“The sheer hypocrisy of calling for a draft of nurses while excluding large numbers of black nurses willing to serve was too much for most Americans to swallow. Telegrams poured into the White House from the NAACP, the Catholic Interracial Council, the National Nursing Council for War Service, the Congress of Industrial Organizations, the American Federation of Labor, the National YWCA Board, the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, the Philadelphia Fellowship Commission, the New York Citizens’ Committee of the Upper West Side, the National Council of Negro Women, the United Council of Church Women, and the American Civil Liberties Union.”
Bibliography
Darlene Clark Hine, Black women in white: Racial conflict and cooperation in the nursing profession, 1890–1950. Bloomington & Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1989.
Charissa J. Threat, "‘The Hands That Might Save Them’: Gender, Race and the Politics of Nursing in the United States during the Second World War," Gender & History 24 No.2 (August 2012), pp. 456–474.