FREE A MARINE TO FIGHT: Women Marines in World War II
by Colonel Mary V Stremlow, USMCR (Ret)
Specialist Schools
From the very beginning, selected officers and
enlisted women were given specialist training and by the end of the war,
9,641 women 8,914 enlisted and 727 officers attended
schools run by civilians, the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps. The earliest
Navy courses were: Aviation Machinist's Mate at the Naval Training
School, Memphis, Tennessee; Link Training Instructor at the Naval Air
Station, Atlanta, Georgia; and Aviation Storekeeper at Indiana
University, Bloomington, Indiana. The first Marine Corps schools opened
to women were: cooks and bakers, motor transport, quartermaster, and
non-commissioned officers. After graduation from OCC at Mount Holyoke,
several officers were sent to the Navy's Communications School in South
Hadley.
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Capt B. E. Tucker, Sgt Rita Schwartz, PFC Jeanette Walker, and PFC
Jane Russell are shown in the fuselage of a Link Trainer, with the
celestial dome in the background. By August 1944, WRs conducted all
courses of Link instruction at Cherry Point. Department of Defense
Photo (USMC) 7184
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All in all, by the end of the war women attended some
30 specialist schools and the variety is a testament to the dramatic
shift in thinking on what women could do: first sergeant, paymaster,
signal, parachute rigger, aerographer, clerical, control tower operator,
aerial gunnery instructor, celestial navigation, motion picture
operator/technician, aircraft instruments technician, radio operator,
radio material teletypewriter, post exchange, uniform shop, automotive
mechanic, carburetor and ignition, aviation supply, and photography.
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The photographs in this collage show various duties given to WRs
assigned to aviation units. Photos courtesy of Sarah Thornton
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