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10.12.2004
STATE REPRESENTATIVES GALVIN AND KAFKA HOST
CEREMONY TO HONOR LATE WORLD WAR II NURSE
Boston nurse was the first nurse to
die in combat
When: October 18, 2004, 1 pm
Where: Nurses’ Hall, State
House, Boston
BOSTON —
Sixty years from the week she died in World War II after her field
hospital tent was shelled, the Massachusetts State Legislature will
honor a Boston nurse (and MNA member) on October 18th in a 1 p.m.
ceremony in Nurses' Hall of the State House. Lt. Frances Y. Slanger,
the daughter of a Jewish fruit peddler, was the first nurse to die
in combat after the landings at Normandy.
Oregon newspaper columnist Bob Welch, author of
American Nightingale: The Story of Frances Slanger, Forgotten Heroine
of Normandy, will offer the keynote address. American Nightingale
was released last June and has been featured on such programs as
"Good Morning America" and "Chronicle." Rabbi
William Hamilton of Congregation Kehillath Israel and Chaplain of
the Massachusetts State Police will offer the invocation. Plans
for a plaque in her honor will be announced by State Representative
Bill Galvin (D-Canton) who, along with State Representative Lou
Kafka (D-Stoughton), assisted in getting official recognition for
Slanger in a process that's taken more than a decade. "Sometimes,
our heroes lie hidden in the shadows," said Welch "This
amazing women’s memory will now be brought to light."
What made her death so notable was a letter she'd
written that paid tribute to the American GI of World War II. She
wrote it by flashlight from a tent and mailed it to Stars and Stripes
newspaper the next morning. The following night she was killed when
the field hospital was shelled by German troops. When Stars and
Stripes published the letter, not knowing Slanger had died, her
words triggered scores of letters from grateful GIs. More came later
when the newspaper reported her death. "She wrote as a GI Jane
to a GI Joe deeply involved in a bloody business called war, asking
not for understanding, expecting no mercy, but giving to her limits
in both," wrote David McClure, a soldier serving in Belgium
at the time. “And we knew there wasn’t a false word
in the letter, and we grinned in appreciation, knowing that we read
the letter of a girl already dead, and her words fixed beyond alteration.
They were sealed with her blood.”
Slanger was born in Wodz, Poland. At the age of
7, she landed at Ellis Island with her mother and sister, her father
having settled in Roxbury, his family unable to join him due to
World War I’s freeze on immigration. Against her parent's
wishes, Frances enrolled in Boston City Hospital’s School
of Nursing where she earned her degree in 1937. With dozens of other
nurses from the Army Nurse Corps, Slanger splashed ashore from a
landing craft four days after D-Day, her 5' 1" frame burdened
by men's fatigues and a 3 pound helmet. She nearly drowned. Once
ashore, these first nurses to land in France were greeted by 17
truckloads of wounded soldiers; more wounded would join them daily
as their makeshift hospitals followed the front lines east into
Germany.
Just miles short of the German border, as an October
storm howled and shells thudded in the distance, Slanger penned
her letter. Soldiers had been praising the nurses in print, but
Slanger said the GIs had it wrong. "We wade ankle deep in mud,
you have to lie in it…….Sure, we rough it, but in comparison
to the way you men are taking it, we can’t complain, nor do
we feel that bouquets are due us. To you we doff our helmets….But
after taking care of some of your buddies; seeing them when they
are brought in bloody, dirty, with the earth, mud and grime, and
most of them so tired. Somebody’s brothers, somebody's fathers
and somebody's sons." Slanger compared the lives of the wounded
to the fire in the tent's potbelly stove. "If it is allowed
to run down too low and if there is a spark of life left in it,
it can be nursed back….So can a human being. It is slow, it
is gradual, it is done all the time in these field hospitals."
The soldiers' concern for each other touched her. "The wounded
do not cry. Their buddies come first….the courage and fortitude
they have is sometimes awesome to behold. It is we who are proud
to be her. Rough it? No. It is a privilege to be able to receive
you….."
Lt. Frances Y. Slanger died the next night, one
of three people killed during the shelling. She was 31 years old.
The October 18th State House ceremony, hosted by
State Representatives Bill Galvin and Lou Kafka, is open to the
public. Along with author Bob Welch, members of Lt. Slanger’s
family, veterans, nurses and other officials will be attending.
Lt. Slanger's plaque will proudly hang in Nurses Hall in lasting
tribute to her spirit which symbolizes that of all Massachusetts
nurses who have selflessly served our country.
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