Composite photo of graduates at Minneapolis, MN’s Carroll School of Chiropractic in 1920. The school’s founders, Stella and J.C. Carroll, are depicted, as are four female and four male graduates.

Truly Ambitious Women: Women Chiropractors and World War I

Two women loading a stretcher into a WWI-era truck with two other people standing in the foreground.

“Battalion of Life”: American Women’s Hospitals and the First World War

Captain A.B. Bayle is shown cranking the car, prior to making her rounds in New York. Her ambulance is surrounded by other women in service uniforms.

“A Male Department of Warfare:” Female Ambulance Drivers in the First World War

“The Joy of My Life”: Seeing-Eye Dogs, Disabled Veterans/Civilians and WWI

Searching for a Warm Home: Women and the Italian Refugee Crisis of World War I

“Shock from Loss”: The Reality of Grief in the First World War

Soldiers lay in front of a tent.

Pathology in Perspective: Wartime Specimen Collecting and the Case of Private Hurdis’ Skull

A woman in a nurse's uniform wraps a bandage around a male soldier's arm. There are other white men in the background, one doing paperwork, one lifting a stretcher.

Listening to Women: Accessing Women’s Pain from First World War Pension Records

Poster shows emaciated human figures, representing various diseases, cower beneath a partially nude female figure, representing venereal disease, chained to a vulture.

VD in the Archives

Caring for Women Veterans: A Brief History of the Cowdray Club