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March 12, 2010

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Honor for wartime women pilots

THEY flew planes during World War II but were not considered "real" military pilots. No flags were draped over their coffins when they died on duty. And when their service ended, they had to pay their own bus fare home.

These pilots - all women - got long-overdue recognition when they received the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian honor given by Congress, in a ceremony on Capitol Hill on Wednesday.

About 200 women who served as Women Airforce Service Pilots, or WASPs, were on hand to receive the award. Now mostly in their late 80s and early 90s, some came in wheelchairs, many sported dark blue uniforms, and one, June Bent, clutched a framed photograph of a comrade who had died.

As a military band played the national anthem, one of the women who had been sitting in a wheelchair stood up and saluted through the entire song as a relative gently supported her back.

"Women Airforce Service Pilots, we are all your daughters; you taught us how to fly," said the leader of the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the first woman to serve as Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. She said the pilots went unrecognized for too long, even though their service blazed a trail for other US military women.

Accepting the award, WASP pilot Deanie Parrish, 88, said the women had volunteered without expectation of thanks. They flew noncombat missions to free up male pilots to fly overseas.

"We did it because our country needed us," Parrish said.

WASP Ty Hughes Killen, 85, put it more simply: "We're a bunch of tough old ladies," she said in an interview.

Thirty-eight WASPS were killed in service in World War II. But they were long considered civilians, not members of the military, and thus were not entitled to the pay and benefits given to men.

They were only afforded veteran status in 1977 after a long fight. It is estimated that about 300 of the more than 1,000 WASPs are still alive.

A day earlier, the women laid wreaths at the US Air Force Memorial with the knowledge that it may be one of the last times so many of them could gather. Killen said it was the "gals who are watching from upstairs" she's been thinking of.


 

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