Recognition finally arriving for Millicent Young, other women pilots in WWII WASP program
(this is a local woman, so the whole story of the WASP's is closer than it is for some)
for those interested in learning more, check out the WASP website:
http://wingsacrossamerica.us/wasp/index.htm, including history, photo galleries, base locations, etc.)
Recognition finally arriving for Millicent Young, other women pilots in WWII WASP program
Millicent Young displays her Congressional Gold Medal during a reception on her behalf at a Westside restaurant Jan. 5. She and other surviving women who were non-combat pilots for the military in World War II received the medals in 2010 - some 66 years after their WASP program was decommissioned. The blue patch with wings was given to her by General Hap Arnold, then chief of the Army Air Forces.
A reception at a Westside restaurant Jan. 5 honored Millicent Amanda Peterson Young, a Colorado Springs resident who in World War II was among about 1,000 female pilots who served the U.S. military.
She proudly displayed for attendees her Congressional Gold Medal, which she had received in 2010 at a belated ceremony in Washington, D.C., for about 170 surviving WASPs (Women Air Force Service Pilots).
According to a book by Millicent's son, Bill Young, the WASPs - known informally as the Fly Girls - logged more than 60 million miles in every type of aircraft and on every type of assignment flown by the male Army Air Force pilots, except combat.
Titled Going for the Gold! The Journey with the WASP, Women's Airforce Service Pilots of World War II, his book includes the history of the program, as well as the lack of honor those aviators received during the war and for many years afterward. The Gold in the book's title refers to the Congressional Gold Medal event March 10, 2010 in Washington, D.C., when the neglect finally ended.
. . . . .
Bill Young's book points out that the government put out a call for women aviators in 1943 as a result of the severe loss of male combat pilots in the war. Still, the Army Air Forces was selective. More than 25,000 American women applied for training, but only 1,830 were accepted and took the oath, he writes. ********The WASPs went through the SAME FLIGHT TRAINING AS THE MALE ARMY AIR FORCE CADETS. THEY ALSO TOOK MANY OF THE SAME RISKS, sometimes with planes that were new and/or had problems.********** Over the program's two-year span (1943-44), 38 of the Fly Girls died - including Evelyn Sharp. Millicent herself specialized in towing targets for gunnery practice, she recalled, with 100 feet of distance between the targets and the AT-6 she was flying. But the government position was that the WASPs were not actually military. This manifested itself even in the way their dead were treated. The military did not pay for the burials, nor did it allow gold stars in their parents' windows or flags on their coffins, Young relates in Going for the Gold.
The Fly Girl program ended suddenly. With victory in WWII almost certain, on Dec. 20, 1944, the WASPs were quietly and unceremoniously disbanded; there were no honors, no benefits and very few thank-you's, Young writes. Just as they had paid their own way to enter training, they had to pay their own way back home
The WASP military records were immediately sealed, stamped 'classified' or 'secret,' then filed away in government archives, unavailable to the historians who wrote the history of WWII or the scholars who compiled the history text books used today.
. . . . .
http://www.westsidepioneer.com/Articles/010515/WWIIWASPs.html
JonathanRackham
(1,604 posts)The planes out of the factory were not quite broken in, many crashed. The planes also didn't have the fancy hydraulics that planes have today to control the ailerons etc. You had to muscle the stick to fly them. I'm pleased to see that overdue recognition is finally here.
niyad
(113,336 posts)treatment these amazing women received.
JonathanRackham
(1,604 posts)Only recently I'm learning about accident rates and degree of difficulty in flying the WWII planes.
FWIW factory workers in WWII had quite a few accidental deaths as well. Lots of those factory jobs were done by women. I'm looking for specific statistics by gender and can't find any. There were long term illness (asbestos, radiation ) associated with war production, I'm sure women were affected as well.
niyad
(113,336 posts)JonathanRackham
(1,604 posts)One MIG and one TIG, they put my farmer's welds to shame. We have neat conversations about tools, equipment and cooking.