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I would have climbed up a mountain to get on the list to serve
overseas]. We were going to do our duty. Despite all the bad things
that happened, America was our home. This is where I was born. It
was where my mother and father were. There was a feeling of wanting
to do your part. To Serve My Country, to Serve my Race is the story of the
historic 6888th, the first United States Women's Army Corps unit
composed of African-American women to serve overseas. Filled with compelling personal testimony based on extensive interviews, To Serve My Country is the first book to document the lives of these courageous pioneers. It reveals how their Army experience affected them for the rest of their lives and how they, in turn, transformed the U.S. military forever.
To Serve My Country, to Serve my Race is the story of the historic 6888th, the first United States Women's Army Corps unit composed of African-American women to serve overseas. While African-American men and white women were invited, if belatedly, to serve their country abroad, African-American women were excluded for overseas duty throughout most of WWII. Under political pressure from legislators like Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., the NAACP, the black press, and even President Roosevelt, the U.S. War Department was forced to deploy African-American women to the European theater in 1945. African-American women, having succeeded, through their own activism and political ties, in their quest to shape their own lives, answered the call from all over the country, from every socioeconomic stratum.Stationed in France and England at the end of World War II, the 6888th brought together women like Mary Daniel Williams, a cook in the 6888th who signed up for the Army to escape the slums of Cleveland and to improve her ninth-grade education, and Margaret Barnes Jones, a public relations officer of the 6888th, who grew up in a comfortable household with a politically active mother who encouraged her to challenge the system. Despite the social, political, and economic restrictions imposed upon these African-American women in their own country, they were eager to serve, not only out of patriotism but out of a desire to uplift their race and dispell bigoted preconceptions about their abilities. Elaine Bennett, a First Sergeant in the 6888th, joined because I wanted to prove to myself and maybe to the world that we would give what we had back to the United States as a confirmation that we were full- fledged citizens. Filled with compelling personal testimony based on extensive interviews, To Serve My Country is the first book to document the lives of these courageous pioneers.It reveals how their Army experience affected them for the rest of their lives and how they, in turn, transformed the U.S. military forever.
"Brenda Moore gives us such an eye-opening look at the racialized genderings of World War II--the war we think we know so much about and yet, in fact, are just beginning to really grasp in all its complexity. Furthermore, using in-depth narratives and exploring Japanese American women's prewar, wartime, and postwar experiences, Moore reminds us that any war is a heady mix of state manipulation, popular anxieties, and individual women's own subtle forms of agency. This a book for right now." --Cynthia Enloe, author of Maneuvers: The International Politics of Militarizing Women's Lives Following the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor and America's declaration of war on Japan, the U.S. War Department allowed up to five hundred second-generation, or "Nisei," Japanese American women to join the Women's Army Corps and, in smaller numbers, the Army Medical Corps. Through in-depth interviews with surviving Nisei women who enlisted, Brenda L. Moore provides fascinating firsthand accounts of their service. Interested primarily in shedding light on the service of Nisei women during the war, the author argues for the relevance of these experiences to larger questions of American race relations and views on gender and their intersections, particularly in the country's highly charged wartime atmosphere. Uncovering a page in American history that has been obscured, Moore adds nuance to our understanding of the situation of Japanese Americans during the war. Brenda L. Moore is an associate professor of sociology at the State University of New York at Buffalo, and is the author of To Serve My Country, To Serve My Race: The Story of the Only African American WACs Stationed Overseas during World War II.
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