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Home > Scholarship > David
Cecelski > Gretchen Brinson Interview
Gretchen Brinson Interview
A born nurse: Gretchen Brinson
By David Cecelski
As published in the June 14, 1998, edition of the Raleigh
News & Observer.
I visited with Gretchen Brinson at her home in the
Promised Land neighborhood of Morehead City. In the opening months of
American involvement in World War II, German submarines sank more than
140 merchant vessels off the North Carolina coast. While a press blackout
kept people inland from knowing how close the war had come to our shores,
wounded sailors overwhelmed her local hospital. Recognizing the severe
shortage of nurses, Brinson enrolled in a Red Cross crash course in nursing
in 1942. She remained a nurse for 30 years, until she retired from Carteret
General Hospital at 72. "I was born to nurse," she told me. Now, at 82,
she is still a hospice volunteer and nursing home visitor.
Brinson was rather wistful about the changes that have occurred in Morehead
since World War II. When she was young, Morehead was "a neighborhood-oriented
family town." She could walk to her church, her job, her bank, her grocery
store. "There was a security," she told me. "You had a rapport of some
sort with everybody. When you started in the first grade, you knew who
your teacher was going to be: your first grade teacher, your second grade
teacher. You knew their families, and you knew you had to be good in school
because your teacher knew your mother. That way of life has passed. It's
a whole other world. Everybody moves."
Brinson's life as a caregiver began when her sister Daphne was born. She
was 8 years old.
* * *
My mother was never well after Daphne was born.
At that time, an 8-year-old child did not know much. I did not know
I was going to have a little sister that Sunday morning, and when I
came downstairs I had a little sister. As I said, my mother was never
well again. They gave me that little girl that morning, and I raised
her. My mother died when Daphne was 10 and I was 17. I was born to take
care of people. I helped my grandmother with my mother until my mother
died. Then I took care of my grandmother; I took care of my uncle. I
took care of my daddy. Nowadays, I don't know if a girl my age could
have coped with what I coped with. I went from day to day. My grandmother
was a great deal of help. My daddy had to work away for long times,
so my grandmother and I took roomers.
I married Bull Brinson in 1937. While my daughter was still an infant,
I started working at the hospital. Very shortly we began hearing depth
charges and if they had a strike we could see the fires, the ships burning.
The debris washed up on the ocean front, and there were several years
we couldn't swim there because of the debris and the oil slicks. We
could see the ships burning. When there was a strike out there at night,
we knew this had happened and that next morning there would be casualties
come in. Bodies, corpses did wash in on the beach. And they were brought
into the hospital: burns, all manner of traumatic situations. The hospital
was full. It was only a 30-bed hospital. They lay in the hall on cots.
We were not prepared for the onslaught.
We only had one surgeon, Dr. Ben Royal. He was the only surgeon in the
county. He set all the bones. He did all the initial burn treatment.
He did all the debridement. Debridement is cutting away burned flesh,
burned skin. He excelled in that.
So many of those young men were foreigners and did not speak English.
One young man, Tony, was about the most seriously wounded that I can
recall. Tony was in one of the ships that was torpedoed. That was a
bad one: It did not completely burn, it did not sink. I think it was
three to five days later when the Coast Guard boarded that ship, they
found Tony in the engine room, wounded, and brought him to this hospital.
Tony-we never could pronounce his last name-was a Cuban. He was the
most badly wounded and stayed the longest of any I can remember. Usually,
Dr. Royal and the local doctors would patch them up as best they could
and send them on to Norfolk, to a naval hospital. As soon as they were
able to travel, they were sent out from here. Tony had no people. The
fact that he had lain so long in the engine room, and was so badly wounded,
he must have stayed here a number of months, maybe a year. There was
a nun, a sister, who could speak Spanish, and she came and found out
what she could about him. After several months, he was finally taken
to New York City to some marine hospital.
Many of the young men who came here, son, did not live. When the 3 o'clock
train left town, the baggage car doors were most always open, and you
could see several coffins in their wooden boxes, being shipped to other
places. There was seldom a day for months, maybe a year or more, when
there were not one or two or three or possibly more that went out on
that 3 o'clock train. It's almost impossible-I don't even want-to remember
some of them. You have to learn to disassociate yourself at times, to
work automatically, to get the job done. Then, of course, when you come
home a lot of times, you just fell apart, when you remember some of
the things you have had to encounter. I guess, when I am on my shift,
it's just routine or something, that I make out really well while I'm
there, and when I come home sometimes I would just fall apart over what
I had seen or what I had had to do. To be a good nurse, you have to
rise above that for the most part.
I don't remember, son, that I was ever apprehensive about how close
the war came to us. I am not easily frightened. I accept things as they
come. I teach Sunday school and have studied in depth questions and
answers of why we are born and what happens. I [also] learned much from
[my grandmother]. She had nine children. She buried seven at the cemetery.
There are seven little graves. I learned from her: This, too, shall
pass. No matter how good it is, no matter how bad it is this, too, shall
pass.
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