Freed Army Nurses Leaving Manila in 1945
U.S. Army nurses from Bataan and Corregidor, freed after 3 years imprisonment in Santo Tomas Internment Compound, climb into trucks
Read moreU.S. Army nurses from Bataan and Corregidor, freed after 3 years imprisonment in Santo Tomas Internment Compound, climb into trucks
Read moreJapanese forces captured the nurses on Corregidor in 1942. The nurses, along with 3,700 men, women, and children civilian prisoners
Read moreArmy nurses, taken prisoners by the Japanese at Bataan and Corregidor during WWII, and recently freed from the Santo Tomas
Read moreLieut. Colonel Nola G. Forrest, Director of Nursing in the SWPA, distributes orders to the Army Nurses liberated from Santo
Read moreU.S. Navy Nurses from USS Haven (AH-12) wait at the railroad station Nagasaki, Kyushu, Japan, for the first liberated Prisoners
Read moreLieutenant Dorothy Still recuperates from her Prisoner of War ordeal at the National Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, in the spring
Read moreRecently freed nurses from a POW camp in the Philippines, at the U.S. Naval Hospital Long Beach, California, 1945. Left
Read moreLieutenant Junior Grade Mary Rose Harrington, NC, USNR. Harrington was one of the U.S. Navy Nurses taken Prisoner of War
Read moreLieutenant Junior Grade Dorothy Still, NC, USNR. Still was a Japanese POW during World War II from January 1, 1942,
Read moreLieutenant Dorothy Still, NC, USNR. Still was a prisoner of war in the Philippines from 1942 to 1945. Photo size:
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