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WW2 Photo WWII Female Marines Chow Hall World War Two MCWR 1944 USMC / 1486

$ 3.16

Availability: 71 in stock
  • Type: Photograph

    Description

    Female US Marines Chow Hall
    USMC MCWR 1944
    This is a nice
    reproduction of an original WWII photograph of  female Marines  in the  US Marine Corps Womens Reserve  in the chow hall.
    Size of photo is about 5" x 5".
    The
    United States Marine Corps Women's Reserve
    (MCWR), was the
    World War II
    women's branch of the US Marine Corps Reserve. It was authorized by the
    U.S. Congress
    and signed into law by President
    Franklin D. Roosevelt
    30 July 1942. Yet, the Marine Corps delayed the formation of the MCWR until 13 February 1943. This law allowed for the acceptance of women into the reserve as commissioned officers and at the enlisted level, effective for the duration of the war plus six months. The purpose of the law was to release officers and men for combat and to replace them with women in shore stations.
    Ruth Cheney Streeter
    was appointed the first director of the MCWR. She was sworn in with the rank of
    Major
    and later was promoted to a full
    Colonel
    . Streeter was a graduate of
    Bryn Mawr College
    and had been involved in health and welfare work. The MCWR did not have an official
    nickname
    , as did the other World War II women's military services.
    The women were assigned to over 200 different jobs, among them: radio operator,
    photographer
    ,
    parachute
    rigger, driver, aerial gunnery instructor,
    cook
    , baker,
    quartermaster
    , control tower operator, motion picture operator, auto mechanic,
    telegraph
    operator,
    cryptographer
    ,
    laundry
    operator,
    post exchange
    manager,
    stenographer
    , and
    agriculturist
    . They would serve as the trained nucleus for possible mobilization emergencies. The demobilization of the Marine Corps Women's Reserve of 820 officers and 17,640 enlisted was to be completed by 1 September 1946. Of the 20,000 women who had joined the Marine Corps during World War II, only 1,000 remained in the Marine Corps Women's Reserve on 1 July 1946.
    On 12 June 1948, the
    United States Congress
    passed the
    Women's Armed Services Integration Act
    , and made women a permanent part of the regular Marine Corps.
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    1486
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