Elaine Agnes Anderson Collection

Oral history interview with Elaine Anderson
Primarily documents Elaine A. Anderson's time in the WAC (Women's Army Corps) and her personal life before and after her service. Personal topics from Anderson's life before military service include: details of her hometown; her brother's service in the army during WWII; memories of the attack on Pearl Harbor and WWII; her job with the Casualty Department in Washington, D.C.; and Franklin D. Roosevelt's death. " Anderson recounts her reason for enlisting in the WAC and her brother's negative response. Of her time in basic training she recalls wearing a uniform for the first time and meeting women from other parts of the country. She mentions the barracks and social activities during her time in finance school in St. Louis, Missouri. Details of her time in Germany include: being transferred overseas to free a man for the Korean Conflict; living in the country during post-WWII occupation; traveling through the Russian sector to Berlin; the devastation in the country; a German friend; working in the payroll department; rifle training; being escorted by an armed man when changing money on ships; and the relationship between servicemen and WACs. Other service topics include the difficulty for women to rise in rank and memorable songs. " Other topics include: her struggle to find enjoyable work; joining the army reserves; turning down a commission during the Cuban Missile Crisis; being a reserve during the Vietnam conflict; travel; problems with the Veterans Administration; and working as the head of the Women's Legion in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Two WACs in chairs aboard ship
Elaine Agnes Anderson (right) and a fellow WAC sit in wooden lounge chairs on the deck of a ship headed to Europe, circa 1950. Anderson wears a twill utility overcoat and hood.
WACs in pajamas
WACs in pajamas sit on a bunk bed in the barracks at Fort Lee, Virginia, during basic training, circa 1949.