3/20/2010 - WASP Take Home the Gold
Courtesy of Sarah Byrn Rickman, WASP Author and Historian- September 10, 1942, Secretary of War Henry Stimson announced that Nancy Harkness Love would lead a group of civilian women pilots who would ferry airplanes for the U.S. Army. They would be known as the Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron.

-WASP Flora Belle Reese and Betty Blake at the Washington DC Memorial Ceremony. Sarah Rickman image-
Gen. Harold L. George, commander of the Army's Air Transport Command (ATC), escorted his new squadron leader, Mrs. Love, to the secretary's office for this momentous announcement. It was a first. Women pilots were being employed by the ATC's Ferrying Division to ferry single-engine trainer airplanes from the factory to wherever that airplane was needed.
No one, back then, could have foreseen the momentous occasion that, 67½ years later to the day, would crown and celebrate that simple announcement - and with such enthusiasm.
-WASP A.J. Starr and Frances Tong, sister of a WASP killed during WWII at Tuesday's Memorial Ceremony. Sarah Rickman Image-
March 10, 2010, families and friends of the 1,101 women who followed Nancy Love into wartime service to their country, gathered in the Capitol in Washington D.C. where - recorded for posterity by an enthusiastic news media - all of the women fliers were awarded the Congressional Gold Medal.
They are known today as the WASP - Women Airforce Service Pilots. They trace their lineage back to that September day when Secretary Stimson and General George welcomed Mrs. Love and her first squadron to the Army Air Forces and World War II service.
-Dugie and John Eyton-Hughes (daughter of WASP Sis Bernheim), Honey Parker (sister of WASP Dorothy Fulton), Allie Love (daughter of WASP Nancy Love) and author Sarah Byrn Rickman waiting to pick up medals. Hannah Robinson image-
The road was a rocky one. Competing philosophies of how women pilots should be organized and utilized; male resistance to women being allowed into that special "brotherhood" where they could share the rare mystique known only to pilots who fly the most powerful machines of flight known to human kind; jealousies over who did what first; gut-wrenching grief when girls barely out of their teens crashed and burned in training or on active duty; private despondency at washing out of training; elation over earning one's wings; joy at being sent to pursuit school - the ultimate dream of most of the "fly girls" of the 1940s.

-WASP Scotty Gough and Marty Wyall with Tuskegee Airman Col. Charles McGee at the reception at the Women In Military Service to America (WIMSA) Memorial, Tuesday. Sarah Rickman image-
Twenty-eight "Originals" - Nancy Love's first recruits and experienced women pilots all - banded together with 1,074 women who earned their wings at the Army flight school first located at Houston Municipal Airport and in March 1943 moved to Avenger Field, Sweetwater, Texas.
A common misconception is that Nancy Love's squadron and the women recruited by Jacqueline Cochran to receive flight training were two separate groups who were merged in the summer of 1943.
Not true.
The women Cochran recruited for training at the Army facility in Texas were, from the beginning, destined to fly for the four ferrying squadrons Nancy Love had been tasked to organize. And the earliest of the girls from the Texas school did go to the "Ferry Command," as it was nicknamed. But fate, the ever-changing necessities of the war, coupled with the Army's ability to shift priorities as those needs arose, changed everything - more than once, in mid flight.
- WASP Marty Wyall and Nadine Nagle. Between them, Lt. Col. Kathryn Staiger, USAF Reserve, Nadine's escort.
AF Reserve Chief Peri Rogowski image-
Cochran achieved her personal goal to train women "to fly the Army way" and send them out to do many flight-related jobs no one, prior to 1943, would have dreamed of sending a girl or woman to do.
Love grew and nurtured her squadrons and led the way for her women ferry pilots to fly and ferry not just single-engine trainers but nearly every airplane in the Army's arsenal - twin-engine cargo planes, hot pursuits and heavy bombers. A woman could check out in any airplane she could handle.
The girls in training in Texas were known as the Women's Flying Training Detachment (WFTD). A mouthful. The name WAFS, with the emphasis on ferrying, did not aptly describe the total mission of the women pilots as a whole. Cochran, conscious of public relations, sought an appropriate "catch-all" name. Women Airforce Service Pilots was born. WASP they became and WASP they are today - all 1102 of them who received medals from their grateful and admiring country on March 10. Jacqueline Cochran who, unlike Nancy Love, is not counted in the final tally of the WASP, also received a gold medal.
Fewer than 300 WASP are alive today. Still, nearly two thirds of those surviving gathered in Washington for recognition withheld for 65 years.
- Vice Admiral Vivien Crea (CG Ret.) and WASP Dawn Seymour following the laying of the wreath for the 38 WASP who died in World War II at the Memorial Ceremony in DC. Sarah Rickman image-
They were denied militarization as a group in June 1944 when a Congress, swayed by a vicious publicity campaign against the women pilots, voted AGAINST General "Hap" Arnold's wishes for the first time. Arnold wanted "his girls" militarized. Congress said "no." The training of future classes of WASP was cancelled. In October, the women were told they would be disbanded. On December 20, 1944, they were dismissed and told to go home - on their own nickel. Many a caring commanding officer, who had grown to appreciate these WASP, their abilities and their dedication, helped see that they did get home for Christmas.
The militarization they sought - recognition of their efforts and role during the war - was granted 33 years later, in November 1977. Bee Haydu, WASP Class 44-7, led that fight as WASP president. She credits the efforts and support of Hap Arnold's son, Bruce Arnold, as the reason they achieved their goal.
-WASP Barbara Robinson and her husband, Bill at the Memorial Ceremony. Sarah Rickman image-
Even then, their victory seemed a begrudging one. Movement to complete the process was slow, and of course, they had missed the GI Bill by 30 years. None of this really fazed the WASP. They remain, today, thankful for the opportunity to "fly those beautiful airplanes."
So, when July 1, 2009, brought President Obama's signature to the Senate Bill to honor them with the Congressional Gold Medal, these ladies took it to heart and began to plan for the BIG day. Sadly, we lost a few of them in the intervening months.
Seeing their faces Tuesday, March 9, at the Air Force Memorial and Wednesday, March 10, in Emancipation Hall was worth it all. Whether they walked in under their own power, were helped by a self-propelled walker or a uniformed military escort, or arrived in a wheelchair, the women who gathered were aviators - women who still have their heads in the sky and their eyes on the stars.
We, who know and love them, salute our heroines. Ordinary women - the girl next door who learned to fly a Piper Cub and went to war. Thirty-eight of them came home in pine boxes. Those 38 were honored at a memorial ceremony March 9 at the Air Force Memorial.
On March 10 the living WASP - joined by their families and friends and by the families of their sister WASP who have flown west - took home the Gold. Alabama Aviator Special feature by Sarah Byrn Rickman
Sarah Byrn Rickman is the author of three non-fiction books about the WASP:The Originals: The Women's Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron of WWII, Nancy Love and the WASP Ferry Pilots of WWII, Nancy Batson Crews: Alabama's First Lady of Flight and the WASP novel Flight From Fear.
Postscript to WASP Take Home the Gold Medal article from Sarah Byrn Rickman
Telling the stories of the 28 original WAFS has been my calling, my passion, and my profession over the last ten years. I also serve as a WASP oral historian for the Women's Collection at Texas Woman's University and as editor of the WASP News, the official WASP newsletter.
Here is a personal postscript on the events of March 9 and 10.
Five of Nancy Love's "originals" survive, and three of them were in DC: Barbara Erickson London, Gertrude Meserve LeValley, and Barbara Donahue Ross. In addition, 97-year-old Phyllis Burchfield Fulton was represented by her niece, Lynn Shima.
Honey Fulton Parker represented her late sister, WAFS Dorothy Fulton Slinn. Dugie Fine Eyton-Hughes represented her late mother, WAFS Kathryn "Sis" Bernheim Fine. Sherrill Arnet and her daughter Julie Kelley, represented mother and grandmother, WAFS Lenore McElroy. And two of Nancy Love's daughters, Hannah Robinson and Allie Love, represented their mother - the woman who was there at the beginning.

-WASP Nancy Batson Crews (1920-2001)
I had the honor of representing two of the Original WAFS: Nancy Batson Crews who died in 2001, and Dorothy Scott, one of the 38 who died in the war. I have written biographies of both and their families chose to let me accept the Gold Medals for their respective families. It was an honor and I consider myself quite fortunate to have had this opportunity.

-WASP Dorothy Scott (1920-1943)
Representing Dorothy at the Memorial Service March 9 was a moving experience. This outstanding young woman of 23 - who would be 90 today - was not allowed to live out her years. But the idea that her life is thus remembered and can be an inspiration for others brings some sense and solace to her tragic loss and the loss of the other 37.
Personal WASP friends, met and cherished over the last ten years - Marjory Munn, Ann Tunner, Gayle Snell, Teresa James, Caro Bosca, and others, but most of all my friend and mentor Nancy Crews - did not live to see this, but we, there, saw it for them. And we remember them.
Now, America remembers them as well.
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