June 1944 was a very tense time
for the world and for my family. D-Day, June
6, 1944, had finally happened. Our troops had gone ashore in Normandy
for the long- awaited invasion of mainland Europe. My
brother John was a Navy pilot flying shore patrols in PB4Ys (Army B-24s) on
antisubmarine duty out of England.
We worried about him constantly, especially because we had had no news from him
in many days.
I, his younger sister, had
graduated from Smith College
three years before, with a major in geology and a minor in history. Thirty-six
months later, I was newly graduated from Yale with a Masters Degree in Nursing.
I had passed my physical exam for the Army Nurse Corps in the spring just
before graduation.
In early June, I traveled to my
parent’s home in Brattleboro, Vermont.
They had moved to Vermont from Bristol,
Connecticut in 1943 at my Dad’s retirement.
I had grown up and been educated in Bristol
and had gone from there to college and nurses’ training. Now Vermont
was home and I arrived there with my graduate degree and my State of Connecticut
nursing license in hand and began the wait for my orders. There were wars on
two fronts, one in Europe, now in full swing, and the other in the Pacific where slowly, General
Douglas MacArthur was beginning to retake the huge
area under Japanese control.
In this tense time, I waited to
be called to active duty. Despite my mother’s horror at my wanting to serve, I
felt compelled to go to help. My orders finally came.
I remember my Dad coming in with
the mail on June 13, 1944
and saying, “Lieutenant, your papers have come!” My heart began to pound. There
was a long, neat, white envelope. I remember sitting in the living room on that
sunny day unfolding my papers.
“I have to be sworn in!” I said,
stupidly.
Dad grinned, “Come on, let’s go
to the Postmaster.”
Off we went to the Postmaster,
and I was duly sworn in as a Second Lieutenant in the Army Nurse Corps. Mom and
Dad were proud. I was so excited. When I arrived home, there in the window next
to my brother’s was another Service Star ... a six-inch by six-inch white tile
with a red inch-wide border and a blue star in the white center. This was for
me! I was touched.
Next day another formidable
envelope arrived. It was very heavy. I opened it. On the top was printed,
“RESTRICTED” in red ink. I looked at the first paragraph and gulped in
confusion. I tried again but ended up knowing two things. I was to report for
active duty to Fort Devens in Ayer, Massachusetts
on June 21, 1944, as 2nd
Lt. Sally B. Hitchcock - ANC, N-752998.
And so it was, on June 21, 1944 I was on my way. My Mom
and Dad borrowed gas coupons to drive me from Brattleboro
to Greenfield, Massachusetts
where I boarded the train to Ayer, Massachusetts,
the site of Fort
Devens.
This was a highly significant
time in my life. I was going to my very first job as a graduate nurse. I was 25
years old and had been in school for the past 19 years of my life. I was
excited and determined to use all my training to help mend as many injured men
and women as I could, and help them come home to their families and loved ones.
So many of my friends were serving. It was a personal
goal and a promise!
As I sat in that old railroad car
(WWI vintage), with its green plush seats and no air conditioning, I was
terribly aware of how hard this leave-taking was for my Mom and Dad. My brother
John was somewhere in Europe. I was going to be
somewhere else. Neither of my parents was young anymore.
The train puffed along and I kept
saying to myself, in time to the clicking rails, “I want to go, I want to go.”
Whether I sat next to anyone else I can’t recall, but I remember I tried to
read “Taps for Private Tussie.”
I blotted my damp hands. I looked
out at the bright, cloudless June day at the cozy farms and small homes neatly
placed in their space and I said to myself “Calm down, you sissy. Read your
book and relax!”
A soldier walked down the aisle
for water. “Should I ask him how far Ayer is?”
“Sit tight,” I said to myself, “You’ll find out soon enough!”
“Ayer and Fort
Devens!”
the conductor called as his head appeared for a moment at the front door of the
car. That was my stop!
Slowly, I got my bag and
pocketbook and stepped off. Now where? I looked around and saw nothing there. A
sign with a single word caught my eye ... “INFORMATION.” What a wonderfully warm
word that was. I went over and asked the woman how to get to Fort
Devens.
“Which department?” she asked. I wasn’t sure. She suggested I take a taxi.
No taxis...I stood waiting. On the
platform, a sergeant was lining men up for a bus. “There’s where I should be,”
I thought,” behind those new Army recruits.” A man came up to me from his
parked station wagon. He was a sergeant with the nicest face, graying hair and
he said with a smile, “You look lost. May I help you?” The station wagon said Fort
Devens, USA.
I told him my quandary and he laughed.
“Come with me, Lieutenant, I’m
going right up there.” Such relief I’ve never known. We drove off and with a
smile and a flourish of orders we sailed through gates and up to the location
on my orders. “You wait