Thelma Foster Oral History

Oral history Interview with Thelma Houpe Foster
Primarily documents Thelma Foster's early life during the Great Depression, service during World War II, and later life. Foster gives a detailed description of the ways in which her family coped with the Great Depression. She tells of making dresses of feed sacks, repairing shoes with cardboard, and harvesting wild dandelions for food. She explains how she was able to attend college through sorority funding and a National Youth Administration Job. Foster documents her life as woman in the World War II era military. She speaks of constant transfers and reassignments. She explains that the original translation job she enlisted for was not offered to her, and how she instead came to be an officer in the quartermaster corps. Foster speaks of the difficulties involved with her assignment including constant trips in a B-17 from Tyndall Field, Florida to Atlanta, Georgia. She discusses teaching during the desegregation of Greensboro schools, and that she witnessed the beginning of the Greensboro sit-in at Woolworths Department Store. Additional information include her views on discrimination, feelings towards presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman, lists some major entertainers that put on shows through the USO, her love of teaching, her marriage, and her views about the role of women in combat."