What is the price of honor? It took ten years for Vietnam War nurse Diane Carlson Evans to answer that questionand the answer was a heavy one. As a nurse in Vietnam in 19681969, Diane Carlson Evans learned to overcome seemingly impossible oddsincluding the night she and a corpsman kept twenty-six severely dehydrated soldiers alive in the darkness as artillery barraged their hospital. Fourteen years later, this Wisconsin mother of four felt called to establish the first memorial honoring military women on the National Mall. But she had no idea what she was in for. What followed was a ten-year battle to overcome sexism, bureaucracy, and betrayal within her own rank. Evans was labeled a feminazi and received death threats. At a national Veterans of Foreign Wars convention, she was all but booed off the stage. Allies undermined her. Editorial writers opined that a womens memorial adjacent to the Vietnam Veteran Memorials was like putting an Elvis statue on Mt. Rushmore. But Evans persevered; detailed notebooks reveal that she completed more than twenty thousand tasks in the quest for her decade-long dream. And in November of 1993, she made history: the Vietnam Womens Memorial was dedicated near The Wall, bringing honor, healing, and hope to the 265,000 otherwise forgotten women who served during the Vietnam War.
- | Author: Diane Carlson Evans
- | Publisher: Permuted Press
- | Publication Date: May 26, 2020
- | Number of Pages: 288 pages
- | Language: English
- | Binding: Hardcover
- | ISBN-10: 1682619125
- | ISBN-13: 9781682619124