CHAPTER 183
Making the Revolutionary New Carrel-Dakin Wound Treatment Available to Save Soldiers’ Lives During World War I
![A Johnson & Johnson employee, "Somewhere in France," during World War I. From our archives.](/sites/default/files/inline-images/2013/11/wwi-employee3.jpg)
A Johnson & Johnson employee, "Somewhere in France," during World War I. From our archives.
As we celebrate Veterans Day in the U.S. and Remembrance Day elsewhere in the world, we salute the men and women who serve their countries.
A Johnson & Johnson employee, "Somewhere in France," during World War I. From our archives.
Johnson & Johnson has a long heritage of employees serving in the military, dating back to 1898, and the Company has supported the men and women who serve their countries for well over a century. As the younger brothers of Union Army veterans, the three founders of Johnson & Johnson had tremendous respect for those who serve and a desire to do what the
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