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Women in the Marine Corps
Women Marines became a permanent part of the regular Marine Corps on 12
June 1948 when Congress passed the Women's Armed Services Integration Act
(Public Law 625), but they had already proved themselves in two world
wars.
During World War I, Opha Mae Johnson was the first of 305 women
to be accepted for duty in the Marine Corps Reserve on 12 August 1918. Most
women filled clerical billets at Headquarters, Marine Corps to release male
Marines qualified for active field service to fight in France. Other women
filled jobs at recruiting stations throughout the United States. On 30 July
1919, after the war was over, orders were issued for separation of all women
from the Corps.
Twenty-five years later, women were back to "free a man
to fight." The Marine Corps Women's Reserve was established in February 1943.
Before World War II ended, a total of 23,145 officer and enlisted women
reservists served in the Corps. Unlike their predecessors, women Marines in
World War II performed over 200 military assignments. In addition to clerical
work, their numbers included parachute riggers, mechanics, radio operators,
map makers, motor transport support, and welders. By June 1944, women
reservists made up 85 percent of the enlisted personnel on duty at
Headquarters, Marine Corps and almost two-thirds of the personnel manning all
major posts and stations in the United States and Hawaii. Following the
surrender of Japan, demobilization of the Women's Reserve proceeded rapidly,
but a number of them returned to service as regulars under the 1948
Act.
In August 1950, for the first time in history, the Women Reserves
were mobilized for the Korean War where the number of women Marines on active
duty reached a peak strength of 2,787. Like the women of two previous wars,
they stepped into stateside jobs and freed male Marines for combat duty. Women
continued to serve in an expanding range of billets and by the height of the
Vietnam War, there were about 2,700 women Marines on active duty serving both
stateside and overseas. During this period, the Marine Corps also began
opening up career-type formal training programs to women officers and advanced
technical training to enlisted women. By 1975, the Corps approved the
assignment of women to all occupational fields except infantry, artillery,
armor and pilot/air crew. Approximately 1,000 women Marines were deployed to
Southwest Asia for Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm in
1990-1991.
Milestones for women officers include: Colonel Margaret A.
Brewer was appointed to a general officer's billet with the rank of brigadier
general becoming the first woman general officer in the history of the Corps
(1978); Colonel Gail M. Reals became the first woman selected by a board of
general officers to be advanced to brigadier general (1985); Brigadier General
Carol A. Mutter assumed command of the 3d Force Service Support Group,
Okinawa, becoming the first woman to command a Fleet Marine Force unit at the
flag level (1992); 2d Lieutenant Sarah Deal became the first woman Marine
selected for Naval aviation training (1993); Brigadier General Mutter became
the first woman major general in the Marine Corps and the senior woman on
active duty in the armed services (1994); Lieutenant General Mutter became the
first woman Marine and the second woman in the history of the armed services
to wear three stars (1996.)
Today, 768 women account for 4.3 percent of
all Marine officers and 8,051 women make up 5.1 percent of the active duty
enlisted force in the Marine Corps. These numbers continue to grow as do
opportunities to serve. Ninety-three percent of all occupational fields and 62
percent of all positions are now open to women. Like their distinguished
predecessors, women in the Marine Corps today continue to serve proudly and
capably in whatever capacity their country and Corps
requires.