• Read Vernice Ferguson – first African American to lead VA Nursing Service

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    Vernice Ferguson – first African American to lead VA Nursing Service

    In 1980 Vernice Ferguson was named head of VA’s Nursing Service, the nation’s largest nursing system with 60,000 professionals. She was African American. Only sixty years earlier, the first Black nurses were hired to care for Veteran patients. Ferguson was a teacher, leader, and advocate for racial parity at VA.

  • Read General Omar Bradley and the remaking of the Veterans Administration

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    General Omar Bradley and the remaking of the Veterans Administration

    Soon after World War II concluded, Gen. Omar Bradley, fresh off relinquishng command of the U.S. Army's Twelfth Army Group, was given a critical mission back stateside - take charge of the Veterans Adminsitration and prepare to support the millions of Veterans coming back home.

  • Read Dr. Andrew Schally: Nobel Prize laureate

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    Dr. Andrew Schally: Nobel Prize laureate

    Dr. Andrew Schally was born in Poland, and through early struggles under German occupation during World War II, started a journey as a medical researcher that would take him to VA and groundbreaking research on hormones. In this feature by VA History intern Parker Beverly, follow along Dr. Schally's career as his medical research was recognized in 1977 with the Nobel Prize.

  • Read Florence Standish – Early 20th-century Asheville VA nurse

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    Florence Standish – Early 20th-century Asheville VA nurse

    Florence Standish was a nurse who worked on the historic Asheville VA Medical Center campus in the early 20th Century when the Army maintained the hospital. A photo found by a local VA employee began a journey that helped identify this pioneering nurse.