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In Focus: Jewish Women in the Military

Nurses

Nurses of the 263rd General Hospital
The nurses of the 263rd General Hospital, headquartered in Calcutta, India (c. 1943)

In all of America's wars, nurses have worked near the front lines of battle. Under frequent enemy fire in field hospitals, evacuation hospitals, hospital trains, hospital ships and medical transport planes, military nurses in wartime are faced with daily situations of grave danger.

Military nurses are involved in a broad range of activities. They are expected to adopt innovative solutions to a broad range of medical problems with limited support, to move and set up field and evacuation hospitals amidst enemy fire, and to teach and supervise new trainees and medical personnel to save lives under dire circumstances.

The work of the following women encompasses the many tasks assumed by military nurses throughout the last 150 years:

Phoebe Yates Levy Pember (Civil War)
Ethel Gladstone (WWI)
Yetta Moskowitz (WWII)
Frances Slanger (WWII)
Gertrude Shapiro (WWII)
Lt. Charlotte Cahney (WWII)
Marita Silverman (Vietnam)

 

 

How to Cite This Page
For a bibliography: Jewish Women's Archive. "JWA - Jewish Women in the MilitaryNurses." <http://jwa.org/discover/infocus/military/nurses/index.html>.

For a footnote: Jewish Women's Archive, "JWA - Jewish Women in the MilitaryNurses," <http://jwa.org/discover/infocus/military/nurses/index.html>.