Army nurses rest after setting up their tent somewhere in southern France.
Credit: Women’s Memorial Foundation
Nurse Corps The Army Nurse Corps, established in 1901, and Navy Nurse Corps, established in 1908, sprang into action as nurses stationed in Pearl Harbor rushed to treat the wounded on shore and aboard hospital ships. At the time, the military included 8,000 nurses. By the end of the war, army nurses had grown to 59,000 and navy nurses to 11,000.
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Credit: USA Photo |
Army nurse Ernestine Koranda instructs
Army medics on the proper method of
giving an injection, Queensland, Australia, 1942.
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Some of the first prisoners of war (POWs) were military nurses and civilian civil servants who were stationed in the Philippines, which was then a U.S. territory.
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Former Army Nurse Corps POWs from Bataan and Corregidor
freed after three years imprisonment in Santo Tomas
Internment Camp in the Philippines, are on their way home
wearing new uniforms, February 1945
Credit: Army Nurse Corps Collection, Office of Medical
History,
Office of the Army Surgeon General
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Former Navy Nurse Corps POWs pose with Vice
Admiral Thomas C. Kincaid, Commander of the
7th Fleet
and
Southwest Pacific Force, after their rescue from
Los
Banos, 23 February 1945
Credit: US Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery Archives
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Members of the Nurse Corps served in the United States and throughout the world wherever American soldiers were. A serious shortage of military and civilian nurses throughout the war prompted continuing recruitment advertising.
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Life magazine, 26 May 1941, emphasized the daily life of an Army nurse. |

Credit: Women’s Memorial Foundation
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Credit: Women’s Memorial Foundation
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Jergen's Lotion advertisement for nurses
in
The Saturday Evening Post, May 26,
1945,
focused on women as caregivers
on the job
and at home. |
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