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Ebersbach (far right) with fellow WASPs
Female
WWII Pilot gives $2 Million to Flight
Nursing Program
Newswise, December 7, 2011 — A pioneering
female aviator who served her country during
World War II has made a gift to Case Western
Reserve University’s Frances Payne Bolton
School of Nursing — a gift that combines her
love of flight and her dedication to
nursing.
Alumna Dorothy E. Ebersbach, who passed away
Nov. 14, has pledged $2 million to establish
the Dorothy Ebersbach Academic Center for
Flight Nursing.

The center will expand on the flight nursing
program’s mission of training graduate-level
nursing students to provide critical,
on-site care during emergencies and
transport to medical facilities.
“This generous gift will reinforce the
Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing’s
status as a leader in flight nurse
education and research,” says Mary Kerr,
dean of the Frances Payne Bolton School
of Nursing. “Dorothy Ebersbach was a
true innovator, which makes her support
for this cutting-edge program so
appropriate.”
Ebersbach, a Pomeroy, Ohio, native who
was born Dec. 9, 1914, led an
extraordinary life. In 1943, after
earning her pilot’s license she applied
to the Women Airforce Service Pilots.
She was one of just more than 1,000 women
selected to report for duty. These young
women were the first trained to fly American
military aircraft. They ran non-combat
missions — ferrying new planes long
distances from factories to military bases
and testing newly overhauled aircraft, among
other duties. Thirty-eight WASP fliers lost
their lives while serving during the war.
The WASP was disbanded in 1944, but members
were considered civilians rather than
military personnel; they were not granted
veteran status until the 1970s. In 2009,
however, Ebersbach and her peers received
the Congressional Gold Medal for their brave
service.
At the time, Ebersbach said, “I was
surprised. It was really a magnificent
honor. It was more than I expected to
receive.”
Such humility and commitment to service were
hallmarks of Ebersbach’s life. She chose a
career as a nurse and graduated from the
Frances Payne Bolton School of nursing in
1954. Upon earning her degree, she went to
work for the Hillsborough County Health
Department in Tampa, Fla., where she worked
in the field of public health until her
retirement in 1975.
When an opportunity arose to give to the
flight nursing program, Ebersbach was
thrilled about the opportunity to support a
program that was such a good personal fit
for her, said Gayla Russell, a longtime
friend to Ebersbach and a co-trustee of her
estate.
“The flight nursing program at Case Western
Reserve embodies Dorothy’s spirit and that
of her generation,” Russell said.
The flight nursing center at the school of
nursing is a master’s level program
requiring advanced practice clinical
courses, a concentration in flight nursing
and participation in an internship through
the world-renowned Cleveland Clinic, during
which students accompany flight teams on
critical transport missions. The program,
the world’s first of its kind, was founded
in 2002.
“Instead of just transporting patients to
the hospital for treatment, acute care nurse
practitioners take the hospital to the
patients for immediate intervention,” said
Christopher Manacci, clinical director of
the program. “They work at 15,000 to 30,000
feet above the traditional clinical
environment and have to think in non-traditonal
ways, which is something that Dorothy
Ebersbach did throughout her life.”