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"Heart
and Soul"



Site last updated
30 March 2008
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U. S. Women in Vietnam
Suggested Reading...
Although Pentagon sources estimate that 1,234
military women other than nurses served throughout the war, the exact number is
unknown. These women served in various positions, such as personnel,
administrative, logistics, communications, finance, intelligence, operations, advisors,
public information, military justice, flight controllers, and in a myriad of other duties.
Except for nurses in Korea, U.S. women had not served in a combat theater since
World War II.
U.S. Army
>Read more... |
The first Womens Army Corps (WAC) person to serve in Vietnam was Major Anne Marie
Doering (1962 to 1963). The daughter of a French engineer, she was born and raised
in Haiphong and spoke fluent Vietnamese. She was assigned to the Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) in Saigon as
a plans officer.
Originally, the Army fought sending women other than nurses into Vietnam. COL
Shirley R. Heinze waged a winning battle with the top brass. Finally, in January
1965, Major Kathleen I. Wilkes and Sergeant First Class Betty L. Adams arrived in Saigon as advisors to the
newly-formed
Vietnamese Womens Armed Forces Corps. Major Audrey Fisher was
the first WAC officer assigned to Headquarters U.S. Army Vietnam with
the Office of the Adjutant General.
In December 1965, six WAC stenographers
arrived in Saigon. In October 1966, First Sergeant Marion Crawford and
Sergeant First Class Betty Benson arrived as the advance party to
oversee the creation of a WAC detachment at Tan Son Nhut. The
rest of the unit cadre, Captain Peggy Ready, Staff Sergeant Edith
Efferson and SP5 Rhynell Stoabs, arrived in November 1966. Never
in the Army's history had there been a WAC detachment in a combat
zone.
On 12 January 1967, the first WAC enlisted arrived to serve at
Headquarters U.S. Army Vietnam (USARV), Tan Son Nhut. Six months
later, along with the entire USARV command, the detachment moved to
Long Binh, approximately 27 miles northeast of Saigon. By
mid-1967, the total number of WACs in Vietnam had leveled of at about
160 officers and enlisted personnel in Saigon and Long Binh.
Most enlisted women were between the ages of 19 and 23.
The majority of the WACs were stationed at Long Binh, assigned to Headquarters U.S. Army
Vietnam (USARV), the 1st Logistics Command, the U.S. Army Engineer Group Command, the 18th
Military Police Brigade, the 3rd Ordnance Brigade, the 1st Aviation Brigade, and
Headquarters Support Command, among others. Those stationed in Saigon were assigned
primarily to the Military Assistance Command Vietnam (MACV), Headquarters Area Command,
Civil Operation and Rural Development Support Agency and 519th Military Intelligence
Groups. A few officers served with the U.S. Army Central Support Command at Qui Nhon
and Cam Ranh Bay. By early 1970, more than 130 enlisted WACs, 30 Army
officers, and five Army warrant officers were serving throughout
Vietnam.
Major Sherian Cadoria received the Air Medal for meritorious service
for duty at Cam Ranh Bay. Captain Catherine Brajkovich was
decorated for heroism for alerting residents of a hotel in Saigon of a
fire in the building. Major Gloria Olson received the Air Medal
for her duties as a journalist and photographer at MACV. The WAC
Detachment received two unit service awards for its service in
Vietnam. No WACs died in Vietnam. One woman, Specialist
Five Sheron Green, received the Purple Heart -- the only WAC to
received that medal since World War II.
According to Maj. Gen. Jeanne Holm, USAF, in her book Women in the Military -- An
Unfinished Revolution, approximately 500 WACs served one-year tours in Vietnam,
many two or more tours. However, according to COL Bettie J. Morden, USA, in
The Womens Army Corps, 1945-1978, approximately 700 WACs served.
U.S. Air Force
>Read more...
The first women to received orders for Vietnam, aside from the nurses,
were female physical therapists and dietitians. They first
arrived in 1966 for duty at the Air Force Base at Cam Ranh Bay.
In June 1967, at the request of the Military Assistance Command Vietnam,
Lieutenant Colonel June H. Hilton, accompanied by five enlisted women,
landed at Tan Son Nhut for duty with Military Assistance Command Vietnam (MACV)
Headquarters. Soon,
other officers were on their way to the 7th Air Force Headquarters at Tan Son Nhut.
Though enlisted females were restricted to assignments in the Saigon area, some officers
were assigned to Cam Ranh Bay and Bien Hoa air bases.
It wasnt until 1970 that more enlisted women
were assigned to Tan Son Nhut. Air Force women stationed in Vietnam numbered 20
officers and 22 enlisted women at their peak strength in June 1971. It is difficult to
ascertain the number of women in the Air Force who served in Vietnam, since their numbers include those who
were stationed in Thailand. In all, between 500 and 600 Air Force
women served in Southeast
Asia.
U.S. Marine Corps
>Read more...
Until 1966, only about 60 women marines were permitted to serve overseas, and all but
seven of these were assigned to Hawaii. The first U.S. Marine Corps woman to
served in a combat theater, Sergeant Barbara J. Dulinsky, stepped off the plane at Bien Hoa
Air Force Base March 18, 1967. She was assigned 30 miles from there in
Saigon to the Marine Corps Personnel Section on the staff of the
Commander, Naval Forces, Vietnam.
Most of the female marines served with the Marine Liaison/Marine Corps
Personnel Section on the staff of the Commander, Naval Forces, Vietnam, but
several others worked for the MACV J-3, J-5, SGS and the Adjutant General's
Office. On occasion, duty took them to the field to conduct
on-the-spot audits of the service records of the widely scattered men in the
north.
Women marines in Vietnam normally numbered eight or 10 enlisted women
and one or two officers at any one time for a total of 28 enlisted women
and eight officers between 1967 and 1973.
U.S. Navy
>Read more...
Between 1967 and 1973, eight Navy line officers served in Vietnam.
Most were assigned to the naval staff in Saigon, and one reported to the
Naval Support Activity in Cam Ranh Bay. No enlisted Navy women
served in Vietnam.
The first
woman Navy officer, Lieutenant Elizabeth G. Wylie, arrived in Saigon in
June 1967 with assignment to the staff of the Commander, Naval Forces,
Command Information Center. No more than one or two officers were in Vietnam at any one
time. Those in the non-nursing field who served aboard ships were
not considered as being in-country.
Commander Elizabeth Barrett was the highest ranking woman naval line
officer to serve in Vietnam and the first to hold a command in a combat
zone. She arrived in Saigon in January 1972 and in November became
the commanding officer of 450 enlisted men in the Naval Advisory Group,
a position she held until she left Vietnam in March 1973.
On 8 September 1972, Personnelman Third Class Peggy Sue Griffith
reported aboard the USS Sanctuary, the first of a group of 32 enlisted
women and two women officers, setting off on uncharted seas. These
women were now the U.S. Navy's first sea-going women sailors, expected
to perform the same duties as their male shipmates.
Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Ann Kerr served primarily as an administrative
assistant, with significant additional watchstanding duties both in port
and at sea. Ensign Rosemary Nelson of the Supply Corps, was
responsible for the officers' wardroom mess (dining room) and also stood
watched in port.
Army Medical Specialist Corps
>Read more...
The first member of the Army
Medical Specialist Corps to serve in Vietnam was a physical therapist
who volunteered for Vietnam. Major Barbara Gray was assigned to
the 17th Field Hospital, Saigon, March 1966.
Army physical therapists were assigned to the II, III, and IV combat
tactical zones at the 8th (Nha Trang), and 3rd and 17th (Saigon) Field
Hospitals; the 12th (Cu Chi), 24th (Long Binh), 29th (Can Tho), 36th (Vung
Tau), 67th (Qui Nhon), 71st (Pleiku), 85th (Qui Nhon), 93rd (Long Binh),
and 95th (Da Nang) Evacuation Hospitals; 3rd Surgical Hospital (Dong
Tam); the 6th Convalescent Center (Cam Ranh Bay); and MACV Headquarters.
One Army occupational therapist was assigned in Vietnam in 1971.
Her mission was to strengthen rehabilitation programs in the Army drug
control treatment facilities and to discuss occupational therapy support
and training for the Vietnamese civilian population.
In May 1966, at the request of the MACV Surgeon, the first two Army
Medical Specialist Corps dietitians, one a woman, arrived at Tan Son
Nhut. Major Patricia Accountius was originally assigned to the 3rd
Field Hospital in Saigon, but was soon given the additional post of
dietary consultant for the 44th Medical Brigade, 1st Logistical Command.
A total of 20 female Army dietitians served in Vietnam. While Army
physical therapists were assigned to specific hospitals, dietitians were
assigned to the Medical Group headquarters in each combat tactical
zone. Since road transportation was unreliable and dangerous, they
usually traveled by helicopter.
Between March 1966 and February 1973, 33 female Army physical therapists
served in South Vietnam. The last Army dietitian and physical
therapist to serve in Vietnam, both women, left Saigon for home in
February 1973.
Stand Down
The WAC Detachment at Long Binh was closed 21 September 1972, and the
cadre moved to Saigon. By the end of December, two WAC officers
and 17 enlisted women remained in Saigon. By the end of March
1973, all the WACs had left Vietnam.
Other services had also sent most of their women out
of the country. A
few Air Force and Army women returned later to help in Operation Baby
Lift in 1975.
Awards given to military women in Vietnam include the Legion of Merit,
Bronze Star Medal, Purple Heart, Meritorious Service Medal, Air Medal
(both for aerial combat missions and meritorious achievement), Joint
Service Commendation Medal, and Army Commendation Medal for heroism.
 | Pallas Athena |
Pallas Athena, Greek goddess of
war, known to the Romans as Minerva, goddess of wisdom, according to ancient myth, sprang
into life, fully armed, from the head of Zeus, ruler of the gods. Her role was a
dual one. Goddess of storms and of battle, she also instructed mankind in the arts
and practical activities of daily life. She presided in war only to lead on to
victory and through victory to peace, prosperity and progress.
 | WAC
Leadership
WAC Detachment, Special Troops, HQ USARV (Oct
1966-1972)
Commanders, First Sergeants, and Administrative NCOs
CPT Peggy E. Ready
1SG Marion C. Crawford
Field First (Admin NCO): SFC Betty J. Benson
CPT Joanne P.
Murphy
1SG Marion C. Crawford
Field First (Admin NCO): SFC Betty J. Benson
CPT Nancy J.
Jurgevich
1SG Katherine E. Herney (deceased)
Admin NCO: SFC Margaret E. Gold
CPT Shirley M.
Ohta
1SG Mary E. Manning (deceased)
Field First (Admin NCO): Bernice A. Myhrwold
CPT Marjorie K. Johnson
1SG Eleanor M. Strudas (deceased) / 1SG Mildred E. Duncan
Admin NCO: SSG Mary C. Aleshire
CPT Constance C. Seidemann
1SG Mildred E. Duncan
Admin NCO: SSG Casey Hickok
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