“What we have done for ourselves alone, dies with us; what we have done for others and the world, remains and is immortal”
,Born in Chicago in 1914, Evie grew up in an orphanage
Never really one for school but not one to shirk hard work, Evie worked multiple jobs from the age of thirteen.
At the age of eighteen she decided to move away from Chicago and made her way to New York, stopping in various cities along the way and working whatever job she could get.
Still unsure of what she really wanted to do with her life, Evelyn joined the American Red Cross at the age of twenty and volunteered often. It gave her the sense of family that she always longed for.
It was with their encouragement that she decided to pursue her aspiration of becoming a nurse and with their help she enrolled into The New York Training School which was at Bellevue Hospital.
When war broke out in Europe in 1939, Evie traveled to Geneva to help in the distribution of aid to the citizens of war torn areas.
Upon America entering the war in December 1941, Evie’s responsibilities changed and she went from helping encourage people to donate blood to being enrolled into the Red Cross Nursing Service and being sent to field hospitals to provide medical help as well as emotional support.
Within her first week, she met Roman Myers as she tended to a bullet graze on his arm. The two wrote to one another and were married as quickly as possible.
Although Evie was never someone who minded a fast pace or struggled handling a more relaxed pace, she did struggle ever so slightly in being around all that deaths and injuries constantly
It was due to that that she asked to be transferred back to home soil for a few months where she is now helping in local hospitals as well as providing support of the families of those serving.
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