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American nurse held in Japanese POW camp in WWII Dies

Miss Neecerie

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From the Los Angeles Times
By Valerie J. Nelson, Times Staff Writer
March 9, 2007

Jean Kennedy Schmidt, one of the last survivors of the Angels of Bataan, the American military nurses who were Japanese prisoners of war for nearly three years during World War II, has died. She was 88.

Schmidt, a retired Army nurse, died Saturday at her home in La Ca?±ada Flintridge of complications related to a fall, said Susan Johnson, her daughter.

The nurses stationed in the Philippines became the first large group of American women in combat, according to Elizabeth M. Norman, who documented their story in the 1999 book "We Band of Angels."

Within hours of the Dec. 7, 1941, attack on Pearl Harbor, the Japanese bombed American bases in the Philippines. Until then, few of the 99 Army and Navy nurses stationed there had served in war conditions, and they "found themselves almost overwhelmed by slaughter," Norman wrote.

Trapped on the Bataan Peninsula, they established operational hospitals with open-air wards in the dense jungle to help care for the retreating American forces.

"Our nurses' training taught us to improvise and to be innovative, and that came in very handy on Bataan," Schmidt said in "No Time for Fear," a 1996 book of remembrances by World War II nurses.

When Bataan fell to the Japanese in April 1942, the nurses "were ordered to leave our patients behind" and go to Corregidor, an island in Manila Bay, Schmidt said in the book.

On the island, they set up a hospital in an underground maze of tunnels and cared for the wounded through almost nonstop shelling.

Because some nurses were evacuated just before the fall of Corregidor in May 1942, "we always thought we'd be going also, until the Japanese came into the tunnel," Schmidt recounted in "No Time for Fear."

Before the Japanese took them prisoner, the nurses wanted to leave a record in case they were never heard from again.

They ripped a square of cloth from a bedsheet and signed it the day of their surrender, May 6, 1942.

Taken by boat to the Santo Tomas internment camp in Manila, the nurses refused the tea offered "because we thought they were trying to poison us," Schmidt recalled in the book.

Despite being racked with disease and injury, the remaining 77 nurses continued to practice, treating military and civilian prisoners in the camp.

By early 1945, many of the nurses suffered from malnutrition, losing an average of 32 pounds each.

"We heard a lot of rumors about the Americans coming for us but were still surprised when they did come," Schmidt said in "No Time for Fear." "I had begun to feel that the Americans thought we weren't worth saving, and to look at how scrawny we were, we probably weren't."

Liberated when an American tank crashed through the camp's main gate in February 1945, all of the nurses safely returned to the U.S.

Three are believed to still be alive, according to Norman.

Back home, the nurses staged war-bond drives but received little attention among the sea of victorious returning U.S. soldiers, Norman said.

Imogene Kennedy was born Oct. 13, 1918, in Philadelphia, Miss., and grew up on a farm with seven siblings. Four brothers who served in the war also came back alive.

After graduating in 1941 with a degree in nursing from the University of Tennessee, she joined the Army and sailed for the Philippines.

While a POW, she met a fellow prisoner, Richard Schmidt, and married him soon after returning to the U.S. He had been captured on his way to his job with a steamship company.

The couple settled in California, and Schmidt continued her nursing career in the Bay Area and Altadena. They moved to La Ca?±ada Flintridge in 1963.

Although she rarely talked about her wartime experiences, her family said it gave her a sunny disposition.

"It took very little to make her happy. We never really saw her angry. She was only sad at the death of her comrades," her daughter said.

One favorite pastime was attending reunions of the Angels of Bataan.

"She had a wonderful spirit," Norman said. "She loved these women she was imprisoned with, and she said she knew them as well as the back of her hand."

In addition to her daughter, Schmidt is survived by a son, two sisters, a brother and four grandchildren. Her husband died in 1994.



http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-schmidt9mar09,0,3773716.story?coll=la-home-obituaries
 

Feraud

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We usually remember the brave soliders who serve. This story has reminded me of the nurses and doctors who serve by helping others.
Thank you for posting this story.
 

Babydoll

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My grandpa was one of the POWs on Corregidor and in the Bataan March. I wonder if they ever crossed paths?

(I can't ask him as he passed in the mid 60s, before I was born.)
 

dhermann1

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So Proudly We Hail

I believe the Claudette Colbert movie "So Proudly We Hail" depicts the experiences of some of these women. Schmaltzy as hell, but still a core of emotional truth.
 

Story

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'Another day and you're still alive'

For this Bataan POW, survival was part skill, part mystery
By Joelle Farrell
Monitor staff
April 09. 2007 8:00AM

Sixty-five years ago, William Onufry threw his rifle into the sea and marched 65 miles to the tip of the Bataan Peninsula in the Philippines.

After four months of fighting a relentless Japanese attack, Onufry and the remaining 12,000 American troops on the island were ordered to surrender on April 9, 1942. Hunger had weakened the men, and many were sick with dysentery or malaria. But the Japanese ordered them to march. Those who stepped out of line to find food or water were beaten. Stragglers were shot.

The Bataan Death March claimed the lives of at least 600 Americans and 5,000 to 10,000 Filipinos; some historians estimate the numbers are even higher. For Onufry, then 18, it was the beginning of 3¬? years as a prisoner of war.

"You should be dead, but you just keep going," said Onufry, who now lives in the North Country town of Freedom. "Another day, and you're still alive."

Onufry, now 84, is one of the few remaining "Battling Bastards of Bataan." He says good luck kept him alive. But skills he learned as a Boy Scout also helped: He staved off thirst by sucking on his uniform buttons and made clothes from scraps of tents.

http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070409/REPOSITORY/704090324
 

Hondo

One Too Many
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Feraud said:
We usually remember the brave soliders who serve. This story has reminded me of the nurses and doctors who serve by helping others.
Thank you for posting this story.

Like wise, Thanks for posting this, as we should not forget the dedication by nurses in time of war, it’s a tribute, there have been some good films on them. God bless you Ms. Schmidt, R.I.P. :(
 

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