Long before "You Go, Girl!" was popular, these women just went ahead and .... well .... went.
They did it because they felt a call to serve. The did it because they simply loved to fly. They did for reasons obvious and not.
But they did it.
I believe deeply that we owe these women a debt of gratitude and they deserve the honors they've only now gotten. I recall asking my parents, when I was just a kid and first heard of them, why we didn't know more about them. I found out about them when a girl in the neighborhood took some time to find out so she could "play Army" with the rest of us and not have to be a nurse. (yeah, we played "Army" back then .... WWII based)
The WASPs. Women Airforce Service Pilots.
They ferried the heavy duty hardware overseas so the guys could fly them into battle. Crossing the North Atlantic in a single engined fighter with no serious navigational equipment, however, was a pretty heroic act, too.
If you went to flight school late in the war, there's a good chance one of these women was your instructor.
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/slideshow/ALeqM5iMdYRUedjmyrD-nnbULYjPI5ALswD9EC3DNG0?index=0Please read the full story at the link.
Female WWII aviators honored with gold medal
By KIMBERLY HEFLING (AP) – 4 hours ago
WASHINGTON — They flew planes during World War II but weren't considered real military pilots. No flags were draped over their coffins when they died on duty. And when their service ended, they had to pay their own bus fare home.
These aviators — all women — got long-overdue recognition on Wednesday. They received the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian honor given by Congress, in a ceremony on Capitol Hill.
About 200 women who served as Women Airforce Service Pilots, or WASPs, were on hand to receive the award. Now mostly in their late 80s and early 90s, some came in wheelchairs, many sported dark blue uniforms, and one, June Bent of Westboro, Mass., clutched a framed photograph of a comrade who had died.
As a military band played "The Star-Spangled Banner," one of the women who had been sitting in a wheelchair stood up and saluted through the entire song as a relative gently supported her back.
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