A Life of Service and Quiet Strength: Carmen Vazquez Rivera
I have been learning about some of the people who served in
the wars, and this time I wanted to let you know the story of Carmen Vazquez
Rivera.
She was born on the 15th of February 1922 in Cidra, Puerto
Rico, and she was the eldest of six
children. At just sixteen, she began training to become a nurse, studying in
Bayamón and then later in San Juan, where she took on roles in operating rooms
and maternity work.
When the United States joined World War II, Puerto Rican
nurses were not initially accepted. But that changed in 1944, and she joined
the U.S. Army that December. She quickly took on the role of head nurse and
helped to deliver over a hundred babies. After the war, she was honoured for
her service and met President Truman.
In 1953, during the Korean War, she returned to military
service, this time with the U.S. Air Force as a First Lieutenant.
She also had some fun moments in her life, she once won a
military beauty pageant and briefly danced with Elvis Presley.
She retired in 1973, and continued to work as a nurse and
volunteered. She lived a to the remarkable age of 103 before she passed away on
the 8th of March 2025.
Do you think lives like hers receive the recognition they
deserve, or do they fade behind larger
events?