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Important Dates in the History of Women in the Military:
American Revolution: Women served on the battlefield as nurses, water
bearers, cooks, laundresses and saboteurs.
War of 1812: Mary Marshall and Mary Allen nursed aboard Commodore
Stephen Decatur's ship United States.
Civil War: Women provided casualty care and nursing to Union and Confederate
troops at field hospitals and on the Union hospital ship Red Rover. Women
soldiers disguised as men served on both sides. In 1866 Dr. Mary Walker
received the Congressional Medal of Honor, the first woman to receive
the nation's highest military honor.
Spanish American War: More than 1,500 Army contract nurses served
stateside, in Hawaii, Cuba, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and on the hospital
ship Relief. Twenty nurses died.
1901: Army Nurse Corps established; Dita H. Kinney served as first
Superintendent.
World War I: Navy and Marine Corps enlisted women to "free men
to fight." Army and Navy nurses served in hospitals stateside and
overseas. 233 bilingual telephone operators recruited by AT served overseas
with the U.S Army Signal Corps.
World War II: More than 400,000 women served in nearly all noncombat
jobs in the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) which soon converted to
Women's Army Corps (WAC); Navy Women's Reserves called Women Accepted
for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES); Coast Guard SPARS (after the
motto Semper Paratus); the Marine Corps Women Marine Reserves, and the
Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs). 87 military women nurses were prisoners
of war in the Pacific and in Europe.
1948: The Women's Armed Services Integration Act of 1948 granted women
permanent status in the Regular and Reserves forces of the Army, Navy,
Marine Corps and newly created separate Air Force.
1949: Air Force Nurse Corps and Army and Air Force Medical Specialist
Corps established.
Korean War: Some 540 served in the combat zone; Army and Navy nurses
in M.A.S.H. units, hospitals, on hospital ships and Air Force nurses with
Air Evacuation units.
Vietnam War: About 7,500 American military women served tours in Southeast
Asia. The majority incountry were Army nurses. Eight died.
1967: On November 8 President Johnson signed Public Law 90-130 repealing
ceilings on women's promotions.
1970: Anna Mae Hays, Chief, Army Nurse Corps, and Elizabeth P. Hoisington,
Director of the Women's Army Corps, were the first women promoted to general
in June.
1971: Air Force promoted Jeanne M. Holm, WAF Director, to brigadier
general.
1972: The military draft ended and more women were recruited. Revised
service policies equalized treatment of women in dependency and entitlements
matters and entry standards for men and women. Alene B. Duerk, Director,
Navy Nurse Corps, became first female admiral.
1973: Six Navy women were the first women to earn military pilot wings.
Jeanne M. Holm became first female major general.
1974: Army Lieutenant Sally Murphy became first military helicopter
pilot. Department of Defense policy revisions to permit women to remain
in the military while raising families.
1976: On October 7, 1975, President Ford signed Public Law 94-106
admitting women to the military academies. Women were enrolled in all
service academies by fall of 1976.
1976: Fran McKee, first woman line officer promoted to rear admiral.
1978: The Coast Guard was first service to open all assignments to
women. Margaret Brewer became the Marine Corps' first female brigadier
general.
1978: On October 20, the Women's Army Corps (WAC) deactivated and
its members integrated into their basic branches.
1978 women served on U.S. Navy ships for the first time.
1979: Hazel W. Johnson, Army Nurse Corps, became the first black woman
brigadier general and first black Chief of the Army Nurse Corps.
1983: Lieutenant Colleen Nevius became the Navy's first woman test
pilot. 170 women were deployed to Grenada on Operation Urgent Fury.
1984: Kristin Holdereid graduated top of her class at the Naval Academy.
1986: Air Force women served as pilots, copilots, and boom operators
on the KC135 and KC-10 tankers that refueled FB-111s during the raid
on Libya.
1989: 770 women deployed to Panama in Operation Just Cause. Kristin
M. Baker named brigade commander and first captain of the West Point Corps
of Cadets.
War in the Persian Gulf: Some 40,000 American military women deployed
on Operation Desert Shield/Storm. Two Army women were taken prisoner.
Thirteen military women died.
1991: Servicewomen deployed to Honduras. Passage of the 1992 Defense
Authorization Bill repealed laws banning women from flying in combat.
1993: Air Force Lieutenant Jeannie Flynn entered combat pilot training.
Congress repealed ban on women serving aboard combat ships. Servicewomen
deployed to United Nations' forces in Bosnia and Somalia.
1994: Navy women joined the crew of a carrier, USS Eisenhower. Women
deployed with U.N. forces in Rwanda. Navy women served on combat ships
in Haiti, Operation Uphold Democracy. Combat pilot, Navy Lt. Kara S. Hultgreen
died in a training accident off the USS Abraham Lincoln.
1995: Air Force Lt. Col. Eileen M. Collins became the first woman
pilot of a space shuttle, the Discovery. Marcelite Harris, USAF, was the
first black woman to attain the rank of major general.
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