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Mary McGuire
didn’t run the Navy during World War II, but
those who did counted on her.
McGuire had been
teaching English at Northampton
High School in Massachusetts when she
enlisted in the Navy in 1943.
She was
accepted into the officer training program for
WAVES, Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency
Service.
Though she had
wanted to enter the service earlier, she honored
her teaching contract before enlisting.
She attended
officer training school at Smith College in Northampton.
“It was only
a few moments’ walk from my former job,” McGuire
said.
She graduated
as a lieutenant junior grade, a higher Navy
ranking than the rank of ensign assigned to most
officer training graduates.
She went to
Washington, D.C., to work in “naval
intelligence.”
“In wartime,
we couldn’t use that phrase at all,” she said.
“It was ‘naval operations.’”
McGuire was
assigned to a duty office that processed daily
events — good and bad — involving all Navy
operations.
The reports
were prepared for the Navy’s “top brass,” which
gathered daily to review them and plan strategy.
McGuire said
her office was on the floor below the “map
room,” where the Secretary of the Navy, its
highest-ranking officers and top governmental
officials met to plan war operations.
McGuire and
her co-workers were in charge of updating
information on the large map the Navy brass used
to track operations. Every night they would take
news bulletins from a stream of wire service
teletypes and update the map.
“The job was
simply to make sure these people clearly
understood the amphibious activities we were
engaged in,” McGuire said.
The Navy
operations she reported on occurred chiefly in
the Pacific but included some action in the
Atlantic.
“The work was
routine,” she said. “There were anxious times,
and sad times when bad news came in. And,
actually, that about tells the story.”
McGuire
recalls the tensest moments on the job occurring
one night when the “top people in intelligence”
instructed her office to be “especially alert.”
She said Navy
officials were expecting a dual attack by German
submarines on Washington and New York.
“As it
happened, that didn’t occur, but it was very,
very scary,” she said.
Recalling her
service in World War II is bittersweet for
McGuire, as was the actual experience.
In
Washington, she was among the first people in
the nation to learn of Navy losses and
casualties. Often she was saddened by personal
loss.
“I had a lot
of students that I heard about,” she said.
At other
times the enormity of the loss saddened her.
“The heavy
cruiser Indianapolis went down with 2,000 crew,”
she said. “Nobody in the Navy really knew where
she was.”
She said the
Indianapolis was on a secret mission in the
Pacific near the end of the war when a Japanese
submarine torpedoed it.
McGuire
remained in Washington through 1945, though the
demand for her duty ended on Aug. 15 when
victory over Japan was declared: VJ Day. (The
formal Japanese signing of the surrender terms
took place on board the battleship USS Missouri
in Tokyo Bay on Sept. 2, 1945.)
“After VJ
Day, the reason for the existence of our office
didn’t exist,” she said.
While on
duty, McGuire was promoted to full lieutenant.
She continued reserve duty after the war and
received two more promotions, rising to the rank
of full commander.
She considers
World War II a “tremendous event,” including the
contribution of the WAVES, which started with
10,000 enlisted and commissioned women in 1943
and grew to 83,000 in 1944.
“Secretary of
the Navy, James Forrestal, said it was the
greatest naval achievement in history, and I
think it was,” said McGuire. “And it was all
necessary.
“I’m glad I
went in. It was necessary. We were besieged on
two fronts, and it was touch-and-go on both.
“I’m glad I
went, but now I feel that war is outmoded. We
need to substitute better communication, better
diplomacy, strengthening the United Nations and
that sort of thing.”
After the
war, McGuire enrolled in Columbia
University and eventually earned a doctorate English. While studying at
Columbia, she
taught there and at the University of
Bridgeport.
Most of her
college teaching career was spent at Chatham
College in Pittsburgh, Pa., where she
taught until retiring in the early 1970s.
A native of
Stonington, McGuire never lost touch with her
roots, returning to the family homestead every
summer. She moved into the house after retiring
from Chatham
College.
“In my ’90s,
and that’s all I’ll tell you,” she said when
asked her age. |