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The Stateside Soldiers Abroad and at the University of Illinois

This paper is part of the Student Researcher Series which showcases research students have conducted using resources in the Student Life and Culture Archives. If you’re a student who is interested in sharing your research on our blog, please contact us

Rebecca Purcell is an undergraduate history student at the University of Illinois. This paper was written for History 498:Research and Writing Seminar taught by Professor Leslie Reagan. Rebecca presented her research at the Ethnography of the University Initiative Conference in December 2015.

WATC Cadets RS 39/2/20, Number 0000647
WATC Cadets. RS 39/2/20, Number 0000647.

We often think of women during wartime as someone who the men fighting send letters to.  We see them as loved ones, care givers, and providers of those fighting overseas.  During World War II women’s roles began to transform into something that did not follow the norms of society set for them in prior wars.  Women now had their own divisions of service to sign up for.  They had the choice like most men of working under the Airforce, Army, Navy, and the National Guard. Women during World War II played an important role in showing not only how women took on more active roles than they had in previous wars, but also how universities such as U of I became centers where women were able to discover who they wanted to become when it came to war time efforts. These women pushed past restrictions placed on them by men, and proved that they were willing and able to fight for their country just like any man.  These women represent not only change, but hope in a future where they could become more than just housewives, but equals to men.  Looking at different accounts from the time and prior we can see through their stories and struggles the changes that began to occur after WWII in relation to women. This paper is meant to prove just how significant these women truly were for both the University of Illinois, as well as across the nation making an impact on the U.S., and its military.

During WWI other countries were taking action to ensure that their nations would not crumble when it came to their military strength. They wanted to be prepared for the possibility that their men would all fall in battle. Countries such as Russia, Japan, Germany, England, and many others were preparing for a total war. This preparation began prior to WWI, and grew strong as the war progressed. “For over a decade the women of Germany, Italy, and Japan have been training for war. Their duties range from front line combat to manual labor.”[1] Russia seemed to be the country that allowed women to be involved in more ways than other countries. Russia allowed women to serve as sharpshooters, dig trenches, and carry ammunition on their backs to troops in the line of fire.[2] Countries around the world besides the U.S. at this point allowed women to be involved in military activities. “The British, whose war effort was more nearly total, had already established women’s auxiliaries in several of their services, and there was considerable evidence that had the war lasted a few months longer the United States might have done like wise.”[3] Women’s involvement in the military may have been different in WWII if this would have happened. However, there was one way that women were allowed to be involved in military efforts in WWI. Continue reading “The Stateside Soldiers Abroad and at the University of Illinois”

World War II and University Housing

Men's Old Gymnasium (c. 1942-46)
Men’s Old Gymnasium (c. 1942-46)

Written by Thomas Hendrickson

After the bombing of Pearl Harbor the United States launched itself into World War II and, like many universities and colleges throughout the States, the University of Illinois was fully engaged in mobilizing its resources for the war effort. New military-student programs began to be set up immediately. Before the end of the next semester (Spring ’42) the Navy had constructed several different military training programs at Illinois: a Naval Signal School, Diesel Engine School, and Diesel School.[1] By mid-summer the U.S. Army had also created the Army Specialized Training Program. Thus by the summer of 1942 military students/trainees outnumbered civilian students at the University of Illinois.[2]

Temporary Housing (c.1946-47)
Temporary Housing (c.1946-47)

This influx of programs and students had a profound impact on University Housing for the rest of the decade because Illinois was now exceeding its student carrying capacity. So much so that despite having just completed the Men’s Residence Halls in the autumn of 1941 the housing situation was over-encumbered. To make space University Housing had to get creative. They re-outfitted the women’s hall of Busey-Evans for military personnel and more classrooms, set up the Great West Hall of the Stadium to hold classrooms, and fraternities were obligated to house military trainees for a short time. To meet the student dining needs the University began serving meals from various locations, including the Illini Union ballroom. This was still not enough and the Housing Division had to take over the Men’s Old Gymnasium and use it for temporary housing and more classes.[3]

Continue reading “World War II and University Housing”

The James Watson Snively Papers

A photo of the Snively family, sent to James while he was a POW.
A photo of the Snively family, sent to James while he was a POW.

Written by Caitlin Stamm

The Student Life and Culture Archives recently processed the papers of James Watson Snively (RS 26/20/198), a University of Illinois student who served during World War II. James Watson Snively was born in 1924 in Rockford, Illinois. His parents, John Rowe Snively, Jr. (Phi Alpha Delta, Pre-Law 1921, Law 1923) and Mabel Ruth (née Holland) Snively (LAS 1924), both attended the University of Illinois.[1]  In addition, SLC has also acquired John R. Snively’s scrapbook from his time as a U of I student(41/20/246).

James “Jimmie” Snively attended West High School in Rockford and entered the University of Illinois in 1942, where he was a member of the University R.O.T.C.’s Pershing Rifles. [2]. This new collection contains the letters that Mr. and Mrs. Snively wrote to Jimmie while he lived in Urbana-Champaign, as well as the letters he wrote back to his parents, describing his life as a student.  Continue reading “The James Watson Snively Papers”