Thursday, June 17, 2021
From Cavalry to Tanks: George S. Patton Jr.
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
Women's Army Corps at Fort Sheridan
In September 1939,
Americans were in the tenth year of the Great Depression when war broke out in
Europe with Hitler’s invasion of Poland. As the warfront expanded throughout
Europe and Asia, the U.S. needed to increase the strength of its’ military to
prepare for the possibility of war. These preparations included discussions on
the prospect of a women’s corps.
Along with men, women wanted to do their part to fight the threat of fascism
and many lobbied for a role in the U.S. military mobilization. At the forefront
was U.S. representative Edith Nourse Rogers (1881-1960) of Massachusetts, who
introduced a bill in Congress in early 1941 to establish an auxiliary corps to
fill non-combatant positions in the army.
The bill stalled until the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941 propelled
the United States’ into war. Chief of Staff, General George C. Marshall,
foresaw a manpower shortage and understood the necessity of women in uniform to
the nation’s defense. Not only were women needed in factories, but also in the
military.
With the support of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and General Marshall, on May
15, 1942, Rogers’s bill (H.R. 4906) passed into law creating the Women’s Army
Auxiliary Corps (WAAC). As an auxiliary unit, the women were limited to
serving with the Army rather than in the
Army.
The purpose of the WAAC was to make “available to the national defense the
knowledge, skill, and special training of the women of the nation."
Women
taking the oath as officer candidates in the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps at
army headquarters, Chicago. Four of the women pictured were African American,
including Mildred L. Osby (top left), who would command an African American
Women's Army Corps unit at Fort Sheridan. Chicago Tribune, July 12,
1942.
Of the four hundred and forty women selected for officer candidate training only 40 places were allotted for African American women, reportedly based on “the percentage of the population.” Mildred L. Osby (1913-1953) of Chicago was one of the African American women selected for officer training. Her fellow candidate, Charity Adams Earley, described them as “the ambitious, the patriotic, the adventurous.”
Lt. Mildred L. Osby recruiting women for the WAACs in Washington D.C., November 1942. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.
First
WAAC detachment arriving at Fort Sheridan on December 30, 1942. Mary Jane
(Lett) Lucas aka "Jane" is right of center holding large
duffel. Chicago Sun Staff Photo / Fort Sheridan Collection, Dunn Museum
95.32.23.
Among the first detachment of WAACs at Fort Sheridan was Mary Jane (Lett) Lucas (1921-2014), who recalled that the women auxiliaries were given a warm reception. She noted that the army “didn’t know what to do with us,” and was given a job as an usher at the post’s theater. The army quickly figured out how best to utilize the extra "manpower." Duties for the women’s corps included: clerks, stenographers, commissary, photo analysts, surgical assistants, lab assistants, mechanics, and chauffeurs.
On July 3, 1943, the auxiliaries were officially given “active duty status”
with the passing of the bill to create the Women’s Army Corps. All auxiliaries
(WAACs) were offered the choice of an honorable discharge and return to
civilian life or joining the U.S. Army as a member of the Women’s Army Corps
(WAC). Seventy-five percent of the women enlisted.
This new designation was important as it gave women full military rank and
benefits for service injuries and allowed them to serve overseas. It also gave
them protection as soldiers and if captured were eligible for rights given to
prisoners of war.
WAC
Mary Jane (Lett) Lucas, bottom right, with Sixth Service Command Laboratory soldiers and WACs, circa 1944. Lucas met her
husband, Colonel Charles J. Lucas (1923-2011), at Fort Sheridan’s
Non-Commissioned Officers’ club. They married in 1947 and settled in
Grayslake. Mary Jane Lucas Collection, Dunn Museum, 2012.20.39.
Lucas was assigned to the Army’s Sixth Service Command Medical Laboratory at Fort Sheridan, driving officers from the lab, and checking in thousands of samples. This laboratory received more than 66,000 food and water samples from 1941 to 1945. The laboratory’s principal activity was the chemical and bacteriological examination of foods, including large quantities of canned evaporated milk, dried powdered milk, and cheese procured for the Armed Forces. At the lab, Lucas also worked with German prisoners of war, but was not allowed to speak to them.
In November 1943, an African American WAC unit was posted to Fort Sheridan under the command of 1st Lt. Mildred L. Osby (promoted to Captain in January 1944). At the time of her enlistment in July 1942, Osby was married, living in Chicago, and employed at the social security board. She had graduated from Officer Candidate Training at Fort Des Moines, served as a WAAC recruiter in Washington, D.C., posted to Fort Custer, Michigan, and WAC Company B commander at Fort Sheridan.
Capt. Mildred L. Osby, date unknown.
Photo from FindAGrave.com, Arlington National Cemetery.
The seventy-five African American WACs under the command of Capt. Mildred Osby were assigned to duties in the Recruit Reception Center. Soldiers on furlough also passed through the Fort where their service records were checked and instructions given for the length of furlough time they had at home.
Soldiers and WACs worked in the Rotation Section, which had a "graveyard shift" to accommodate the great numbers of soldiers passing through and to "speed overseas veterans through." (The Tower, August 11, 1944).
Twenty-six of the original company of WACs at Fort Sheridan on their two-year roll of honor, December 1944. Mary Jane (Lett) Lucas (top row, red star). Thirty of their WAC comrades had been transferred overseas where they were serving in New Guinea, Egypt, England and France. The Tower, December 29, 1944.
Details of the celebration at Fort Sheridan marking the 2nd anniversary of the creation of the Women's Army Corps. Chicago Tribune, May 15, 1944.
During World War II, nearly 150,000 American women served as soldiers in the Women’s Army Corps. In 1948, for their superb service during the war, President Truman signed the Women’s Armed Services Integration Act allowing a permanent place for women to serve within the military in regular, peacetime forces.
The
Women's Army Corps disbanded in 1978 and all members were fully integrated into
the U.S. Army.
The Dunn Museum is celebrating those who served with a new temporary exhibition Breaking Barriers: Women in the Military through June 13, 2021. To experience this past exhibition, you may view the virtual exhibit online.
- Diana Dretske, Curator ddretske@lcfpd.org
Sources:
Bess Bower Dunn Museum (Fort
Sheridan Collection 92.24/95.23; Mary Jane Lucas Collection 2012.20)
"War Training - First
Contingent of WAACs Arrives at Fort Sheridan," Chicago Daily
Tribune, December 31, 1942.
"Twenty-five WAACs Win
Promotion to Second Officer," Chicago Tribune, January 3,
1943.
"American Women at War - Lt.
Mildred L. Osby," Chicago Tribune, November 28,
1943.
"American Women at War - Capt.
Mildred L. Osby," Chicago Tribune, January 30, 1944.
"WACs at Fort Sheridan to
Observe Anniversary," Chicago Tribune, May 15, 1944.
"'Graveyard Shift' Hastens
Rotation Men Home," The Tower, August
11, 1944.
"WACs Celebrate Second
Anniversary Here," The Tower, December 29, 1944.
"On the Record with Mary Jane
Lucas," Lake County Journal, May 27, 2010.
Earley, Charity Adams. One
Woman's Army: A Black Officer Remembers the WACs. Texas A&M
University Press, 1995.
Treadwell, Mattie E. United
States Army in World War II, Special Studies: Women's Army Auxiliary
Corps. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, United States
Army, 1991.
Ancestry.com
FindAGrave.com. "Mildred
Lavinia Osby," Arlington National Cemetery.
"Twenty-One Illinois Women Who Are in the Army Now," Chicago Tribune, June 12, 1942.
George C. Marshall Foundation Blog: https://www.marshallfoundation.org/blog/marshall-75th-anniversary-wacs/
The Women’s Army Corps: A
Commemoration of World War II Service, Judith A. Bellafaire
https://history.army.mil/brochures/WAC/WAC.HTM
Friday, June 14, 2013
Fort Sheridan and the Impact of Chemical Warfare
The hospital at Fort Sheridan was built in 1893 and shown here circa 1930. Dunn Museum 92.24.1384 |
View of Fort Sheridan looking northwest, showing the Tower and temporary
buildings for General Hospital No. 28 (later Lovell General Hospital) across the parade grounds.
Circa 1919. Dunn Museum 95.32.1
|
The "Trackless Train" at Fort Sheridan moved wounded between
hospital wards for treatment. Photo from the Chicago Tribune,
March 8, 1919. |
In 1919, the Hostess House of the Young Women's Christian Association was built at Fort Sheridan using
salvaged material. General Pershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces on the
Western Front in World War I, visited Fort Sheridan and the Hostess House in December 1919.
The facility provided a library and tea room which served homemade meals to convalescing soldiers. Dunn Museum 95.32.24. |
Paul Steorp of Deerfield Township, Lake County, IL, wearing gas mask. Steorp served with the U.S. Army Ambulance Service. Dunn Museum 2003.0.16 |
The World War prompted an enormous expansion of the Army Medical Department. When the U.S. entered the war the department consisted of less than 1,000 personnel. By the time the peace treaty was signed in November 1918, it numbered over 350,000.
2nd U.S. Infantry training in tear gas at Fort Sheridan,
circa 1925. Dunn Museum 92.24.1015.
|
Soldiers entering a gas chamber built on the Fort's Lake Michigan
shoreline. Circa 1935. Dunn Museum 92.24.1761.
|
Women's Army Corps members emerging from gas chamber training
at Fort Sheridan, 1964. Dunn Museum 92.24.1202
|
The Bess Bower Dunn Museum's (formerly the Lake County Discovery Museum) Fort Sheridan Collection is digitized and hosted online at the Illinois Digital Archives.
Friday, March 29, 2013
King Peter II Returns to Yugoslavia
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King Peter II of Yugoslavia. |
The young king’s strong opposition to Nazi Germany, led to the Germans attacking Yugoslavia for three days and nights in Operation Punishment. Following the Axis invasion, the 17-year old Peter II and members of the government fled the country. Peter II had to decide to join the anti-monarchist and revolutionary leader Josip Broz Tito against the Nazis, or maintain his government in exile. He chose the latter.
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General Montgomery, Peter II, and Sir Winston Churchill in 1941. |
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The wedding of King Peter II of Yugoslavia and Princess Alexandra of Greece in London, England on March 20, 1944. On far left is King George VI of England. |
As I have assured Your Majesty's Government, the United States will speedily furnish all material assistance possible in accordance with its existing statutes.
I send Your Majesty my most earnest hopes for a successful resistance to this criminal assault upon the independence and integrity of your country.
In 1945, the provisional government of Yugoslavia was led by Tito, and included representatives from the royalist government-in-exile. A post-war election was held to determine whether the country would continue as a monarchy or become a republic. In November 1945, Tito's pro-republican People's Front, led by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, won the elections by a landslide, the monarchists having boycotted the vote.
Tito was confirmed as the Prime Minister, and on November 29, 1945, Peter II was formally deposed.
King Peter II refused to abdicate, and went into exile in Britain and the United States. In 1948, he arrived in Chicago, and stayed at the Drake Hotel. While in the Chicago area, he visited the monastery of St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Monastery in Libertyville.
He also met Mathon Kyritsis, a well-known fisherman and restauranteur who for many years forecast the weather by gauging the depth at which perch were caught.
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The funeral of King Peter II of Yugoslavia on November 14, 1970 at St. Sava's Serbian Orthodox Monastery Church in Libertyville, Illinois. News-Sun Collection, Bess Bower Dunn Museum. |
In January 2013, the long anticipated repatriation took place with a private ceremony at St. Sava in Libertyville. On January 22nd, the return of Peter II to his homeland marked another step in the country's reconciliation with its royal past. (above)
A State Funeral will take place for HM Peter II, his wife HM Queen Alexandra, and his mother HM Queen Maria on May 26 at St. George's Church Oplenac, in the city of Topola, where the Royal Family Mausoleum is located.
Sources:
Royalty Magazine, Volume 22 No. 11, www.royalty-magazine.com
"Waukegan Has Ex-King Peter as Its Guest," Chicago Tribune, February 28, 1959.
"The Sad Life of Peter II, and the Curious Disinterring of the King of Yugoslavia from Libertyville," Chicago Magazine, January 2013.
News-Sun Collection, Bess Bower Dunn Museum, Libertyville, IL.
Reference Files, Bess Bower Dunn Museum.
Monday, December 7, 2009
Gordon Keith Ray and Pearl Harbor
It was on the evening of December 7, 1941, while the Ray family was having dinner in their Diamond Lake home, when the music on the radio broke with the news of Pearl Harbor. Their son, Gordon Keith, was stationed at Schofield Barracks not far from Pearl Harbor.
In the spring of 1941, Gordon Keith Ray (1919 - 2006), known as Keith, had finished his senior year at the University of Illinois and received a commission in the U.S. Army as a second lieutenant. When he left home that July, his father Gordon, wrote in his diary: "this seemed like the end as we returned to an empty house, but Keith never let us down."
Gordon wrote back: "I hope you don't have to go to Hawaii, but if you do, take it on the chin, and trusting God."
As fate would have it, Keith was sent to Hawaii. The Ray family was devastated to hear the news of the attack on that December evening.
Gordon wrote in his diary: "We could only wait for news to come, but the days passed and no news came. Everyone tried to console us by saying that 'no news is good news,' but it didn't satisfy our anxiety."
On December 16, the Rays sent a cablegram to Keith, but there was no reply. Three days later, the U.S. Government broadcasted on the radio that anyone who had not heard from the War Department should be assured their boys were O.K.
Still, the family prayed for news from Keith.
It was Monday, December 22 at 8:30 a.m. when Gordon and Marie Ray received a telegram from their son saying, "Am all right, why not?"
The same day they received a letter from Keith written on December 9:
"Dear Folks, I don't know when you will get this, but I thought I'd drop you a line to let you know that I'm still kicking. We seem to be in a war and are working 24 hours a day. I'm really doing things, but I'm afraid I can't tell you anything now. When I get home, I'll have some real stories to tell of air raids, blackouts, and defense work in the field. Lots of rumors, but not much war. Don't believe everything you hear from Washington or Tokyo. They both tell a lot of lies. Love, Keith."

The Ray Brothers resort on Diamond Lake was a popular hang-out for picnics, dancing and the community to gather. In 1943, the "V" for Victory photo collage of local men who enlisted was displayed prominently at the resort.
On May 2, 1944, Keith came home from the war. He wasted no time filling up on Ray Brothers' hamburgers, shakes and pies.
December 5, 1944, almost three years to the day of the attack on Pearl Harbor, G. Keith Ray married Betty Gridley at the Gridley home in Libertyville.
Monday, December 1, 2008
Going to the Chapel
When planning an exhibition, the museum's collections staff consider which archival materials and objects will best tell the story, and often choose an item based on how recently it has been displayed.
For the current exhibition on World War II, "Keep 'Em Flying: How the Homefront Helped the Frontlines," staff wanted to feature at least one wedding dress. The exhibit was a great opportunity to showcase a beautiful dress from the museum's textile collection. In the end, two wedding dresses and a woman's Red Cross uniform jacket were chosen.
The exhibition's focus is to highlight a grant project digitizing tens of thousands of World War II images from the collections. The majority of the images are postcards made by the Curt Teich Company between 1941-1945. A selection of about 200 of these postcards are featured in the exhibition, along with Civilian Defense booklets, and photographs from Fort Sheridan.

Marcelline Czernik married her high school sweetheart, Chester Vasofsky, on January 22, 1944, as seen in their wedding photo below. The bride purchased an off-the-rack dress at the Globe Department Store in downtown Waukegan. With the war raging, it was the only style available.


As staff was preparing one dress for exhibition, another war-time bride's story came to light as a museum exhibits intern told of her grandmother's wedding dress made from a parachute. After inquiries, it was confirmed that the dress had a unique Lake County story to tell, and the family was willing to donate it to the museum's permanent collection. The timing was perfect to be included in the exhibition. The unique nylon dress (below) needed some steaming before being dressed on a mannequin and put on display.

Both wedding dresses are on display through January, 2009.
(Since making this post, the exhibit's closing date has been changed to May 3, 2009).