Nicolle M. Brossard Collection

Nicolle M. Brossard
Photograph of Nicolle M. Brossard.
Nicolle M. Brossard
Photograph of Nicolle M. Brossard and a dog.
Nicolle M. Brossard
Nicolle M. Brossard poses with a vase of flowers.
Nicolle M. Brossard
Nicolle M. Brossard poses next to a Bongo truck.
Nicolle M. Brossard
Nicolle M. Brossard looks up an American Flag during sunset.
Nicolle M. Brossard and Afghan men
Nicolle M. Brossard poses with four local Afghan men.
Nicolle M. Brossard and an Afghan boy
Nicolle M. Brossard hands a football to a local Afghan boy as others watch.
Nicolle M. Brossard and comrades
Nicolle M. Brossard, third from left, poses with comrades who gave her an award for "being the happiest person on the base."
Nicolle M. Brossard during deployment
Nicolle M. Brossard, second from right, poses with other soldiers.
Nicolle M. Brossard on a helicopter mission
Nicolle M. Brossard poses while on a helicopter flying mission.
Nicolle M. Brossard on her return from deployment
Nicolle M. Brossard poses with balloons on the day she returned from deployment.
Oral history interview with Nicolle M. Brossard, Part 1 of 2
Conducted in two parts (Part 1 in 2012 and Part 2 in 2014), the interview primarily documents Nicolle Brossard's upbringing in Oregon; her service with the United States Army; and her education after service. Brossard discusses growing up in Oregon, her mother's brain cancer diagnosis at the age of three and how she missed having a mother to bond with, and feeling that divine intervention brought her to the army. " Brossard discusses her father's support for joining the service, her pride in being a part of the U.S. Army, and her belief that basic training inoculates you for the rest of your army career. She shares her thoughts on the pre-deployment processing, as well as her fear of being raped by the enemy in Iraq. " Brossard recalls her experiences directly before and after the Fort Hood shootings, her desire to get back and help take care of those who were wounded, the ceremonies and memorials that were held in the wake of the tragedy, and her use of the experience at Fort Hood as a way to relate combat stress control principles to the soldiers at various forward operating bases across Afghanistan. " She discusses what it was like to lose her mother to cancer while she was in training for overseas deployment. She recalls what it was like having to reintegrate into civilian life after deployment, and the emotional drain and strain she felt after having seen so many things. " She also discusses enrolling at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and her work with a task force for military veterans and their family members; her efforts to maintain a positive and grateful attitude in order to deflect negativity; and her feelings on how her army experience has developed her more as a woman and given her more character.
Oral history interview with Nicolle M. Brossard, Part 2 of 2
Conducted in two parts (Part 1 in 2012 and Part 2 in 2014), the interview primarily documents Nicolle Brossard's upbringing in Oregon; her service with the United States Army; and her education after service. Brossard discusses growing up in Oregon, her mother's brain cancer diagnosis at the age of three and how she missed having a mother to bond with, and feeling that divine intervention brought her to the army. " Brossard discusses her father's support for joining the service, her pride in being a part of the U.S. Army, and her belief that basic training inoculates you for the rest of your army career. She shares her thoughts on the pre-deployment processing, as well as her fear of being raped by the enemy in Iraq. " Brossard recalls her experiences directly before and after the Fort Hood shootings, her desire to get back and help take care of those who were wounded, the ceremonies and memorials that were held in the wake of the tragedy, and her use of the experience at Fort Hood as a way to relate combat stress control principles to the soldiers at various forward operating bases across Afghanistan. " She discusses what it was like to lose her mother to cancer while she was in training for overseas deployment. She recalls what it was like having to reintegrate into civilian life after deployment, and the emotional drain and strain she felt after having seen so many things. " She also discusses enrolling at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and her work with a task force for military veterans and their family members; her efforts to maintain a positive and grateful attitude in order to deflect negativity; and her feelings on how her army experience has developed her more as a woman and given her more character.