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Photos by Andrew Shurtleff |
| Arlene
Keeling, left, R.N.,
Ph.D., director of U.Va.’s Center for Nursing
Historical Inquiry, and Jennifer
Casavant, Ph.D. student in School of Nursing |
April 12, 2004
By Dan Heuchert
Arlene Keeling and Jennifer Casavant were despairing of ever finding
the collection.
They had been searching the Rugby Road home of Lucy Pegau for
some time, seeking
the belongings of Pegau’s aunt, the late Camilla Louise Wills. A U.Va.
Nursing School graduate, Wills had served in France during World War I, and
Pegau had offered the school’s Center
for Nursing Historical Inquiry — which
Keeling directs — a collection of Wills’ artifacts from that time.
If they could be found.
One day last September, Pegau pointed out one more dark corner
in the attic, recalled Keeling, an associate nursing professor.
“I
was beginning to give up hope, but then I saw the red crosses,
and I knew we
had found it.”
Inside
the boxes, Keeling and Casavant, an acute-care nurse practitioner
and first-year doctoral student, found more
than 100 items — letters to and
from France, a diary, and relics of the era, including a victory medal, a U.Va.
pin, a winter scarf, a nursing cap. They also found a 1917 edition of “Songs
of the Soldiers and Sailors,” a pamphlet containing patriotic songs and
popular tunes of the day.
Artifacts are still trickling in, said Casavant, an acute-care
nurse practitioner and first-year doctoral student; Pegau
recently brought
in Wills’ military-issue
identification bracelet. The letters and the diary contained the greatest scholarly
interest for Keeling. “There is no one alive from World War I to interview
about conditions, so this is very valuable,” she said.
She
noted a reference to the widespread use of Dakin’s solution, a bleach-like
liquid. In those days before antibiotics, Dakin’s was used (and still is,
in some cases) to kill bacteria and irrigate wounds without damaging tissue,
Casavant explained.
A grand
adventure
World War I was the adventure of a lifetime for a Charlottesville
girl.
Born Aug. 22, 1894, Wills was a student at the all-girls Piedmont
Institute until it closed, then attended public schools until
1914. She next
studied at the University
of Virginia, where she earned a nursing degree in 1918 — just in time to
join Base Hospital 41, a U.Va.-sponsored unit that was preparing to ship overseas
to treat the wounded of The Great War.
The unit spent weeks in New York City preparing for deployment,
and there her diary — written in sometimes hard-to-decipher shorthand and sentence fragments — picks
up the story. Wills writes of French classes, movies, receptions, shopping trips,
visits to the Statue of Liberty and Staten Island, and preparations for the journey
to France. A typical note, from July 13, 1918: “Ans. rollcall + drilled
in A.M.
After
lunch Canada + I took in Bronx Park. Enjoyed it — but were
slightly sore and stiff from walking so much. Smith, Mabel [unknown] + I had
a nice quiet time in our room.”
A week later, Wills was on board the S.S. Scotian for
the Atlantic crossing. Initially seasick, she recovered
quickly
enough to
note “singing with the
boys” and “Playing checkers with Maj. Jones” — with the
additional notation, “ + beat him.”
By
mid-August, the journal entries were from France, and the tone
had changed. Wills’ unit had set up a base hospital in
an old Catholic school alongside the Cathedral of St. Denis,
just outside Paris. The hospital treated convoys
of wounded soldiers, many from the Germans’ bombing
of Paris.
“Two air raids tonight,” she recorded on Aug. 15. “1st at 2
A.M. 2nd at 4 A.M. Ran to cellar both times. Would not let us go outside. Much
bombing.”
For the next several weeks, the diary describes
11-hour shifts treating hundreds of patients,
interspersed with occasional
trips to Paris.
In contrast, her letters home to her “Aunt Mamie” — both of
Wills’ parents were dead — were more upbeat. “She wrote about, ‘Things
are great; things are fine,’” Casavant said, “like you would
write to your parents so they wouldn’t worry.”
“She talked a lot about the boys she met and what they were doing for fun
on the wards,” Keeling said.
Still, Wills sometimes ran afoul of military
censors. Casavant displayed one of Wills’ letters that had a patient’s name carefully scissored out.
After 88 days — to Wills’ later chagrin, two days short of the minimum
stay required to earn a Cross of Military Service from the United Daughters of
the Confederacy — the unit was shipped stateside.
A distinguished life
Wills returned to New York and earned
bachelor’s and master’s degrees
in health education and biology from Columbia University. In the mid-1920s, she
did some post-graduate study back at U.Va., where she was a member of the Thomas
Jefferson Society, a rare honor for a woman of that era.
She went on to teach in New York,
New Mexico, at Atlantic Christian
College
in North
Carolina and
at Stuart Hall
in Staunton.
She retired to Charlottesville,
but remained quite active, founding
the
Charlottesville-Albemarle
Bird Club and
serving as president
of the local
chapter of the United Daughters
of the Confederacy. She was also
a 50-plus-year member of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution.
In 1991, at age 96, a bedridden
but spirited Wills granted
an oral history
interview. “I
think I’d better finish this obituary before I let you have it,” she
told the interviewer, according to the transcript. “I’m 96, and I
may die anytime. Although I don’t think so, but that’s the way things
go. Past experience — other people die at that age.”
In fact, she lived another
three years, until Aug. 13,
1994 — just nine
days shy of her 100th birthday.
The hidden treasure trove
she left behind will live
on even
longer. “This
a real find,” Keeling said. “I don’t think there’s a
collection like this in the United States.”
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