Elizabeth Windsor, then also known as Princess Elizabeth, and now known as Queen Elizabeth II, registered for service.
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Monday, April 25, 2022
Saturday, April 25, 1942. Service, escape, internment and ANZAC Day.
Saturday, December 18, 2021
Thursday December 18, 1941. The United Kingdom commences female conscription.
On this Thursday in 1941, the United Kingdom started universal female conscription, making the UK the first nation in the world to have done so.
The British and the members of the Commonwealth, had created a variety of military female service organizations to support their armed forces during the war, but after two years of war the drain on male manpower was proving to be just too much. Now that war with Japan had also arrived, the United Kingdom ordered that unmarried women ages 21 through 30 were conscripted into British wartime service, with them having a choice between the Auxiliary Territorial Service, the Women's Royal Navy Service, the Women's Auxiliary Air Force, Civil Defense, Land Army or taking employment in war industry work. It might be noted that the conscription was therefore unique in that it contemplated non-martial choices as well as martial ones, or that it allowed for choices at all.
That non-combatant role no doubt counted as wartime service for conscription tallies, but it was not in the listed options due to the special requirements it obviously had.
The Auxiliary Territorial Service, of which the future Queen Elizabeth II was a member, served a role similar to that of the WAAF, but for the Army. Watchers of British television are familiar, to an extent, with this service through the British television series, Foyle's War.
December 18, 1941
Pursuant to the authority in me vested by the Constitution of the United States, I hereby appoint as a commission to ascertain and report the facts relating to the attack made by Japanese armed forces upon the Territory of Hawaii on December 7, 1941, the following:Associate Justice Owen J. Roberts, United States Supreme Court,Chairman;
Admiral William H. Standley, United States Navy, Retired; Rear Admiral Joseph M. Reeves, United States Navy, Retired; Major General Frank R. McCoy, United States Army, Retired; Brigadier General Joseph T. McNarney, United States Army.
The purposes of the required inquiry and report are to provide bases for sound decisions whether any derelictions of duty or errors of judgment on the part of United States Army or Navy personnel contributed to such successes as were achieved by the enemy on the occasion mentioned, and if so, what these derelictions or errors were, and who were responsible therefor.
The Commission will convene at the call of its Chairman at Washington, D. C, will thereafter proceed with its professional and clerical assistants to Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, and any other places it may deem necessary to visit for the completion of its inquiry. It will then return to Washington, D. C., and submit its report direct to the President of the United States.
The Commission is empowered to prescribe its own procedure, to employ such professional and clerical assistants as it may deem necessary, to fix the compensation and allowances of such assistants, to incur all necessary expenses for services and supplies, and to direct such travel of members and employees at public expense as it may deem necessary in the accomplishment of its mission. Each of the members of the Commission and each of its professional assistants, including civilian advisers and any Army, Navy, and Marine Corps officers so employed, detailed, or assigned shall receive payment of his actual and necessary expenses for transportation, and in addition and in lieu of all other allowances for expenses while absent from the place of his residence or station in connection with the business of the Commission, a per diem allowance of twenty-five dollars. All of the expenses of the Commission shall be paid by Army disbursing officers from allocations to be made to the War Department for that purpose from the Emergency Fund for the President.
All executive officers and agencies of the United States are directed to furnish the Commission such facilities, services, and cooperation as it may request of them from time to time.