Group of Girls Who Have Enlisted in WAVES.Front Row, left to right -- Irene Tompkins, Jeanne Schleich, and Caroline White-Bear. |
Above are six of the 15 young women, sworn into the WAVES Thursday by Lieut. William Black of Chicago, U.S.N. They comprise the second group to join the WAVES since the campaign opened, with headquarters at the Hotel Blackhawk. It is expected that the number of enlistees from this area will be more than 100.
Those sworn in yesterday are:
Aurelia Geraldine Atkinson, 1802 West Third street, Davenport;
Josephine Aldia DeGeeter, 1842 Fifteenth street, Moline;
Ann Catherine Edwards, 105 Main street, Davenport;
Mariam Helen Haglund, 2416 Harrison street, Davenport;
Juanita Johnson, Lorraine Johnson, Janet Esther Lind, and Bernadette Ellen Mungen, Clinton, Ia.
Muriel Jean Randall, 1018 Pershing avenue, Davenport;
Jeanne Marie Schleich, 2412 Fifteenth avenue, Moline;
Bernadine Lois Sellers, 1509 ½ Sixth avenue, Moline;
June Elizabeth Tompkins, route No. 1, East Moline;
Elsie Marie Victor, 516 Eighteenth and one-half avenue, Rock Island;
Maurine Caroline Wacker, 1329 Ripley street, Davenport;
Carolyn White-Bear, 1505 Pershing avenue, Davenport.
Miss White-Bear is an Indian, who attended the State Teachers college in Minot, N.D., and is now employed at the Rock Island arsenal.
In addition to those announced yesterday, others who have joined the WAVES during the campaign are:
Margaret Emma James, 217 West Fourth street, Davenport;
Maxine and Nadean Keeffer, 1211 Bridge avenue, Davenport;
Kathryn Lucinda Nelson, 3133 Eleventh street, Rock Island;
Helen Katharine Vaughn, 2917 Boies avenue, Davenport.
Source: The Daily Times, Davenport, Iowa, July 23, 1943 (group photograph included)
Seaman Second Class Carolyn White-Bear, Arikara tribe, first full blooded Indian to be graduated from the U.S. naval training school in New York, shows her identification card to a shore patrolman.
Source: Nashua Reporter, October 27, 1943 (photo included)