Helen Fairchild
{{Short description|American nurse}}
{{Infobox medical person
| name = Helen Fairchild
| image = Helen Fairchild.JPG
| image_size =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1885|11|21}}
| birth_place = Turbot Township, Pennsylvania, U.S.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1918|01|18|1885|11|21}}
| death_place = France
| occupation = Nurse
}}
Helen Fairchild (November 21, 1885 – January 18, 1918) was an American nurse who served as part of the American Expeditionary Force during World War I, and who became known for her wartime letters to her family in the U.S., which vividly depicted the realities of combat nursing during World War I. She died of post-operative complications after surgery for a gastric ulcer while on duty with No. 10 U.S. Base Hospital on the Western Front.{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lyZYS_GxglIC | title=Women and War: A Historical Encyclopedia from Antiquity to the Present | author=Bernard A. Cook | year=2006 | pages=175| publisher=Bloomsbury Academic | isbn=9781851097708 }}{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KDWiFMNlOfIC | title=American Nursing: A Biographical Dictionary:, Volume 3 | publisher=Springer Publishing Company | author=Vern L. Bullough, Lilli Sentz, MLS | year=2004 | pages=83| isbn=9780826111470 }}
Biography
Helen was born in Turbot Township, Milton, in central Pennsylvania to Ambrose and Adda Dunkle Fairchild in 1885.{{Cite web|url=http://www.gwpda.org/medical/MaMh/MyAunt.htm|title=Nurse Helen Fairchild: My Aunt, My Hero|website=www.gwpda.org|access-date=2016-09-30}} She was the fourth of seven children and worked on the family farm in her earlier years. In 1913, Fairchild graduated from Pennsylvania Hospital and worked as a nurse. After the United States joined World War I, Fairchild and 63 other nurses from the hospital volunteered for the American Expeditionary Forces,{{Cite web|url=http://www.greatwar.co.uk/people/nurse-helen-fairchild.htm|title=Nurse Helen Fairchild|website=www.greatwar.co.uk|access-date=2016-09-30}} joining U.S. Base Hospital No. 10 (also referred to as Pennsylvania Hospital Unit).
In May 1917, Fairchild sailed with her unit from New York to London, and traveled from there to Le Treport, arriving in June 1917. Since there were no U.S. forces in France yet by this time, the U.S. Base Hospitals occupied themselves by providing support to British and Dominion troops.{{Cite journal |last=Hallett |first=Christine E. |date=2017 |title=Saving Lives On The Front Line |url= |journal=History Today |volume=67 |issue=7 |pages=24-35 |via=}} Among other activities, Base Hospitals provided four-person teams consisting of a medical officer, a nursing sister, an anaesthesist, and an orderly to British Casualty Clearing Stations, mere miles from the front line. Fairchild volunteered for one such team during the Third Battle of Ypres and moved to (British) Casualty Clearing Station No. 4 near Dozinghem, by her own telling a hundred miles closer to the front than her parent unit. She served as a combat nurse and was exposed to heavy shelling including the use of mustard gas. On the night of 17 August, the casualty clearing station was bombed by German aircraft and the medical staff were evacuated back to Le Treport.
Fairchild had a medical history of abdominal pain, which worsened after her combat experience. By Christmas 1917 she was vomiting after every meal. X-rays revealed that a large gastric ulcer was obstructing her pylorus. She underwent surgery for the ulcer on January 13, 1918 at Canadian Stationary Hospital No. 3. At first she recovered well but then lapsed into a coma and died five days later. The post-mortem examination suggested that she died as a result of hepatic complications from the chloroform used as the anesthesia during her operation, possibly worsened by her previous exposure to mustard gas. According to a colleague writing her family, Fairchild had worsened her exposure by putting her own gas mask on a patient during the attack.
She was buried with full military honours in a cemetery in Le Treport and later shifted to Somme American Cemetery and Memorial in Bony, France.
=Honors=
The Nurses' Post of the American Legion in Philadelphia was named the Helen Fairchild Nurses' Post #412 in her honor. She is registered in the Women in Military Service for America Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia.
The Watsontown, Pa., bridge was named the Nurse Helen Fairchild Memorial Bridge. It is an arched bridge over 1,000 feet long, over the West Branch of the Susquehanna River. It is on the National Trust for its construction and design.
A plaque on a stand is located in Belgium near the village of Westvleteren, not far from Poperinge. It stands just outside the wall of Dozinghem British Military Cemetery, the former location of Nurse Helen's Casualty Clearing Station No. 4 from June to November 1917. The plaque shows her portrait and gives her history in English and Dutch. The plaque was unveiled and placed in August 2010. The unveiling was attended by a number of high ranking Belgian and other officials, including a representative of the American Embassy and the villagers from West Vleteren.
Legacy
In 2018, Fairchild was the subject of the short documentary Nurse Helen Fairchild: Killed in Action? directed by Eliciana Nascimento and produced by Daniel Bernardi with the collaboration of El Dorado Films and the Veteran Documentary Corps.{{cite web |url= https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9422390/?ref_=rvi_tt|title= Nurse Helen Fairchild(Short 2018)|last= |first= |website= IMDb|date= |quote= Most soldiers' letters from the front shade the horrors of war; hers shone a light on them.}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.vlib.us/medical/MaMh/MyAunt.htm Virtual Library entry for Helen Fairchild, with letters and other documents]
- [http://www.spartacus-educational.com/Wfairchild.htm Spartacus Educational entry for Helen Fairchild]
- [http://www.military.com/Content/MoreContent?file=ML_fairchild_bkp Military.com entry for Helen Fairchild]
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fairchild, Helen}}
Category:American women nurses
Category:Female nurses in World War I
Category:American women in World War I
Category:American military personnel killed in World War I
Category:People from Northumberland County, Pennsylvania
Category:Deaths from chloroform