Plain English summary not yet available
The full original text is available below. Check back soon as we process this bill.
III
117TH CONGRESS
1ST SESSION
S. RES. 249
Honoring women in the United States for their service in World War II
and recognizing the role of Representative Edith Nourse Rogers in estab-
lishing the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps and the Women’s Army
Corps.
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
MAY 27, 2021
Ms. DUCKWORTH (for herself, Mr. MORAN, Mr. DURBIN, Mr. COTTON, Ms.
ERNST, and Ms. HIRONO) submitted the following resolution; which was
referred to the Committee on Armed Services
RESOLUTION
Honoring women in the United States for their service in
World War II and recognizing the role of Representative
Edith Nourse Rogers in establishing the Women’s Army
Auxiliary Corps and the Women’s Army Corps.
Whereas during World War II (referred to in this preamble
as the ‘‘War’’), despite social stigmas against women
serving in uniform, women in the United States served in
the Armed Forces in vast numbers;
Whereas Congresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachu-
setts introduced legislation to create the Women’s Army
Auxiliary Corps (referred to in this preamble as the
‘‘WAAC’’) in May 1941, which was signed into law by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt on May 15, 1942;
VerDate Sep 11 2014
21:52 May 28, 2021
Jkt 019200
PO 00000
Frm 00001
Fmt 6652
Sfmt 6300
E:\BILLS\SR249.IS
SR249
pbinns on DSKJLVW7X2PROD with BILLS
2
•SRES 249 IS
Whereas the first director of the WAAC, Oveta Culp Hobby,
was sworn in on May 16, 1942, and shortly thereafter
began the process of recruiting women to join the WAAC,
which garnered over 35,000 applications for an antici-
pated 1,000 available positions;
Whereas the first recruits for the newly created WAAC ar-
rived at the first training center on July 20, 1942, with
125 enlisted women and 440 officer candidates, 40 of
whom were Black;
Whereas, during the War, women serving in the Army in the
WAAC and the Women’s Army Corps (referred to in this
preamble as the ‘‘WAC’’) performed duties traditionally
performed by men;
Whereas, in unspoken recognition of the value of their serv-
ices, the Army removed the auxiliary status of the WAAC
units in 1943, which gave women all of the rank, privi-
leges, and benefits of male soldiers;
Whereas almost 1⁄2 of the members of the WAC during the
War served in the Army Air Forces as officers and en-
listed personnel, with duties including radio operator,
photographer, and flight clerk;
Whereas 7,315 of those members of the Army Air Forces
WAC were serving overseas in all theaters of the War in
January 1945;
Whereas, at the end of the War, 657 women were honored
for their service in the WAAC and the WAC, receiving
medals and citations, including the Distinguished Service
Medal, the Legion of Merit, the Air Medal, the Soldiers’
Medal for heroic action, the Purple Heart, and the
Bronze Star;
VerDate Sep 11 2014
21:52 May 28, 2021
Jkt 019200
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 6652
Sfmt 6300
E:\BILLS\SR249.IS
SR249
pbinns on DSKJLVW7X2PROD with BILLS
3
•SRES 249 IS
Whereas, in 1946, the Army requested that Congress estab-
lish the WAC as a permanent part of the Army, perhaps
the single greatest indication of the value of women in
the Army to the effort of the United States in the War;
Whereas, during the War, women served with the Army Air
Forces in the Women’s Auxiliary Ferrying Squadron, the
Women’s Flying Training Detachment, and the Women
Air Force Service Pilots (referred to in this preamble as
‘‘WASPs’’);
Whereas women serving with the Army Air Forces—
(1) ferried planes from factories to airfields;
(2) performed test flights of repaired aircraft towed
targets used in live gunnery practice; and
(3) performed a variety of other duties traditionally
performed by men;
Whereas women pilots flew more than 70 types of military
aircraft, from open-cockpit primary trainers to P–51
Mustangs, B–26 Marauders, and B–29 Superfortresses;
Whereas, from September 10, 1942, to December 20, 1944,
1,074 WASPs flew an aggregate 60,000,000 miles in
wartime service;
Whereas, although WASPs were promised military classifica-
tion, they were classified as civilians, and the 38 WASPs
who died in the line of duty were regrettably buried with-
out military honors;
Whereas WASPs did not receive official status as military
veterans until March 1979, when WASP units were for-
mally recognized as components of the Air Force;
Whereas, during the War, women in the Navy served in the
Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (re-
ferred to in this preamble as ‘‘WAVES’’);
VerDate Sep 11 2014
21:52 May 28, 2021
Jkt 019200
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 6652
Sfmt 6300
E:\BILLS\SR249.IS
SR249
pbinns on DSKJLVW7X2PROD with BILLS
4
•SRES 249 IS
Whereas, approximately 90,000 WAVES served the Navy in
a variety of capacities and in such numbers that, accord-
ing to a Navy estimate, enough sailors were freed for
combat duty to crew the ships of 4 major task forces,
each including a battleship, 2 large aircraft carriers, 2
heavy cruisers, 4 light cruisers, and 15 destroyers;
Whereas WAVES who served in naval aviation taught instru-
ment flying, aircraft recognition, celestial navigation, air-
craft gunnery, radio, radar, air combat information, and
air fighter administration, but were not allowed to be pi-
lots;
Whereas, at the end of the War, Secretary of the Navy
James Forrestal stated that members of the WAVES
‘‘have exceeded performance of men in certain types of
work, and the Navy Department considers it to be very
desirable that these important services rendered by
women during the war should likewise be available in
postwar years ahead’’;
Whereas, during the War, women served in the Marine Corps
Women’s Reserve;
Whereas more than 23,000 women served at shore establish-
ments of the Marine Corps, and by the end of the War,
85 percent of the enlisted personnel assigned to Head-
quarters Marine Corps were women;
Whereas, during the War, women were assigned to over 200
different specialties in the Marine Corps and, by per-
forming those duties, freed other Marines for active duty
to fight;
Whereas, during the War, women served in the Coast Guard
Women’s Reserve (referred to in this preamble as
‘‘SPARs’’);
VerDate Sep 11 2014
21:52 May 28, 2021
Jkt 019200
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 6652
Sfmt 6300
E:\BILLS\SR249.IS
SR249
pbinns on DSKJLVW7X2PROD with BILLS
5
•SRES 249 IS
Whereas more than 10,000 women volunteered for service
with the Coast Guard during the period from 1942
through 1946, and when the Coast Guard was at the
peak of its strength during the War, 1 out of every 16
members of the Coast Guard was a SPAR;
Whereas the SPARs who attended the Coast Guard Academy
were the first women in the United States to attend a
military academy;
Whereas, by the end of the War, more than 400,000 women
had served the United States in military capacities;
Whereas those women who served, despite their merit and the
recognized value and importance of their contributions to
the effort of the United States during the War—
(1) were not given status equal to their male coun-
terparts; and
(2) struggled for years to receive the appreciation of
Congress and the people of the United States;
Whereas those women helped to catalyze the social, demo-
graphic, and economic evolutions that occurred after the
War and that continue to this day; and
Whereas those pioneering women are owed a great debt of
gratitude for their service to the United States: Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Senate—
1
(1) honors the women who served the United
2
States in military capacities during World War II;
3
(2) commends those women who, through a
4
sense of duty and willingness to defy stereotypes and
5
social pressures, performed military assignments to
6
VerDate Sep 11 2014
21:52 May 28, 2021
Jkt 019200
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 6652
Sfmt 6201
E:\BILLS\SR249.IS
SR249
pbinns on DSKJLVW7X2PROD with BILLS
6
•SRES 249 IS
aid the war effort, allowing for more combat capac-
1
ity;
2
(3) recognizes that those women, by serving
3
with diligence and merit, not only opened up oppor-
4
tunities for women that had previously been reserved
5
for men, but also contributed vitally to the victory
6
of the United States and the Allies in World War II;
7
and
8
(4) honors the contributions of Congresswoman
9
Edith Nourse Rogers and her fellow Members of
10
Congress who supported the establishment of the
11
Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps and the Women’s
12
Army Corps.
13
Æ
VerDate Sep 11 2014
21:52 May 28, 2021
Jkt 019200
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 6652
Sfmt 6301
E:\BILLS\SR249.IS
SR249
pbinns on DSKJLVW7X2PROD with BILLS