[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 147 (Wednesday, September 28, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6245-S6246]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING BETTY DEWHIRST RUSSELL
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I rise today to speak in honor of a friend,
a fellow congregant--Betty Dewhirst Russell--someone I have known for a
long time and someone I knew as a member of my home church, First and
Central Presbyterian in Wilmington, DE.
Earlier today, Betty passed away. I am so honored to have an
opportunity on the floor of the Senate to briefly recognize her for her
remarkable service to the United States and for her great and soaring
spirit.
Betty was a young midwestern girl when she ventured to St. Louis, MO,
in 1940, to begin her schooling as a nurse. Upon graduation, she
volunteered for service in the U.S. Army. Betty was posted to Longview,
TX, for basic training. While in Longview, she would meet her future
husband, Lloyd Byron Russell, known as Russ, of Wilmington, DE.
Betty served her country as a first lieutenant in the Army Nurse
Corps from April 1943 until January 1946 through the 70th General
Hospital. Betty served alongside her uncle, Chief Surgeon Colonel L.D.
Cassidy. In something that she recounted to me a number of times once I
was elected to this body, Betty, during the Second World War and as
part of the 70th General Hospital, cared for hundreds and hundreds of
American soldiers, among them two who returned home to serve in this
body as Senators--Bob Dole of Kansas and Daniel Inouye of Hawaii.
Betty received a battle star as the 70th General Hospital was awarded
the European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Ribbon. Betty was,
understandably, proud of her service, saving so many American lives.
One cherished memory that Betty shared with her family was that when
she was caring for one particularly badly wounded GI, his last request
was to hold close an American flag--a big one, he said. She went to the
Red Cross, and they gave her a big American flag. She spread it over
his body. He put his arms around it, smiled, and took his last breath.
Betty and Russ were married in Oran, Algeria. Being military and
married in a foreign country required cutting through a lot of redtape.
They were eventually married twice--once by the French Government and
once by the U.S. Army. Betty and Russ returned to live in our hometown
of Wilmington, DE, and eventually settled in Hockessin. They were
married for 53 years before Russ passed in 1998.
Betty and Russ's four children were born and raised in Delaware. She
served her community faithfully, by helping to establish the Hockessin
Well Baby Clinic, by serving as a Cub Scouts den mother, as a volunteer
at the junior board of Memorial Hospital, at the Wilmington Flower
Market for over 50 years, and as a charter member of the Hockessin
Community Club. Betty was also a longtime board member of the Lamborn
Library and of the Friends of the Hockessin Library in Hockessin and a
faithful member of First and Central Presbyterian Church for 70 years.
[[Page S6246]]
Betty has lived a full and wonderful life--full of dedicated service
to her faith, her family, and her country. She always saw the best in
others, and she always had a hopeful attitude about the day that lay
ahead. So I am grateful for having had the opportunity to know Betty
for just a few years in our wonderful home State. I am so grateful for
the career and the life of service that Betty Russell gave as a gift to
all of us in Delaware and in this grateful Nation.
Thank you.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to engage in a
colloquy with Senator Carper for up to 30 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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