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American women ‘militarily necessary’ in combat

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What prompted the creation of the Nurse Corps? The devastating toll of typhoid, malaria and other diseases that killed far more soldiers than the fighting during the Spanish-American War.

Overwhelmed by the tropical diseases, the military rushed to find more than 1,500 female contract nurses to serve at military hospitals and aboard ships. Twenty-one nurses died in the line of duty. After the war, the Army’s surgeon general called for creation of a permanent nurse corps with reserves at the ready for future wars.

SFlbOVER THERE

The world wars brought large-scale proof that women could handle many of the military’s noncombat jobs. They were recruited to “Free a man to fight!”

For the first time in World War I, women other than nurses were allowed to enlist in the Navy and Marines. They worked as telephone operators, accountants, draftsmen, clerks. Some went to Europe. Still, only about 35,000 women, the majority of them nurses, served among nearly 5 million U.S. men. They were promptly sent home after the armistice.

They were the advance troops for the wave of women to come in the next world war, including the Navy’s WAVES and the Army’s WACS. There were even civilian pilots – the WASPS – who repositioned planes and towed gunners’ targets but were denied Air Force status.

The demands of a huge military buildup and a diminishing pool of male draftees crumpled resistance to enlisting large numbers of women for World War II.

More than 400,000 women served, at home and overseas, stepping into nearly all types of noncombat jobs. Retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Wilma L. Vaught, a teenager then, remembers women’s eagerness to help.

“America was attacked,” said Vaught, president of the Women in Military Service for America Memorial Foundation. “Women felt, ‘This is my country, I’ve got to help defend my country.’ They wanted to be part of it.”

World War II was the turning point that earned women full-fledged military status. In 1948, after fierce debate, Congress approved allowing women to serve in the regular forces of all branches of the service all the time, not just in war.


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