MCAS Edenton Women's Reserve Class Photograph 1944, WWII 97
Abstract
The MCAS Edenton Women's Reserve Class Photograph 1944 collection is composed of one original 8" x 10" group photograph of the U.S. Marine Corps Women's Reserve Celestial Navigation Training Class at the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Edenton (MCAS Edenton) in Edenton, N.C., on March 15, 1944. The photograph was taken on the class' graduation day after completing celestial navigation training. By late 1944, there were more than 215 Marine Corps Women's Reserve members stationed at MACS Edenton, of which this photograph features 25 Women's Reservists.
Descriptive Summary
- Title
- MCAS Edenton Women's Reserve Class Photograph 1944
- Call Number
- WWII 97
- Creator
- Unidentified
- Date
- March 15, 1944
- Extent
- 0.010 cubic feet
- Repository
- State Archives of North Carolina
Restrictions on Access & Use
Access Restrictions
There are no restrictions on accessing this collection.
Use Restrictions
There are no known restrictions on using this collection.
Preferred Citation
MCAS Edenton Women's Reserve Class Photograph 1944, WWII 97, WWII Papers, Military Collection, State Archives of North Carolina, Raleigh, N.C.
Collection Overview
The collection is composed of one original 8" x 10" group photograph of the U.S. Marine Corps Women's Reserve Celestial Navigation Training Class at the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station Edenton (MCAS Edenton) in Edenton, N.C., on March 15, 1944. The photograph was taken on the class' graduation day after completing celestial navigation training. By late 1944, there were more than 215 Marine Corps Women's Reserve members stationed at MACS Edenton, of which this photograph features 25 Women's Reservists.
Historical Note
Marine Corps Air Station Edenton (MCAS Edenton) was founded in World War II, operating
as an outlier Marine Corps installation connected with operations at MCAS Cherry Point
and Camp Lejeune, N.C. The federal government ordered the construction of MCAS Edenton.
With structural construction completed, the station was given the mission to engage
in operational training for landplanes and reduced seaplane facilities. The usual
training devices and buildings for celestial navigation and other aviation navigation
subjects were provided, as well as gasoline storage, a photographic laboratory, and
other facilities. The first Marine Corps Women's Reserves reported on August 4, 1943,
at MCAS Edenton; by September 6, 1943, there were 415 Women's Reservists there.
While the runways were being completed-with three of them being asphalt-covered and
6,000 feet long-Marine Fighter Squadrons 413 and 423 began conducting training at
the base, until they completed the training syllabus and were deployed overseas. A
number of other Marine Corps aviation units began training there shortly after. Training
was undertaken by an Operational Training Squadron for officers and men who would
fly twin-engine aircraft. By October 1944, MCAS Edenton had 26 Marine Corps officers
overseeing 332 men, and 11 Women Marine Reserve Officers overseeing 212 women. In
addition, there were 15 Navy officers, 6 WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency
Service), and 26 Navy and Marine women also stationed there. 22 Coast Guard enlisted
men and one woman provided security with dogs for the base. There was a headquarters
squadron for the men, and two Aviation Women's Reserve Squadrons for the women.
During the early days of the base, station employees ate in downtown Edenton, N.C.
The base cafeteria opened in November 1942, and was shortly followed by a mess hall
and galley that could feed 250 officers and 1,900 enlisted persons daily. By the spring
of 1943, MCAS Edenton would include the guard section, traffic control, a brig, a
fire department, a communications department, Navy disbursing and paymaster departments,
a post office, public works, malaria control, ground maintenance, quartermaster department,
supply department, and a medical department.
Safety and rescue of Marine Corps members was the task assigned to a crash boat facility
completed at MCAS Edenton on May 15, 1943. Recreation was provided in part by athletic
events, boating, and bowling. There were also parties and dancing at an old barn that
was rebuilt for the MCAS Edenton personnel, and at various clubs. There were chaplains
operating at the base. Through the base's Public Relations department, a station newspaper
entitled the Chowan Leatherneck was issued, growing from a three-sheet publication with a circulation of 650, to
a seven-sheet publication and a circulation of 1,850. Between January and October
1944, 90,543 flight operations occurred; in March 1944, an outlying field was acquired
at Emporia, Virginia to serve for a "bounce drill"-or training for pilots who would
have to operate from aircraft carriers.
On February 24, 1943, the Director of the Planning Division in the Bureau of Aeronautics
called for a temporary diversion in the use of MCAS Edenton from glider training to
two-engine landplane operations, with Operation Squadron Eight to use thirty-six PV-1
Venturas and eighteen SNB-1s for the purpose. The change called for an addition to the gasoline
storage supply and various other projects. With the end of World War II, MCAS Edenton
was placed in caretaker status on July 1, 1946, and was inactivated and disestablished
on August 1, 1946.
On August 2, 1955, it was reestablished as a naval auxiliary air station, only to
be disestablished on December 31, 1958, and decommissioned on January 1, 1959. The
Edenton base was redesigned as an outlying field for MCAS Cherry Point, N.C., on January
9, 1959. Within three months, however, it was disestablished again on March 31, 1959.
Given the cost of modernization for the base estimated at about $48 million, it was
decided to close the facility. The closure led to the laying off of 1,294 military
personnel and 138 civilian employees. The 3,283 acres of land on which it sat were
declared surplus with the right of recapture by the military. It would later become
the Northeastern Regional Airport in Edenton, N.C.
[All of the information for this biographical note was taken from United States Navy and Marine Corps Bases, Domestic, edited by Paolo E. Coletta, Greenwood Press, 1985, pages 194-195].
Contents of the Collection
Subject Headings
Acquisitions Information
The collection was received by the Military Collection of the State Archives of North Carolina from a private donor in July 2017, with the donation completed in August 2017.