Women in the United States Navy

Summary

Many women have served in the United States Navy for over a century. As of 2020, there were 69,629 total women on active duty in the US Navy, with 11,076 serving as officers, and 58,553 enlisted. Of all the branches in the US military, the Navy has the second highest percentage of female active duty service members (after the US Air Force) with women making up 20% of the US Navy in 2020.[4]

Admiral Michelle J. Howard became the first female four-star admiral in the U.S. Navy in 2014.[1] This also made her the U.S. armed forces' first black woman to achieve four stars.[2]
In November 2023 Admiral Lisa Franchetti became the first female Chief of Naval Operations and first female member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.[3]

As of 2023, no woman has become a Navy SEAL. In 2019, a woman successfully completed SEAL officer assessment and selection (SOAS), but opted to join another unit of the Navy.[5] She was among five women who had participated in the SOAS[6] screening process.[5]

In July 2021, the first woman graduated from the Naval Special Warfare (NSW) training program to become a Special Warfare Combatant craft Crewman (SWCC). The SWCC directly supports the SEALs and other commando units, and are experts in covert insertion and extraction special operations tactics.[7][8]

In November 2023, the United States Senate voted 95-1 to confirm Admiral Lisa Franchetti as Chief of Naval Operations, making Franchetti the first woman to both lead the Navy and join the Joint Chiefs of Staff.[9]

History edit

Pre–World War I edit

Women worked as nurses for the Union Navy during the American Civil War. In 1890, Ann Bradford Stokes, who during the American Civil War had worked as a nurse on the navy hospital ship USS Red Rover, where she assisted Sisters of the Holy Cross, was granted a pension of $12 a month, making her the first American woman to receive a pension for her own service in the military.[10][11]

The United States Navy Nurse Corps was officially established in 1908; it was all-female until 1965.[12][13] After the establishment of the Nurse Corps in 1908 by an Act of Congress, twenty women were selected as the first members and assigned to the Naval Medical School Hospital in Washington, D.C. However, the navy did not provide room or board for them, and so the nurses rented their own house and provided their own meals.[14] In time, the nurses would come to be known as "The Sacred Twenty" because they were the first women to serve formally as members of the Navy. The "Sacred Twenty" were Mary H. Du Bose; Adah M. Pendleton; Elizabeth M. Hewitt; Della V. Knight; Josephine Beatrice Bowman; Lenah H. Sutcliffe Higbee; Esther Voorhees Hasson, the first Superintendent of the Navy Nurse Corps, 1908–1911; Martha E. Pringle; Elizabeth J. Wells; Clare L. De Ceu.; Elizabeth Leonhardt; Estelle Hine; Ethel R. Parsons; Florence T. Milburn; Boniface T. Small; Victoria White; Isabelle Rose Roy; Margaret D. Murray; Sara B. Myer; and Sara M. Cox. The Nurse Corps gradually expanded to 160 on the eve of World War I. For a few months in 1913, Navy nurses saw their first shipboard service, aboard Mayflower and Dolphin.

World War I edit

The increased size of the navy in support of World War I increased the need for clerical and administrative support. The U.S. Naval Reserve Act of 1916 permitted the enlistment of qualified "persons" for service; Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels asked, "Is there any law that says a Yeoman must be a man?" and was told there was not.[15] Thus, the navy was able to induct its first female sailors into the U.S. Naval Reserve. The first woman to enlist in the U.S. Navy was Loretta Perfectus Walsh on 17 March 1917.[16] She was also the first American active-duty navy woman, and the first woman allowed to serve as a woman in any of the United States armed forces, as anything other than as a nurse. Walsh subsequently became the first woman U.S. Navy petty officer when she was sworn in as Chief Yeoman on 21 March 1917. During World War I Navy women served around the continental U.S. and in France, Guam and Hawaii, mostly as Yeomen (F), but also as radio operators, electricians, draftsmen, pharmacists, photographers, telegraphers, fingerprint experts, chemists, torpedo assemblers and camouflage designers. Some black women served as Yeomen (F) and were the first black women to serve as enlisted members of the U.S. armed forces.[17] These first black women to serve in the navy were 16 Yeomen (F)—the total would rise to 24[18]—from some of "Washington's elite black families" who "worked in the Muster Roll division at Washington's Navy Yard...."[19] All women in the navy were released from active duty after the end of the war.

World War II and after until the Korean War edit

World War II again brought the need for additional personnel. The Navy organized to recruit women into a separate women's auxiliary, labeled Women Appointed for Voluntary Emergency Service (WAVES). WAVES served in varied positions around the continental U.S. and in Hawaii.

Two groups of Navy nurses (Navy nurses were all women then) were held prisoner by the Japanese in World War II. Chief Nurse Marion Olds and nurses Leona Jackson, Lorraine Christiansen, Virginia Fogerty and Doris Yetter were taken prisoner on Guam shortly after Pearl Harbor and transported to Japan. They were repatriated in August 1942, although the newspaper did not identify them as Navy nurses. Chief Nurse Laura Cobb and her nurses, Mary Chapman, Bertha Evans, Helen Gorzelanski, Mary Harrington, Margaret Nash, Goldie O'Haver, Eldene Paige, Susie Pitcher, Dorothy Still and C. Edwina Todd (some of the "Angels of Bataan") were captured in 1942 in the Philippines and imprisoned in the Los Baños internment camp there, where they continued to function as a nursing unit, until they were rescued by American forces in 1945. Other Los Baños prisoners later said: "We are absolutely certain that had it not been for these nurses many of us who are alive and well would have died."[20] Navy nurse Ann Agnes Bernatitus, one of the "Angels of Bataan", nearly became another POW; she was one of the last to escape Corregidor Island in the Philippines, via the USS Spearfish. Upon her return to the United States she became the first American to receive the Legion of Merit.

In 1943, Thelma Bendler Stern, an engineering draftsman, became the first woman assigned to perform duties aboard a United States Navy ship as part of her official responsibilities.

The first black woman sworn into the Navy Nurse Corps was Phyllis Mae Dailey, a Columbia University student from New York, on 8 March 1945. She was the first of only four black women to serve as a Navy nurse during World War II.[21]

 
 
 
WAVES Recruiting posters

World War II ended in 1945. The Women's Armed Services Integration Act (Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 80–625, 62 Stat. 356, enacted June 12, 1948) is a United States law that enabled women to serve as permanent, regular members of the armed forces, including the Navy. Prior to this act, women, with the exception of nurses, served in the military only in times of war. However, Section 502 of the act limited service of women by excluding them from aircraft and vessels of the Navy that might engage in combat.[22]

Korean War edit

Women in the Naval Reserve were recalled along with their male counterparts for duty during the Korean War.

Vietnam War edit

Nurses served aboard the hospital ship USS Sanctuary. Nine non-nurse navy women served in country; however no enlisted navy women were authorized.

Iraq War edit

Women in the navy served in the Iraq War from 2003-2011.[23]

Women in the navy since 1970 edit

 
U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Robin Braun, Commander, Navy Recruiting Command.

Major changes occurred for navy women in the 1970s. Alene Duerk became the first female admiral in the navy in 1972.[24][25] In 1976 RADM Fran McKee became the first female unrestricted line officer appointed to flag rank. In 1978, Judge Sirica ruled the law banning navy women from ships to be unconstitutional in the US District Court for the District of Columbia case Owens v. Brown.[26] That year, Congress approved a change to Title 10 USC Section 6015 to permit the navy to assign women to fill sea duty billets on support and noncombatant ships.[12][27] During the 1970s, women began to enter the surface warfare and aviation fields, gained access to officer accession programs previously open only to men, and started to screen for command opportunities ashore.[28]

In December 2015, Defense Secretary Ash Carter stated that starting in 2016 all combat jobs would open to women.[29] In March 2016 Ash Carter approved final plans from military service branches and the U.S. Special Operations Command to open all combat jobs to women, and authorized the military to begin integrating female combat soldiers "right away."[30]

Aviation edit

In 1972, Roseann Roberts became the first female helicopter plane captain in the navy.

In 1973 the Secretary of the Navy announced the authorization of naval aviation training for women. LTJG Judith Neuffer was the first woman selected for flight training. In 1974, the navy became the first service to graduate a woman pilot, LT Barbara Allen Rainey, followed closely by classmates Judith Neuffer, Ana Marie Fuqua, Rosemary Bryant Mariner, Jane Skiles O'Dea and Joellen Drag.[28]

Women began attending Aviation Officer Candidate School (AOCS) in 1976.[28]

In 1979 the Naval Flight Officer (NFO) program opened to women.

Also in 1979, LT Lynn Spruill became the first woman naval aviator to obtain carrier qualification.

Benefits edit

Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677 (1973), was a landmark Supreme Court case[31] which decided that benefits given by the military to the family of service members cannot be given out differently because of sex.[32]

Officer Accession Programs edit

The Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) was opened to women in 1972 and the first woman was commissioned from a ROTC program in 1974. The Women Officer School (WOS), Newport, RI, was disestablished in 1973, and Officer Candidate School (OCS) training was integrated to support men and women. The United States Naval Academy, along with the other military academies, first accepted women in 1976 and commissioned its first female graduates in 1980. Women also began attending Aviation Officer Candidate School (AOCS) in 1976.[28]

Naval Nuclear Power Training edit

While still barred from serving on combatant vessels, enlisted women were accepted for training in the Naval Nuclear Power Program in the early 80s. After initial rating training, this consisted of Nuclear Power School (Orlando, FL), and the follow on Nuclear Power Training Unit (prototype) operational training (NY or ID). The first graduates of this training were in 1981. Because all nuclear powered vessels in the Navy at this time were combatants, these women were assigned to either prototype training billets or service/support roles on tenders and shore facilities. This caused some resentment among males in the enlisted nuclear power community because the women were viewed as taking away shore billets that would allow them to maintain a pay bonus based on their maintaining their proficiency in the nuclear power field. Training women in the nuclear power program was discontinued after a year or two because of this restriction on assigning them to combatant units.[33]

Submarines edit

On 29 April 2010, the Department of the Navy announced authorization of a policy change allowing women to begin serving on board navy submarines.[34][35] The new policy and plan was set to begin with the integration of female Officers. A group of up to 24 female Officers (three Officers on each of eight different crews)[35] were scheduled to enter the standard nuclear submarine training pipeline in July 2010[36] – and expected to report to submarine duty by late 2011 or early 2012.[35] Integration of Enlisted females into submarine crews was expected to begin soon thereafter.[36][37] Initial candidates for female Submarine Officer positions were highly qualified selects from accession sources that include the Naval Academy, Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps, STA-21 program and Officer Candidate School, with transfers possible for those from other Unrestricted Line Officer communities.[36] A group of up to eight female Supply Corps Officers was also expected to complete requisite training and begin submarine service in the same time frame.[35][36]

Initial assignments for female submariners were on the blue and gold crews of selected guided-missile submarines (SSGNs) and ballistic-missile submarines (SSBNs). Two submarines of each type served as the inaugural vessels.[35][36] The first group of U.S. female submariners completed nuclear power school and officially reported on board two ballistic and two guided missile submarines in November 2011.[38] In 2012, it was announced that 2013 would be the first year for women to serve on U.S. attack submarines.[39] On 22 June 2012, a sailor assigned to USS Ohio (SSGN-726) became the first female supply officer to qualify in U.S. submarines. Lt. Britta Christianson of Ohio's Gold Crew received her Submarine Supply Corps "dolphins" from the Gold Crew Commanding Officer Capt. Rodney Mills during a brief ceremony at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility (PSNS & IMF).[40]

On 5 December 2012, three sailors assigned to USS Maine (SSBN-741) and USS Wyoming (SSBN-742) became the first female unrestricted line officers to qualify in U.S. submarines.[41] LTJG Jennifer Noonan [ROTC Cornell University], a native of Scituate MA, and LTJG Amber Cowan both of Maine's Blue Crew, and LTJG Marquette Leveque, a native of Fort Collins, Colo., assigned to the Gold Crew of Wyoming, and received their submarine "dolphins" during separate ceremonies at Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor, Wash. and Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay, Ga. respectively.[41] In 2013, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus said that the first women to join Virginia-class attack subs had been chosen: They were newly commissioned female officers scheduled to report to their subs in fiscal year 2015.[42] In August 2016, Chief Petty Officer Dominique Saavedra became the first enlisted female sailor to earn her submarine qualification, and was assigned to USS Michigan (SSGN-727).[43]

Surface warfare edit

In 1972 the pilot program for assignment of officers and enlisted women to ships was initiated on board USS Sanctuary (AH-17). In 1978 Congress approved a change to Title 10 USC Section 6015 to permit the navy to assign women to fill sea duty billets on support and noncombatant ships. The Surface Warfare community opened to women. In 1979, the first woman obtained her Surface Warfare Officer (SWO) qualification.[28] In 1993, Congress approved women to serve on combat ships. There were about 33 women who were the first assigned to these sea billets.

Timeline of women in the United States Navy edit

Year Event
1861-1865 Women worked as nurses for the navy during the American Civil War.[10][11]
1908 The Navy Nurse Corps was established; it was all-female until 1965.[12][13]
1917 Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels announced that the navy would enlist women on 17 March.[44]
1917 Loretta Perfectus Walsh became the first woman to enlist in the navy on 17 March.[16]
1942 President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Public Law 689 creating the navy's women reserve program on 30 July 1942.[44]
1942 Lieutenant Commander Mildred H. McAfee, USNR, director of the WAVES, became the navy's first female line officer.[44]
1944 Lieutenant Harriet Ida Pickens and Ensign Frances Wills were commissioned as the first African-American female navy officers.[44]
1944 Sue Dauser, the director of the Navy Nurse Corps, became the first female captain in the navy.[45]
1945 The first black woman sworn into the Navy Nurse Corps was Phyllis Mae Dailey, a Columbia University student from New York, on 8 March 1945. She was the first of only four black women to serve as a Navy nurse during World War II.[21]
1948 The Women's Armed Services Integration Act (Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 80–625, 62 Stat. 356, enacted June 12, 1948) is a United States law that enabled women to serve as permanent, regular members of the armed forces, including the Navy. Prior to this act, women, with the exception of nurses, served in the military only in times of war. However, Section 502 of the act limited service of women by excluding them from aircraft and vessels of the Navy that might engage in combat.[22]
1948 On 15 October 1948, the first eight women were commissioned in the regular Navy: Joy Bright Hancock, Winifred Quick Collins, Ann King, Frances Willoughby, Ellen Ford, Doris Cranmore, Doris Defenderfer, and Betty Rae Tennant took their oaths as naval officers.[46]
1959 Yeoman Anna Der-Vartanian was the first woman in the navy promoted to master chief petty officer, and the first woman in the armed services promoted to E-9.[47]
1961 Lieutenant Charlene I. Suneson became the first line WAVES officer to be ordered to shipboard duty.[48]
1967 Public Law 90-130 was signed into law; it removed legal ceilings on women's promotions that had kept them out of the general and flag ranks, and dropped the two percent ceiling on officer and enlisted strengths for women in the armed forces.[49]
1972 Roseanne Roberts became the first female helicopter plane captain in the Navy.[50][51]
1972 Alene Duerk became the first female admiral in the navy.[24][25]
1973 Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677 (1973), was a landmark Supreme Court case[31] which decided that benefits given by the military to the family of service members cannot be given out differently because of sex.[32]
1974 Lieutenant Junior Grade Barbara Ann (Allen) Rainey became the first navy woman to earn her wings on 22 February 1974.[52]
1974 The first women were commissioned through NROTC.[53]
1975 Schlesinger v. Ballard, 419 U.S. 498 (1975), was a United States Supreme Court case that upheld a federal statute granting female naval officers four more years of commissioned service before mandatory discharge than male Naval officers.[54] A federal statute granted female Naval officers fourteen years of commissioned service while allowing only nine years of commissioned service for male Naval officers before mandatory discharge. The Supreme Court held that the law passed intermediate scrutiny equal protection analysis because women, excluded from combat duty, had fewer opportunities for advancement in the military. The Court found the statute to directly compensate for the past statutory barriers to advancement.[55]
1976 Fran McKee became the navy's first female unrestricted line flag officer.[56]
1978 Navy Nurse Joan C. Bynum became the first black woman promoted to the rank of captain.[52]
1978 Judge Sirica ruled the law banning navy women from ships to be unconstitutional in the US District Court for the District of Columbia case Owens v. Brown.[26]
1978 Congress approved a change to Title 10 USC Section 6015 to permit the navy to assign women to fill sea duty billets on support and noncombatant ships.[12][27]
1979 Lieutenant Lynn Spruill became the first female navy pilot qualified to land on aircraft carriers.[57]
1979 The first woman in the navy to qualify as a surface warfare officer did so this year.[58]
1980 The first women graduated from the Naval Academy. There were 81 women in the class of 1980 at the Naval Academy, and 55 of them graduated. Elizabeth Belzer was the first female graduate and Janie L. Mines was the first black female graduate.[52]
1984 Kristine Holderied became the first female valedictorian of the Naval Academy.[59]
1990 Rear Admiral Marsha J. Evans became the first woman to command a Naval Station.[60]
1990 Lieutenant Commander Darlene Iskra became the first navy woman to command a ship, USS Opportune (ARS-41).[61]
1991 The Tailhook scandal occurred, in which Navy (and Marine Corps) aviators were accused of sexually assaulting 83 women (and 7 men) at the Tailhook convention in Las Vegas.[62]
1993 Before the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was enacted in 1993, lesbians and bisexual women (and gay men and bisexual men) were banned from serving in the military.[63] In 1993 the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was enacted, which mandated that the military could not ask servicemembers about their sexual orientation.[64][65] However, until the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was ended in 2011, service members (including but not limited to female service members) were still expelled from the military if they engaged in sexual conduct with a member of the same sex, stated that they were lesbian, gay, or bisexual, and/or married or attempted to marry someone of the same sex.[66]
1995 USS Benfold is the first destroyer to be built to accommodate females.
1996 Patricia Tracey became the first female three-star officer (vice admiral) in the navy.[67]
1998 CDR Maureen A. Farren became the first woman to command a combatant ship in the navy.[60]
1998 Lillian Fishburne became the first African-American woman promoted to flag rank in the navy.[60]
2006 Carol M. Pottenger became the first woman to command an expeditionary strike group in the navy.
2010 Nora Tyson became the first woman to command a carrier strike group in the navy.[68]
2010 Martha E.G. Herb became the first woman Navy deep sea diver and member of the EOD community to be promoted to flag rank in the Navy.[69]
2011 The "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was ended in 2011, thus putting an end to service members (including but not limited to female service members) being expelled from the military if they engaged in sexual conduct with a member of the same sex, stated that they were lesbian, gay, or bisexual, and/or married or attempted to marry someone of the same sex.[66]
2011 The first group of female submariners in the navy completed nuclear power school and officially reported on board two ballistic and two guided missile submarines in November 2011.[38]
2012 Commander Monika Washington Stoker became the first African American woman to take command of a navy missile destroyer.[70]
2012 Five "Tigertails" of Carrier Airborne Early Warning Squadron One Two Five (VAW-125), embarked aboard the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN-70) as part of Carrier Air Wing Seventeen (CVW-17), flew an historic flight on 25 January when they participated in the navy's first all-female E-2C Hawkeye combat mission.[71]
2012 On 22 June 2012, a sailor assigned to USS Ohio (SSGN-726) became the first female supply officer to qualify in submarines in the navy. Lt. Britta Christianson of Ohio's Gold Crew received her Submarine Supply Corps "dolphins" from the Gold Crew Commanding Officer Capt. Rodney Mills during a brief ceremony at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard and Intermediate Maintenance Facility (PSNS & IMF).[40]
2012 On 5 December 2012, three sailors assigned to USS Maine (SSBN-741) and USS Wyoming (SSBN-742) became the first female unrestricted line officers to qualify in submarines in the navy.[41] LTJG Marquette Leveque, a native of Fort Collins, Colorado, assigned to the Gold Crew of Wyoming, and LTJG Amber Cowan and LTJG Jennifer Noonan [ROTC Cornell University], a native of Scituate MA, both of Maine's Blue Crew received their submarine "dolphins" during separate ceremonies at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay, Ga., and Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor, Wash.[41]
2012 Robin Braun became the first female commander of the Navy Reserve, making her the first female three star aviator and the first woman to lead any Reserve component of the military.[72]
2014 Michelle J. Howard became the first female four-star admiral in the navy.[1]
2014 Jan E. Tighe became the first woman to command a numbered fleet when she assumed command of the navy's Tenth Fleet on 2 April 2014.[73]
2014 In July 2014, Marine Corps Captain Katie Higgins became the first female pilot to join the Blue Angels, the navy's flight demonstration squadron. She piloted the team's KC-130 Hercules support aircraft, "Fat Albert."[74]
2015 Nora Tyson was installed as the commander of the navy's Third Fleet, making her the first woman to lead a navy operational fleet.[75][76]
2015 Cheryl Hansen became the first female commander of the Naval Construction Battalion Center in Gulfport, Mississippi.[77]
2015 In December 2015, Defense Secretary Ash Carter stated that starting in 2016 all combat jobs would open to women.[29]
2016 In March 2016, Defense Secretary Ash Carter approved final plans from military service branches and the U.S. Special Operations Command to open all combat jobs to women, and authorized the military to begin integrating female combat soldiers "right away."[30]
2016 In August 2016, Dominique Saavedra became the first enlisted female sailor to earn her submarine qualification.[43]
2019 In 2019, Capt. Tamara Lawrence, a spokeswoman for Naval Special Warfare, confirmed that an anonymous woman completed the SOAS Navy Seal screening, but was afterwards transferred to another section of the Navy as she had not listed the SEALs as her first choice of military branch to serve with.[78] Lawrence also revealed that the woman who managed to complete the training was among five women who participated in the Navy SEAL SOAS training program as well and that this woman was awarded membership in the Navy branch of her choosing for completing the training.[5]
2021 In July 2021, the first woman graduated from a Naval Special Warfare (NSW) assessment and selection pipeline to become a Special Warfare Combatant craft Crewman (SWCC). The SWCC directly supports the SEALs and other commando units, and are experts in covert insertion and extraction special operations tactics.[7][8]
2023 In November 2023, Admiral Lisa Franchetti became the first woman to serve as Chief of Naval Operations.[79]

Careers edit

In the navy, women are currently eligible to serve in all ratings. In 2013 Leon Panetta removed the U.S. military's ban on women serving in combat, overturning a 1994 rule prohibiting women from being assigned to smaller ground combat units. Panetta's decision gave the U.S. military services until January 2016 to seek special exceptions if they believed any positions must remain closed to women. The services had until May 2013 to draw up a plan for opening all units to women and until the end of 2015 to actually implement it.[80][81] In December 2015, Defense Secretary Ash Carter stated that starting in 2016 all combat jobs would open to women.[29]

The former policy set by Congress and the Secretary of Defense, effective 1 October 1994, excluded women from direct ground combat billets in the military, stating:

"Service members who are eligible to be assigned to all positions for which they are qualified, except that women shall be excluded from assignment to units below the brigade level whose primary mission is to engage in direct combat on the ground as defined below. "Direct ground combat is engaging an enemy on the ground with individual or crew-served weapons, while being exposed to hostile fire and to a high probability of direct physical contact with the hostile force's personnel. Direct combat take place well forward on the battlefield while locating and closing with the enemy to defeat them by fire, maneuver, or shock effect." However, qualified and motivated women are encouraged to investigate the diver and explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) fields."
 
 
 
 
Careers in the navy

Dress edit

  • A certified maternity uniform is mandatory for all pregnant servicewomen in the navy when the regular uniform no longer fits.

Grooming standards edit

  • Hair: The navy deems that hairstyles shall not be "outrageously multicolored" or "faddish," to include shaved portions of the scalp (other than the neckline), or have designs cut or braided into the hair. Hair coloring must look natural and complement the individual. Haircuts and styles shall present a balanced appearance. Lopsided and extremely asymmetrical styles are not authorized. Pigtails, widely spaced individual hanging locks, and braids that protrude from the head, are not authorized. Multiple braids are authorized. Braided hairstyles shall be conservative and conform to the guidelines listed herein. When a hairstyle of multiple braids is worn, braids shall be of uniform dimension, small in diameter (approx. 1/4 inch), and tightly interwoven to present a neat, professional, well-groomed appearance. Foreign material (i.e., beads, decorative items) shall not be braided into the hair. Short hair may be braided in symmetrical fore and aft rows (cornrowing) that minimize scalp exposure. Cornrow ends shall not protrude from the head, and shall be secured only with inconspicuous rubber bands that match the color of the hair. Appropriateness of a hairstyle shall also be judged by its appearance when headgear is worn. All headgear shall fit snugly and comfortably around the largest part of the head without distortion or excessive gaps. Hair shall not show from under the front of the brim of the combination hat, garrison, or command ball caps. Hairstyles which do not allow headgear to be worn in this manner, or which interfere with the proper wear of protective masks or equipment are prohibited. When in uniform, the hair may touch, but not fall below a horizontal line level with the lower edge of the back of the collar. On 11 July 2018 Navy women became allowed to wear their hair in ponytails, locks, wider buns and at times below their collars, although subject to strict guidelines on the matter.[82][83][84]
  • Cosmetics: The navy prefers that cosmetics be applied in good taste so that colors blend with natural skin tone and enhance natural features. Exaggerated or faddish cosmetic styles are not authorized and shall not be worn. Care should be taken to avoid artificial appearance. Lipstick colors shall be conservative and complement the individual. Long false eyelashes shall not be worn when in uniform.
  • Tattoos: Navy policy stipulates that any tattoo/body art/brand that is obscene, sexually explicit or advocates discrimination of any sort is prohibited. No tattoos/body art/brands on the head, face, neck, or scalp and individual tattoos/body art/brands exposed by wearing a short sleeve uniform shirt shall be no larger in size than the wearer's hand with fingers extended and joined with the thumb touching the base of the index finger.
  • Jewelry: Conservative jewelry is authorized for all personnel and shall be in good taste while in uniform. Eccentricities or faddishness are not permitted. Jewelry shall not present a safety or FOD (Foreign object damage) hazard. Jewelry shall be worn within the following guidelines
  • Earrings: Earrings for women are an optional item, and are not required for wear. When worn the earring shall be a 4-6mm ball (gold for officers/CPOs, and silver for E-6 and below), plain with brushed, matte finish, screw-on or post type. Pearl earrings may be worn with Dinner Dress or Formal uniforms.
  • Rings: While in uniform, only one ring per hand is authorized, plus a wedding/engagement ring set. Rings are not authorized for wear on thumbs.
  • Necklaces: While in uniform, only one necklace may be worn and it shall not be visible.
  • Bracelets: While in uniform, only one of each may be worn. Ankle bracelets are not authorized while in uniform.
  • Fingernails: Fingernails for women shall not exceed 1/4 inch beyond the end of the finger. They shall be kept clean. Nail polish may be worn, but colors shall be conservative and complement the skin tone.

Health and fitness standards edit

The Physical Fitness Assessment (PFA) is conducted twice a year for all sailors, which includes:

  • Body Composition Assessment (BCA). Body composition is assessed by:
  • An initial weight and height screening
  • A Navy-approved circumference technique to estimate body fat percentage

Physical Readiness Test (PRT) include different standards for male and female sailors. PRT is a series of physical activities designed to evaluate factors that enable members to perform physically. Factors evaluated are:

  • Muscular strength and endurance via:
  1. Planks[85]
  2. Push-ups
  • Aerobic capacity via:
  1. 1.5-mile run/walk, or
  2. 500-yard or 450-meter swim

PT Fitness Standards (NSW/NSO programs only):

  • The PST consists of five events:
  1. 500-yard swim (using sidestroke or breaststroke)
  2. Push-Ups (as many as possible in 2-minutes)
  3. Sit-Ups (as many as possible in 2-minutes)
  4. Pull-Ups (as many as possible, no time limit)
  5. 1 ½ mile run

Navy family life edit

Benefits edit

Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677 (1973), was a landmark Supreme Court case [31] which decided that benefits given by the military to the family of service members cannot be given out differently because of sex.[32]

Marriage edit

Spouse co-location assignments are fully supported by the Chief of Naval Personnel and when requested become the highest priority and main duty preference consistent with the needs of the navy. While not always possible, every effort, within reason, will be made for military couples and family members to move & serve together. Co-op assignments are not guaranteed.

The service member requesting transfer to join with his/her spouse or family member must have a minimum of one year on board his/her present command at the time of transfer.

Military couples may not be permanently assigned to the same ship or the same shipboard deployable command. For shore assignments, the couple will not be assigned to the same reporting station without the gaining CO's approval. Unusual circumstances may require a couple being temporarily assigned to the same afloat activity, which is allowable at the CO's discretion.[86]

Controversies edit

Gender identity edit

According to scholars, since at least as early as 1960, Executive Order 10450 was applied to ban transgender individuals from serving in the United States military.[87][88] On May 17, 1963, gender transitioned or transitioning individuals were officially prohibited from the United States military by Army Regulation 40-501. This policy reasoned transgender people were medically unqualified to serve because their mental state was considered unfit.[89] Later, after varying restrictions over the years, there stopped being restrictions on people serving in the military due to their being transgender when President Joe Biden signed the "Executive Order on Enabling All Qualified Americans to Serve Their Country in Uniform" on January 25, 2021.[90][91]

Pregnancy edit

In her 1995 book Tailspin: Women at War in the Wake of Tailhook, Jean Zimmerman reported that there was a perception in the navy that women sailors use pregnancy to escape or avoid deployed ship duty. In an example cited by Zimmerman, in 1993 as the USS Cape Cod prepared to depart on a deployment cruise, 25 female sailors, out of a crew of 1,500, reported being pregnant shortly before the scheduled departure and were reassigned to shore duty. Although Zimmerman felt that the number of pregnancies was small and should not be regarded as significant, the senior enlisted sailor on the ship, Command Master Chief Alice Smith rejoined, "Just about every division has been decimated by the number of pregnancies. Now tell me that's not going to hurt a ship."[92] A 1997 study by the Navy Personnel Research and Development Center found that female sailors assigned to ships experienced higher pregnancy and abortion rates than shore-based female sailors.[93]

A Navy policy change in June 2007 extended post-partum tours of duty ashore from 4 months to 12 months. A Virginia Pilot article in October 2007 reported on the navy's policy decision as a means to improve long term retention of trained personnel. The chief of women's policy for the chief of personnel noted that far more men than women fail to deploy or are sent back from deployment, "because of sports injuries, discipline issues or testing positive for drugs."[94]

In 2009, Andrew Tilghman reported in the Military Times on a Naval Inspector General (IG) report noting that, in the wake of this change, Navy shore commands based in Norfolk reported that 34% of their assigned members were pregnant sailors reassigned from ship duty. Since shore-based assignments for pregnant sailors were extended in 2007, the number of navy women leaving deploying units to have children rose from 1,770 in June 2006 to 3,125 as of 1 August 2009. Tilghman further reports that Navy Personnel Command is reviewing the report.[95]

Sexual orientation edit

Before the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was enacted in 1993, lesbians and bisexual women (and gay men and bisexual men) were banned from serving in the military.[63] In 1993 the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" policy was enacted, which mandated that the military could not ask servicemembers about their sexual orientation.[64][65] However, until the policy was ended in 2011 service members were still expelled from the military if they engaged in sexual conduct with a member of the same sex, stated that they were lesbian, gay, or bisexual, and/or married or attempted to marry someone of the same sex.[66]

Women on submarines edit

In July 1994, policy changes were made expanding the number of assignments available to women in the navy. At this time, repeal of the combat exclusion law gave women the opportunity to serve on surface combatant ships but still excluded assignments for women to serve on board submarines.[34][35] Previously there had been concern about bringing women onto submarines because living quarters offered little privacy and weren't considered suitable for mixed-gender habitation.[96]

In October 2009, the Secretary of the Navy announced that he and the Chief of Naval Operations were moving aggressively to change the policy.[37] Reasons included the fact that larger SSGN and SSBN submarines now in the Fleet had more available space and could accommodate female Officers with little or no modification. Also, the availability of qualified female candidates with the desire to serve in this capacity was cited. It was noted that women now represented 15% of the Active Duty Navy[37] and that women today earn about half of all science and engineering bachelor's degrees. A policy change was deemed to serve the aspirations of women, the mission of the navy and the strength of its submarine force.[34][37]

In February 2010, the Secretary of Defense approved the proposed policy and signed letters formally notifying Congress of the intended change. After receiving no objection, the Department of the Navy officially announced on 29 April 2010, that it had authorized women to serve on board submarines moving forward.[35]

The first group of U.S. female submariners completed nuclear power school and officially reported on board two ballistic and two guided missile submarines in November 2011.[38]

Admirals edit

Alene Duerk became the first female admiral in the navy in 1972.[24][25] Michelle J. Howard became the first female four-star admiral in the navy in 2014.[1]

Name Commission Position Community RDML RADM VADM ADM Retired Notes
Michelle J. Howard 1982 (USNA) Vice Chief of Naval Operations Surface Warfare 2006 2010 2012 2014 2017 First woman to earn fourth star in the US Navy.
Patricia A. Tracey 1970 Director, Navy Staff, N09B, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations URL ? ? 1996 2004 First woman to earn third star in the US Navy.
Ann E. Rondeau 1974 (OCS) President, National Defense University Fleet Support 1999 2002 2005 2012
Nancy Elizabeth Brown 1974 (OCS) Director for C4 Systems (J6) URL 2000 2003 2006 2009
Carol M. Pottenger 1977 (NROTC) Deputy Chief of Staff for Capability and Development, Supreme Allied Commander Transformation Surface Warfare 2003 2007 2010 2013
Nanette M. DeRenzi 1984 (OIS) Judge Advocate General of the Navy JAG 2009[97] 2009 2012 2015
Robin Braun 1980 Chief of Navy Reserve/Commander, Navy Reserve Force Reserve, Naval Aviator 2007 2011 2012 2016
Nora W. Tyson 1979 (OCS) Commander, US Third Fleet Naval Flight Officer 2007 2011 2013 2017 First woman to command a carrier strike group.
Jan E. Tighe 1984 (USNA) Commander, U.S. Fleet Cyber Command, Commander U. S. 10th Fleet IDW/Crypto 2010 2013 2014 2018 First female IDW flag officer. First woman to command a numbered fleet.
Nancy A. Norton[98] 1987 (OCS) Commander, Joint Forces Headquarters - Department of Defense Information Network (JFHQ-DODIN); Director of the Defense Information Agency (DISA) [99] IDW 2013 2016 2018 2021
Fran McKee 1950 Assistant Chief of Naval Personnel for Human Resource Management URL 1976 1978 1981 First woman line officer promoted to flag rank in the United States Navy. Second woman promoted to flag rank in the United States Navy
Roberta L. Hazard 1960 Assistant Chief of Naval Personnel, Personnel Readiness and Community Support 1989–1992 URL 1984 1989 1992 First woman to command a navy training command (NTC San Diego 1982).
Marsha J. Evans 1967 Superintendent of the Naval Postgraduate School 1995–1998 Fleet Support 1992 1996 1998
Joan Marie Engel 1969 18th Director, Navy Nurse Corps 1994–1998 SHCE (Nurse Corps) 1994 1997 2000 18th Director, Navy Nurse Corps.
Barbara E. McGann 1970 (OCS) Provost, Naval War College 2000–2002 URL 1994 1998 2002
Ronne Froman 1970 Director, Ashore Readiness, Chief of Naval Operations, Washington, D.c. 2000 – 2001 Fleet Support 1995 1999 2001 First woman commander of Navy Region Southwest (aka "Navy Mayor of San Diego"), 1997–2000.
Bonnie Burnham Potter 1975 (OIS) Fleet Surgeon, U.S. Atlantic Fleet 1999– Medical Corps 1997 2000 2003 First female physician to become a flag officer in the military.
Kathleen Paige 1971 Program Director, Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense 2003–2005 Engineering Duty Officer 1996 2001 2005
Karen A. Harmeyer[citation needed] 1975 Chief of Staff, Chief of Naval Operations, N093R, Washington, D.C. SHCE (Nurse Corps) 1997 2001 2002 1st female two-star in the Reserves.
Kathleen L. Martin 1973 (OIS) Deputy Surgeon General of the Navy/ Vice Chief, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery 2002–2005 SHCE (Nurse Corps) 1998 2001 2005 19th Director of the Navy Nurse Corps from August 1998 to August 2001. First Nurse Corps officer to be assigned to the position of Deputy Surgeon General of the Navy.
Annette E. Brown 1974 (OCS) Commander, Navy Region Southeast (2002) Fleet Support 1999 2003 2005
Linda J. Bird 1974 (OCS) Director, Supply, Ordnance and Logistics Operations Division, N41 2003–2005 Supply Corps 1999 2002 2005
Elizabeth M. Morris 1973 (OIS) Deputy Chief for Reserve Affairs at the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery 2005–2006? SHCE (Nurse Corps) 2001 2004 2006
Nancy J. Lescavage 1972 (OIS) Senior Health Care Executive Regional Director, TRICARE Regional Office – West SHCE (Nurse Corps) 2003 2005 2009 20th Director of the Navy Nurse Corps.
Donna L. Crisp 1974 (OCS) Commander, Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command URL 2001 2006 2010
Ann D. Gilbride 1978 (OCS) Director, National Maritime Intelligence Center Reserve 2003 2006 2009
Sharon H. Redpath 1976 (NROTC) Vice Commander, Navy Expeditionary Combat Command, Commander, Navy Expeditionary Logistics Support Group Reserve 2003 2006 2009
Elizabeth A. Hight 1977 (OCS) Vice Director, Defense Information Systems Agency URL 2003 2006 2010 First woman to Command the JTF-GNO, after serving as its Deputy Commander. First woman Vice Director at DISA.
Christine Bruzek-Kohler 1974 Commander, Navy Medicine West, Naval Medical Center San Diego Nurse Corps 2004 2007 2010 21st Director of the Navy Nurse Corps.
Christine S. Hunter 1980 deputy director, TRICARE Management Activity Medical 2004 2007 2011
Wendi B. Carpenter 1977 (AOCS) Commander, Navy Warfare Development Command, Norfolk Reserve 2004 2008 2011 First female naval aviator promoted to Flag rank.
Karen Flaherty 1973 (OIS) Deputy Surgeon General of Navy Medicine Nurse Corps 2003 2008 2012 22nd Director of the Navy Nurse Corps.
Moira N. Flanders 1978 (OCS) Director, Inter-American Defense College URL 2005 2008 2012 
Kathleen M. Dussault 1979 (OCS) Director, Supply, Ordnance and Logistics Operations Division (OPNAV N41) Supply Corps 2006 2009 2012
Janice M. Hamby 1980 (NROTC) Vice Director for C4 Systems (J6) URL, then Information Professional[100] 2006 2009 2012
Elizabeth S. Niemyer 1981 Director, Navy Nurse Corps Nurse Corps 2008 2010 2013 23rd Director of the Navy Nurse Corps
Patricia E. Wolfe 1981 (NROTC) Commander, Navy Expeditionary Logistics Support Group (NAVELSG) Reserve, Supply Corps 2007 2010 2013
Cynthia A. Covell 1980 (OCS) Director, Total Force Requirements Division (OPNAV N12) Navy Human Resources Officer 2008 2012 2014
Margaret D. Klein 1981 (USNA) Senior Advisor to the Secretary of Defense for Military Professionalism Naval Flight Officer 2008 2012 2017 82nd Commandant of Midshipmen, USNA – first woman.
Sandy Daniels 1980 (USNA) Senior Advisor for Space to the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Information Dominance (OPNAV N2/N6) Reserve 2007 2012 2015
Katherine L. Gregory 1982 (USNA) Commander, Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Chief of Civil Engineers CEC 2010 2013 2015 First female CEC admiral.
Elizabeth L. Train 1983 (OCS) Director, National Maritime Intelligence-Integration Office, Commander, Office of Naval Intelligence Intelligence 2009 2013 2016
Paula C. Brown 1982 Deputy Commander, Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Deputy Chief of Civil Engineers CEC 2010 2013 2016
Elaine C. Wagner 1984 Deputy Chief, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Wounded, Ill and Injured Dental Corps 2010 2013 2017 Chief of the Naval Dental Corps, 2010 – 2017
Althea Coetzee 1985 (USNA) Deputy Director, Contingency Contracting, Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy (DPAP), OSD (Acquisition Technology & Logistics) Supply Corps 2011 2014 2017
Janet R. Donovan 1983 Deputy Judge Advocate General (Reserve Affairs & OPS) JAG 2012 2014 2016 
Martha E. G. Herb 1979 (OCS) Director Inter-American Defense College EOD 2010 2014 2018
Valerie K. Huegel 1980 (OCS) Commander, Navy Expeditionary Logistics Support Group Supply Corps 2011 2014 2017 
Rebecca J. McCormick-Boyle 1981 Chief of Staff, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery Nurse Corps 2011 2014 2018
Margaret G. Kibben 1986 (OIS) Chaplain of the United States Marine Corps, deputy chief of Navy Chaplains Chaplain Corps 2010 2014 2018 18th Chaplain of the USMC, first female chaplain at USNA.
Alene B. Duerk 1943 Director Navy Nurse Corps 1970–1975 Nurse Corps 1972 1975 First female admiral in the United States Navy. Director Navy Nurse Corps 1970–1975.
Maxine Conder 1951 Director, Navy Nurse Corps 1975–1979 Nurse Corps 1975 1979 Director, Navy Nurse Corps.
Frances Shea-Buckley 1951 14th Director, Navy Nurse Corps 1979–1983 Nurse Corps 1979 1983 14th Director, Navy Nurse Corps.
Pauline Hartington[citation needed] 1953 Commander, Naval Training Center Orlando URL 1981 1984 Second woman line officer selected for flag rank.
Grace Hopper 1944 Head, Training and Technology Directorate/Special Advisor to the Commander, Naval Data Automation Command URL? 1983 1986 Co-inventor of COBOL. Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer USS Hopper (DDG-70) named for RADM Hopper.
Mary Joan Nielubowicz 1951 15th Director, Navy Nurse Corps 1983–1987 Nurse Corps 1983 1987 15th Director, Navy Nurse Corps.
Mary F. Hall 1959 16th Director, Navy Nurse Corps 1987–1991 Nurse Corps 1987 1991 Director, Navy Nurse Corps.
Louise C. Wilmot 1964 Commander, Naval Base Philadelphia −1994 URL 1991 1994 First woman to command a naval base.
Mariann Stratton 1966 17th Director, Navy Nurse Corps 1991–1994 Nurse Corps 1991 1994 17th Director, Navy Nurse Corps.
Maryanne T. Gallagher Ibach[citation needed] 1964 Reserve Nurse Corps 1990 1995 First Reserve flag officer for Navy Nurse Corps.
Katharine L. Laughton[citation needed] 1963 Commander, Naval Space Command, Dahlgren, VA 1995–1997 Fleet Support 1993 1997
Nancy A. Fackler[citation needed] 1962 Deputy Director of the Navy Nurse Corps for Reserve Affairs Reserve Nurse Corps 1994 1997
Jacqueline O. (Allison) Barnes[citation needed] Director, On-Site Inspection Directorate 1998–2000 Fleet Support 1996 2000
Lillian E. Fishburne 1973 (OCS) Director, Information Transfer Division for the Space, Information Warfare, Command and Control Directorate ?-2001 URL 1998 2001 First African-American woman to achieve flag rank.
Marianne B. Drew[citation needed] 1967 Deputy Commander, Navy Personnel Command Reserve, Fleet Support 1999 2002
Eleanor Mariano 1977 White House Physician Medical Corps 2000 2001 First Filipino-American flag officer.
Rosanne M. Levitre 1973 (OCS) Director of Intelligence, J2, U.S. Joint Forces Command Intelligence 2000 2005 First Director, Navy Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR), FORCEnet. First female Intel officer selected for flag rank in the United States Navy.
Carol I. Turner 1977 Senior Health Care Executive, U.S. Navy Commander, Navy Medicine Support Command Dental Corps 2005 2008 First female Chief of the Naval Dental Corps, 2003–2007.
Deborah Loewer 1976 (OCS) Commander, Mine Warfare Command 2005–2006 Surface Warfare 2003 2007 First warfare-qualified woman selected for flag rank in the United States Navy.
Cynthia A. Dullea 1980 (OIS) Deputy Commander, Navy Medicine National Capital Area Reserve 2007 2014
Maude Elizabeth Young 1984 (USNA) Director, Systems Engineering National Reconnaissance Office; Commander, SPAWAR Space Field Activity (SSFA), PEO for Space Systems, USN URL 2008 2011
Eleanor V. Valentin 1982 Director, Medical Service Corps, Commander, Navy Medicine Support Command, Jacksonville, Florida MSC 2009 2014 16th director of the Medical Service Corps (first female director)
Robin L. Graf 1981 (OCS) Deputy Commander, Navy Recruiting Command URL 2009 2016
Diane E. H. Webber 1983 (OCS) Commander, Navy Cyber Forces IP 2009 2015
Ann Claire Phillips 1983 (NROTC) Commander, Expeditionary Strike Group Two Surface Warfare 2010 2014
Gretchen S. Herbert[101] 1984 (NROTC) Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, Next Generation Enterprise Network (NGEN) URL 2010 2014
Margaret A. Rykowski 1987 Fleet Surgeon, Third Fleet NNC 2010 2013
Sandra E. Adams 1981 (OCS) Deputy Commander, Naval Expeditionary Combat Command URL (SWO) 2011 2015
Annie B. Andrews 1983 (NROTC) Commander, Navy Recruiting Command Navy Human Resources Officer 2012 2015
Cindy Jaynes 1983 (OCS) Program Executive Officer for Air ASW, Assault & Special Mission Programs, PEO(A) AMDO 2012 2016
Christina M. Alvarado 1988 Deputy Commander, Navy Medicine East Nurse Corps 2013 2015 2018
Babette Bolivar 1985 (USNA) Commander, Navy Region Southwest EOD/ Diving & Salvage 2013 2021
Priscilla B. Coe Deputy Chief of Staff, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Deputy Chief, Navy Reserve Dental Corps Dental Corps 2013 2016
Lisa Franchetti 1985 (NROTC) Chief of Naval Operations SWO 2013 2018 2022 First women to become CNO
Alma M. Grocki 1981 (USNA) Deputy Chief of Staff for Fleet Maintenance, Commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet Reserve EDO 2013 2016
Deborah P. Haven Commander, Defense Contract Management Agency International Reserve Supply Corps 2013 2016 2019
Barbara Sweredoski 1985 (NROTC) Reserve Deputy, Military Personnel Plans & Policy N13R HR 2012 2015
Cynthia Thebaud 1985 (USNA) Commander, Logistics Group Western Pacific, Commander, Task Force 73, Singapore Area Coordinator SWO 2013 2016
Dawn E. Cutler 1989 (NROTC) Chief of Information (CHINFO) PAO 2014 2017
Danelle Barrett[citation needed] 1989 (NROTC) Cyber Security Division Director/Deputy Department of the Navy Chief Information Officer IDWO 2015 2019
Kelly Aeschbach (NROTC) Commander, U.S. Naval Information Forces Intelligence 2016 2019 2021
Linda Wackerman[citation needed] 1986 First female C9 Squadron CO, VR52; Commander of NEPLO Program; Deputy Director OPNAV N81; Deputy Commander Navy IG; Deputy Commander USNAVSO and US FOURTH Fleet Naval Aviator 2014 2018 Pilot for American Airlines
Raquel C. Bono[102] 1979 Director, Defense Health Agency Medical Corps 2011 2014 2015 2019
Tina A. Davidson 1986 Commander, Navy Medicine Education, Training and Logistics Command Nurse Corps 2016 2020
Mary M. Jackson 1988 (USNA) Commander, Navy Installations Command SWO 2014 2017 2017 2020 Promoted directly from one-star to three-star.
Nancy S. Lacore 1990 (NROTC) Director of the Maritime Partnership Program, U.S. Naval Forces Europe/Africa/U.S. 6th Fleet Aviator 2018
Shoshana S. Chatfield 1988 (NROTC) President, Naval War College Aviator 2015 2018
Kathleen Creighton 1988 (NROTC) Director of Warfare Integration IP 2014 2018
Yvette M. Davids 1989 (USNA) Chief of Staff, United States Southern Command SWO 2017 2020
Sara A. Joyner 1989 (USNA) Chief of Legislative Affairs, United States Navy Naval Aviator 2017 2021 2022

See also edit

References edit

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  97. ^ DeRenzi never held the rank of rear admiral (lower half) (O-7). She was promoted from captain (O-6) to rear admiral (O-8) when she assumed the duties of Deputy Judge Advocate General in 2009.
  98. ^ "Nancy A. Norton". navy.mil.
  99. ^ "Norton assumes command of JFHQ-DODIN and directorship of DISA". disa.mil.
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  102. ^ "Raquel C. Bono". navy.mil.

Further reading edit

  • Godson, Susan H. (2001). Serving Proudly: A History of Women in the U.S. Navy. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-317-6.
  • Ebbert, Jean and Marie-Beth Hall (1999). Crossed Currents: Navy Women in a Century of Change [Third Edition, Revised and Updated]. Washington, D.C.: Brassey's. ISBN 978-1-57488-193-6.
  • Ebbert, Jean and Marie-Beth Hall (2002). The First, the Few, the Forgotten: Navy and Marine Corps Women in World War I. Annapolis, MD: The Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-203-X.
  • Sterner, Doris M. (1997). In and Out of Harm's Way: A history of the U.S. Navy Nurse Corps. Seattle, WA: Peanut Butter Publishing. ISBN 0-89716-706-6.
  • Hancock, Joy Bright Captain, U.S. Navy (Retired) (1972). Lady in the Navy: A Personal Reminiscence. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-336-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Collins, Winifred Quick Captain, U.S. Navy (Retired); Levine, Herbert (1997). More Than A Uniform: A Navy Woman in a Navy Man's World. Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press. ISBN 1-57441-022-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Holm, Jeanne Maj Gen, USAF (Ret) (1972). Women in the Military: An Unfinished Revolution [Revised Edition]. Novato, CA: Presidio Press. ISBN 0891414509.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Zimmerman, Jean (1995). Tailspin: Women at War in the Wake of Tailhook. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-47789-9.

Bibliographies edit

  • Women in the Navy, a bibliography compiled in 1998 by Diana Simpson, Bibliographer, Air University Library, Maxwell AFB.
  • Women in the U.S. Navy: Bibliography and Sources from the Naval Historical Center.
  • 30 Years of Women at USNA, selected bibliography of resources available in the Naval Academy's Nimitz Library.
  • Bibliography on women in the military from the Women in Military Service for America (WIMSA) Memorial

External links edit

  • Office of Women's Policy (N134W) Bureau of Naval Personnel
  • Sea Services Leadership Association supporting motivated Sea Service officers since 1978. (Formerly Women Officers Professional Association.)
  • Women Redefined - a Facebook Page for Women in the Navy
  • Women in the Navy Flickr Images
  • Navy For Moms Community