Doris Dickens Wilson Collection

Oral history interview with Doris Wilson
Primarily covers Doris Dickens (Hoye) Wilson's service in the WAAC (Women's Auxiliary Army Corps) and the WAC (Women's Army Corps) during WWII, and her education and career following the war. Wilson discusses life during the Depression; her family's frequent moves; working with the National Youth Administration (NYA) after graduating from high school; attending business school in Wilmington, North Carolina; and working at the Cape Fear Hotel. She also describes life on the East coast after the attack on Pearl Harbor, including her work in a local filter center, which monitored aircrafts." Wilson shares her reasons for enlisting in the WAAC (Women's Auxiliary Army Corps); the shortage of WAACs in Wilmington; and how women had to be brought in from other states. She briefly mentions her basic training at Fort Des Moines, Iowa; receiving uniforms; and the train returning WAACs to Wilmington getting lost. Of her continued work at the Wilmington filter center, Wilson discusses the changing demands of her job there; the WAAC expectation that she work as an officer and not a secretary; what it was like to "free a man to fight;" and male soldiers' reaction to WAACs. Wilson briefly mentions attending Officer Candidate School and recalls Eleanor Roosevelt handing out the commissions. She recalls sharing a Pullman car with Shriners on the way to Fort Devens, Massachusetts and working in the base library there." Of her time at Hamilton Field, California, Wilson discusses in detail how WACs started a passenger station and welcome service for servicepersons; meeting celebrities on USO tours; and helping returning GIs. She then describes her transfer to the Officer's Promotion Unit in Washington, DC; her own promotions; procedures for promoting servicemen; and calling her fiance Stanford Lee Hoye. She recalls V-E Day, V-J Day, and President Franklin Roosevelt's death." Wilson briefly discusses her life during her marriage to Hoye but focuses on her own teaching career and education. Topic include teaching multiple subjects at the Illinois State Mental Hospital in Anna; issues in educating mental patients; being offered and accepting a professorship in family relations at Bradley University; and working towards a Ph.D. in home economics at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.