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Some of her supervisors found her headstrong,
commenting that she “spends too much time
with her patients.” She worked at Boston
City Hospital for about three years, and then
went into private home nursing until joining the
Army Nurse Corps in August 1943.
Certainly, all of the nurses of the U.S. Army
Nurse Corps involved in that historic endeavor
were brave, but the diminutive and reserved 30-year-old
Slanger left her mark on thousands of U.S. soldiers
through her passion for words. “It was the
way she saw more deeply than the rest, and took
time to chronicle what she saw in words,”
is how an observer described Slanger.
Enduring legacy
Months after arriving in France, she wrote a
letter by flashlight in her tent one evening that
paid tribute to the American GI. The piece was
published in the Stars and Stripes military newspaper,
and received widespread recognition and praise.
Slanger never read her own words in print. She
was killed the next night by shelling from German
troops, the first American nurse to die in Europe
after the D-Day landing at Normandy.
Hundreds of GIs wrote in after Slanger’s
letter was published, and again after word of
her death.
“Slanger, after her death, was honored
by hundreds of GIs for her substance as a human
being — for her courage, compassion, and
willingness, along with the other nurses, to be
in a war that, unlike the men who were drafted,
they had no obligation to be in,” said Welch,
author of American Nightingale: The Story of Frances
Slanger, Forgotten Heroine of Normandy.
In June, it will have been 60 years ago since
this young Polish-born RN joined other nurses
in the 45th Field Hospital Unit. The Second Platoon
of which Slanger was part of moved more than 30
times, Welch said, living four nurses to a small
tent. The 45th’s three units treated 4,950
patients and performed a thousand major surgeries.
The doctors and nurses saw 223 people die while
in their care.
“The American nurses were far grittier
than anyone would imagine,” Welch said.
“Try Frances Slanger, in a 3-pound helmet,
boots, and fatigues, nearly drowning while getting
ashore at Utah Beach,” Welch said. “Sallylou
Bonzer used alcohol to wipe down a saw in the
middle of 12-hour shift after a soldier’s
leg has been sawn off. Nurses served as close
to the frontlines as any medical battalion could
get. More than 70 were taken prisoner. And yet,
unlike Pvt. Jessica Lynch, a lot of Americans
never even knew it. Sixteen nurses were killed
in action.”
The World War II Memorial was unveiled May 29
in Washington in anticipation of the 60th anniversary
of D-Day on June 6, the massive Allied force invasion
on the five beaches across a 60-mile stretch of
the Normandy coast.
“In a world filled with pain and selfishness,
there are giving people who inspire us all to
live for a higher calling,” Welch said.
“Following her death, a GI wrote about
Slanger: ‘For somewhere in the sordid, selfish,
shameful business that makes up most of our petty
lives there is a nobility that will not perish
85’ Slanger, he was suggesting, was that
nobility, and I agree. I’m honored to be
sharing such nobility through the telling of her
story.”
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