One day we lost six of our thirty patients and I was pretty depressed, but our commanding officer said if we weren't here not a single one would live [crying] to get back to the evacuation hospital. (Audio interview, Part 2, 9:23)
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Elsie F. Perch |
![Image of Elsie F. Getz Perch](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081014035219im_/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/natlib/afc2001001/service/10180/ph0001001i.jpg)
Elsie Perch, Louisville, KY [1942] | World War II, 1939-1946
Army Nurse Corps
105th Station Hospital; 330th Field Hospital
Nichols General Hospital, Louisville and Fort Knox, Kentucky; Fort Dix, New Jersey; Ferryville, North Africa; Rome, Anzio and Pisa, Italy
First Lieutenant
Carroll County, IN
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![](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20081014035219im_/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/natlib/afc2001001/vhp-stories/web/images/ex-war-card-bottom.gif) |
Ordered to the Anzio beachhead as a replacementsix nurses had been killed thereElsie Perch wondered what on earth she had gotten herself into when she signed up for the Army Nurse Corps. However, she sustained her courage by thinking of the sacrifices of the men she treated. Although stationed at a hospital station removed from the front, Perch was far from safe. Once, the Germans deliberately shelled the hospital, killing five patients and wounding eighteen. When speaking of the dead and wounded, and of the bravery of the men she helped, Perch is often overcome by emotion, her private wounds still raw after 60 years.
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