Marthalou Hunter Collection

Marthalou Hunter and K. Kostolich
Marthalou Hunter (left) with 3rd Platoon commander of the 4th Company, 6th Regiment, Sgt. K. Kostolich, in Daytona Beach, circa 1943.
Marthalou Hunter and father
Marthalou Hunter, in WAC overcoat and Hobby hat, and her father H.T. Hunter, president of Western Carolina College, pose outside in the snow, circa 1943.
Marthalou Hunter as a serologist
Marthalou Hunter sits at a desk of test tubes and beakers as a serologist at Fitzsimons General Hospital in Denver, Colorado, in 1943.
Marthalou Hunter with Frederick C. Whitten
Marthalou Hunter and Lt. Col. Frederick C. Whitten, the post executive officer, in front of a train, circa 1945. Behind them, a porter helps a WAC with her luggage.
Marthalou Hunter with soldier
WAC Marthalou Hunter in uniform with an unidentified soldier outside his home, circa 1945. In the window of the house is a Blue Star Service Banner with two stars.
Oral history interview with Marthalou Hunter
Primarily documents Marthalou Hunter's college years and her experiences in the Women's Army Corps (WAC) from 1942 to 1947. Hunter discusses her education at three universities, including a negative experience at Duke University School of Nursing; a conversation between her mother and Eleanor Roosevelt; and her pre-war work in the serology department at the State Laboratory of Hygiene. " Hunter talks chiefly about her service in the WAC. She remembers learning about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor;" attending OCS at Fort Des Moines, forgetting to wear her exercise bloomers one day; preparing WAAC facilities in Daytona Beach; not having much to do at Fitzsimmons General Hospital; chance meetings with old friends while in the army; and reactions to the WACs from male officers and soldiers. " Topics related to Hunter's overseas duty include traveling on the Queen Elizabeth; getting assignments at a Replacement Depot in England; working in serology and bacteriology in Salisbury; hearing Yasha Haifetz play in the Salisbury Cathedral; losing papers she was supposed to deliver to the Surgeon General in Paris; trying to get to Darmstadt to fulfill her original orders; trading two cartons of cigarettes for a plane ticket from Darmstadt to Paris; experiencing buzz bomb attacks in London; President Franklin Roosevelt's death; and social life overseas. " Hunter also details her education and career after the war, including her attempt to return to Johns Hopkins but attending UNC School of Public Health instead; working at VA hospitals in Swannanoa, NC; Dublin, GA; and Atlanta, Georgia; and working with the Centers for Disease Control.
Six WACs
Five WACs, including Marthalou Hunter (far left) pose with a commanding officer (center), circa 1945.
Two WACs and a WAVE
Two WACs (right) and a Navy WAVES member (left) pose in front of building, circa 1945.
U.S. Army parade
Marching formation of two rows of WAACs, commanded by Marthalou Hunter (front right), and three regular army platoons, circa 1944.
WAAC company in Daytona Beach
Photo of Marthalou Hunter's unit, the 4th Company, 6th WAAC Regiment, in formation in front of the Riviera Hotel at Daytona Beach, Florida, circa 1943.
WAAC platoon at Daytona Beach
Photo of Marthalou Hunter and the 3rd platoon of the 4th Company, 6th WAAC Regiment, in formation at Daytona Beach, Florida, circa 1943.
WAACs in front of sign
WAACs pose in front of a sign in Daytona Beach so that it reads "Notice! WAAC Officers For Rent", circa 1943.
WAACs with Jane Wyman
Actress Jane Wyman and her accompanist pose with WAAC officers, including Marthlou Hunter (front right), in 1943.
WACs in physical training
WACs lie on their backs doing leg raises as a part of physical training at Brookley Field in Mobile, Alabama, circa 1944.
WACs marching
WACs in formation march past a white wooden church, circa 1945.