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87-Year-Old Recalls Service as Army Nurse

87-Year-Old Recalls Service as Army Nurse

Jeff Wilkinson / McClatchy Newspapers / The Sun News

September 22, 2008

COLUMBIA – Anna Bell “Wendy” Wendelburg Zeigler began work at 6:30 that December morning in 1944, in a sprawling Gothic hospital in Paris, to pandemonium, blood and screams.

Ambulances crowded the large, snow-covered plaza of Hospital Lariboisiere on Rue Ambroise Pare. Stretchers with bloody men jammed the corridors. Every bed was filled with wounded soldiers from the Battle of the Bulge.

“There were so many litters, you could barely walk down the hall,” said Zeigler of Northeast Richland, now 87. “We probably worked until midnight. I really can’t remember. There were lots of days like that.”

The young nurse, part of the buildup of U.S. forces in England in spring of 1944, landed among the wreckage on Utah Beach that August, two months after the D-Day invasion.

Paris was a long way from her home in Stafford, Kan. Friends and co-workers never called her by her first name of Anna Bell. They called her “Wendy,” for her maiden name Wendelburg.

No one in Paris knew her new last name was Zeigler. They didn’t know she had been secretly married.

“I didn’t tell anyone,” she said. “The only person who knew was my husband.”

At that moment Wilbur Zeigler, of tiny Cameron in Calhoun County, was 3,000 miles away in Burma, working in a first aid station, dispensing medicine to bomber crews and posing for pictures with elephants.

“This is a love story,” daughter Barbara Powell said in Zeigler’s home in Columbia. “Even we [she and sister Jane Aldridge] have only heard bits and pieces.”

Zeigler is one of 100 veterans who will be on the inaugural Honor Flight to the nation’s capital Nov. 15 to visit the National World War II Memorial.

Wilbur Zeigler died in March, having never been there. Wendy – as her friends and family call her to this day – never has seen the memorial, either.

A self-proclaimed 21-year-old “Kansas farm girl,” Anna Bell Wendelburg was attending Grace Hospital School of Nursing in Hutchinson, Kan., on Dec. 7, 1941, when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. She and a girlfriend had just left a movie and stopped to have hot chocolate. The radio was on in the cafe and she heard the reports.

“I will remember it until the day I die,” she said.

Seven months later Zeigler joined the Army.

After training at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Zeigler was sent to a clinic at a glider training base near Warrensburg, Mo. There, in January 1943, she met Wilbur.

The two embarked on a whirlwind love affair with Wilbur asking Wendy to marry him several times. “I always said no,” she said.

By November 1943, Wilbur was visiting his parents in Calhoun County before going overseas to war. He asked Wendy to come, too.

When he asked her to marry him this time, she said yes.

“I hadn’t planned to do it,” she said. “I don’t know. I guess I was ready.”

The couple went to the Orangeburg County Courthouse to get a marriage license, but it was closed for Armistice Day, now Veterans Day.

They married the next day. By Christmas, Wendy was on the Queen Mary, a former liner converted into a troop ship, heading for Scotland. Wilbur was on a voyage to Asia.

The two did not see each other for two years. By that time, the war had ended in Europe and Wendy had volunteered for the Pacific Theater. During her 60-day voyage from Marseilles, France, to Manila Bay in the Philippines, the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the war ended.

Wilbur and Wendy were reunited and despite their short courtship and long absence spent the next 63 years together.

© YellowBrix 2008


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    Shan4691

    about 1 year ago

    5402 comments

    great story

  • Karen_pictures_011_max50

    kstiltner1

    about 1 year ago

    7266 comments

    That is such a beatuiful love story. Someone need to write a book about it.

  • Sexy_betty_nurse_max50

    coop79

    about 1 year ago

    26 comments

    what a great story it would be nice if more people could find adversity amist all of there termoile we would have a lower divorice rate

  • 1024963740_m_max50

    vickielee1970

    about 1 year ago

    692 comments

    Wow, to bad the epic mini-series are no more, this would have made a great one.

  • 21ky1pt_max50

    sap

    about 1 year ago

    2404 comments

    This story was GREAT. Cheers to her!

  • Photo_user_blank_big

    Temaki

    about 1 year ago

    50 comments

    Great story

  • J0423100_max50

    emtpixie

    about 1 year ago

    326 comments

    Great story, kind of sounds like it should be a movie. Something like "Pearl Harbor", maybe?

  • 1122071358_c3_af_1__max50

    casassy62688

    about 1 year ago

    288 comments

    Wow, how captivating! This is such a great story! Kudos to you "Wendy"!


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