Dorothy R. Collins Sullivan Collection
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Dorothy Collins Sullivan and two WACs
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Dorothy R. Collins Sullivan (center) poses with two fellow WACs, circa 1944. The women on the left and right wear the WAC khaki shirtwaist, tie, and skirt. Sullivan probably wears the WAC beige summer off-duty dress.
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Oral history interview with Dorothy Sullivan
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Interview primarily documents Dorothy Collins Sullivan's service in the WAAC (Women's Auxiliary Army Corps) and the WAC (Women's Army Corps). Sullivan details her reasons for joining the WAC, including the slogan "Free a Man to Fight." She recalls a visit from Franklin D. Roosevelt during her basic training at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia. Discussion focuses on her time overseas, including: overseas training; traveling on the HMS Queen Elizabeth; uniforms; overseas army food; social activities; soldiers' responses to WAACs; segregation in the army; V-Mail; trips to Scotland, London, and Paris; and entertainers Jane Froman and Bob Hope. She also discusses receiving emergency furlough to visit her sick mother, the war ending before she could return to Europe, and VE and V-J Day in new York City. " Other topics include her courtship with her husband; adjustment back to civilian life; what she gained from her service; patriotism during WWII; and her brothers' service.
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WACs in fatigues
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Eight WACs, including Dorothy R. Collins Sullivan (back row, second from left), sit for a group photo in 1944, probably while stationed in Europe. The women wear the WAC work uniforms and summer fatigue hats; one is smoking a cigarette.
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WACs sort packages
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WACs sort packages on rows of long tables while at work in a large bunker, circa 1944.
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Warehouse of bags
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Photo of a warehouse brimming with large duffel bags and section markers, circa 1944.