The Spanish-American War, dubbed the “splendid little war” by John Hay, began on April 25, 1898, and lasted until Spain signed the armistice on August 12, 1898. During the war death from infectious diseases caused seven times the number of fatalities as battle wounds. Although a patriarchal military system initially preferred male medical personnel, the Spanish-American War confirmed the competence of women in military service as nurses and doctors and led to the establishment of the permanent Army Reserve Nurse Corps in 1901. Drawing on historical documents and examples from material commemorative culture this article examines the textual, cultural, and rhetorical representation of the experiences of Acting Assistant Surgeon Anita Newcomb...
In August 1914, women of the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service accompanied the fir...
Canadian nurses volunteered for military service in overwhelming numbers during the Second World War...
Mothering the maimed Women overcame wartime conditions to heal soldiers One reads this book with m...
Thinking of war from a U.S.-American perspective will almost immediately evoke associations of male ...
In the wake of the Great Depression, the United States found itself propelled into a world war of un...
In spite of the hardships of World War I, women volunteered as nurses out of patriotism and because ...
From 1900 to 1902 the U.S. Army conducted a series of yellow fever experiments in Cuba. While some o...
American women contributed to the Great War in many ways. Women were nurses, volunteers, clerks; eac...
When the American government called for nurses during the Spanish-American War, 189 of the 282 siste...
Covers the wartime experiences of the female American military nurses who served in World War II, in...
abstract: During the First and Second World Wars, the totality of global war and the involvement of ...
The discourse that emerged around the female nurses who served in American Civil War hospitals has b...
Although much has been written about the vital role played by both women and men in producing muniti...
About the Author Keely Smith is a senior History, Spanish, and Global Studies major at Samford Unive...
This study uses the service of Red Cross nursing sisters, African American health workers and male g...
In August 1914, women of the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service accompanied the fir...
Canadian nurses volunteered for military service in overwhelming numbers during the Second World War...
Mothering the maimed Women overcame wartime conditions to heal soldiers One reads this book with m...
Thinking of war from a U.S.-American perspective will almost immediately evoke associations of male ...
In the wake of the Great Depression, the United States found itself propelled into a world war of un...
In spite of the hardships of World War I, women volunteered as nurses out of patriotism and because ...
From 1900 to 1902 the U.S. Army conducted a series of yellow fever experiments in Cuba. While some o...
American women contributed to the Great War in many ways. Women were nurses, volunteers, clerks; eac...
When the American government called for nurses during the Spanish-American War, 189 of the 282 siste...
Covers the wartime experiences of the female American military nurses who served in World War II, in...
abstract: During the First and Second World Wars, the totality of global war and the involvement of ...
The discourse that emerged around the female nurses who served in American Civil War hospitals has b...
Although much has been written about the vital role played by both women and men in producing muniti...
About the Author Keely Smith is a senior History, Spanish, and Global Studies major at Samford Unive...
This study uses the service of Red Cross nursing sisters, African American health workers and male g...
In August 1914, women of the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service accompanied the fir...
Canadian nurses volunteered for military service in overwhelming numbers during the Second World War...
Mothering the maimed Women overcame wartime conditions to heal soldiers One reads this book with m...