Jean Downer Oral History

Oral history interview with Jean Downer
Primarily documents Jean Downer's service in the U.S. Navy WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service) from 1945 to 1946 and her life after the World War II. Pre-service topics include Downer's youth in Philadelphia, details of her her father's career and her brother's military service, her receptionist and accounting assistant job and her work operating a switchboard for the Philadelphia Electric Company. She recalls the bombing of Pearl Harbor and attending USO events in the city. " Downer describes enlisting in the WAVES to become a hospital corpsman and live away from home. She briefly discusses basic training at Hunter College, including graduation, barracks life, and getting to serve in the hospital corps. She describes her nursing duties at St. Albans Hospital; social activities; opinions of servicewomen; uniforms; meeting her husband; Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt; V-J Day; and favorite songs and movies. " Other topics include: returning to civilian life; the benefits of single gender high schools and dormitories; the history of Philadelphia and ethnic neighborhoods; unions; her son-in-law becoming a house husband and the role of WWII in expanding work opportunities for women; the birth of her children; the death of her first husband; meeting her second husband; women in combat and the war in Iraq; her son's service during the Vietnam War.