Plane Maintenance

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Today’s image continues our series of photographs from September 1943 of WAVES at work in the Naval aviation. In this photo, WAVES Mary Arnold, Violet Falkum, and Bernice Stansbury adjust the intake on an SNJ training plane at Naval Air Station Jacksonville.

The photograph comes from the National Archives.

 

Plane Workers

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Continuing our series of photographs from September 1943 of WAVES at work in the Naval aviation, today’s image shows WAVE Bernice Sansbury adjusting the spark plugs on n SNJ training plane at Naval Air Station Jacksonville.

The photograph comes from the National Archives.

 

Shoe Shopping

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What is on your shopping plans this weekend? For this WAVE, new shoes were a must. Note the instruction sign in the upper left explaining what enlisted personnel must do in order to get “shoe certificates.” During World War II, many materials were rationed for the war effort, and so things like leather shoes were limited.

The 1943 photograph comes from the National Archives.

 

R&R

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WAVES at Naval Air Station Seattle in 1943. But who’s resting and who’s still at work. Velma Fields (front) has her feet up but she’s still on the job, doing some “damage control” on her blouse (note the needle and thread), while Louise Eiselein (rear) looks ready for work as she gets a chuckle from the latest issue of the New Yorker (and look at how BIG the magazine is!!!).

The photo comes from the National Archives.

 

Mail Call!

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One destination for Navy WAVES? Naval Air Station Seattle. And mail call there was an eagerly awaited event. Women claiming their letters in 1943 include (front row) Vera Hoffman, Emma Rose Higgs, and Ida Sykes; and (back) Harriet Slottee, Lois Bailey, Norma Johanson, and Pollyanna Person.

The photograph comes from the National Archives.

Fond Farewell!

IMG_3919WAVE Violet Falkum bids farewell to sailor Matty Melidoni, after leaving Yeoman training camp at Norman, Oklahoma c. 1943. The caption for the photograph reads:

Last minute clutches and hurried good-bye kisses were in evidence everywhere for the Waves that were lucky enough to have their boy-friends at the station to see them off.

The photograph comes from the National Archives.