[Tanya Roth is a writer, historian, and high school educator with whom I’ve been very fortunate to connect through the #twitterstorians community over the last few months. This Guest Post is an excerpt from her forthcoming book Her Cold War: Women in the U.S. Military, 1945-1980, which is due out September 30th!]
[Ad from the National Archives, Record Group 330, stored in a Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services (DACOWITS) member's folder.]
Excerpt from Her Cold War: Women in the U.S. Military,
1945-1980 by Tanya L. Roth
Chapter 2: The Real Miss America: Recruiting Womanpower
Four years after the Women’s Armed Services Integration Act
passed, someone in recruiting decided that the first all-out campaign for
womanpower should take place with the 1952 Miss America pageant. It must have
seemed like the perfect pairing: the pageant highlighted the best young
American women from around the nation, perfectly poised, beautiful, talented,
and educated. Recruiters dreamed of signing just these types of young ladies
for service in the armed forces. Military publicity officers secured a
presence for servicewomen throughout the pageant, ensuring visibility whenever
possible. The goal was simple: get Americans to associate servicewomen with the
excellent reputation Miss America contestants had at that time and to impart a
sense of glamour into Americans’ ideas of women in uniform...
From the beginning...concerns
about appearances framed woman power recruiting efforts. Recruiters followed
the philosophy that familiarity and femininity would be the most practical and
effective ways to entice women to military careers. Military service
became advertised as an avenue by which women could become not just ideal
American women, but respectable ladies. This approach helped make
women’s service acceptable to Americans both inside and outside the armed
forces. If military service— especially in wartime—could transform boys into
men, then military service could also turn girls into proper ladies. Women
belonged in national defense in part because military and government officials
saw them as partners in service with men, doing things women did best and
capitalizing on their identities as women to do so. In these regards,
staging the women’s recruiting drive in conjunction with the 1952 Miss
America pageant made sense. The pageant was about thirty years old, and
community service was— and still is—an important element of holding the title
“Miss America.” During World War II, the crowned Miss Americas all
performed war service activities such as visiting troops and selling war bonds,
their version of supporting national defense.5 Scholar Mary
Anne Schofield argues that during wartime, such efforts “supported the
propaganda machine that said that femininity and war work went together.”
In the process, the pageant itself solidified the image of Miss America as “the
ideal American woman.” By 1952, if military leaders wanted a venue that would
showcase servicewomen as the very best of American womanhood and service,
the Miss America pageant was the place to be.
[9/11 series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other pageant histories, stories, or contexts you’d share?]
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