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Ambler, James M. (1848–1881) – Encyclopedia Virginia


James Markham Marshall Ambler was born on December 30, 1848, at the Dell in Fauquier County, the second of four sons and second of five children of Richard Cary Ambler, a physician, and Susan Marshall Ambler. At age sixteen Ambler joined the 12th Virginia Cavalry Regiment and served during the closing months of the Civil War. He attended Washington College in Lexington from 1865 to 1867 and the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, from which he graduated in 1870.
Ambler practiced medicine for four years before joining the U.S. Navy in 1874 as an assistant surgeon. His duty assignments included service aboard the screw tug USS ....

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Naval Destroyer Higbee II: Namesake Received Navy Cross for her WWI Service – Soldier of Fortune Magazine


Mrs. L.S. Higbee at her desk, photograph by Harris & Ewing, 1918.
All reporting U.S. Navy :Lenah Sutcliffe Higbee was born in Chatham, Canada, on 18 May 1874. After immigrating to the United States, she completed her nursing training at New York Postgraduate Hospital in 1899 and later received further training at Fordham Hospital. On 1 October 1908, she became one the first twenty nurses in the newly-formed Navy Nurse Corps (commonly referred to as The Sacred Twenty). She became the second superintendent of the Navy Nurse Corps in 1911. 
Lenah Sutcliffe Higbee served in the United States Navy from 1908-1922.  For eleven of her fourteen years of service, Higbee was Superintendent of the Navy Nurse Corps.  Chief Nurse Higbee received the Navy Cross for her leadership of the Navy Nurse Corps during World War I.  She was the first female to be presented the award. ....

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Epidemic, The Norfolk and Portsmouth Yellow Fever (1855) – Encyclopedia Virginia


In 1855, Norfolk was a prosperous city of some 16,000 residents with one of the busiest harbors on the East Coast, five large hotels, five newspapers, and eight banks. Ships were often lined up five or six deep at the wharves. Portsmouth, just across the Elizabeth River with a population of 10,000, was similarly flourishing. The region appeared poised for major growth, due in part to Norfolk’s reputation as a healthy southern city, clean and virtually free of yellow fever, which had plagued southern ports sporadically since the late 1700s.
On June 7, 1855, the steamer
Benjamin Franklin arrived in Hampton Roads for repairs after a two-week voyage from St. Thomas in the West Indies. The port’s health officer visited the ship and the captain assured him that there was no disease onboard, despite the fact that two crew members had died on the journey. After a twelve-day quarantine, the ....

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Jerry Summers: John Harlan Willis - Baby-Faced Hero


Jerry Summers: John Harlan Willis - Baby-Faced Hero
Saturday, December 12, 2020 - by Jerry Summers
Jerry Summers
From looking at a photo of the baby-faced United States hospital corpsmen from Columbia, Tennessee the viewer would probably not recognize the young Medal of Honor winner in World War II for his heroics on Iwo Jima on February 29, 1945.
John Harlan Willis was born on June 10, 1921 in Columbia, Tennessee and graduated from Columbia Central High School
He enlisted in the Unites States Navy on November 5, 1940 and received training as a hospital corpsman at the Norfolk Naval Hospital, Portsmouth, Virginia.
John steadily was promoted through the corps until July 1, 1943 when he achieved the rank of pharmacist’s mate first class. ....

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