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Enemies in Love

Page 20

by Alexis Clark


  Eisenhower, Dwight D.

  Ellington, Duke

  Elliott, Ray

  Equal Justice Initiative

  Fairfield County, Connecticut

  farming, American

  cotton farming

  effects of World War II

  end of war and continued need for POW labor

  POWs as solution to labor needs

  Felton, Alethea

  Feuerfest (Refratechnik) (German company)

  FHA mortgages

  Fitzgerald, Ella

  597th Field Artillery Battalion

  Florence, Arizona, local residents of

  See also Camp Florence (Arizona POW camp)

  flu pandemic (1918)

  Flying Fortresses (B-17 bombers)

  Ford Foundation

  Ford Ord (California)

  Fort Bragg (North Carolina)

  Fort Custer (Battle Creek, Michigan)

  Fort Devens (Massachusetts)

  Fort Huachuca (southern Arizona)

  black military personnel at

  black nurses’ basic training at

  black nurses’ living conditions

  Elinor at

  Hospital One

  Mountain View (officers’ club)

  racial discrimination and segregated facilities

  relationship between black enlisted men and white officers

  Fort Robinson (Arkansas)

  France

  black regiments and World War I service

  German POWs and postwar labor

  Freedmen’s Hospital School of Nursing (Washington, D.C.)

  Friedrich, Caspar David

  Geneva Convention

  Article

  on return of POWS to their homelands

  on treatment of POWs

  Georg-August University (Göttingen, Germany)

  German anti-Semitism

  Göttingen

  Nuremberg laws

  Oppeln

  German prisoners of war (POWs) in US camps

  camaraderie with American guards

  captured in northern Africa

  clothing/uniforms

  cotton farming work

  days-long train journeys to camps

  differential treatment

  escape attempts

  expressions of condolence for FDR’s death

  fraternization with local women

  fulfillment of American labor needs

  and Geneva Convention

  hard-core Nazis/German loyalists

  interactions and camaraderie with African Americans

  language barriers and shortage of translators

  opinions of American racial hierarchies and discrimination

  opinions of Hitler and Nazism

  postwar labor battalions in England and France

  postwar wishes to stay in the U.S.

  racism against black nurses

  routines and schedules

  transatlantic voyages to U.S.

  treatment of

  U.S.-Britain agreement

  war’s end and return to Europe

  See also Camp Florence (Arizona POW camp); prisoners of war (POW) camps

  Germany

  Albert family home in Oppeln

  Elinor and Frederick’s move to

  German nationalism

  Göttingen

  Hitler’s rise

  Jewish population

  Weimar Republic

  World War I and economic aftermath

  See also Germany, Nazi (Hitler’s Third Reich); Germany, postwar

  Germany, Nazi (Hitler’s Third Reich)

  armed forces (Wehrmacht)

  and “degenerate art”

  Hitler Youth

  Hitler’s occupation of Poland

  Luftwaffe (aerial warfare branch)

  Nuremberg laws

  POWs’ attitudes toward Hitler and

  surrender and end of war

  Waffen SS

  Germany, postwar

  African Americans and Germans in

  American occupation

  civilian deaths

  concentration camps

  devastation

  Elinor and Frederick’s residence in Göttingen

  German immigration to the U.S.

  mixed-race children (“brown babies” or mischlingskinder)

  POWs’ return to

  racial discrimination against black soldiers

  racial prejudice against mixed-race couples

  G.I. Nightingales: The Army Nurse Corps in World War II (Tomblin)

  Gillespie, Dizzy

  Girl Scouts of America

  Göttingen, Germany

  Elinor and Frederick’s residence at the Albert home

  Jews of

  right-wing ideas and racism

  Grammer, Mabel

  Grammer, Oscar

  Great Britain

  black nurses assigned to English hospitals

  German POWs and postwar labor

  POW agreement with U.S.

  Great Depression

  Great German Art Exhibition

  Great Migration

  Hackbarth, Karl-Heinz

  Harlem, New York

  race riots (1943)

  tuberculosis epidemic

  Harlem Renaissance

  Haus, Fritz

  Hayden, Carl

  Hicks, Ora

  Hitler, Adolf

  the Alberts and

  and “degenerate art,”

  occupation of Poland

  POWs’ attitudes toward

  rise of

  suicide

  See also Germany, Nazi (Hitler’s Third Reich)

  Hitler Youth

  Holiday, Billie

  Hoover, J. Edgar

  Horne, Lena

  Hotel Braddock (Harlem)

  House Military Affairs Committee

  Howard University (Washington, D.C.)

  Immigration and Naturalization Act (1924)

  immigration to the U.S., postwar German

  International Red Cross

  interracial (mixed-race) couples

  Elinor and Frederick’s challenges as mixed-race family

  Gallup poll of white Americans’ opinions on (1958)

  interracial marriage laws

  landlords, mortgages, and housing restrictions

  mixed-race children in the U.S.

  obtaining life insurance

  in postwar occupied Germany

  prejudicial treatment in postwar America

  prejudicial treatment in postwar Germany

  school enrollment and segregation in Morton, Pennsylvania

  Village Creek community in South Norwalk, Connecticut

  Italian prisoners of war (POWs)

  jazz music

  in the Albert family household

  black musicians

  Chris Albert’s career

  Frederick’s passion for

  Hitler’s opinion of

  V-Discs and U.S. military personnel

  Jenkins, Dorothy

  Jim Crow system. See racial discrimination and segregation (Jim Crow laws)

  Johnson, Joe

  Kentucky

  King, Martin Luther, Jr.

  Kirk, Norman T.

  labor unions

  Lammersdorf, Hans

  Lincoln School for Nurses (Bronx, New York)

  Little, Robert

  Littlefield, Samuel

  Louis, Joe

  Louisville, Kentucky

  lynchings

  Magee, James

  Magma-Arizona Railroad Company

  Mahoney, Mary Eliza

  March on Washington

  “marriage bars”

  Massachusetts Historical Commission

  May, Andrew J.

  May Bill

  Media, Pennsylvania

  Miller Stuart, Oneida

  Milton, Massachusetts

  Gladys Powell’s community work

  history

  i
ntegrated Girl Scouting

  Littlefield/Powell house on Granite Place

  Powell family

  Powell’s Emerson Road house

  racial tolerance and progressiveness

  Milton High School

  Milton Record

  mischlingskinder (“brown babies”)

  mixed-race children

  (“brown babies” or mischlingskinder) in post-occupation Germany

  school enrollment and segregation in Morton, Pennsylvania

  Stephen Albert’s experiences

  Mögel, Friedrich

  Montgomery, Bernard

  Moore, Gwyneth Blessitt

  assistance with Frederick’s immigration to the U.S.

  and Elinor and Frederick’s relationship at Camp Florence

  experiences of discrimination and treatment at Camp Florence

  on German POWs’ kindness toward black nurses

  postwar

  Morton School Board (Morton, Pennsylvania)

  NACGN. See National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses (NACGN)

  Nash Engineering Company

  National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)

  Boston branch

  and Elinor’s stand on school segregation

  National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses (NACGN)

  National Council of Negro Women

  National Nursing Council for War Service

  National Socialist German Workers’ Party (Nazi Party). See Germany, Nazi (Hitler’s Third Reich)

  Naval Nurse Corp

  New England Conservatory of Music

  New England Hospital for Women and Children

  New York City

  black population

  Elinor’s nursing school education

  Harlem

  Jim Crow segregation

  race riots (1943)

  tuberculosis epidemic

  New York State’s interracial marriage laws

  New York Times

  Nichols Army Hospital (Louisville, Kentucky)

  92nd Division (U.S. Army)

  93rd Division (U.S. Army)

  Nuremberg Laws

  nursing profession

  American Nurses Association

  black nursing schools

  state board examinations and qualifications

  wartime nursing shortage and proposed conscription (draft)

  See also black army nurses of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps

  Office of the Provost Marshal Office

  Oppeln, Germany

  Owsley, Alvin M.

  Parker, Charlie

  Patton, George

  Pearl Harbor attack (1941)

  Pepperidge Farm (Connecticut)

  Petty, Mary L.

  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

  Phoenix, Arizona

  See also Camp Florence (Arizona POW camp)

  Phyllis Wheatley School (Morton, Pennsylvania)

  Piasecki Helicopter Company (Morton, Pennsylvania)

  Pittsburgh Courier

  Planned Parenthood

  Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)

  P.M. (New York daily)

  Poland, Hitler’s occupation of

  Polite, Marjorie

  Powell, Adam Clayton, Jr.

  Powell, Albert

  Powell, Elinor Elizabeth. See Albert, Elinor Elizabeth Powell

  Powell, Ellen “Ella” Wade

  Powell, Gladys (Elinor’s sister)

  Powell, Gladys Farrow (Elinor’s mother)

  community work

  death

  and Elinor’s marriage to Frederick

  Girl Scouting

  husband’s death and new widowhood

  marriage and family

  move to Milton, Massachusetts

  opinion of Frederick

  outspokenness and dominant, bullying personality

  relationship with daughter Elinor

  Powell, John

  Powell, Ruth

  Powell, William I.

  Powell, William L. (Lawrence) (Elinor’s father)

  death

  marriage and family

  Milton, Massachusetts family and early life

  wife’s bullying treatment of

  World War I military service in Kentucky

  Prairie View A&M University

  prisoners of war (POW) camps

  assignment of black army nurses to

  local residents’ opinions of

  postwar closure and re-purposing of

  in the rural South

  statistics on

  See also Camp Florence (Arizona POW camp); German prisoners of war (POWs) in US camps

  racial discrimination and segregation (Jim Crow laws)

  black army nurses

  at Camp Florence

  Elinor and Frederick’s avoidance of discussion of

  Elinor’s experiences of

  at Fort Huachuca

  German POWs’ opinions of

  and German-born mixed-race children (“brown babies”)

  Kentucky

  landlords, mortgages, and housing restrictions

  lynchings

  mixed-race couples and marriage laws

  New York City

  Plessy v. Ferguson and separate but equal doctrine

  restaurants and dining rooms

  school segregation in Morton, Pennsylvania

  Truman’s Executive Order banning segregation in the military

  in the U.S. military and POW camps

  by white soldiers in postwar Germany

  See also interracial (mixed-race) couples; mixed-race children

  Radeke, Ray

  Red Cross. See American Red Cross; International Red Cross

  Reich Chamber of Visual Arts

  Reichsarbeitsdienst (RAD) (State Labor Service)

  Remond, Charles Lenox

  Revolutionary War

  Rockefeller, John D.

  Rockefeller, Laura Spelman

  Rommel, Erwin

  Roosevelt, Eleanor

  Roosevelt, Franklin D.

  school segregation

  Selective Service and Training Act

  Severloh, Hein

  Shumate, Josephine L.

  Smedley School (Morton, Pennsylvania)

  Somerville, Brehon B.

  South Norwalk, Connecticut (Village Creek community)

  Spelman College

  Staupers, Mabel Keaton

  efforts to ensure equal treatment of black nurses

  Suffolk Reserves

  Superior Rotary Club of Florence, Arizona

  Taylor, Hope

  Third Reich. See Germany, Nazi (Hitler’s Third Reich)

  39th United States Colored Troops (USCT) Regiment Infantry

  Thoms, Adah

  366th Infantry Regiment (U.S. Army)

  368th Infantry Regiment (U.S. Army)

  Tomblin, Barbara Brooks

  Treaty of Versailles

  Truman, Harry

  tuberculosis epidemic

  Tucson, Arizona

  Tuskegee Institute nursing training course

  Tutsek, Charlotte Albert

  on childhood with brother Frederick

  on Elinor and Frederick’s life in Germany

  on Frederick’s postwar return to Europe

  on growing up under the Third Reich

  on her father

  marriage

  on parents’ discipline and emotional remoteness

  in postwar Vienna

  25th Infantry (U.S. Army)

  Underground Railroad

  U.S. Armed Forces Radio

  U.S. Army Nurse Corps. See black army nurses of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps

  U.S. Public Health Service

  V-Discs (records for U.S. military personnel)

  Veitscher Magnesitwerke

  Vienna, Austria

  Albert family’s relocation to

  postwar

  Village Creek community (South Norwalk, Connecticut)
r />   Vogelbeck, Germany

  Walter Baker & Company (Milton, Massachusetts)

  Weimar Republic

  Weiskircher, Captain (German POW at Camp Florence)

  White, Walter

  Wilcox, Roger

  Wilhelm, Kurt

  Wilkins, Roy

  Wollaston, Massachusetts

  Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAC)

  Woolworth’s department store (Phoenix, Arizona)

  World War I

  black nurses

  black soldiers

  German POWS detained in U.S.

  Germany and the war’s aftermath

  Lawrence Powell’s service

  World War II

  American war preparedness efforts

  Americans’ service

  black soldiers

  end of

  Hitler’s occupation of Poland

  northern Africa campaigns

  nursing shortage and proposed conscription

  Pearl Harbor attack

  postwar Germany

  postwar process of returning POWs to Europe

  postwar return of American soldiers

  POW statistics

  See also black army nurses of the U.S. Army Nurse Corps

  X, Malcolm

  Yank (army weekly newspaper)

  Young, Charles

  Ziegler, Adolf

  Zürn, Paul

  About the Author

  Previously an editor at Town & Country magazine, Alexis Clark is a freelance journalist who has written for the New York Times, Yahoo, The Root, Condé Nast Traveler, and other publications. An alumna of Spelman College, Clark holds master’s degrees from the University of Virginia and Columbia Journalism School, where she’s currently an adjunct professor. She lives in New York City.

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