FREE A MARINE TO FIGHT: Women Marines in World War II
by Colonel Mary V Stremlow, USMCR (Ret)
Early Planning
On 5 November, the Commandant wrote to the commanding
officers of all Marine posts and procurement districts to prepare them
for the forthcoming MCWR and to ask for their best estimates of the
number of Women Reservists (WRs) needed to replace officers and men as
office clerks, radiomen, drivers, mechanics, messmen, commissary clerks,
etc. He made clear that, within the next year the manpower shortage
would be such that it would be incumbent on all concerned with the
national welfare to replace men by women in all possible positions.
Armed with the responses, planners tried to project
how many women possessing the required skills would be enlisted and put
to work immediately, and how many would need special training in such
fields as paymaster, quartermaster, and communicator. Based on their
calculations, quotas were established for recruiting and training
classes were scheduled.
Early estimates called for an initial target of 500
officers and 6,000 enlisted women within four months, and a total of
1,000 officers and 18,000 enlisted women by June 1944. The plan for rank
and grade distribution followed the same pattern as the men's with only
minor differences. For officers there would be one major and 35
captains, with the balance of the remaining commissioned officers being
first and second lieutenants.
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Col
Ruth Cheney Streeter, the first director of the Marine Corps Women's
Reserve, was photographed at Headquarters, Marine Corps,
Washington. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 12627
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The highest rank, fixed by Public Law 689, permitted
one lieutenant commander in the Women's Reserve of the U.S. Naval
Reserve, whose counterpart in the Marine Corps would be a major.
Eventually, the law was amended so that the senior woman in the Navy and
Coast Guard was promoted to captain and in the Marine Corps to
colonel.
The public, anticipating a catchy nickname for women
Marines much like the WACS, WAVES, and SPARS, bombarded Headquarters
with suggestions: MARS, Femarines, WAMS, Dainty Devil-Dogs, Glamarines,
Women's Leather-neck Aides, and even Sub-Marines. Surprisingly,
considering his open opposition to using women at all, General Holcomb
adamantly ruled out all cute names and acronyms and when answering yet
another reporter on the subject, stated his views very forcefully in an
article in the 27 March 1944 issue of Life magazine: "They are
Marines. They don't have a nickname and they don't need one. They get
their basic training in a Marine atmosphere at a Marine post. They
inherit the traditions of Marines. They are Marines"
Marine women of World War II were enormously proud to
belong to the only military service that shared its name with them and,
actually, insisted upon it. It happened that, in practice, they were
most often called Women Reservists, informally shortened to WRs. When
referred to as women Marines, or Marine women, the "w" was not
capitalized as it was later, after the passage of the Armed Forces
Integration Act of 1948, the law that gave women regular status in the
military. Then, Women Marines were best known as WMs. In fact, women
would have to wait 30 years before the gender designator would be
dropped and they at last would be simply Marines.
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