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Adapted from "Captain Ann Agnes Bernatitus, Nurse Corps, United States Navy, Deceased" [biography, dated 8 August 1968] in Modern Biographical Files collection, Navy Department Library.

Topic
  • Medicine
Document Type
  • Biography
Wars & Conflicts
  • China Service 1937-1939, 1945-1957
  • World War II 1939-1945
File Formats
Location of Archival Materials
  • NHHC-Library

Ann Agnes Bernatitus

21 January 1912-3 March 2003

Ann Agnes Bernatitus was born in Exeter, Pennsylvania, on January 21, 1912, daughter of Alexander Bernatitus and Mrs. (Margaret Adamits) Bernatitus. She received her education in the Exeter public schools, graduating from high school in 1928. In 1931, she entered nurses’ training at the Wyoming Valley Homeopathic Hospital Training School, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, with an affiliation at the Pennsylvania General Hospital, from which she graduated in 1934. The following year she took a postgraduate course in operating-room technique at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate Hospital at Philadelphia, and continued duty there as Staff Nurse from February to May 1935. She was next Staff Nurse-Operating Room at the New Rochelle (New York) Hospital until July 1935, then had similar employment at the Nanticoke (Pennsylvania) State Hospital.

Appointed Ensign in the Navy Nurse Corps on September 25, 1936, she progressed in grade to that of Commander, to date from January 1, 1950. On April 1, 1959 she was transferred to the Retired List of the US Navy and was advanced to the rank of Captain on the basis of a combat award.

After receiving her appointment in the Nurse Corps in 1936, she reported as a Staff Nurse at the Naval Hospital, Chelsea, Massachusetts, and in September 1938 was transferred, in a similar capacity, to the Naval Hospital, Annapolis, Maryland. She remained there until March 1940, after which she had duty as a Nurse in USS Chaumont (transport). Assigned in July 1940 to the US Naval Hospital, Canacao, Philippine Islands, she was so serving when news of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii, came. Because of the location of the hospital it soon became necessary to evacuate the patients and the newly arrived wounded to Manila. During this work she was a member of an emergency operating team under Army orders.

On the morning of December 24, this team was suddenly ordered to Bataan, where again they worked under the Army. There she saw the entire heroic drama of the American-Filipino stand. In one eight-hour day she saw two hundred and eighty five patients brought into the operating room, waiting their turn. She treated her own countrymen and Japanese prisoners from dawn to midnight.

In April 1942, a few days before Bataan succumbed, she was evacuated to Corregidor where she served in the hospital wards of the beleaguered fort until two days before the end. She and a few others were selected for an attempt to run the Japanese blockade in the submarine Spearfish, which had sneaked into Manila Bay. After a seventeen day submarine trip through enemy-infested waters, she arrived in Australia, and then returned to the United States. During this time of escape, she was listed on the Navy Department records as “missing in action.”

When the award of the Legion of Merit was created by Act of Congress in 1942, she was the first person in the naval service to receive this newly established award. The citation follows in part:

“For exceptionally meritorious conduct…as a member of Surgical Unit #5 during the bombing of the Philippine Islands by enemy Japanese forces for the period December 1941 through April 1942. Constantly in the front lines of defense in the Manila-Bataan Area, and on two separate occasions forced to evacuate to new positions after Japanese bombs had wrecked the Surgical Unit, Nurse Bernatitus courageously withstood the dangers and rigors of tropical combat, rendering efficient and devoted service during the tense days of prolonged siege and evacuation.”

Returning to the United States, she was promoted to Chief Nurse, and in July 1942 was assigned to the Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland. In August 1943 she became Chief Nurse at the Naval Dispensary, Eighth Naval District, headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana. From June to November 1944 she served at the Naval Hospital, Great Lakes, Illinois, after which she had temporary duty as Assistant Chief of Nursing Service at the Naval Hospital, Treasure Island, San Francisco, California. In February 1945 she joined USS Relief as Chief of Nursing Service and in that capacity participated in the Okinawa Invasion. Detached from that hospital ship in November 1945, she was next Assistant Chief of Nursing Service at the Naval Hospital, Brooklyn, New York.

In September 1946 she reported for instruction in occupational therapy at the Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy at Philadelphia and completing the course there in April 1948, reported as Chief of Occupational Therapy at the Naval Hospital, Houston, Texas. She was transferred to similar duty at the Naval Hospital, Long Beach, California, in May 1949 and during the period April 1950 to July 1953 was Chief of Nursing Service at the Naval Hospital, Newport, Rhode Island. Following an assignment as Chief of Nursing Service at the Naval Hospital, Camp Pendleton, California, she was transferred in October 1954 in a similar capacity to the Naval Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was so serving when relieved of active duty pending her retirement, effective April 1, 1959.

In addition to the Legion of Merit with Combat “V,” Nurse Bernatitus has the American Defense Service Medal, Base Clasp; Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with two stars; World War II Victory Medal; Navy Occupation Service Medal; China Service Medal; Philippine Defense Ribbon; Philippine Liberation Ribbon and the Philippine Independence Ribbon. She is also entitled to the Army Distinguished Unit Badge, which was awarded all personnel who served in defense of the Philippines.

He died March 3, 2003. 

END 

Published: Tue Mar 31 10:05:01 EDT 2020