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NATIVE
AMERICAN WOMEN VETERANS
Very little is known about the contributions of
Native American women to the United States military. The Women
In Military Service For America Memorial Foundation is attempting
to fill this gap by encouraging Native American women veterans
to register with the Memorial so that their stories may be
recorded and preserved. They are also conducting research
on the contributions of Native American women of earlier eras.
Historians have only recently rediscovered and verified the
actions of an Oneida woman, Tyonajanegen, at the battle of
Oriskany during the American Revolution (1775-1783). Tyonajanegen
was married to an American Army officer of Dutch descent.
She fought at her husband's side on horseback during the battle,
loading her husband's gun for him after he was shot in the
wrist.
The story of Sacajawea, the Shoshone
woman who accompanied the Lewis and Clark expedition of the
early 19th century, is somewhat better known. Much of what
is common knowledge is myth, however. Sacajawea has been remembered
as a guide. In reality, she served as an interpreter for members
of the expedition, who were unfamiliar with the Indian language.
"Bird Woman's" service is described in the journals kept by
Army Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark during the
expedition.
Four Native American Catholic Sisters from Fort Berthold,
South Dakota worked as nurses for the War Department during
the Spanish American War (1898). Originally assigned to the
military hospital at Jacksonville, Florida, the nurses were
soon transferred to Havana, Cuba. One of the nurses, Sister
Anthony died of disease in Cuba and was buried with military
honors.

Fourteen Native American women served as
members of the Army Nurse Corps during World War I, two
of them overseas. Mrs. Cora E. Sinnard, a member of the
Oneida Tribe and a graduate of the Episcopalian School of
Nursing in Philadelphia, served eighteen months in France
with a hospital unit provided by the Episcopal Church. Charlotte
Edith (Anderson) Monture of the Iroquois Nation also served
as an Army nurse in France. Charlotte was born in 1890 in
Ohsweken, Ontario, Canada. In 1917, she left her job as
an elementary school nurse to join the Army Nurse Corps.
She later referred to her service in France at a military
hospital as "the adventure of a lifetime." Charlotte passed
away in 1996, at the age of 106.
 Nearly 800
Native American women served in the military during World
War II. Elva (Tapedo) Wale, a Kiowa, left her Oklahoma reservation
to join the  Women's Army Corps.
Private Tapedo became an "Air WAC," and worked on Army Air
Bases across the United States. Corporal Bernice (Firstshoot)
Bailey of Lodge Pole, Montana, joined the Women's Army Corps
in 1945 and served until 1948. After the war, she was sent
to Wiesbaden, Germany, as part of the Army of Occupation.
Beatrice (Coffey) Thayer also served in the Army of Occupation
in Germany. Beatrice remembers being assigned to KP with
German POWs, who were accompanied by armed guards. Beatrice
was in Germany when the Berlin Wall went up, and remained
in the Army until the 1970s.

Alida (Whipple) Fletcher joined the Army during World War
II and trained as a medical specialist. She was assigned to
the hospital at Camp Stoneman, California, which was an Army
port of embarkation for the Pacific. Alida was on duty the
night two ships loaded with explosives collided at a nearby
ammunition dump, killing approximately 400 sailors and wounding
many more. The wounded were brought to the hospital where
Alida worked. She remembers that night as the most tragic
of her life.

First Lieutenant Julia (Nashanany) Reeves, a member of the Potawatomie
Indian Tribe of Crandon, Wisconsin, joined the Army Nurse Corps
in 1942, and was assigned to one of the first medical Units
shipped to the Pacific. The 52nd Evacuation Hospital Unit was
sent to New Caledonia before its members had received their
Army uniforms. When the hospital ship Solace arrived
at New Caledonia, Julia was assigned temporary duty aboard the
ship. The following year, Julia was transferred to the 23rd
Station Hospital in Norwich, England, where she was stationed
during the invasion of Normandy. She remained in Norwich through
V-J Day, returning shortly afterward to the United States. During
the Korean War, Julia mobilized with the 804th Station Hospital.
Private Minnie Spotted-Wolf of Heart Butte, Montana, enlisted
in the Marine Corps Women's Reserve in July 1943. She was
the first female American Indian to enroll in the Corps. Minnie
had worked on her father's ranch doing such chores as cutting
fence posts, driving a two-ton truck, and breaking horses.
Her comment on Marine boot camp "Hard but not too hard."
Ola
Mildred Rexroat, an Oglala Sioux from Pine Ridge Indian
Reservation, South Dakota, joined the Women's Airforce Service
Pilots (WASP) directly out of high school. Her job was to
tow targets for aerial gunnery students at Eagle Pass Army
Air Base in Texas. Towing targets for student gunners was
a fairly dangerous assignment, but "Rexy" was happy to be
able to contribute to the war effort in a meaningful way.
After the war ended, Ola joined the Air Force and served
for almost ten years.
During the 1950s and 1960s, fewer women felt
the call to military service. The services, however, were
in desperate need of womanpower during the Korean conflict
and the Vietnam War, and conducted extensive recruitment campaigns
aimed at young women. Many Native American women answered
their country's call. Sarah Mae Peshlakai, a member of the
Navajo Tribe from Crystal, New Mexico, enlisted in the Women's
Army Corps in 1951 and served until 1957. Peshlakai trained
as a medical specialist and was assigned to Yokohama Army
Hospital in Japan, where she helped care for casualties from
the Korean battlefields.

Verna Fender entered the Navy during the Korean Conflict and
trained at Bainbridge, Maryland. She was severely injured
during basic training and was sent to a Navy hospital for
physical rehabilitation. Undeterred, Verna returned to Bainbridge
and completed her training. The Navy assigned Verna to its
base in San Diego, California, where she completed her 3-year
term of enlistment, working in the departments of berthing
and sectioning, supply, and ordnance. Shirley M. Arviso, a
Navajo of the Bitter Water Clan, served in the Navy from 1953
through 1963. She was the Communications Officer in charge
of a group of people who decrypted classified messages.
Pearl Ross,
a member of the Arikara Tribe from the Fort Berthold Reservation,
joined the Air Force in 1953, and trained as a medical specialist.
Her first assignment was to the Air Force hospital in Cheyenne,
Wyoming. Pearl was then assigned to Offutt Air Force Base
in Nebraska, where she worked in the 865th Medical Group at
SAC HQ. During theVietnam era, she saw many men who had been
wounded in the combat theater. Pearl volunteered for overseas
duty, but was turned down because the Air Force was hesitant
to send women to Vietnam.
Linda Woods enlisted in the Air Force in the
late 1950s and was on duty when President Kennedy was assassinated.
She remembers that the air base where she was stationed went
on full alert. A later assignment took her to the southern
United States during the Civil Rights movement. As a non-white,
she found the environment somewhat difficult, however, she
retained pride in her uniform as a woman of color.
Barbara Monteiro joined the WAC in 1963 and
took her basic and secretarial training at Ft. McClellan.
Alabama. Her first duty assignment was to Ft. Huachuca, Arizona,
where she worked for three years in the travel office and
motor pool in support of troop readiness during the Vietnam
War. In 1966, Monteiro was assigned to Ft. Richardson, Alaska,
where she served as an administration specialist at the Education
Center for a year. Lance Corporal Valla Dee Jack Egge of Dougherty,
Oklahoma, served in the U.S. Marine Corps in the early 1960s
as the executive secretary to two commanding generals of the
Parris Island Marine Corps Base, South Carolina.
Increasing numbers of women, including Native
Americans, entered the military in the 1970s and 1980s. Patricia
White Bear joined the Navy in 1981. She trained as an instrumentman
and served at sea repairing, adjusting and calibrating the
wide variety of mechanical measuring instruments used aboard
ships. Dolores Kathleen Smith, a Cherokee, graduated from
the Air Force Academy in 1982. She completed navigator training
and was assigned to a KC-135 unit. She served in the operational
plans division of her unit and also as an instructor before
retiring as a captain from the Air Force in 1990.
Darlene Yellowcloud of the Lakota Tribe was inspired to join
the Army because so many of the men in her family had served.
Her grandfather, Bear Saves Life, was killed in action in
France during World War I. Her father, brothers, brothers-in-law,
uncles and cousins were all veterans. Darlene was assigned
to the U. S. Army in Korea as a Specialist 4th Class. Lawnikwa
Spotted-Eaglefortune joined the Army in 1988, and attended
Basic Training at Fort Dix, New Jersey. Acting as a guide-on
carrier, she was injured when another carrier grounded a guide
iron through her foot into the ground. She still has the scar,
and now serves as a member of the Virginia Air National Guard.
As of 1980, at least sixty Native American women
were serving in the Eskimo Scouts, a special unit of the Alaska
National Guard. The Eskimo Scouts patrol the western coastline
of Alaska and the islands separating Alaska and Russia. The
Scouts are the only members of the National Guard who have
a continuous active duty mission. This unit was organized
during World War II, and the wives of scout battalion members
have always been involved in patrol missions. Women were admitted
as official members in 1976, and only then began to receive
pay, benefits and recognition for their work. Scouts currently
patrol ice flows in the Bering Straits, monitor movements
on the tundra, and perform Arctic search and rescue efforts
as required.
Native American women
lost their lives in the service of their nation. Katherine
Matthews of Cherokee, North Carolina, joined the Navy in the
late 1970s and trained as an Aviation Machinist's Mate. She
died while serving in California in 1985. Terri Ann Hagen,
a former Army medic, was a member of the Army National Guard
when she was killed fighting a fire on Storm King Mountain
in Colorado in 1994.
As of 1994, 1,509 Native American women and
Native Alaskan women were serving in the military forces of
the United States. Thousands more have served in the military
over time. 
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