Overdue Recognition for Woman AF Pilot
WII Women Air Force Service Pilot (WASP) 1st Lt. Elaine Harmon didn’t join the military for recognition but she certainly earned it. Harmon was one of the 1,074 women pilots who flew non-combat missions in the U.S. in order to free their male counterparts for overseas combat missions.
She knew the WASPS were trailblazers. “It was a man’s world, but we were doing what was needed for the war effort,” Harmon said. “My mother was dead set against it.”
“The Army Air Corps kept us a secret. They didn’t want the enemy to know the country was so desperate for pilots that they were hiring women,” said 92 year-old Harmon.
Harmon, who receives her health care at the Washington DC VA Medical Center (DCVAMC) said the WASPS were not granted Veteran status until 1977 even though they performed vital duties such as ferrying aircraft from the factories to military bases, towing targets for gunnery practice, flying cargo and serving as flight instructors. They were considered civilians. If a WASP was killed while serving, she did not receive a military funeral and her family had to incur the expense of bringing their daughters’ remains home.
When the WASPS were deactivated, their records were locked away for 30 years. When the Air Force Academy began admitting females into the pilot training program in 1976, the media published stories about how the new young female cadets who would soon be the “first female Air Force pilots”. The WASPS knew they had to come together to set the record straight. They petitioned Congress and the injustices were corrected when WASPS were awarded Veterans’ benefits in 1977.
Although slow in coming, the women are getting the recognition they deserve. In 2009, President Obama signed a bill into law awarding the Congressional Gold Medal to the WASPS.
All the efforts for recognition were worth it, says Harmon. “We just wanted to make sure these women for forgotten.”
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Short URL: http://www.veteranstoday.com/?p=111570
Posted by Veterans Today on Jun 6 2011, With 0 Reads, Filed under Vet News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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It’s not a surprise to me. There were a lot of things women did during WWII and other wars that aren’t revealed to the public. Instead of congratulating women for stepping forward, there always seems to be shame that the country to have to rely on women. Women have done extraordinary things that have never been recognized. The world is so busy trying to put women into a box, they don’t realize there is no box for anyone. All there is is the individual and their gifts to the world. When we stop putting people into some textbook character, we’ll be able to appreciate everyone’s gifts.
This is an outrage that families had to pay to have their dead daugthers remains returned. The butt heads who did this should be dug up to have their heads chopped off and then reburied. And they need to be retroactively dishonorably discharged from the service.
It would give the butt heads in their now something to consider when thinking of pulling a similar scam on American service people today. This is why I have long felt that you need monitors in the right places to spot stuff like this when it is happening and not let the jerks do their classification hustle to take advantage of families like this.