Outside my window a huge sheet of ice is floating by on the Mississippi River. The ice up in the backwaters is breaking loose. Eagles are playing in the air currents and cruising the treetops of the island across from us. They're also keeping a close eye on the commercial fishermen who are setting a net across this back channel to harvest carp. In the front yard, the birdsong and squirrel chatter is gloriously loud and joyful. The sedum and daylilies are waking up, and I expect the lungwort to break through a crust of matted leaves any day now. I really should get the trimmers out and hack down the remains of my roadside garden.
Yesterday I received the first shot of vaccine, and I found myself dancing around the house. The dogs aren't sure what to make of me.
It's time for a new beginning. I've put my sequel to Guardians of Grace on hold and started a new project. It all began when I decided to go through the letters my mother saved in a shoebox for more than sixty years—the love letters my father wrote to her when he was still in the Virginia Military Institute and she was 400 miles away in Dayton, Ohio. I also found a big envelope full of memorabilia from her time training for the Cadet Nurse Corps at Good Samaritan Hospital in Dayton, OH. In that period, 1945 to 1951, with the war finally ended, the future seemed bright and hopeful for a young couple and a nation. I want to capture that story.Because of the war, so many nurses were recruited into the Army or Navy that the civilian hospitals were in dire straits. This situation was made worse because physicians were entering military service, leaving nurses to take over more responsibilities for heath care on the home front. And as cities of industrial workers sprang up overnight to support the war effort, public health nurses were badly needed. Meanwhile, military hospitals were filling with wounded. In 1943, Congress passed a bill to provide for the training of nurses for the armed forces, governmental and civilian hospitals, health agencies and war industries. And thus was born the U.S. Cadet Nurse Corps.
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