Elizabeth M. Norman (50 page)

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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

BOOK: Elizabeth M. Norman
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Piemonte, R., and Gurney, C. (eds.)
Highlights in the History of the Army Nurse Corps
. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Center for Military History, 1987.

“Philippine epic: General MacArthur and his men make a Thermopylae of Bataan.”
Life, 12
(15), 25–37, April 13, 1942.

“The Philippines: Ghostly garrison.”
Newsweek 39
(19), 25, May 18, 1942.

POWs, nurses’ list of names
, (no date). Army Nurse Corps Archives, Center for Military History, Washington, D.C., File 383.6.

“P. T. Department: Lieutenant Brunetta Kuehlthau tells her experiences.”
Army Nurse, 2
(6), 10, June 1945.

Quartermaster diary on Corregidor, 8 December 1941 to 12 March 1942
. Author unknown. National Archives, Philippine Archive Collection, Washington, D.C., RG 407, Box 10, File #500–22.

Randolph, M. “What Army nurses expect from the profession.”
American Journal of Nursing, 46
, 95–97, 1946.

Raymond, A. “War notes. Army nurses write an enduring chapter in fortitude and courage.”
Trained Nurse and Hospital Review, 109
, 45–46, 1942.

Redmond, J.
I Served on Bataan
. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1943.

“Reminiscences of a nurse POW.”
Navy Medicine
, 36–40, May-June 1992.

Report No. 189, General Headquarters United States Army, Pacific, war crimes branch of mistreatment and imprisonment under improper condition of American prisoners of war at Corregidor, P. I., during summer 1942
. National Archives, Suitland, Maryland. SCAP Collection, Box 1125.

Reuter, J. “The ball and cross: Tropical prison camp.”
The Catholic World, 162
, 159–63, 1945.

Roberts, M.
The Tradition and Destiny of the US Army Nurse Corps
. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Medical Department, 1949.

Romulo, C. P.
I Saw the Fall of the Philippines
. Garden City, New York: Doubleday and Co., 1943.

Rudin, E. “Memories of a World War II POW nurse.”
U.S. Navy Medicine, 73
, 15–20, 1982.

Russell, M.
Jungle Angel: Bataan Remembered
. Brainard, Minnesota: Bang Printing Company, 1988.

Sanger, D. “Philippines orders U.S. to leave strategic Navy base at Subic Bay.”
The New York Times
, 1–2, Dec. 28, 1991.

Sayre, E. “Submarine from Corregidor.”
The Atlantic, 170
, 25–26, Aug. 1942.

Schaffter, D.
What Comes of Training Women for War
. Washington, D.C.: American Council on Education, 1948.

Schaller, M.
Douglas MacArthur
. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.

Schedler, D., and Hampson, F. “Steel tank crashes gate of Japanese prison camp.”
The San Francisco Chronicle
, 1, Feb. 6, 1945.

Schnurr, P. “The long-term course of PTSD.”
Clinical Quarterly: The National Center for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, 4
(1), 15–16, 1994.

Scholl, Dorothy Belle (as told to Margaret Hamilton). “What I saw as army nurse on Bataan and Corregidor.”
Kansas City Star
, Section C., 1; 3, March 18, 1945.

Seals, C. H. Typed message to Bataan commanders, Jan. 15, 1942. National Archives, Philippine Archive Collection, Washington, D.C. RG 407, Box 12.

Shacklette Haynes’s diary, (no date).
Bataan, Corregidor, Santo Tomas
1942–1945
, Admiral Nimitz Museum Collection, State Historical Park, Fredericksburg, Texas. Microfilm.

Shields, E.
A History of the United States Army Nurse Corps (Female)
,
1901–1937
. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Columbia University Teachers College, New York, 1980.

Smith, R. R.
The War in the Pacific: Triumph in the Philippines
. Washington, D.C.: Center for Military History, United States Army, 1963.

Speck, J. “Captured on Guam.”
The Trained Nurse and Hospital Review, 109
, 414–16, Dec. 1942.

“So proudly we hail: Realistic story of nurses in the Philippines.”
Life
, 15, 69–72, Oct. 4, 1943.

Sommers, S. (ed.)
The Japanese Story
. Packet #10. Marshfield, Wisconsin: American Ex-POW Inc., National Medical Research Committee, 1980.

Steinberg, D.
Philippine Collaboration in World War II
. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press, 1967.

Steinberg, R.
Return to the Philippines
. New York: Time-Life Books, 1979.

Stevens, F. H.
Santo Tomas Internment Camp
. New York: Stratford House, 1946.

“Still holding.”
Time, 39
, 17, March 2, 1942.

Stimson, J. A. “The role of American nurses in winning the war.”
Canadian Nurse, 38
, 623–28, 1942.

Straub, Ruth (as told to Marcia Winn). “Nurse Ruth Straub’s diary.”
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
, nine-part series, Sept. 21–30, 1942.

“Stylish too.”
The Trained Nurse and Hospital Review, 114
, 428, 1945.

Tennant, C., and Goulston, K. “The psychological effects of being a prisoner of war: Forty years after release.”
American Journal of Psychiatry, 143(5)
, 618–21, 1986.

“The texts of the day’s communiques of fighting in various fronts.”
The New York Times
, 2, Dec. 30, 1941.

“32 POW nurses honored, first reunion since WWII.”
The American Nurse
, 10, July-Aug. 1983.

Thompson, D. Davis.
The Road Back: A Pacific POWs Liberation Story
. Lub-bock, Texas: Texas Tech University Press, 1996.

Todd, C. E. “Nursing under fire.”
Military Surgeon, 100
, 335–41, April 1947.

Toland, J.
But Not in Shame: Six Months after Pearl Harbor
. New York: Random House, 1961.

Ullom, M. “Heroines under fire: The U.S. Army Nurse Corps.”
The Stars and Stripes, 106
(14), 6–7; 10–11, April 7, 1983.

_______, (date not given).
The Philippine assignment: Some aspects of the Army Nurse Corps in the Philippine Islands, 1940–1945
. Unpublished manuscript. Washington, D.C.: Center for Military History.

Underbrink, R. L.
Destination Corregidor
. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1971.

Unit history and personnel rosters of General Hospital No. 2, December 41 to June 42
. Author and date unknown. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, Philippine Archive Collection.

Unusual incidents at Hospital #2
. Author and date unknown. Washington, D.C.: National Archives, Philippine Archive Collection, RG 407, Box 12, Folder No.
99
.

U.S. Army.
Reports of General MacArthur: The campaign of MacArthur in the Pacific
, by the General Staff, Tokyo headquarters, Tokyo, Japan, vol. 1, part 1, 1950. West Point, New York: Nininger Collection, United States Military Academy special collections.

_______.
Reports of General MacArthur: Operations of the South Luzon force
, by the General Staff, Tokyo headquarters, Tokyo, Japan, vol. 1, part II, 1950. West Point, New York: Nininger Collection, United States Military Academy special collections.

_______.
Reports of General MacArthur: Japanese operations in the South West Pacific area
, by the General Staff, Tokyo headquarters, Tokyo, Japan, vol. II, part 1, 1950. West Point, New York: Nininger Collection, United States Military Academy special collections.

USS Spearfish special mission. Forwards narrative account of evacuation of personnel from Corregidor, P.I. on 3 May 1942 during fourth war patrol
, June 3, 1942. Serial SA-115. Allied Naval Forces Based Western Australia. Operational archives, Naval Historical Center, Washington, D.C.

Valentine, C. “Nursing at Los Banos.”
RN, 8
, 30–2; 66–8, 1945.

Valentine, E. R. “Our nurses on the world’s fronts.”
The New York Times Magazine
, 12; 53, Sept. 13, 1942.

Wainwright, J. M., edited by B. Considine.
General Wainwright’s Story: The Account of Four Years of Humiliating Defeat, Surrender and Captivity
. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1946.

Ware, S.
American Women in the 1930s: Holding Their Own
. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1982.

Wartime translations of seized Japanese documents: Allied translator and interpreter section reports, 1942–1945
. Frederick, Maryland: University Publications of America, 1989.

Waymire, K. “11 navy ‘angels’ arrive home after 3 years at Cabanatuan.”
The San Francisco Examiner
, 1; 3, March 11, 1945.

Weinstein, A.
Barbed Wire Surgeon
. New York: Macmillan Company, 1948.

Weintraub, S.
Long Days Journey into War
. New York: Truman Tally Books, Dutton, 1991.

“What Tokyo reports.”
The New York Times
, 1, April 10, 1942.

White, W. L.
They Were Expendable
. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1942.

Whitman, J.
Bataan: Our Last Ditch
. New York: Hippocrene Books, 1990.

Williams, D.
To the Angels
. San Francisco: Denson Press, 1985.

Willoughby, A.
I Was on Corregidor: The Experiences of an American Official’s Wife in the War-Torn Philippines
. New York: Harper, 1943.

Willoughby, Major General Charles (ed.).
Operations of the Intelligence Service in the SW Pacific Area: A brief history of the G-2 section, GHQ, SWPA, and affiliated units
, by the General Staff, Tokyo headquarters, Tokyo, Japan, 1948. Kruger Collection, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York.

Wright, Major B. C.
The 1st Cavalry Division in World War II
. Tokyo, Japan: Toppan Printing Company, 1947.

Young, E. F., edited by F. J. Taylor. “Three years outside this world.”
Saturday Evening Post, 217
, 18–19+, May 5, 1945.

Zeiss, R., and Dickman, H. “PTSD 40 years later: Incidence and person-situation correlates in former POWS.”
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 45
(1), 80–87, 1989.

Endnotes

FULL CITATIONS IN BIBLIOGRAPHY
.
Foreword

1.
The Japanese attack on the Philippines occurred on December 8, not December 7, because the islands are across the International Date Line from Hawaii.

2.
Bertha Dworsky Henderson, 1992 correspondence with author.

3.
Doris Kehoe, 1992 correspondence with author.

4.
Phyllis Arnold, 1992 correspondence with author.

Chapter One: Waking Up to War

1.
Eleanor Garen letter to her mother, Lulu Garen, dated October 25, 1941. Eleanor Garen’s letters, scrapbooks and notebooks are located at Northwestern Memorial Hospital Archives, Chicago, Illinois. Her great-nephew, Dennis Kennedy, and niece, Doris Sante, gave permission to quote from Garen’s files. Future references abbreviated “Garen files.”

2.
Mary Rose Harrington Nelson, April 13, 1989, author interview.

3.
Redmond, J. (1943), pp. 15–16.

4.
Davis, Josephine Nesbit. Army Nurse Corps Oral History Program interview. Interviewed by Major Susan Graski, April 9, 1983, transcript.

In 1983–85, the Army Nurse Corps conducted interviews with thirty former army nurse POW’s and one former navy nurse POW as part of the Army Nurse Corps Oral History Program. Transcripts and audiotapes are on file at the Department of the Army, Center for Military History, Washington, D.C. References to information taken from these interviews abbreviated “1983 ANC interview.”

5.
Ruby Bradley, 1989 author interview. She unsuccessfully tried to locate the Dudleys after the war.

6.
A lone radar technician at Iba Field, forty miles west of Clark Field and Fort Stotsenberg Hospital, saw dozens of blips on his screen. His radar was the only working unit in the islands. The planes were flying toward Clark, while the men and women were eating lunch at the officers club, the hospital or the nurses quarters. The Army Air Corps pilots planned to fly a mission that afternoon. Wainwright, J. M., pp. 20–23.

7.
In August 1944, Cassie wrote an essay about her experiences on December 8, 1941, which she called “The Uncertain.” Used with permission. This essay and notes she made about December 8 form the basis of this section.

8.
Information about Helen “Cassie” Cassiani from a series of interviews with the author from 1990–97.

9.
Ruth Straub. Straub’s diary was serialized in seven installments from September 21 through September 30, 1942. All entries in this chapter from the September 21, 1942, installment, p. 1; 10.

Chapter Two: Manila Cannot Hold

1.
Margaret Nash, 1991 telephone interview with author.

2.
Cooper, W. E., pp. 47–53.

3.
Ruth Straub diary.

4.
Helen Cassiani Nestor, 1992 author interview. Quotations from this interview form the basis of this section.

5.
Helen Cassiani, typed commendation. Used with permission. After the war someone told Cassie that she qualified for a Silver Star. She never received this medal or any additional recognition for her actions on December 24, 1941.

6.
Beck, J. J., pp. 35–36.

7.
Ullom, M., p. 22.

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