In this photograph from the National Archives, WAVES are marching behind the flag bearer at the Radio School at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Tag Archives: navy training
Madison, WI
WAVES trainees marching at the radio training school (coding messages) at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. The school opening in October of 1942 and was one of three training initial training facilities for WAVES.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
Stillwater, OK
Yeomen (Navy parlance for secretaries) trained initially at Oklahoma A&M University in Stillwater (Iowa State Teacher’s College in Cedar Falls would later become a yeoman training facility after the Hunter College Boot Camp opened in February of 1943). In this photograph, an unidentified WAVE salutes while standing at attention at the Stillwater training camp.
It comes from the National Archives.
Bloomington, IN
The initial training schools which opened in October of 1942 combined boot camp and specialty training in one place. Indiana University at Bloomington was selected for storekeepers (accounting and bookkeeping in Navy parlance).
The newspaper clipping from October 9, 1942, is from a story about 31 Iowa women leaving from Des Moines for Navy WAVES training. Fourteen of them headed to storekeeper training at Indiana University. It comes from the University of Iowa Digital Libraries.
Enlisted Training
In October, 1942, enlisted women also began training to become WAVES. Initially, three schools were set up on college campuses: Madison, Wisconsin, Stillwater, Oklahoma, and Bloomington, Indiana. Each would eventually become a specialty training center after the Hunter College boot camp was established in February 1943. University of Wisconsin, Madison trained radio operators. Oklahoma A&M University (now Oklahoma State University) was a training facility for yeomen. Indiana University at Bloomington trained storekeepers (interestingly, the school’s records indicate that the WAVES didn’t arrive until mid-1943 but the Navy and individual correspondence with women who trained there tell a different story).
This photo shows women arriving at the Madison, Wisconsin radio training school It comes from the National Archives.
The New Ensign
WAVE Annabell Dean gets her first stripe sewn onto her uniform after graduating as an ensign from the Women’s Reserve Officers Training School at Smith College in Northampton, MA. She is being assisted by Ensign Mabel Theobald.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
Meet the Press

The media was very interested in the training the WAVES officers-to-be would receive at Smith College in Northampton, MA. Here, Captain Herbert Underwood holds a press interview with local media. Note that most of the reporters are women.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
Classroom Instruction
Women in the classroom at the Women’s Reserve Naval Training School, Smith College, Northampton, MA.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
The First to Arrive
Lt. Elizabeth Boland (left) greets Lt. Eleanor Denton Rich as Lt. Cmdr. Wilson McCandless looks on. Rich was the first member of the WAVES to arrive at the Women’s Reserve Naval Training School at Smith College in Northampton, MA.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
October 6, 1942
It was 70 years ago today, October 6 1942, that the first full class of officers would come to Smith College for training in the WAVES. Northrup and Gillet Halls, shown here, were used as dormitories for that first class of officers.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.









