Ruth Kent Petker Collection
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Oral history interview with Ruth Petker
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Primarily documents Ruth Kent Petker's service in the U.S. Navy WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service) from 1943 to 1945. Petker chiefly discusses airplane mechanics training in Norman, Oklahoma, and her service at Jacksonville Naval Air Station in Jacksonville, Florida, during World War II. Petker speaks about getting her papers together to apply for the WAVES; living arrangements and mess cooking while at basic training at Hunter College; job choices in the WAVES; the layout of the base in Norman; and being confused by hydraulics. " Petker also describes the nice accommodations in Jacksonville; working in the assembly and repair shop; instrument training; checking the gasoline in her airplane trainer; attitudes of male navy officers toward the WAVES; plane crashes; guiding planes in for landings; a friend's boyfriend who disappeared while flying; socializing between WAVES and enlisted men; singing barbershop songs; meeting fighter pilots who had downed Japanese planes; her reaction to the atomic bombs; V-J Day celebrations; and the phony Hollywood portrayal of WAVES. " Petker also briefly describes her life before and after her military service, including her education in art.
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Ruth Kent Petker holding hands with serviceman
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Ruth Kent Petker, in the WAVES service dress blue uniform and service hat, holds hands with an unidentified soldier in downtown Norman, Oklahoma, where she attended mechanics training in 1943.