Mattie Donnell Hicks Collection

Army Nurse Corps seersucker dress
One-piece brown and white seersucker field hospital uniform with wrap-around tie at left waist and one pocket on right skirt. Uniform was worn with brown and white striped seersucker nurse's cap. Initially designed for overseas service, but extended for use by nurses serving in hospitals in the United States in 1945. Uniform was worn by Mattie Donnell Hicks in 1945.
Army Nurse Corps taupe overcoat
Army Nurse Corps taupe overcoat with large rounded collar, two pockets, shoulder straps with gold buttons, and four pairs of gold embossed buttons. The coat matched the "Hattie Carnegie" taupe uniform designed in 1950 and was also worn by members of the Women's Army Corps. Worn by Mattie Donnell Hicks in the 1950s.
Army Nurse Corps taupe raincoat
Army Nurse Corps taupe nylon-rayon raincoat with belt and removable hood. The coat was also worn by members of the Women's Army Corps. Worn by Mattie Donnell Hicks in the 1950s.
Mattie Donnell Hicks performing nursing duties
Army Nurse Mattie Donnell Hicks handles medical supplies at a counter in an area marked "non sterile," circa 1950.
Mattie Donnell Hicks receiving award
Major Mattie Donnell Hicks smiles for the camera as she receives a certificate, circa 1965.
Oral history interview with Mattie Donnell Hicks
Documents Mattie Donnell Hicks's nurse education and training; service in the Army Nurse Corps (ANC) from 1945 to 1966; and post-war life in Greensboro, North Carolina. Hicks provides a brief description of her pre-war nurse education and then basic training at Camp McCoy, Wisconsin, in an integrated unit. She also notes complications at her first station, Camp San Luis Obispo in California, due to the segregation of her unit. " Hicks primarily discusses traveling with the army and her many duty stations. Subjects include Korea during the war in the early 1950s and the damage done to the country; her work in Korea and Japan with military and civilian patients; her social activities while stationed in Germany; and the different types of uniforms that she wore at various duty stations. She also describes baptizing dying patients, working with German medical staff, souvenirs she acquired, and why she encourages young people to enlist. Hicks also mentions her brief part-time work at L. Richardson Hospital in Greensboro and building her house there
Potrait of Mattie Donnell Hicks
Formal portrait of Mattie Donnell Hicks dressed in nursing uniform and hat.