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Natalies
anxieties over Adolph Hitler, the war clouds over Europe, began
dominating her correspondence by the mid-1930s.
By 1940, well before Pearl Harbor, she sought re-entry into the
Red Cross for overseas work in war hospitals.
Her age, over 50, made her ineligible (35 being the maximum).
Yet she organized DeGaulle Clubs, led refugee fundraising, and
joined the Mexican medical corps, all for the war effort.
Finally, after U.S. entry into the war, the Red Cross put her to
work again. Natalie became
one of only three Red Cross workers to serve in both wars, her overseas
service continuing for three more years after the war.
The New Orleans Times-Picayune, without Natalies
knowledge, began publishing her letters as a war diary, Natalie not
informed by her friend Martha Robinson who fed these letters to the
paper. New York author
Genevieve Parkhurst made a small book of Natalies North African war
letters in 1944, but the publishing was cancelled when the war ended
though Natalies translation of Paul Renauds eyewitness account of
D-Day, Saine-Mére Eglise: First American Bridge Head in France,
was published in late 1945.
Moving
forward with the troops as the war progressed, Natalie served in North
Africa, Italy, France, then her mobile evacuation hospital plunged into
Germany with the invading forces of the U.S. 7th Army,
tending to the wounded soldiers, refugees and concentration camp
survivors. She witnessed the collapse of Germany, then boarded a
troopship for the Pacific, her expectation to accompany U.S. forces in
the invasion of Japan. Though
the war ended with the atomic bomb dropping on Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
Natalie remained in devastated Asia, serving until 1948 in the
Philippines and Japan, two years in Korea as upheaval and war threatened
the troubled country.
Newcomb
'09
Upon
her return, Natalie led a nationwide fundraising campaign for Newcomb
College then returned to Taxco, her peasant school and her stimulating
intellectual and social life there. Here she reigned, in the words of Mexico historian Lesley
Simpson, as the grande dame of Taxco, its social and
philanthropic leader.
Perhaps
no one on earth better understood the tragedy and heroism of this
historic period, more immersed themselves within its challenges, or more
effectively identified, embraced and took responsibility for the great
causes at hand. Natalie has
been characterized in a sense as a sort of Forest Gump, who always
seemed to be present where intriguing events occurred, a witness upon
the major world events, calamities, personalities of her era.
But unlike Gump, the articulate and activist Natalie Scott made
these historic moments her passion, recorded what transpired in
remarkable high quality journalism, adopted them as her personal causes,
one small woman with great initiative and inner joy changing the madness
of the world around her.
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