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Cal State University, Fullerton
(CSUF)
P.O.Box 6846
Fullerton, CA 92834 - 6846
Office: Pollak Library South (PLS) 363
714 278-3580
COPH@fullerton.edu
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Office hours: Mon, Tue, Wed, Fri 9:00 - 5:00
Thursday 9:00 - 6:30
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WOMEN IN WORLD WAR II
BRICK, Katherine (1910-1995)
O.H. 2176
Interviewer: Gail Gutierrez
Date: November 12,
1989
Status: Final typed, 47
pp.
Tape length: 2
hrs.
Born in Maine, Brick received her pilot’s
license in 1941, and in 1943, she joined the Women Airforce Service Pilots
(WASP). Brick recounts training in the Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPT);
difficulties of women learning to fly; training at Howard Hughes Air Field,
Houston, Texas, and Avenger Field, Sweetwater, Texas for the WASP program;
recalls Jacqueline Cochran; types of aircraft flown, the Fourth tow-target
squadron; discrimination; sabotage; Camp Davis, North Carolina; duties while
in the tow-target squadron; Officers Training School, Orlando, Florida;
uniforms, wages, and militarization; deaths of fellow WASPs; disbandment;
and women in aviation since World War II.
CRITCHELL, Iris (n.d.)
O.H. 2177
Interviewer: Gail Gutierrez
Date: August 2, 1990
Status: Final typed, 67
pp.
Tape length:
3 hrs. 45 min.
A native of California and member of the
Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP), flight instructor and pilot examiner,
relates her experiences while in the 1936 Olympics; her travel and
experiences in Germany and the rest of Europe immediately prior to World War
II; olympic training at that time; learning to fly in Los Angeles in the
1930s, for a woman; an instructor at Brackett Field, La Verne, California;
training naval cadets in Carson City, Nevada; joining the Women’s Auxiliary
Ferrying Squadron (WAF); Nancy Harkness Love and Jacqueline Cochran;
training received at Howard Hughes Air Field, Houston, Texas; ferrying
duties, types of aircraft delivered including bombers and pursuits,
qualifications for ferry command, and the WASP program; lack of training,
disbandment, and militarization given to WASPs; hardships at various
military bases; women in the military after the war; the establishment of
University of Southern California’s College of Aeronautical
Engineering in Santa Maria, California; and the establishment of a
curriculum in special aviation courses at Harvey Mudd College, Claremont,
California, for the Bates Foundation.
DRESBACH, Marjorie (1917-1996)
O.H. 2178
Interviewer: Gail Gutierrez
Date: April 28, 1990
Status: Final typed, 34
pp.
Tape length: 3
hrs.
Raised in Oklahoma, her love of flying began
after a ride in a dirigible. She recalls receiving her pilot’s license in
September 1942; Tulsa, Oklahoma, during the Great Depression; the beginning
of World War II; her meeting and admiration for Jacqueline Cochran; cost and
type of planes used in learning to fly; joining the Women Airforce Service
Pilots (WASP); training at Avenger Field, Sweetwater, Texas; recollections
of training difficulties; deaths of WASPs, assignment to Spence Field,
Moultrie, Georgia; test-flight engineers, cross-country flying, wages,
duties, and military life at Spence Field; weather during flight; problems
encountered at other bases; disbandment of WASP program; militarization
denied to WASPs; and Army Air Force Reserve.
JUDD, Pearl (n.d.)
O.H. 2179
Interviewer: Gail Gutierrez
Date: May 19, 1989
Status: Final typed, 48
pp.
Tape length: 3
hrs.
A former member of the Women Airforce Service
Pilots (WASP), recalls requirements for obtaining a pilot’s license in the
1930s, the expense of obtaining a pilot’s license, requirements for WASPs,
and training at Avenger Field, Sweetwater, Texas; civilian and military
instructors, activities on and off the field for women, social life, duties
and dangers in the test-flight engineer squadron; uniforms, wages, and
military etiquette; cross-country solos; Minter Air Base, Bakersfield,
California. Includes comments on disbandment, lack of militarization,
Jacqueline Cochran, discriminations, death of fellow WASPs, and availability
of women for work in aviation after World War II.
LONDON, Barbara (n.d.)
O.H. 2180
Interviewer:
Gail Gutierrez
Date:
October 29, 1989
Status:
Final typed, 41 pp.
Tape length:
2 hrs.
A native of Washington state and former Women
Airforce Service Pilot (WASP) during World War II, London began flying in
1939 through the Civilian Pilot Training Program (CPT) and received her pilot’s license in
early 1940, her commercial license and her instructor’s license in 1941. She
describes the training in the CPT for both her private and commercial
license; introduction to Nancy Harkness Love, the Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying
Squadron (WAFS); as squadron commander while stationed at Long Beach Air
Base; various aircraft ferried across the United States for delivery at
Newcastle Air Base, Wilmington, Delaware; duties, taming, and being the
first and only WASP to receive the Air Medal; transition from WAFS to WASPs;
uniforms and hardships while delivering aircraft; disbandment of the WASP
program; lack of militarization; availability of military status for women
in the Air Force after the war; women in aviation since World War II, and
Jacqueline Cochran.
SECCIANI, Joyce (n.d.)
O.H. 2181
Interviewer: Gail Gutierrez
Date: October 22,
1990
Status: Final typed, 76
pp.
Tape length:
3 hrs. 15 min.
A native Californian describes experiences
learning to fly in the Civilian Pilot Training (CPT) program at El Centro
Junior College, California; flying in the desert and joining the Women
Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) program, Jacqueline Cochran, and training at
Howard Hughes Air Field, Houston, Texas and Avenger Field, Sweetwater,
Texas. She recalls problems in training , assignment and duties in the
tow-target squadron; discrimination at Camp Davis, North Carolina;
requirements for joining the WASPs; radio-control operations; uniforms,
wages, military etiquette, and militarization; March Air Force Base,
Riverside, California; Riverside during World War II; military life of a
woman; attitudes of male counterparts; disbandment; and opportunities for
women in the Air Force after the war.
TURNER, Alice Jean (1910- )
O.H. 1927
Interviewer: Gail Gutierrez
Date: May 9, 1987
Status: Transcribed, 105
pp.
Tape length:
3 hrs. 30 min.
Born near the United States and Canadian
border in Albert, Canada, Turner held dual citizenship until the age of
twenty-one when she chose American citizenship, received a degree in
nursing, and moved to California in 1935. She describes the Los Angeles area
during the Great Depression, nursing duties in pediatrics at Los Angeles
Children’s Hospital, training, qualifications, wages, working conditions,
and attitudes of doctors. As a nurse, during World War II, she explains the
qualifications, training, assignment to Camp Stoneman, California, a
training station and port of embarkation; training Army and Navy corpsmen,
debarkation hospital Birmingham General in Van Nuys, California; Los Angeles
during VE and VJ days; American prisoners of war returning from Bataan; Italian prisoners of war working and
hospitalized at Birmingham General; military dress, etiquette, and living
conditions on base for nurses.
Related material:
GUTIERREZ, Gail. “Forgotten Wings: An Oral
History of Women Airforce Service Pilots, The WASPs.” Master’s thesis,
California State University, Fullerton, 1990. (available
in our bookstore)
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