EUELYN BARBIER Denver, Colorado Unit Transcript of an Oral History Interview All rights, title, and interest in the material recorded are assigned and conveyed to the Women’s Overseas Service League For the purpose of publication, use in teaching, or other such uses that may further the aims and objectives of the League, such use and participation to be acknowledged in appropriate fashion and with due credit to: Evelyn Barbier PREFACE This transcript is the product of a tape-recorded interview conducted on 4 March, 1985, For the Women’s Overseas Service League. Signed, dated agreements of release and biographical information accompany the original cassette. Transcribed by Patricia Siggers Lansing, Michigan B EUELYN BARBIER Denver Unit MB: What is your name? 4 EB: Evelyn Barbier. MB: When did you Join the Denver Unit of WOSL? B EB: In 1953. MB: Were you in the service? B EB: I was . MB: What branch of the service were you in? 10 EB: The Army Nurse Corps. flB: When did you Join the Army Nurse Corps? 12 EB: In 1941. 14 MB: What made you decide to go into the Army Nurse Corps at that particular time? IB EB: The impending war. In 1940, it seemed sure that we would be going into war, and I had several Friends who advised me to go in at that time. 18 MB: Before you went in the Army, what did you do? EUELYN BARBIER, Denver Unit 2 EB: I was a registered nurse. I was a delivery room E 0 supervisor, and then most recently I was assistant tc an endocrinologist; a French doctor. EE MB: EB: What did you do in the service? I was in the Army Nurse Corps, and I think I did Just 24 about everything From general duty up to Chief Nurse, and 2B a Few things in between; such as Director of the Cadet Nurse program, which was very helpful as a recruiting 2B program. I was also instructor at the medical training center in Germany. MB: How long were you in the Army Nurse Corps? 30 EB: Twenty years. MB: While you were in the service, where did your travels 32 take you? EB: Panama. Panama was interesting because at that time it 34 was fairly sure that the Germans and the Japanese would meet at the Canal; and we were told when we First got 36 there, in 1342, that we could not expect to go home. MB: What were some of your other assignments? 38 EB: Well, I was in Germany; in Japan; in Guam; and in Siapan. EUELYN BARBIER, Denver Unit 3 FIB: What kind of housing did you have when you were in the 40 Army? EB: Everything From bad to good. 42 MB: Did you ever have any duty in a tent? EB: Not for any length of time, but brief times in the field. 44 MB: What can you say about the medical care that was available to you in service? 46 EB: MB: Excellent. What was your uniform dress. What did you mostly wear? 4B EB: When I first went in, in ’41, they had no uniforms available for us; so we wore civilian clothes, and from 50 that time on, every uniform that was allowed from 1941— late ’41, until I retired in 1961. 52 MB: Tell me about some of your experiences that were especially memorable to you? 54 EB: Well, I think I should mention two. One was when I was in 6uam: I worked with the Guamanian natives during a 56 measles epidemic, and I should explain that measles was very dangerous to the Guamanians. In a previous 50 epidemic, it had killed over two thousand because they had had no contact with this type of disease. I was EUELYN BARBIER, Denver Unit 4 BO there in ’48, and we treated every case. The epidemic was taken care of during three months by teams of one 62 Army nurse, and the other members of the various teams were Navy corpsmen, and we got through that epidemic with 64 only eleven deaths. And the eleventh, we Just took because we were generous. We didn’t really think it was 66 measles. MB: Any other experiences? 6B EB: Then, when I transferred up to Siapan, the day after I arrived in Siapan the island was hit by a direct hit by a 70 typhoon. So we had to get all our patients in the typhoon shelter, and I started off from my quarters to go 72 to the ward where I was needed. I was told not to use my Jeep, because it was going to be needed for something 74 more important than my transportation. I got beyond the shelter of my quarters and was lifted clear off my feet— 76 nothing to hold on to. I only weighed 102 pounds. Nothing to hold on to, and floating toward me on a direct 78 course, was a big GI can full of garbage. I decided I was not about to meet it and I willed myself down, backed 80 off, got into my Jeep and drove off for about the distance of a block, and by then I was just soaked 82 through to the skin; although I wore our nice raincoat. We had the crew of one of our B-17’s had flown in from 84 Okinawa to seek shelter on Siapan, so they got right in EUELYN BARBIER, Denver Unit 5 the midst of the typhoon. One of the crewmen— the only 86 88 80 88 84 36 38 100 108 104 106 one who managed to save a personal belonging— was a young airman who had bought a sewing machine For his wife, and he said that machine would stay with him no matter where he was, because he had promised his wife to bring her a sewing machine. So if he died when they crashed near us, she would know that at least he had gotten the machine because that would be saved for her. CLaughterl MB: What was the greatest adjustment you had to make when you came in the Army Nurse Corps? EB: I can’t say that I had any difficulty whatsoever. I had traveled a great deal before I joined the Army. MB: When you came in the Army Nurse Corps, did you plan to make it a career? EB: I wasn’t sure that I would make it a career because at that time they were only promising one year of service; but I found out that a couple of nurses who were at Fort Jackson, where I went in, got out. They went home, and we helped them get their things home because they happened to live in Columbia. This one particular girl went home on December 6. That was Saturday, so she was going to get home for the weekend. And we all know what happened on Sunday, 108 December 7. They sent us back to bring her back on the EUELYN BARBIER, Denver Unit B Monday, the 8th. Then I decided: Sounds as though 110 they’re going to keep us longer! So, the longer I went 112 MB: the more I was sure I was going to stay. After you retired from the Army Nurse Corps, what did you do? 114 EB: I tried civilian nursing, and after twenty years in Army 116 nursing, I just couldn’t stand it. I did try. I helped to open a nursing home. It was being built; it was Just a hole in the ground when I joined them, having been 118 120 referred by our chief nurse at Fitzsimmons. The owners wanted it to be the best nursing home in town, and they gave me carte blanche to do whatever I wanted to 130 for ten years I worked as a travel consultant in a travel off ice. EVELYN BARBIER, Denver Unit 7 132 134 136 138 140 142 144 MB: What does being a member of WDSL mean to you? EB: When I First Joined the Unit, there were only two other members of the WW-II generation. All the other members were From WW-I, and I was extremely interested in talking to these members and Finding out how very diFFerent our experience was to theirs. The organization was oF great interest to me because it applied to a very special group oF women, who during WW-I, had a much more diFFicult experience than we had. MB: O.K. Thank you very much. EB: CLaughterD You’re very welcome. Transcribed by Patricia Siggers Lansing, Michigan