Barbara A. Kucharczyk Collection

Oral history interview with Barbara Wolfe Kucharczyk
Primary documents Barbara W. Kucharczyk's career in the U.S. Air Force. Kucharczyk describes frequently moving during her childhood due to her father's military service. Related topics include attending Department of Defense Schools and living in Japan when the Vietnam Conflict was heating up. A significant portion of the interview focuses on Kucharczyk's time at UNCG, including her social life, Big Sisters, the newly co-ed campus, racial attitudes, Kennedy's assassination, and her PE major. " Kucharczyk describes finding employment as a teacher in Virginia; her desire to fill the need for sex education teachers; spending summers in Scandinavia as a part of her NYU graduate studies; comparisons between teacher benefits in Virginia and New Jersey; her desire to join the military; and the process of officer recruitment for in Air Force. " Of her time in Officer Training School, Kucharczyk discusses activities, inspections, PT, and her father commissioning her into the Air Force. She describes the purpose of Aircraft Maintenance Officer Course and volunteering to be stationed overseas in the countries she had lived as a child. Notable topics from her tour in Japan include: Kucharczyk's various positions and assignments, being the only woman with the 18th Tactical Fighter Wing, having several "battle hero" planes in her unit, and how the country had changed since she last lived there. She mentions marrying a fellow officer while in Okinawa, securing a joint-spouse assignment at Ramstein Air Base in Germany, experiencing the nearby explosion of a terrorist bomb while there, and European attitudes towards Americans. " Kucharczyk describes the Education with Industry Program and her activities with General Dynamics in Texas, including working the aircraft assembly line when workers there went on strike. She discusses her responsibilities at Kunsan Air Base in South Korea and working with many more women there. Topics from her time stationed at Shaw Air Force Base include her promotion to major, her first command, and the details of her job and unit. " Kucharczyk describes her disappointment at being reassigned to Air Command and Staff College just before her unit was deployed in Operation Desert Shield, staying on to teach at the school, and then becoming a student again at the Air War College, which was also located at Maxwell-Gunter AFB. Notable topics from her subsequent assignments include: the benefits and responsibilities of command positions, the drawbacks of being a colonel, and her decision to retire in 1998 rather than be stationed in Alaska. " Additional topics include: USAF officer training schools, the opportunities the military provides, gender discrimination in the air force, Kucharczyk's testimony before the House Armed Services Subcommittee to open more combat-related career fields to women, and her work as teacher following her retirement.