“were serious minded, quiet, business-like women, well qualified to take charge of wards, had our colored [sic] patients been segregated...they gave several dinners and dances...[as] the need for nurses at the Camp became less acute...by the middle of July, their services in this Camp had terminated.”3
BibliographyGwyneth Milbrath, "A New Approach to Preparing Nurses for War: The Army School of Nursing" OJIN: The Online Journal of Issues in Nursing 24, No. 3, Manuscript 4 (September 30, 2019), https://doi.org/10.3912/OJIN.Vol24No03Man04. Marian Moser Jones and Matilda Saines, “The Eighteen of 1918-1919: Black Nurses and the Great Flu Pandemic in the United States,” American Journal of Public Health 109, no. 6 (2019), 879. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2019.305003.