A Hartsville woman
today marks her 90th Memorial Day with memories
still vivid enough to re-live the World War II
era. Since her use of a wheelchair makes it
difficult to be out and about, she plans to
observe the holiday at home with her family and
dog, Ash.
June DeSpain McKay
is not a military veteran, but a civilian who
tended to veterans while working at Wakeman
General Hospital at Camp Atterbury near
Edinburgh.
At age 16, the
Hope native � then known as June Bell � dropped
out of high school to join hundreds of area
civilians to help the United States war effort
close to home.
Hired to work
in the hospital�s food service and tasked with
taking food carts into hospital wards, the young
woman got her first, vivid look at war�s
unforgiving price.
Wanting to help the military
patients in any way she could, DeSpain McKay soon transferred to
work in Plastic Surgery Ward 2B, a place where she and other teen
girls grew up in a hurry, she said.
�It was a strange time to live in
the world, for a young person to see that,� DeSpain McKay said.
Seventy-three years later, she
still has some photos and many memories from her time with patients
inside the hospital.
During World War II, Wakeman was
the U.S. Army�s largest convalescent hospital, specializing in
neurosurgery, plastic surgery and bone reconstruction, according to
the Indiana Military Organization. The hospital treated more than
85,000 soldiers during 1945 and 1946.
Patient after patient came through
the halls of the ward, and DeSpain McKay saw young men with missing
limbs and once-handsome faces now in need of ears, noses, eyes and
sometimes full-facial replacements.
�In plastic surgery, there was just
surgery after surgery after surgery,� DeSpain McKay said. �When they
got back from surgery, it was always awful because they were sick,
in pain, uncomfortable.�
The worst were the burn patients,
she said.
�The most serious facial damage was
the burn-scarred patients,� DeSpain McKay said in a remembrance she
wrote in 2001. �It was also the most difficult to repair and the
slowest to heal following surgery.�
Although the injuries were
horrible, DeSpain McKay said she witnessed doctors and nurses who
performed �all sorts of amazing things� with plastic surgery.
She saw doctors create new ears and
noses, and portions of bone taken from other parts of the body were
used to re-create eye sockets and more. She particularly remembers a
skin-grafting process where a patient�s arm was held immobile above
the head while a tube of living tissue was connected to the
underside of the arm and to the face. Soldiers would stay in this
uncomfortable position for weeks, DeSpain McKay said.
Now 89, some of DeSpain McKay�s
memories have begun to fade, but she can still relate tales of some
patients, such as a soldier named Billy.
Her blue eyes lit up as she spoke
of him, a soldier just a few years older than she was, from
Louisville, Kentucky, she said with a grin. But her smile
disappeared as she recalled his wounds. He still had eyes that could
see, and his nose and mouth were intact, but the rest of his face
was gone, DeSpain McKay said.
Somehow the soldier and others like
him remained in good humor, DeSpain McKay said, thinking back.
�I guess they were proud to be
alive,� she said.
Post-war years
Wakeman General Hospital closed in
1946, a year after the end of the war, and DeSpain McKay resumed her
pre-war life. She returned to school, taking a mix of high school
and college classes for a time in Hope.She married a military
veteran, Delbert DeSpain, in 1947. He had served in the 1st Platoon,
D Battery, 534th AAA Battalion, 103rd Division. DeSpain had fought
his way through Europe, including France, Italy and Germany.
The couple raised two sons, Steven
and Rodney, and were married for 47 years until Delbert�s death at
the age of 72 in 1994.
About five years later, she married
family friend and widower Duane McKay. He died about a year ago,
said her eldest son, Steven DeSpain.
DeSpain McKay�s hands now show the
signs of a life of hard work.
�I must have been busy, the doctor
said, for these muscles to be worn out,� she said, studying her
hands and pointing to the muscles in her palm.
After Wakeman and schooling, her
career took off with Cummins in the 1940s.
�She was the first female to work
in the drafting department in Cummins,� son Steven DeSpain said.
After Cummins, DeSpain McKay joined
the plastics department at Hamilton Cosco, known today as Dorel
Juvenile Group. She later moved to a position in quality control at
Cosco and would remain there until she retired.
�Nobody could do her job but her,�
Steven DeSpain said. �They really begged her to stay.�
Preserving history
Eventually, DeSpain McKay returned
to Camp Atterbury, this time to preserve World War II-era history
inside the Camp Atterbury Museum.She passionately recorded her time
at Wakeman through photography, bringing her camera with her on the
bus each morning. These snapshots contain glimpses into life at Camp
Atterbury, including her co-workers, the patients she knew and loved
and even the grounds of Wakeman.
DeSpain McKay donated her beloved
photo and souvenir collection to the museum years ago, said James
West, a friend of DeSpain McKay who worked with her at the museum.
In 1999, DeSpain McKay said she was
proud to see her pictures on the museum wall and Delbert DeSpain�s
wartime photos in various cases, along with �an 8-by-10-inch photo
of him, so young, healthy and handsome, taken in Germany.�
But for DeSpain McKay, her donation
and work at the museum are more than just memories. They are an
effort to ensure the world remembers World War II, as well as the
sacrifices that came with it.
�What would our world be like now
if Hitler had not been stopped?,� DeSpain McKay said in a 1999
interview with West for the Indiana Military Organization. �Who else
but our soldiers could have stopped him? I think we must always
remember what really happened back then.� |