By
now, everyone has heard of Amelia Earhart, of course. But I doubt that many of
you have heard of the Women's
Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) of World War II.
During World
War II, women began to enter previously all-male jobs, out of necessity, to
free up men for combat. Legendary flyer Jackie Cochran envisioned a corps of
women pilots who would ferry new planes to the air bases of England and the
Pacific, freeing up more men for combat flight duty.
Cochran
petitioned General “Hap” Arnold, the head of the Army Air Force, but Arnold was
not convinced that “a slip of a young girl could fight the controls of a
B-17." But women pilots can be as
determined as men, and Cochran enlisted the aid of none other than Eleanor
Roosevelt.
Finally,
Arnold was persuaded, and the WASPs were hatched. When the announcement was
made, asking for volunteers, more than TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND women applied, and
eventually about a thousand were accepted. These women pilots served with great
distinction in the war, with thirty-eight of them making the ultimate
sacrifice.
On December
7, 1944, in a speech to the last graduating class of WASPs, General Arnold
said, “You and more than 900 of your sisters have shown you can fly wingtip to
wingtip with your brothers. I salute you . . . We of the Army Air Force are
proud of you. We will never forget our debt to you.”
Despite
these high-sounding words, the WASPS were treated VERY differently from male
pilots; they were given no benefits, they had to pay for their own training,
they even had to pay for their own way home after the war!
The
WASP records were sealed after the war, stamped “classified” or “secret,” and
were not available to the public until 1980. So much for “we will never forget!”
In fact, it
wasn’t until 2009 that Senators Kay Bailey
Hutchison of Texas and Barbara Mikulski of Maryland, along with Congresswomen
Susan Davis of California and Ilena Ros-Lehtinen of Florida introduced a bill
to award the Congressional Gold Medal to all
WWII WASP pilots. (This medal is the highest and most
distinguished award Congress can award to a civilian.)
The award ceremony
took place on March 11, 2010. These brave women finally got the recognition they
deserved.
And it took the government a mere 65 years to do it.
There
is still no word on
whether the WASP pilots will be reimbursed for their
travel expenses.