

In Focus: Jewish Women in the Military
WAVES
A boot camp for WAVES was established at Hunter College in New
York City. Basic training lasted form six to eight weeks. Although
women were expected to meet the same high standards of professionalism
as men, often with similar responsibilities, there were several
restrictions and limitations placed on their duties: Women were not
permitted to serve at sea or outside the continental United States.
Women were also not allowed to exercise military command over men and
could not obtain a rank beyond lieutenant commander.
Nevertheless, in the ensuing month thousands of women joined the WAVES
and became an integral part of the Navy. The WAVES performed nearly every
conceivable type of duty at over 500 naval shore establishments. By 1944,
this enabled enough officers and men to crew a fleet of 10 battleships, 10
aircraft carriers, 28 cruisers and 50 destroyers—and thus enabled the
American Navy to emerge victorious in the Pacific Theatre of operations.
How to Cite This Page
For a bibliography:
Jewish Women's Archive. "JWA - NavyWAVES." <http://jwa.org/discover/infocus/military/navy/waves.html>.
For a footnote:
Jewish Women's Archive, "JWA - NavyWAVES," <http://jwa.org/discover/infocus/military/navy/waves.html>.
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