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Creative Writing: My Paratrooper

Decent Essays

Metha flipped to the last page in her journal containing her most recent poem “My Paratrooper”. Clearing her throat, she began to read aloud: A picture I hold close to my heart; It’s the picture you left when we had to part. “So long! And yours ‘til my chute fails to open.” You turned and left leaving farewells unspoken, Now I live again our days of happiness, As nearer my heart your picture I press. My Paratrooper! With a heart might brave, It’s fellows like you that make Old Glory wave. I’m proud of your boots and your silver wings, Every sacrifice you make and a million other things. By now your kahki is dirty and worn, Like a little ship that’s weathered the storm. Perhaps your boots don’t shine as they did a year …show more content…

Metha spoke up between giggles, “Speaking of doing your part have either of you heard from Marie? Last I heard from her she was in Italy, but that was two months ago.” Irene and Helen glanced at each other and shrugged. Metha sighed, “Well I hope she is okay, I am glad that at least her nursing abilities are not going to waste.” Going into industry to work was not the only option for women wanting to do their part in the war effort. After the creation of Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps, the Navy Women’s Reserve, the Marine Corps Women’s Reserve, the Coast Guard Women’s Reserve, the Women Airforce Service Pilots, the Army Nurses Corps, and the Navy Nurse Corps, women too could fight overseas. Many women heeded the call of the military with some 350,000 women joining the Armed Forces (“American women in World War II”). However, women were not allowed to fight. Instead women took up “office and clerical jobs,…drove trucks, repaired airplanes, worked as laboratory technicians, rigged parachutes, served as radio operators, analyzed photographs, flew military aircraft across the country, [and] test-flew newly repaired planes” (“American women in World War II”). The goal of having women take up these jobs was to free up more men to be able to fight. The Nurse Corps received some the highest amounts of female enlistments (“Partners in winning the war”). Before the war, there were only 8,000 military nurses; by the end of the war, there were almost 70,000 enlisted nurses (“American women in World War II”). Nurses often went overseas to combat zones, sometimes even being shipped to the front lines, and lived in harsh conditions. After the war, more than 1,600 nurses were decorated for bravery under fire and service to the war effort (“American women in World War

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