Black Hawk County

Dolores A. Schaack

Mrs. Burdette

 

 

Dolores A. Schaack, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John N. Schaack, 117 High street, is the first of the Waterloo girls who enlisted in the Waves to complete the basic training.  Miss Schaack enlisted in November, was sent to Oklahoma A. & M. college at Stillwater to take her basic training Feb. 11, and graduated March 12 with the rating of yeoman third class.  She has been home on a five-day leave and will go to Washington, D.C., Sunday to report to the vice chief of naval operations.

Source:  The Courier, Waterloo, IA – March 19, 1943

Arriving Wednesday for a 10-day visit wit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John N. Schaack, 117 High street, was Miss Dolores A. Schaack,yeoman third class. Miss Schaack was inducted in to the Waves six months ago, and following a month's basic training in Stillwater, Okla., she was assigned to Washington, D.C. She will return there following her leave. She has been working for the chief of naval operations. She was an employee in the offices of the Rath Packing company prior to her induction into the navy.

Source:  The Courier, Waterloo, IA – August 19, 1943 (photo included)

Glenn C. Burdett and his bride, the former Dolores A. Schaack of Waterloo, Ia., emerged from St. Gabriel's Catholic Church in Washington, D.C., after their marriage ceremony. Both the bride and groom are serving in the Navy. Mrs. Burdett is a WAVE and the groom is navy yeoman second class.

Source: The Jackson Sun, July 16, 1944 (bride/groom photo included)

Delores A. Schaack Burdette, Wave, has been promoted from yeoman second class to specialist yeoman first class, according to word received by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John N. Schaack, 117 High street. She is with a communications unit in Washington, D.C. Her husband, Glen Burdette, yeoman second class, is somewhere on the west coast awaiting sea duty.

Source: The Courier, Waterloo, IA - December 17, 1944 (photo included)

Waterloo 'code girl,' breaks silence on WWII service before turning 100

In the space of about a year, Delores Schaack Burdett went from working in the office of The Rath Packing Co. to helping turn the tide of the battle in the Pacific in World War II.

But she couldn’t talk about what she did for decades.

A 1938 graduate of East High School who grew up on High Street near the school, she joined the U.S Navy WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service) and was part of a top-secret code-breaking unit.

Burdett, who now lives in Florida, was a member of the United States Naval Communication Intelligence Organization, based in Washington, D.C. She was a Navy intelligence communications specialist.

That was nearly 80 years ago. She turns 100 on Jan. 18.

“We decoded the Japanese messages. It was really quite an experience,” Burdett said from New Smyrna Beach, Fla., where she lives.

“Our fleet intercepted the messages, and when they came to us, we decoded them,” Burdett said. On one occasion, she said, “I had gotten a message and it was telling about how the Japanese were planning to attack one of the islands. We got the message transcribed and out to our fleet and they destroyed that (Japanese) fleet.

“But we couldn’t discuss anything about our work — only within the walls of that room,” she said. ”It was that secret.”

It was so secret, Burdett said, she couldn’t even discuss an award she received for her work after the war.

The Navy awarded the Naval Communication Intelligence Organization, including Burdett, a unit commendation for their work. But the notification letter she received about the award said, “It is directed that, because of the nature of the services performed by this unit, no publicity be given to your receipt of this award.”

“I couldn’t tell my husband — nobody,” she said. “I packed it away in the bank. It was there for 50 years, and after 50 years they said we could talk about it.”

And her husband, Glenn, originally from Tennessee, was a career Navy man. “All he knew was, I was in communications. I couldn’t tell him any more.”

They married during the war, having been introduced through a mutual acquaintance in Washington.

Of their first date, she said, “We went out that night and spent the whole evening discussing how we were against wartime marriages. And then, we got married!”

Glenn subsequently served in the Philippines during the war. The couple lived in Waterloo for a time after the war. Glenn returned to the Navy and served 26 years, through Korea and Vietnam, and 25 years with the U.S. General Services Administration in Washington, before he retired and they moved to Florida. They were married 70 years, with two children and three grandchildren, and he died in 2014 at age 92. She misses him terribly.

She also remembers an office co-worker from Rath, Bob Manske, who also joined the Navy and was killed on the USS Arizona in the Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that plunged the U.S. into the war. She enlisted in the WAVES shortly thereafter.

“Now that I’m going to be 100 years old, I look back on it, and I’ve had quite a life, and that was an experience not many people had.”

In 2017, her unit received some long-overdue recognition with the publication of a New York Times bestselling book, “Code Girls: The Untold Story of the Amercan Women Code Breakers of World War II,” by Liza Mundy. Since then, she’s talked more about her service and had articles in the local Florida papers.

“It’s ironic,” she said. “I was at the beauty shop, and one of the fellas that works there said, ‘Can you believe that’s the woman who kept her mouth shut for 50 years?’ But that’s what we did. We knew how important it was.”

In November 1945, after she’d left the Navy, she received a letter from U.S. Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal underscoring the importance of her work.

“I want the Navy’s pride in you, which it is my privilege to express, to reach into your civilian life and remain with you always,” she said.

It has, and it will.

She still has her Navy unit commendation pin, stored carefully away. Her children know where to find it.

It will be pinned on her and laid to rest with her upon her passing.

Siource: Waterloo Courier - 20 December 2020 (photo included)