Anne Greene here. I’ll be doing a series of postings
in the next few months on the many important roles women played during World
War II. Also today I have a BOOK GIVE-AWAY,
so please leave a comment for a chance to win.

This month I’m giving an autographed copy
of my historical romance, MARRIAGE BY
ARRANGEMENT, to a person who leaves a comment. I pick a commenter’s name
from a hat. So tell me, Did you have a female
relative, Grand-mother, aunt, cousin, third cousin twice removed who served in
the military during World War II? Leave a comment even if you didn’t. A
donut dolly, a victory garden grower, or a bond seller all filled needed niches
during the war. These deserve comments as well.
BIO: ANNE GREENE delights in writing about
alpha heroes who aren’t afraid to fall on their knees in prayer, and about
gutsy heroines. She and her hero husband, Army Special Forces Colonel Larry
Greene, visited Scotland, resulting in her award-winning Scottish historicals, Masquerade Marriage and Marriage By Arrangement. Moody Press
published her first book, Trail of Tears,
an American historical. A Texas
Christmas Mystery also won awards. Elk Lake Publishing contracted two
series. Her Women of Courage Series spotlights
heroic women of World War II. The first book of the second series, Holly Garden, PI, Red Is For Rookie, releases
in 2015. Anne makes her home in
McKinney, Texas. Two of her four children live nearby. Tim LaHaye led her to
the Lord when she was twenty-one, and Chuck Swindoll is her Pastor. Her highest
hope is that her stories transport the reader to an awesome new world and touch
hearts to seek a deeper spiritual relationship with the Lord Jesus. To learn
more of Anne, visit her at http://www.AnneGreeneAuthor.com. She writes a novel teaching class on her blog
www.anneswritingupdates.blogspot.com
In 1942, the United States faced a severe shortage
of pilots. President Roosevelt decided to train
women to fly military aircraft so male pilots could be released for combat
overseas. Congress named the females Women Airforce Service Pilots – WASP. The ladies surprised US Army Air
Force Command General, Hap Arnold, who wasn’t sure “A slip of a girl could
fight the controls of a B-17 in heavy weather.”
More than 1,100 lady civilian volunteers
flew every type of military aircraft including the B-26 and B-29 bombers as
part of the WASP program. They tested
overhauled crippled fighter planes, they towed
targets to give ground and air gunners training to shoot with live
ammunition, and they ferried untested
planes from factories to military bases across the country. The WASP expected
to become a branch of the military. Congress never passed that bill.
WASPS weren’t granted military status until
the 1970s. And now 65 years after their service, President Obama signed a bill
awarding the WASP the Congressional Gold Medal.
The women who flew had moxie and an
adventurous gene. In that 1940-1944 time frame, most people had never been aboard a plane much less flown one. Short,
tall, slim, wide, women came to the WASP program knowing how to fly. Since
flying lessons were expensive, most women came from wealthy families. The
military trained male pilots from scratch, but not the female civilian
volunteers.
Thirty-eight
WASPs lost their lives serving their country.
Jacqueline Cochran was the driving force
and head of the WASP program. Jacqueline was a pioneering aviator. But the WASP
program was threatened from the start and had to fight to remain in effect.
Many people found the program unacceptable. Some found it hard to swallow that
women could release men for combat duty and place themselves in danger. And as
the war wound to an end, these voices grew louder.
But in 1944 Commander Arnold said, “Let the
record stand that women can fly as well as men, and in some cases better.”

Yet, as the war seemed to draw to a close
in the summer of 1944, flight training programs closed. Instructors didn’t want
to lose their jobs to women, so they lobbied for the WASPs jobs saying “It’s
unacceptable for women to replace men.” Men said they were heads of families and sole
providers and as such needed the jobs more than women.
My book, ANGEL WITH STEEL WINGS, about WASPs releases soon. In it you’ll discover a tumultuous
romance, live though many of the adventures real American women experienced,
and find the answer to what happened to the WASPs. I hold WASPs in extremely high regard!
In coming months I’ll also be posting about the WAC, the NURSE, the WAVE, and the
SPY, all brave American women who
served America during the war to end all wars. So make a note to visit with me
at Heroes, Heroines, and History
every 14th day of every month. Some months I’ll have chances for give-aways to the lovely people who leave
comments.

