Thursday, March 25, 2021

Remembering the World War I Service of Mary Elizabeth Wyeth

Mary Elizabeth Wyeth (insert) and the Army Nurse Corps, Base Hospital 68, A. E. F.
For Women’s History Month 2021, we honor World War I nurse, Mary Elizabeth Wyeth.  Mary was named for her great, great grandmother, Mary Elizabeth Brewer, the wife of Boston Tea Party and Continental Army veteran, Joshua Wyeth.  

A few years after graduating from Union Hospital’s nursing program in Terre Haute, Indiana, 27-year-old Mary set sail on 16 Sep 1918 for France with 100 other young women of the Army Nurse Corps of the American Expeditionary Forces.  Their destination was the newly purposed Base Hospital No. 68 in Mars-sur-Allier. 

Since the sea crossing took place at the height of the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918, the deadliest in history, Mary’s nursing work for the Corps actually began aboard ship.  Once in France, none of Mary’s nursing experience prepared her emotionally or physically for caring for the vast numbers of soldiers wounded by high-explosive artillery shells, poison gas burns and "shell shock" who arrived by the trainload at No. 68.  Many men were sickened by flu that in turn took the lives of several of Mary's fellow nurses.  

When Hospital No. 68 closed on 15 Jan 1919, Mary transferred to Base Hospital No. 93 in Cannes, France.  There in May 1919, Pvt. John McLaughlin, a young man from her hometown, on leave from the 8th Battalion, 20th Engineers, wrote his mother about seeing Nurse Mary on the sunny coast.  After 59 years of marriage, Mr. and Mrs. John McLaughlin and their military tombstones now rest side by side in Terre Haute’s Highland Lawn Cemetery.  

Sources: Ethel Ross Wyeth Canion; Alpha Sawyer, US Base Hospital 68 A.E.F (Boston: Griffith-Stilling Press, 1920), 26, 40, 43 and 124; Christina Wyeth Baker, The Wyeth and Wythe Families of America (Berwyn Heights, MD: Heritage Books, 2019), 211; and the Terre Haute Saturday Spectator, 17 May 1919, 24.

Monday, March 1, 2021

The Daughter of Rebecca Parks Andrew Wyeth Fox is Depicted in Thomkins Matteson's 1855 Painting

Thomkins Matteson painting from Wikimedia Commons
On 26 May 1698, Mary Wyeth, the 49-year-old unmarried daughter of Nicholas Wyeth and Rebecca Parks Andrew Wyeth Fox, wrote in her last will and testament that anything “due from the estate of my Father Wyeth and my Mother Fox my will is it be disposed of to my five Brothers Thomas Andrew, Daniel Andrew, Nicolas (sic) Wyeth, John Wyeth and William Wyeth and to my sisters Sarah Fiske and Rebecca Jacobs.” The sister Mary mentioned, Rebecca Andrew Frost Jacobs, is shown here with her hands raised in anger at her daughter Margaret for accusing her grandfather George Jacobs Sr. of witchcraft. This painting has been widely used to depict the trials that started on 1 Mar 1692 in Salem, MA. For more information on Mary’s will and her siblings accused of witchcraft, please see pages 41-56 and 153-154 of The Wyeth and Wythe Families of America book.