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<text id=93HT0282>
<title>
1940s: Women:Hobby's Army
</title>
<history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1940s Highlights</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TIME Magazine
January 17, 1944
Army & Navy
Women: Hobby's Army
</hdr>
<body>
<p> In England this week, the U.S. Women's Army Corps had the
pleasantly apprehensive experience of being inspected by the
Corps' Commanding Officer. Trim Colonel Oveta Culp Hobby, head
woman of the WACs, found everything in order.
</p>
<p> She saw erect, well-dressed girls drawn up for parade. In
the clammy English dawn, she saw WAC's in maroon bathrobes (with
boy friends' unit insignia sewn on their sleeves) dashing from
tin barracks and scuttling across the mud--heading for the
"ablution hut" to start the day with a shivery wash-up.
</p>
<p> There was not much glamor in it, Hobby's army had found
out. Living quarters were either huts heated by a single stove,
or some drafty English country house. Only a few hundred WACs
working in London were lucky enough to live in greater comfort.
The pay was low. The hours were long. Discipline was strict.
Sometimes there were bombings.
</p>
<p> G.I. Jane. By last week 1,170 WACs dubbed "G.I. Janes" in
the European Theater of Operations were undergoing these rigors.
Most of them were at General Dwight Eisenhower's headquarters
and Eighth Air Force stations, where they plotted, teleprinted,
operated switchboards, made maps, assessed combat films,
"sweated out" missions in flight control rooms.
</p>
<p> With dignity and firm morale, they had survived
difficulties due to early mistakes in organization and many
other unforeseen obstacles. They had caught on with a speed which
amazed U.S. and British officers. They had distinguished
themselves as nice-looking, hard-working, cheerful girls.
Commanding officers recognized their work by pleading for more
of them.
</p>
<p> They managed to have some fun; they took in the sights, had
more dates than they had ever had in their lives. During
occasional air raids, some achieved the WAC ambition: to bolt
from barracks, crouch in a slit trench and duck back to bed at
the "all clear" without really waking up. Instead of, "What's
cooking?" they said, "Nervous in the service?"
</p>
<p> From three whole WAC battalions only three Janes had gone
A.W.O.L. Chief gripe was "Why should we stay behind when the
boys open the second front?"
</p>
<p> Chief wonderment was over the tales from home that WAC
recruiting had fallen down. They favored conscription for women
They asked, "What's the matter with them? Don't they want to
live?"
</p>
<p> The Colonel indeed had reason to be proud of her overseas
troops, 3,002 of them were serving in Africa, Egypt, New
Caledonia, India.
</p>
<p> Like G.I. Joe. At home the women in Hobby's army had turned
in an equally good record. The Army has anticipated emotional
outbursts, resentment at having to take orders, squawks about
living in barracks, feuds and cliques and general troubles with
the unpredictable (to men) nature of women. Now at Fort Des
Moines, oldest of the three training centers, officers were quick
to say that the Army's fears were generally groundless.
</p>
<p> Women had turned out to be more awed than men by the
military structure. Colonel Frank U. McCoskrie, who
occasionally inspected a line-up, asking questions, once snapped
at a WAC recruit: "Who is the commandant?" Back came the answer,
"Colonel Frank U. McCoskrie." To the next WAC he said: "What's
in that barracks bag?" Gulped the stiff-legged little private:
"Colonel Frank U. McCoskrie." But except for a greater respect
for authority and a greater capacity for bustling industry, they
were not much different from G.I. Joes. In the evenings, off
duty, they talked about home, their dates, their husbands and
sweethearts.
</p>
<p> Like G.I. Joes, a few got in serious jams. A few overstayed
leave. A few got fed up and went on mild benders. But for the
most, behavior was average young female. They put wet towels
in each other's beds, tied knots in pajama legs. They griped
about red tape, uniforms that did not fit, hats not "as cute as
the Marine women's." They might refer to an unpopular officer
privately as "that bitch." To the surprise of most males, they
got along together just as well as men.
</p>
<p> Statement of a Difference. Essential difference between Jane
and Joe was pointed out by a Fort Des Moines recruit who was
being loaded into an already jampacked Army truck. "Hey,
sergeant," she protested, "have a heart, this bus is full." Said
the tough male sergeant: "Lady, I been getting 18 men into these
trucks and I sure as hell can get 18 WACs in." Wailed the
squeezed WAC: "But men are broad in the shoulders!"
</p>
<p> Graduated from training, WACs now fill 239 different kinds
of jobs and in some cases have filled them better than men.
Among other things, WACs are opticians, surgical technicians,
chemists, surveyors, electricians, radio repairmen, control-
tower operators, boiler inspectors, riveters, welders, tractor
mechanics, balloon-gas handlers, dog trainers.
</p>
<p> Chief gripe of WACs at home is now that they are stuck. Said
Corporal Sara Sykes at Fort Oglethorpe: "We practically drool
when we hear of someone going overseas." They complain that
C.O.s do not always give them enough to do. Old soldiers fear
that the busy WACs are on the way to end forever the enlisted
soldiers' time-honored practice of "gold-bricking."
</p>
<p> On performance, the WAC's had proved themselves. The
failure was not theirs but the nation's: U.S. women still refused
to join up. That was Colonel Hobby's headache--and to a lesser
degree it has become the headache of Captain Mildred H. McAfree
of the WAVES, Commander Dorothy C. Stratton of the SPARS and
Lieut. Colonel Ruth Cheney Streeter of the Marine Women's
Reserve.
</p>
<p> Shoulder to Shoulder. Before she went to England, Colonel
Hobby sat in her office in the Pentagon building and with an air
of patent unhappiness parried questions about the failure of
woman recruiting. Beside her sat the Army Bureau of Public
Relations' Major Francis Frazier--"to protect her." he said.
</p>
<p> In the beginning Hobby had confidently proclaimed: "Women
will come marching--shoulder to shoulder--to serve their
country...I predict that all America will be proud of them.
Last week she said pensively: "I don't think it is so strange
that there are no more women in uniform. Add up all the
services, WACs, WAVES, SPARS, Marines and the various nursing
corps and you get a sizable number of women who volunteered. I
don't think its a bad figure."
</p>
<p> The figure was 172,822 out of nearly 50,000,000 women;
about one woman in every 300. By comparison with this "not-bad"
figure:
</p>
<p>-- Of some 4,000,000 Canadian women, 31,367 have volunteered
for the Army, Navy, Air Force women's service and the nursing
corps; about one out of every 150.
</p>
<p>-- Despite the Colonel's assertion that the U.S. could not
raise a volunteer army of 400,000 men, 677,000 men were
voluntarily serving in the country's armed forces before the
draft.
</p>
<p>-- In Britain, where there is a generally approved national
conscription (set up as much to distribute women power as to
compel service), out of some 8,670,000 women registered for
national service, 7,750,000 have full-time war jobs. At least
2,500,000 of them are in the military services.
</p>
<p>-- In Russia, millions serve in home-guard units for air-raid
defense. Numberless women joined the Partisans during the Nazi
occupation. The Government has decorated 4,575 women for valor
on the battlefield. Six women have won the Government's highest
award.
</p>
<p> U.S. women are ready to point out that Russia's war is on
her own soil, that British homes have been bombed; if U.S. women
had to defend their homes they would join just as valorously;
if they could even take a more active part in the war, they would
join.
</p>
<p> The simple fact remains that women who took on the prosaic,
behind-the-lines jobs open to them released U.S. men for the
fighting fronts, just as English and Russian women have done.
The enemy realizes this better then U.S. women. Last week the
Berlin radio gloated over "totally inadequate" women's Army
enlistments in the U.S.
</p>
<p> Diminishing Return. The history of WAC recruiting has been
one of diminishing returns. In May 1942, when Hobby's army was
the WAACs, a kind of stepsister to the Army, but not an integral
part of it, it looked as if women would indeed come marching
"shoulder to shoulder." The Army had set the WAAC quota at a
cautious 25,000. The first day 13,208 applied.
</p>
<p> There were some vexations. The country was inclined to
laugh. Catholic Bishop James E. Cassidy of Fall River deplored
the idea as a "serious menace to the home and foundation of
a true Christian and democratic country." Even Army officers
joined in inconsidered and harmful wisecracks among their
friends. But the women kept coming in at a gratifying rate,
until by last January 20,943 had joined.
</p>
<p> In the months that followed, however, recruiting began to
slide. The Army upped the quota to 150,000; enrollment by last
summer was less than half that. In the fall the WAACs became the
WACs, and a full-fledged branch of the Army, with soldier's
privileges of insurance, pensions, dependency allotments and
overseas pay.
</p>
<p> Given the chance to get out, 14,950 women took it. By last
week Hobby's army had only recovered the strength it has lost
during that debacle. Today Hobby has requests from field
commanders for 600,000 WACs. She has only 63,000 to supply. For
the second time in her successful life, Oveta Culp Hobby has
been really balked.
</p>
<p> Miss Spark-Plug. When the chief WAC was a little girl in
curls, she read aloud from the Congressional record to her
father, Lawyer Isaac William Culp of Killeen, Tex. She thought
at first she would like to be a foreign missionary. Later she
thought she might go on the stage.
</p>
<p> In the end she studied law, got her degree from the
University of Texas, became parliamentarian of the Texas
Legislature and wrote a book on parliamentary law. At 22, Oveta
codified Texas' banking laws. At 24, she ran for the State
Legislature and was beaten--the first setback in a face-ever-
forward career.
</p>
<p> When she was 25, she married William Pettus Hobby. She had
met him first when she was around 13 and he was Governor of
Texas. Mr. Hobby published the Houston Post. She plunged into
newspaper work--at the Post. For six months she studied
formats, cleaned out old files; for two years she was book
editor; for three years she wrote editorials and a series of
articles on the constitutions of the world. At 32, she became
the Post's executive vice president, Post colleagues called her
"Miss Spark-Plug."
</p>
<p> On the side she acted in amateur theatricals, collected
Georgian silver and rare books (she describes herself as
"bookish"). Her chief sport was riding horseback. Once she was
thrown, but climbed back on the nearest horse as soon as she got
out of the hospital. She had a "planned life."
</p>
<p> She became executive director of station KPRC, a director
of the Cleburne National Bank, a member of the Board of Regents
at Texas State Teachers College, president of the Texas League
of Women Voters, Texas chairman of the Women's Committee for the
New York World's Fair. In 1941, the War Department appointed her
boss of a new women's publicity bureau, set up to sell the Army
to the wives and mothers of the men. A year later final honors
crowned her; the Army invited her to be chief of the WAACs.
Mrs. Hobby moved on Washington.
</p>
<p> Lawyer Culp's Little Girl. People in Houston observed that
even if Oveta Culp Hobby had started as a private she would
have soon become the colonel anyhow. She promised that "our
staff will offer a reservoir of woman power on which the Army
can call," and dug in for the duration. Sixty-five-year-old Mr.
Hobby stayed behind in the large brick house in Houston to run
the paper.
</p>
<p> Mrs. Hobby's Washington apartment was elegant with antiques
(Friends who sublet it for a while kept their young son in the
bathroom most of the time because they were afraid he would
break something.) As busy as she was, Isaac William Culp's
little girl never lost her style, her poise, her figure. Guests
admired the way she appeared on sweltering nights looking cool
and handsome in dinner dresses with ruffles. She though she
looked best in yellow and chartreuse. She always had a weakness
for absurd headgear and courageously indulged it.
</p>
<p> Now she spares herself no work. Husband Hobby has to go to
Washington if he wants to see her. She is at her office before
9 o'clock, gets home around 7:30 to have dinner with her seven-
year-old daughter Jessica (William, 12, lives with his father).
Frequently in the evening she pores over a stack of work. In her
busy, private, moments among the soft tan Chinese hangings of
her living room, she must often wonder, as many a WAC does: What
is the matter with U.S. women?
</p>
<p> The Answer. One of the answers is: U.S. men--who have
always preferred their women in the home. Women themselves have
plenty of excuses and confused rationalizations:
</p>
<p> "WACs waste time in bedmaking, drilling, marching. A woman
can get more accomplished as an ordinary civilian worker. WAC
hats are terrible. They were designed for Mrs. Hobby. She's the
only one they look smart on. The WACs might make a woman with
a scientific background into a cook. The Army gives the WACs no
real responsibility. There is no glamor in the WACs, or in the
WAVES or the SPARS or the Marines. They are segregated from the
men. The pay is awful."
</p>
<p> The truth might be: the majority of U.S. women are unmoved
by any great sense of personal responsibility for helping fight
this war. Colonel Hobby could beat her iron-grey, smartly
coiffured head against that blank wall until she was groggy. She
could launch advertising campaigns, promise recruits they could
pick their own post, camp or station, get Army generals
themselves to appeal to U.S. young women to help. The U.S.'s
young women were not listening.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>