She attended the Fairmont Seminary and a training program for the
Washington Public Library, and got her first job in 1910 as a cataloger at the Carnegie-built
Central Library there. In 1914 she decided to leave the library and attend
nursing school. In her words, "The library was too slow and uneventful. My taste ran to something more exciting." She decided to attend the Bellevue Nurses Training Program in
New York City, and graduated in 1917. She then applied for service with the American Red Cross, and, on June 15, 1918, sailed for
Europe. In
Milan, at her first assignment for the Red Cross at the Army Hospital, she met Hemingway. She was seven years his senior, he only 19, but they became engaged. However, several months after he had returned to the United States, in March of 1919, she rejected him through a letter informing him that she was engaged to an
Italian Royal Army officer (later disclosed as Domenico Caracciolo). After a year in New York, she was sent by the American Red Cross to the
Kingdom of Romania for two years. Another two years in New York followed, before she went to
Haiti. There she served as director of nurses for Haiti's Public Health Service. ==Inspiration for Hemingway==