In this photograph from the National Archives, WAVES are having lunch at the mess hall for the Yeoman Training facility in Stillwater at Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State University).
A Blog About Women Who Were Homefront Heroines: the WAVES of World War II
In this photograph from the National Archives, WAVES are having lunch at the mess hall for the Yeoman Training facility in Stillwater at Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State University).
During boot camp, WAVES play bridge in their quarters in Bartlett Hall, Cedar Falls, Iowa. The photo comes from the National Archives.
WAVES (left to right) Jane Rosenbaum, June David and Thelma Stretch do their laundry and write letters in their quarters at Cedar Falls. The photograph comes from the National Archives.
WAVES in the mess hall at boot camp in Cedar Falla, Iowa.
They are (left to right): Paul Weis, Ann Walus, Edna Brown and Esther Swenson.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
No, this WAVE isn’t getting ready to go trick or treating (Happy Halloween). Juane Boegeman is happy because she’s getting to go on leave with Private Jerry Wampach from her boot camp in Cedar Falls.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
All work and no play makes Jane a dull WAVE. At the Radio School on the University of Wisconsin campus in Madison, WAVES held a jitterbug content – and this couple took home the top award.
The photo comes from the National Archives.
WAVE Ann Atridge leads a group of WAVES at the radio training school in Madison, Wisconsin, in rehearsal for their weekly radio broadcasts on a local radio station.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
Code class is in session at the radio school for WAVES, located on the University of Wisconsin, Madison, campus. The instructor (in the background) carefully times his messages for the WAVES, each in her own headsets and equipment.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
Radio coding class is in session, in this photograph from the National Archives. The University of Wisconsin Madison was one of the first training centers for WAVES to open, beginning in October of 1942.
In this photo, the instructor (in the foreground) carefully times his rate of sending coded messages with his timer, which is in his left hand.