Tara Ross's Post
Sep 5, 2025
Army personnel prepare to build a tent in the huge hospital area at Anzio. Within range of German artillery, the Anzio beachhead hospitals were continually being hit, causing loss of life to doctors, nurses, and patients.
On
this day in 1998, Army nurse Elaine Roe passes away. She is best known
as one of four nurses to be awarded the Silver Star during World War II.
All four Stars came after an especially tough day at the Battle of Anzio.
That
battle, you may remember, began with an Allied invasion on January 22,
1944. The initial landings met with less resistance than expected, but
the German counterattack—when it came—was rough. Unsurprisingly, then,
military nurses such as then-1st Lt. Mary Roberts and 2d Lts. Roe, Rita
Rourke, and Ellen Ainsworth were working long hours at evacuation
hospitals near the front lines.
“If
we weren’t in a tent,” Roberts explained, “we were in a bombed-out
building . . . . war is hell. We had amputees, eviscerated abdomens,
open chest wounds—you name it.” She remembered that the situation was
so bad that the nurses were asked if they wanted to be evacuated. “[W]e
decided that if the infantry was going to stay, we were going to stay,”
she shrugged.
Perhaps it’s not surprising that the nurses who endured have been called “Angels of Anzio”?
February
10 proved to be an especially bad day. Roberts was then working as
Chief Nurse of an operating room in the 56th Evacuation Hospital Unit.
Ainsworth was in the same unit, working the night shift in a surgical
ward. In the meantime, Roe and Rourke were at the nearby 33rd Field
Hospital.
Suddenly, the Germans launched an attack on the hospitals, despite their Red Cross markings.
“We
hear so many shells whistling over this tent,” Roe later explained,
“that when the first one landed I paid no attention. Then the second one
came and the patients told me, ‘Go to foxholes, that’s incoming mail.’”
Rourke,
too, remembered patients who wanted her to find a foxhole and escape
the incoming fire. “But the nurses stayed at their posts,” she said,
“and tried not to show fear.”
Roe
and Rourke worked determinedly, despite the incoming fire. The enemy
attack had knocked out electricity at the hospital, so they used
flashlights to evacuate the 42 patients in their care. Their Silver Star
citations describe the nurses’ “remarkable coolness and courage” and
their insistence on helping the men, “with complete disregard for their
own safety.”
Indeed,
their efficiency and calm “under unnerving conditions” reportedly
inspired the men and prevented the scene from degenerating into chaos.
In
the meantime, Roberts had a different sort of challenge: As Chief Nurse
of an operating room, she was dealing with surgeries already in
progress when the shelling began. Would you believe she kept that
operating room functioning, even as shells fell all around?
“You could say I was fearful but not scared,” she said. “There were so many soldiers depending on us.”
All
three of these nurses would survive, but Ainsworth was not so
fortunate. She was able to move the patients in her ward to safety, but
she took a hit herself that would prove fatal.
Would
you believe that these nurses’ patients all survived—and Roberts even
ensured that a few surgeries were successfully completed?
All four women would be awarded the Silver Star for their courage under fire.
Many
years later, a journalist tracked down Roberts, hoping to interview her
about her time at Anzio. Naturally, Roberts didn’t think she’d done
much.
“She
had to search in a bureau drawer to find the Silver Star medal in its
box,” Thomas Turner reported for the Waco Tribune-Herald. “She seldom
displayed it or discussed it. She said it belonged to all those nurses
at Anzio—especially the ones buried there.”
Just another member of the Greatest Generation, exemplifying the reasons that they received that nickname in the first place.
1 comment:
I was under the impression as couple of Silver Stars were awarded to nurses in the Pacific theater, for actions during the Pearl Harbor attack, but I could be wrong about that.
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