Clara Adams-Ender Collection

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Oral history interview with Clara Adams-Ender
Primarily documents Brig. Gen. Clara L. Adams-Ender's background; her service with the U.S. Army Nurse Corps from 1961 to 1993; and her marriage to Heinz Ender. Adams-Ender also comments on management and leadership issues related to the Army Nurse Corps. Adams-Ender describes growing up on a tobacco farm in North Carolina in the 1940s and 1950s; missing school to work on the farm; having a large family; the importance of education; and her father's insistence that she attend nursing school rather than become a lawyer. " She also discusses her work in hospitals in Greensboro and Oteen, North Carolina, and New York while a nursing student at North Carolina A and T State University; her involvement in the sit-in at the F.W. Woolworth in Greensboro; preparations for the sit-in; and the philosophy of non-violence during the civil rights movement. Adams-Ender explains her decision to join the Army Nurse Corps in 1961, while still in college, including her meeting with a recruiter; her financial motivation for joining; her parents' response; and turning down a marriage proposal so that she could serve in the army. " Adams-Ender provides a brief overview of her entire career in the Army Nurse Corps and offers details about certain duty stations, including officer basic training at Fort Sam Houston and her work as a staff nurse at Fort Dix in the early 1960s. Topics include working as a surgical nurse and in intensive care units; working with a sergeant who had been in the Korean War; particular medical cases; and patients that she helped. " Adams-Ender talks about her 1964-1967 assignment to Fort Sam Houston, where she trained medics for service in Vietnam. In addition to explaining her work as an instructor, she describes an incident where she received an adverse efficiency report for personal reasons. She notes that it appeared to be discrimination against African Americans and comments on how the situation was rectified by the army. " Adams-Ender discusses working as an instructor and education coordinator at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Nursing from 1969 to 1974, including the atmosphere at Walter Reed during the Vietnam War. She speaks in more detail about attending the Army Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, from 1975 to 1976, and describes the types of courses and skills that were taught; incidents of chauvinism; leading a section; the difficulties holding a program honoring women in the military; and taking a physical fitness test that female officers were exempt from. Adams-Ender also briefly comments on her work in the late 1970s on the inspector general's team at Fort Sam Houston and the importance of nurses meeting high standards for care. " She also comments on her duty at the Frankfurt Army Regional Medical Center from 1978 to 1981. Topics include being involved in a German-American medical society; German customs and drinks; discrimination from her commander as a nurse and an African American; doing a march to commemorate the liberation of the Dutch by the Allied troops during World War II; and meeting her husband, Heinz Ender. " Adams-Ender also describes her work as chief of the Army Nurse Corps, including her responsibilities; working with Congress and the political work it required; and her work to recruit and retain nurses. Comments related to her last assignment as commanding general at Fort Belvoir from 1991 to 1993 largely pertain to the lessons that prepared her for command. " Adams-Ender frequently speaks about the organization of the army's medical facilities and about management. She explains the hierarchy between doctors, chief nurse, nurses, and corpsmen and trying to match physicians and chief nurses when assigning people to various facilities. She discusses learning her jobs; developing skills throughout the course of her career; roles and responsibilities of nurses; management issues; and her management style. " Adams-Ender also comments on the purpose of the Army Nurse Corps and its relationship with the rest of the army; her relationship with Lillian Dunlap as her mentor; her promotion to full colonel; the process of being promoted to chief nurse; her promotion to brigadier general; her family's response to her promotion; and a party to celebrate. " Other personal topics include her conversion to Roman Catholicism; meeting her husband, Heinz Ender, while stationed in Frankfurt; their relationship and marriage; Heinz taking care of their home while she worked; and Heinz's work and activities and being a military spouse.
Portrait of Clara Adams-Ender
Portrait of Brigadier General Clara Adams-Ender, circa 1993. She wears the army green winter uniform.
Wedding of Clara Adams-Ender and Heinz Ender
Clara Adams-Ender and Heinz Ender sit at a table at their wedding reception in Highland Park, Illinois, in July 1981.

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