Published on
For the second time in less than two years, former Aquinas College employee Mildred
"Jane" Doyle, 87, was honored for her work during World War Two as a member of the
Women Air Force Service Pilots (WASPs) program. In November of 2009, she joined hundreds
of other women veterans who were honored in a ceremony at the Women's Memorial in
Washington, D.C. to mark the opening of the traveling exhibit, "Fly girls of World
War II."
This week, she returned to Washington, D.C. with about 200 other WASPs, each receiving
the Congressional Gold Medal for their service. Doyle completed civilian pilot training
in the early 1940s and was a civilian test pilot for the military from November 1943
to October 1944. She also handled administrative flights, shuttling supplies to various
military bases throughout the country.
According to a report by WOOD-TV, WASPs were the first women to fly military planes.
Theirs were non-combat missions but they were not missions without danger. Thirty-eight
WASPs were killed on duty. One of Doyle's jobs was to take planes out for test flights
after male pilots reported problems and the planes were sent in for service. She was
in line to fly a B-26 with what's called a towed target.
"The B-26 had a target that they trailed behind -- a sleeve -- and it was live gunnery
that would shoot at it for gunnery practice," Doyle said. "So they used the women
for that." But just before her B-26 work was set to begin, the WASPs were disbanded,
because, in late 1944, Congress voted against giving the women military status.
In fact, the women didn't get veterans status until the late 1970s. Now, after a bill
passed in the House and Senate was signed by President Barack Obama in July 2009,
the WASPs are getting more recognition, "It's quite an honor to receive it [the Congressional
Gold Medal]," Doyle said.
Doyle joins an impressive list of people who have received the Congressional Gold
Medal, including George Washington, Ulysses Grant, Charles Lindbergh, Thomas Edison,
Howard Hughes, Irving Berlin, Dr. Jonas Salk, Bob Hope, Walt Disney, Winston Churchill,
Joe Louis, Billy Graham, Frank Sinatra and Gerald Ford, among others.
Doyle fondly remembers Aquinas as "a nice place to work." She worked as the Science
Department secretary from 1971-1983. She graduated from the University of Michigan.