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Nursing

We weren't always welcomed home from the war. But we were good at what we did and the patients knew we mattered. 

Editor’s Note: Capt.

In a hard war, theirs may have been the hardest job of all. Along with Army doctors and nurses, they worked something very close to a miracle in the European theater.

It wasn’t any different getting killed in World War II than in the Civil War, but if the shrapnel, bullet, or tree limb wounded a GI without killing him, his experience as a casualty was infinitely better.

A World War I soldier writes home about the Christmas holiday in his hospital, "one of the merriest, happiest seasons of my life"

Editor's Note: December, 1918; the war was over.

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