses taken to Santo Tomas Internment Camp, Manila.
March 11, 1942
General MacArthur leaves Corregidor for Australia. General Wainwright in command of Bataan and Corregidor forces.
March 30, 1942
Bataan Hospital #1 bombed at 10:17
A.M
. Patient and male personnel casualties. Final Japanese assault on Bataan begins.
April 3, 1942
Captain Maude Davison visits Bataan from her HQ on Corregidor. More nurses ordered from Corregidor to Bataan to help with increasing casualties.
April 5, 1942
Easter. Japanese increase attacks on Bataan.
April 6, 1942
Only fifteen of the original twenty-four nurses remain on Corregidor. The other ANC have been sent to Bataan.
April 7, 1942
Bataan Hospital #1 bombed shortly after 10:00
A.M
. One ward demolished. Two ANC, Rosemary Hogan and Rita Palmer, wounded.
April 8–9, 1942
All seventy-two ANC and one NNC ordered from Bataan to Corregidor. Twenty-six Filipino nurses, one dietitian, one physiotherapist, one Red Cross field director and five civilian women accompany them. Hospital #1 group leaves the Mariveles dock about 11:30
P.M
. and arrive about 3:00
A.M
. at Corregidor. Hospital #2 group caught behind exploding ordnance. Reach Mariveles around sunrise.
April 9, 1942
Allies on Bataan surrender to the Japanese at 6:00
A.M
. Last boat with Hospital #2 nurses leaves Bataan about 8:00
A.M
. All American and Filipino women safely on Corregidor by 1:00
P.M.
April 29, 1942
Two PBY planes leave Corregidor with twenty army nurses and other passengers. At a refueling stop on Mindanao, one PBY hits a rock on takeoff and is unable to fly. Ten ANC stranded. The other PBY plane arrives safely in Australia.
May 1, 1942
Continuous bombing and shelling of Corregidor. Nurses remain on duty in Malinta Tunnel Hospital.
May 3, 1942
Eleven army and one navy nurse leave Corregidor on a submarine. Safely arrive in Fremantle, Australia.
May 6, 1942
General Wainwright surrenders to the Japanese. Fifty-four ANC among the American forces on Corregidor. Japanese order the nurses to remain inside Malinta Tunnel.
May 10, 1942
Ten nurses stranded on Mindanao surrender.
June 25, 1942
Fifty-four army nurses, staff and patients ordered out of Malinta Tunnel. Arrive at ruined Middleside Hospital on Corregidor about 9:00
A.M
. after a two-and-a-half-mile hike.
July 2, 1942
Fifty-four ANC removed from Corregidor about 5:00
A.M
. by boat. Arrive Manila 11:00
A.M
. Transported by truck to Santo Tomas Internment Camp (STIC) in Manila. Taken to Santa Catalina Convent, outside the main camp grounds.
August 25, 1942
Fifty-four army nurses move into main internment camp (STIC).
September 9, 1942
Ten army nurses stranded on Mindanao arrive in Manila; sixty-four army nurses now at STIC. Army nurse Maude Davison in charge of Santa Catalina prison hospital. Eleven navy nurses work under her command.
December 25, 1942
First POW Christmas. Sixty-four army nurses share presents and special meal outside Santa Catalina Hospital.
May 14, 1943
Eleven navy nurses move to the newly established internment camp at Los Banos and set up a hospital to care for other POW’s. Navy nurse Laura Cobb in charge of Los Banos hospital nursing staff.
Summer 1943
Army nurse Ruby Bradley arrives at STIC from John Hay Internment Camp in Baguio. The other army nurse, Beatrice Chambers, elects to remain at John Hay.
September 26, 1943
One hundred twenty-seven civilians from STIC and Los Banos leave on a repatriation ship. No military nurses among them. Sixty-five ANC in STIC, eleven NNC at Los Banos.
December 25, 1943
Second POW Christmas. Food less plentiful. Nurses share Red Cross relief supplies.
January 1944
Japanese War Prisoners Division takes over all Philippine POW camps from civilian command. Issues series of restrictive orders.
February 1, 1944
Army nurse Josie Nesbit notes signs of weight loss and malnutrition in the nurses.
March 1944
Mail from USA arrives. Nurses allowed to send home censored twenty-five-word postcards.
September 21, 1944
Death rate from malnutrition in STIC and Los Banos increasing. American pilots bomb Manila for the first time.
October 20, 1944
Allied troops land on southern Philippine island of Leyte. General MacArthur arrives on Leyte.
December 25, 1944
Third POW Christmas. Scarce food. No gifts allowed into camps. No holiday parties.
January 2, 1945
Allies land on Luzon, Philippines.
February 3, 1945
1st Cavalry liberates STIC. All sixty-five ANC in STIC alive after almost three years as POW’s.
February 5, 1945
Army nurse Mabel Robinson arrives with nearly one hundred ANC. Relieve STIC army nurses from duty. Army nurse Beatrice Chambers from Baguio reunited with other former POW army nurses.
February 12-19, 1945
Sixty-six ANC, two dietitians, one physiotherapist, one Red Cross field director and civilian nurses flown to Leyte. Medical tests done; nurses given uniforms, promoted one grade and presented with medals.
February 19-23, 1945
ANC island-hopping across the Pacific.
February 22, 1945
11th Airborne Division liberates Los Banos Internment Camp. Eleven navy nurses freed.
February 23, 1945
Sixty-six ANC arrive in San Francisco. Reunited with friends and families. Taken to Letterman Hospital for evaluation.
March 10, 1945
Eleven navy nurses arrive in San Francisco. Taken to Oak Knoll Hospital for evaluation.
March 1945
Sixty-six ANC and eleven NNC released from hospitals. Travel to their hometowns.
May 8, 1945
Germany surrenders.
July 5, 1945
General MacArthur announces fighting in the Philippine Islands is over. Complete allied victory.
August 6, 1945
Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
August 15, 1945
Japan surrenders.
BOOK: Elizabeth M. Norman
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