Frieda Hardin

Deceased Person

1896 – 2000

 Credit ยป
72

Who was Frieda Hardin?

Frieda Mae Green Hardin joined the U.S. Navy at the end of World War I in 1918, enlisting, against her parents' wishes, at the age of 22 in Portsmouth, Ohio.

In March 1917, with America's entry into World War I imminent, Navy Secretary Josephus Daniels called on women to enlist in the Naval Reserve to free sailors for combat duty. Hardin joined the Navy at a time when women were still denied the right to vote.

She was among almost 12,000 women who served in the Navy during World War I as clerks, draftsmen, translators, camouflage designers and recruiters, in the rating Yeoman, commonly known as "Yeomanettes". She was on active duty from September 1918 to March 1919 at the Norfolk Navy Yard in Virginia. She performed clerical duties, receiving outstanding grades in reading proficiency and perfect marks in obedience and sobriety, the three areas in which the Navy graded women. She remained a teetotaler. By 1920, all the Yeomanettes were released from duty, and women would not be permitted to serve in the Navy again until World War II.

She then moved back to Portsmouth, Ohio and married the first of four husbands, all of whom she outlived.

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Born
Sep 22, 1896
Eden Valley
Nationality
  • United States of America
Lived in
  • Minnesota
  • Portsmouth
Died
Aug 9, 2000
Livermore
Resting place
Arlington National Cemetery

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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