- RG004-S01-ss01-B01
- Box
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
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Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
136 pages with events of 1942 summarized on pages 135-136.
Unit history, January, February, March, and April 1944, pages 1-158.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
441 pages total.
Unit history, May 1944 (copy).
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Unit history, June 1944 (copy).
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
1943 annual history, variant typing.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
1943 annual history, variant arrangement.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
21st General Hospital Officers and Nurses Diary: Inactivation, 1 January 1944 to 8 November 1945.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
1 bound volume.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
21st General Hospital Officers and Nurses Diary: Inactivation, 1944-1945.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Annual and Monthly Histories of the Hospital, 1942-1945.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Diaries, Narrative Histories, and Reports, 1942-1981.
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
This series contains chronological records of the 21st General Hospital. Much of the series is Cady's postwar narrative history, Diary of the 21st General Hospital (Subseries 5), and two revisions, The fighting twenty-first (Subseries 6-7). The unit histories, the nursing reports, and the log of inactivation of medical officers and nurses are the wartime records in Series 1. Unit histories, according to Cady's memorandum regarding reports, 2 June 1944 (Box 6, Folder 1), "go below the surface of bare events." Content includes organization; training and development; and problems of assembly, embarkation, movement, and debarkation; and operations (amount of work). Where applicable they cover the character of country and terrain, the attitude of military and civil officials and of the population of the region and the resources of the country. Of particular interest were methods employed to restore operation of damaged buildings, sewage, water, and electricity; and methods adopted for control of discipline, police and fire protection and health. Supporting documents attached are photographs, directives, orders, statistics, and charts.
Unit history, August 1944 (copy).
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Unit history, November 1944 (copy).
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection
Part of 21st General Hospital Collection