TY - GEN N2 - Three nurses share their memories of the years they spent in military service with the 46th General Hospital during World War II. Ruby Hills, Kay Fisher Hilterbrant, and Edith Moore Richards were all working at Good Samaritan Hospital in downtown Portland when Col. J. Guy Strohm, urologist at the University of Oregon Medical School (UOMS) and WWI veteran, received orders to assemble a volunteer unit in 1940. For two years before they were called up, the unit attended lectures and classes at UOMS to learn about the various conditions and diseases they might encounter in battle, and to become familiar with Army procedures. In July of 1942, the unit was sent to Fort Riley, Kansas, to begin preparations for a possible mobilization overseas. The call came in August 1943, when the unit left Kansas for Oran, Algiers. Thirteen months later, the unit was moved to Besan_紀n, France for the remainder of the war. The women together describe the long trip home on the liner Vulcania, and their return to civilian life. Finally, they share their impressions of Col. Strohm and explain the importance of the unit flag, which was subsequently donated to OHSU Historical Collections & Archives. DO - 10.6083/M4WS8S0C DO - DOI AB - Three nurses share their memories of the years they spent in military service with the 46th General Hospital during World War II. Ruby Hills, Kay Fisher Hilterbrant, and Edith Moore Richards were all working at Good Samaritan Hospital in downtown Portland when Col. J. Guy Strohm, urologist at the University of Oregon Medical School (UOMS) and WWI veteran, received orders to assemble a volunteer unit in 1940. For two years before they were called up, the unit attended lectures and classes at UOMS to learn about the various conditions and diseases they might encounter in battle, and to become familiar with Army procedures. In July of 1942, the unit was sent to Fort Riley, Kansas, to begin preparations for a possible mobilization overseas. The call came in August 1943, when the unit left Kansas for Oran, Algiers. Thirteen months later, the unit was moved to Besan_紀n, France for the remainder of the war. The women together describe the long trip home on the liner Vulcania, and their return to civilian life. Finally, they share their impressions of Col. Strohm and explain the importance of the unit flag, which was subsequently donated to OHSU Historical Collections & Archives. T1 - Interview with Ruby Hills, Katherine Fisher Hilterbrant, and Edith Moore Richards ED - Hills, Ruby ED - Hilterbrant, Kathryn (Kathryn D. Fisher) ED - Richards, Edith Moore ED - Weimer, Linda ED - Interviewee ED - Interviewee ED - Interviewee ED - Interviewer DA - 1998-04-11 DA - 1998 April 11 L1 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/3187/files/oralhist_18.pdf PB - Oregon Health & Science University LA - eng PY - 1998-04-11 PY - 1998 April 11 ID - 3187 L4 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/3187/files/oralhist_18.pdf KW - Hospitals, Military KW - Military Medicine KW - Military Nursing TI - Interview with Ruby Hills, Katherine Fisher Hilterbrant, and Edith Moore Richards Y1 - 1998-04-11 L2 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/3187/files/oralhist_18.pdf LK - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/3187/files/oralhist_18.pdf UR - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/3187/files/oralhist_18.pdf ER -