Major moments in women's military service
1901- Army Nurse Corps is established.
1908- Navy Nurse Corps is established.
1939‐1945 Over 350,000 uniformed women served the United States during World War II. The Army established the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC), which was later converted to the Women’s Army Corps or (WAC), and Navy establishes the Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Services (WAVES).
1944- Sue Dauser, Director of the Navy Nurse Corps, becomes the first female Captain in the U.S. Navy.
1948- The Women’s Armed Service Integration Act permitted women permanent positions in the Armed Forces yet barred them from serving aboard ships, combat aircraft and in ground combat.
1950‐1953- 540 women were stationed as Army nurses in Korea.
1951- The Defense Department Advisory Committee on Women in the Services (DACOWITS) is established.
1953- Barbara O. Barnwell becomes the first female U.S. Marine to be awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for heroism.
1965- Over 650 women were deployed to Vietnam, approximately 300 of them nurses. Rose Franco is the first woman to become a Chief Warrant Officer in the U.S. Marines.
1967- Barbara Dulinksy becomes the first woman Marine to serve in a combat zone. President Johnson lifts grade restrictions and strength limitations on women in the U.S. military.
1970- Anna Mae Hays and Elizabeth Hoisington (U.S. Army) are the first women promoted to the general officer ranks.
1974- Lieutenant Sally D. Murphy becomes the first woman U.S. Army aviator and U.S. Army helicopter pilot.
1975- The U.S. Military Academy, Air Force Academy, Coast Guard, and Navy Academy opened their doors to women. At this time, five‐percent of the military or 109,133 servicemembers were women.
1978- The 1948 Integration Act is amended to allow women permanent positions on non‐combatant ships, and temporary assignment to combatant ships. All women are integrated into their respective services— WAF, WAC, WAVES and Women Marines are disestablished. Margaret A. Brewer becomes the first woman to reach the rank of general in the U.S. Marine Corps.
1979- Hazel Johnson‐Brown (U.S. Army) is the first African American female promoted to General.
1981- Exempting women from registering for the Military Selective Service Act is found to be constitutional‐ an argument used to support women’s exclusion from combat. Michelle D. Johnson becomes the first woman to hold the senior‐ranking positions at any of the U.S. military academies as Cadet Wing Commander at the U.S. Air Force Academy.
1983- The Direct Combat Probability Code ascribes to every Army position an assessment of the likelihood of participating in direct combat.
1988- A Department of Defense Task Force on Women in the Military developed the “Risk Rule” to determine proper criteria for closing positions to women.
1991- The ban on women serving aboard combat aircraft engaged in combat missions is lifted.
1992- The 1992 Presidential Commission on the Assignment of Women in the Armed Forces called for the exclusion of women from direct land combat units and Special Forces yet allowed for women to be assigned to all naval vessel save amphibious craft and submarines.
1992- The “Army Policy for the Assignment of Female Soldiers” (AR 600‐13) bans women from being assigned to units who engage in direct combat.
1994- The 1988 “Risk Rule” is rescinded and replaced with the “Direct Ground Combat Definition and Assignment Rule,” which allows women to serve in combat support groups close to, but not on the front lines, while maintaining their exclusion from serving in infantry, armory, Special Forces, and field artillery
positions. The first Air Force woman completes pilot training and the Navy assigns women to a combat ship for the first time.
1996- U.S. Marine Carol Mutter is the first woman promoted to three star officer in the military, Vice Admiral Patricia Tracey is the first woman promoted to 3‐star officer in the Navy, and Army Sergeant Heather Johnson is the first woman assigned to guard the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
1997
Claudia Kennedy becomes the first woman in the U.S. Army to hold a three‐star rank.
1998
U.S. Navy Commander Maureen A. Farren becomes the first woman to command a combatant ship.
1999
Colonel Eileen Collins of the U.S. Air Force is the first woman to command a Space Shuttle.
2000- The first woman pilot in the Air Force is promoted to Brigadier General and the first Coast Guard women are promoted to Admiral. The first woman is named a Major General in the National Guard.
2001- Coral Wong Pietch becomes the first woman Army Judge Advocates General (JAG) and the first Asian‐American to reach the rank of General in the U.S. Army.
2002- Vernice Armour becomes the first African‐American female combat pilot in the U.S. military.
2003- U.S. Air Force Major Kim Reed‐Campbell is awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for the successful handling of her aircraft in a combat mission.
2003- Jessica Lynch became the first women POW in Iraq.
2004- U.S. Army pilot Captain Kimberley Hampton becomes the first woman military pilot in U.S. history to be shot down and killed by an enemy.
2005- U.S. Army Sergeant Leigh Ann Hester receives her Silver Star, making her the first woman to receive the award for exceptional valor since World War II and the first woman ever to receive it for close combat.
2006- Major Megan McClung becomes the first woman Marine officer to be killed in Iraq.
2007- U.S. Army Specialist Monica Brown is awarded a Silver Star for her for saving the lives of her fellow soldiers by running through gunfire and shielding their wounded bodies.
2008- U.S. Army General Ann E. Dunwoody becomes the first woman to be promoted to four‐star general.
2009- DoD statistics show that one in 10 U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are women
2010- The Secretary of Defense lifts the ban disallowing female officers from serving on submarines. U.S. Navy Rear Admiral Nora W. Tyson becomes the first woman to command a carrier strike group.
2011- At the behest of congress, the Military Leadership and Diversity Commission issued a report unequivocally recommending that the Services and the DoD eliminate the combat exclusion policies.
1908- Navy Nurse Corps is established.
1939‐1945 Over 350,000 uniformed women served the United States during World War II. The Army established the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC), which was later converted to the Women’s Army Corps or (WAC), and Navy establishes the Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Services (WAVES).
1944- Sue Dauser, Director of the Navy Nurse Corps, becomes the first female Captain in the U.S. Navy.
1948- The Women’s Armed Service Integration Act permitted women permanent positions in the Armed Forces yet barred them from serving aboard ships, combat aircraft and in ground combat.
1950‐1953- 540 women were stationed as Army nurses in Korea.
1951- The Defense Department Advisory Committee on Women in the Services (DACOWITS) is established.
1953- Barbara O. Barnwell becomes the first female U.S. Marine to be awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for heroism.
1965- Over 650 women were deployed to Vietnam, approximately 300 of them nurses. Rose Franco is the first woman to become a Chief Warrant Officer in the U.S. Marines.
1967- Barbara Dulinksy becomes the first woman Marine to serve in a combat zone. President Johnson lifts grade restrictions and strength limitations on women in the U.S. military.
1970- Anna Mae Hays and Elizabeth Hoisington (U.S. Army) are the first women promoted to the general officer ranks.
1974- Lieutenant Sally D. Murphy becomes the first woman U.S. Army aviator and U.S. Army helicopter pilot.
1975- The U.S. Military Academy, Air Force Academy, Coast Guard, and Navy Academy opened their doors to women. At this time, five‐percent of the military or 109,133 servicemembers were women.
1978- The 1948 Integration Act is amended to allow women permanent positions on non‐combatant ships, and temporary assignment to combatant ships. All women are integrated into their respective services— WAF, WAC, WAVES and Women Marines are disestablished. Margaret A. Brewer becomes the first woman to reach the rank of general in the U.S. Marine Corps.
1979- Hazel Johnson‐Brown (U.S. Army) is the first African American female promoted to General.
1981- Exempting women from registering for the Military Selective Service Act is found to be constitutional‐ an argument used to support women’s exclusion from combat. Michelle D. Johnson becomes the first woman to hold the senior‐ranking positions at any of the U.S. military academies as Cadet Wing Commander at the U.S. Air Force Academy.
1983- The Direct Combat Probability Code ascribes to every Army position an assessment of the likelihood of participating in direct combat.
1988- A Department of Defense Task Force on Women in the Military developed the “Risk Rule” to determine proper criteria for closing positions to women.
1991- The ban on women serving aboard combat aircraft engaged in combat missions is lifted.
1992- The 1992 Presidential Commission on the Assignment of Women in the Armed Forces called for the exclusion of women from direct land combat units and Special Forces yet allowed for women to be assigned to all naval vessel save amphibious craft and submarines.
1992- The “Army Policy for the Assignment of Female Soldiers” (AR 600‐13) bans women from being assigned to units who engage in direct combat.
1994- The 1988 “Risk Rule” is rescinded and replaced with the “Direct Ground Combat Definition and Assignment Rule,” which allows women to serve in combat support groups close to, but not on the front lines, while maintaining their exclusion from serving in infantry, armory, Special Forces, and field artillery
positions. The first Air Force woman completes pilot training and the Navy assigns women to a combat ship for the first time.
1996- U.S. Marine Carol Mutter is the first woman promoted to three star officer in the military, Vice Admiral Patricia Tracey is the first woman promoted to 3‐star officer in the Navy, and Army Sergeant Heather Johnson is the first woman assigned to guard the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
1997
Claudia Kennedy becomes the first woman in the U.S. Army to hold a three‐star rank.
1998
U.S. Navy Commander Maureen A. Farren becomes the first woman to command a combatant ship.
1999
Colonel Eileen Collins of the U.S. Air Force is the first woman to command a Space Shuttle.
2000- The first woman pilot in the Air Force is promoted to Brigadier General and the first Coast Guard women are promoted to Admiral. The first woman is named a Major General in the National Guard.
2001- Coral Wong Pietch becomes the first woman Army Judge Advocates General (JAG) and the first Asian‐American to reach the rank of General in the U.S. Army.
2002- Vernice Armour becomes the first African‐American female combat pilot in the U.S. military.
2003- U.S. Air Force Major Kim Reed‐Campbell is awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for the successful handling of her aircraft in a combat mission.
2003- Jessica Lynch became the first women POW in Iraq.
2004- U.S. Army pilot Captain Kimberley Hampton becomes the first woman military pilot in U.S. history to be shot down and killed by an enemy.
2005- U.S. Army Sergeant Leigh Ann Hester receives her Silver Star, making her the first woman to receive the award for exceptional valor since World War II and the first woman ever to receive it for close combat.
2006- Major Megan McClung becomes the first woman Marine officer to be killed in Iraq.
2007- U.S. Army Specialist Monica Brown is awarded a Silver Star for her for saving the lives of her fellow soldiers by running through gunfire and shielding their wounded bodies.
2008- U.S. Army General Ann E. Dunwoody becomes the first woman to be promoted to four‐star general.
2009- DoD statistics show that one in 10 U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are women
2010- The Secretary of Defense lifts the ban disallowing female officers from serving on submarines. U.S. Navy Rear Admiral Nora W. Tyson becomes the first woman to command a carrier strike group.
2011- At the behest of congress, the Military Leadership and Diversity Commission issued a report unequivocally recommending that the Services and the DoD eliminate the combat exclusion policies.