WAVE recruits take the oath of office with Lt. Stewart.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
A Blog About Women Who Were Homefront Heroines: the WAVES of World War II
WAVE recruits take the oath of office with Lt. Stewart.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
The WAVES not only were assigned to traditional military jobs during World War II, but some were also asked to fill in for entertainment positions, such as this WAVES-staffed band.
The 1944 photograph comes from the National Archives.
WAVE Annabell Dean get her first stripe sewn on after she graduates as an ensign from the Northampton Women’s Reserve Officer’s Training School at Smith College. Ensign Mabel Theobald helps her get the placement just right.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
Check out the living quarters for WAVES at NATTC in Norman, Oklahoma. The WAVE shows that folding was an art form – and a necessity.
The photograph comes from the National Archives.
Piles of luggage, and scores of WAVES, as both await the trains to take them from boot camp at Cedar Falls, Iowa, to new places of instruction.
The photograph by Lt. Wayne Miller comes from the National Archives.
WAVES are “at ease” during the Captain’s Inspection at the Cedar Falls boot camp in February 1943.
The photograph by Lt. Wayne Miller comes from the National Archives.
Happy Halloween! We continue aviation week with a treat not a trick: WAVES repairing planes during World War II.
The photo comes from the Schlesinger Library at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University.
Aviation week continues with this c. 1944 photograph of a Navy WAVE working the headsets on the Link flight simulation unit. She’ll use the microphone to help direct the pilot trainee and let him know if he is flying correctly or has “crashed.”
The photo comes from the Schlesinger Library at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University.
Continuing in our “aviation week” theme, this photo shows an unidentified WAVE and Navy pilot trainee working with the Link instructor. The pilot is learning the skills of instrument flight.
The photo comes from the Schlesinger Library at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University.