[Congressional Bills 118th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 868 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
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118th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. RES. 868
Acknowledging and commemorating the women who served the Navy in the
Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service during World War II.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
September 25, 2024
Ms. Warren (for herself, Mrs. Blackburn, Mr. Tillis, Mr. Braun, Mr.
Durbin, Mr. Ossoff, Mr. Van Hollen, Mr. Wyden, and Mr. Cruz) submitted
the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Armed
Services
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Acknowledging and commemorating the women who served the Navy in the
Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service during World War II.
Whereas President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the Women Accepted for
Volunteer Emergency Service (referred to in this preamble as ``WAVES'')
on July 30, 1942, when he signed the Act of July 30, 1942 (56 Stat. 730,
chapter 538), into law;
Whereas, despite social stigmas and public opinion averse to women in uniform,
women applied for WAVES in such numbers that enrollment ceilings were
reached within the first several years;
Whereas, while women had served in the enlisted ranks of the Navy in a variety
of positions during World War I, legislation passed after World War I
limited women to service as nurses until the creation of the WAVES;
Whereas, during World War II, women in the United States were recruited into the
Armed Forces to perform military assignments so that men could be freed
for combat duties;
Whereas, under the direction of Lieutenant Commander (later Captain) Mildred
Helen McAfee, the WAVES peaked in 1945 at nearly 80,000 officers and
enlisted personnel, or approximately 2.5 percent of the wartime strength
of the Navy and was composed of women from urban and rural communities
across many socioeconomic backgrounds;
Whereas the annual report of the Secretary of the Navy for fiscal year 1945
stated that there were 8,475 officers and 73,816 enlisted WAVES serving
in the spring of 1945;
Whereas the WAVES worked at large and small naval commands from Florida to
Washington and from California to Rhode Island, as well as overseas;
Whereas the numerous and diverse contributions of the WAVES ranged from yeoman,
chauffeur, and baker to pharmacist, artist, aircraft mechanic, and
dental hygienist;
Whereas, during World War II, the WAVES served as training instructors
throughout the United States for newly recruited WAVES as well as
thousands of aspiring male naval aviators, gunners, and navigators
destined for combat units;
Whereas the WAVES who served in naval aviation taught instrument flying,
aircraft recognition, celestial navigation, aircraft gunnery, radio,
radar, air combat information, and air fighter administration but were
not allowed to be pilots;
Whereas the WAVES served the Navy in such numbers that, according to a Navy
estimate, enough men were freed for combat duty to crew the ships of 4
major task forces, each including a battleship, 2 large aircraft
carriers, 2 heavy cruisers, 4 light cruisers, and 15 destroyers;
Whereas, at the end of World War II, Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal
stated that members of the WAVES ``have exceeded performance of men in
certain types of work, and the Navy Department considers it to be very
desirable that these important services rendered by women during the war
should likewise be available in postwar years ahead'';
Whereas, by the end of World War II, more than 400,000 women had served the
United States in military capacities, with every Navy aviator who
entered combat having received some part of his training from a member
of the WAVES;
Whereas the WAVES, despite their merit and the recognized value and importance
of their contributions to the war effort, were not given status equal to
their male counterparts, and struggled for years to receive the
appreciation of Congress and the people of the United States;
Whereas the WAVES helped to catalyze the social, demographic, and economic
evolutions that occurred in the 1960s and 1970s and continue to this
day; and
Whereas the pioneering women who served in the WAVES are owed a great debt of
gratitude for their service to the United States: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Senate--
(1) honors the women who served the Navy in the Women
Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Service (referred to in this
resolution as ``WAVES'') during World War II;
(2) commends the WAVES who, through a sense of duty and
willingness to defy stereotypes and social pressures, performed
military assignments to aid the war effort, with the result
that men were freed for combat duties; and
(3) recognizes that the WAVES, by serving with diligence
and merit, not only opened up opportunities for women that had
previously been reserved for men, but also contributed vitally
to the victory of the United States and the Allies in World War
II.
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