|
Disabled Sailor Carl Bronner Operating a Braille Machine |
By Keith Muchowski
The USS J. Fred Talbott and the
men aboard her were stationed in Trieste Italy in the
months after the Armistice. One of the Talbott’s crewmen was Carl
Bronner of Cincinnati.
On 9 August 1919 he and over 40 other seamen attended a Y.M.C.A. function
on land. Bronner and a friend were exploring the Italian seashore when the
former saw something shiny on the ground and thinking he found a souvenir
picked it up. It was an improvised explosive device. When the handmade grenade
detonated in Bronner’s hands its blast killed his friend instantly; Bronner
lost both of his hands and was rendered permanently blind. In the coming months
the seaman had numerous surgeries at stateside naval hospitals; the day after
his discharge in early June 1920 he began rehabilitation and training at the
Red Cross Institute for the Blind in Baltimore.
Known as Evergreen, the center offered medical services and vocational training
to visually impaired American servicemen of the Great War. In that bucolic
setting the physically and psychically scarred Carl Bronner learned braille and
how to type on a special writing machine equipped with pedals and other
attachments.
|
New Representative Edith Rogers Still in Mourning After Her Husband's Death |
Bronner became something of an inspiration to wounded Doughboys and others. In December 1921 he received a letter from President
Warren G. Harding, who expressed his admiration for the young man still only in
his early twenties. On 3 June 1926 Bronner and 1,000 other wounded veterans
attended a White House garden fête hosted by President Calvin Coolidge and
First Lady Grace Coolidge. Present too was Congresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers of
Massachusetts,
serving in her dual capacity as a Red Cross Gray Lady. That same day Bronner
attended a session at the U.S. Capitol Building, where from the House floor
Representative Rogers spoke and told the story of the young man listening from
the gallery. Rogers’s
presence at both events was not accidental. The congresswoman from Massachusetts had been
active in Red Cross and veterans affairs for nearly a decade. Edith Nourse
Rogers was the widow and political successor of Congressman John Jacob Rogers.
Largely forgotten today, the two represented Massachusetts’s Fifth District for nearly half a
century from 1913 to 1960 and in that span created some of the most
consequential and lasting legislation in American history.
|
Representative John Jacob Rogers (Right) Showing Support for Naval Aviation |
John J. Rogers was a Harvard-educated attorney who married
and began law in Lowell
in 1907. John and bride Edith resided in that mill town, and soon he entered
local politics, eventually joining the U.S. House as a freshman congressmen in
March 1913. When the European war came the following summer he followed events
closely. On 23 April 1917, two and a half weeks after Congress declared war on Germany, Rogers
introduced a bill that would have restored American citizenship to the
40,000-50,000 young men who had surrendered their U.S. nationality to fight in the
uniforms of the Allied and Associated Powers. Representative and Mrs. Rogers
traveled to Europe during the Great War, where
he toured as part of the House Foreign Affairs Committee on a fact-finding mission
and she worked for the Y.M.C.A. and Red Cross. Visiting field units on the
Continent, Ms. Rogers was appalled by the squalor and deprivation she saw.
Stateside, she worked as a nurse at Walter
Reed Hospital.
Meanwhile, while still a member of Congress, her spouse enlisted in the 29th Training Battery, 10th Training Battalion, Field Artillery on
12 September 1918. John J. Rogers, like many Doughboys in training, apparently
did not make it overseas before the Armistice came. Private Rogers was
honorably discharged on 29 November 1918.
Congressman Rogers had the foresight to see the changes
coming to the postwar world. In November 1919 he was emphasizing the coming
significance of cable and wireless communication. He was also quick to see the
shift in power dynamics from one side of the Atlantic to the other as the United States
emerged stronger than ever on the world stage. Thus, in 1919 he advocated for a
streamlining and restructuring of the cumbersome and unwieldy American
diplomatic corps, split at the time between the Diplomatic and Consular
Services. It took half a decade of wrangling but the Foreign Service Act—the Rogers Act—finally passed
when President Coolidge signed the bill into law on 24 May 1924. It is for
this reason that some call John Jacob Rogers “the Father of the Foreign
Service.” Less than a year later he died after complications from appendicitis surgery at just 43.
His widow ran for his seat in the runoff election of 30 June 1925 and took her place in the House on 7 December. There she would remain
until her death in September 1960. Like her husband, Edith Rogers was a
Republican, which put her in good stead in 1920s Washington. Presidents Harding, Coolidge,
and eventually Hoover entrusted the passionate Rogers with touring military hospitals across the United States
and reporting the shortcomings she witnessed. As a member of the House
Veterans’ Affairs Committee in March 1928 she submitted a bill providing
$15,000,000 for additional hospitals and other services to the Veterans’
Bureau. In 1932, perhaps surprisingly, she sided with President Hoover and
voted against early payment of funds to the Bonus Army veterans who were then
encamped in Washington, D.C. Throughout that decade she watched world events
with increasing concern with a special focus on the plight of refugees.
By the time the United States entered the Second
World War, Edith Nourse Rogers was a seasoned legislator. Congresswoman Rogers
sponsored the creation of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps putting women in
military uniform. Many were skeptical. One congressman declared the WAAC bill
“most ridiculous” while another scoffed that it was “the silliest piece of
legislation I have ever seen come into this House.” The WAACs—or WACs as they
were known by the war’s end—made considerable contributions to the Allied war
effort. Like Franklin D. Roosevelt—who had graduated with her late husband in
the Harvard Class of 1904—Edith Nourse Rogers understood the mistakes that Washington had made
after the First World War. Carl Bronner had been one of the fortunate Great War
veterans in terms of the medical care and vocational training he received upon
his discharge. Knowing there would be many more Bronners in similar need after
the current conflict, she drafted and helped pass the Servicemen's Readjustment
Act of 1944—the G.I. Bill.
|
Representative Edith Rogers in Her Nurses Uniform Addressing a Group of WAACs in 1943 |
Edith Nourse Rogers served in Congress until her death on
10 September 1960 in the waning months of the Eisenhower administration. She
and John rest today in Lowell
Cemetery.
Keith Muchowski, a librarian and professor at New York City
College of Technology (CUNY) in Brooklyn,
blogs at http://thestrawfoot.com. He is working on a history of Civil War Era New York
City.
Fine good people these Rogers', who was it that said Republicans are "deplorables"? Speaking of deplorables, that Trieste would have IEDs laying in the streets for the curious to just pick up is disgustingly heinous. Another example of "the ends justify the means"? And sadly we here in America, the bastion of free thinking and speech, today are seeing "the ends justify the means" in the good old USA.
ReplyDelete