cover image The Hello Girls: America’s First Women Soldiers

The Hello Girls: America’s First Women Soldiers

Elizabeth Cobbs. Harvard Univ., $29.95 (400p) ISBN 978-0-674-97147-9

Cobbs (American Umpire), chair in American history at Texas A&M, examines the Signal Corps’s female telephone operators during WWI in the first full-length scholarly work of its kind. Her fine study enriches our understanding of America’s participation in its first major European war by focusing on important historical actors who are typically sidelined in military accounts. Under Gen. John Pershing’s orders, 223 bilingual female operators—dubbed Hello Girls—were sent to Europe to handle communications among the Allies. Hundreds of women had rushed to apply, eager to demonstrate their patriotism and claim equal citizenship. Cobbs discusses the final phase of the women’s suffrage campaign to highlight the connections between military service and citizenship. This information is sometimes awkwardly inserted, diverting attention from the more compelling story of the Hello Girls’ contributions to the success of the Allied war effort. Grace Banker, a 25-year-old chief operator, efficiently worked the switchboard during the Meuse-Argonne battle. Merle Egan, stationed at Services of Supply headquarters, facilitated communications to guarantee the army received necessary supplies. After the war, the Hello Girls had to fight for formal recognition of their service; the army attempted to classify them as civilian contract employees and deny them veterans’ benefits. Aficionados of WWI history and women’s history will appreciate Cobbs’s book. Illus. [em](Apr.) [/em]