Cannonball fire burst through the trees, and Private Robert Shurtleff felt the ground shake.
It was dark. Shurtleff ducked and lifted his arms to shield his face from the mounds of dirt flying through the air. He looked quickly to his left and watched Diston, a man he had grown close to in just a few months, begin to fall. Shurtleff wanted to lunge across the mud to save him, but enemy fire stopped the private from moving. Instead, he watched Diston’s lifeless body fall atop one of many others, Continental and British alike, scattered across the Revolutionary War battlefield.
Shurtleff was tough—lauded as one of the fastest, strongest, and most capable men in his scouting unit. He could read, a rarity in eighteenth-century America. He was the first to volunteer for dangerous missions. His fellow soldiers playfully called him Molly because of what they thought were slightly feminine characteristics—he had no facial hair and tended to shy away from the wrestling and roughhousing that other men participated in during brief moments of free time in the field.
It was 1782.
And what none of those soldiers knew was that the man everyone called Shurtleff, the one they loyally and fiercely followed into battle, was actually a woman.
Deborah Sampson was the first female known to have fought in an American war. She tried, but failed, to enlist twice (under different male monikers) before she perfected her ability to pass under the name Robert Shurtleff. Her work during the Revolutionary War proves that women have been capable of fighting in combat for the United States since the first group of men set boots to muddy ground for American freedom.
1775–1783: Although women are not allowed to join the military, not all females who believe in the quest for America’s freedom are as extreme in their desire for combat as Deborah Sampson. Hundreds of women serve openly during the American Revolution—not as soldiers but as civilian nurses, water carriers, cooks, spies, and in other support roles. Some follow their husbands to battle. Sampson’s actions, passing as a man, are illegal during the Revolution, and dozens of women are jailed for attempting it. A doctor discovers that Sampson is a woman after the private is shot and requires a long hospital stay. She is kicked out of the military and has to fight for years, with the help of her husband and other men, to get acknowledged for her service through a military pension.
1861–1865: Still unable to serve in the military but surely having heard about the work and accolades of Deborah Sampson (who became a brand, was the subject of at least one book, and toured the country lecturing about her experiences as a soldier), hundreds of women disguise themselves as men to fight in combat for both the Union and the Confederacy. As slave men sign up to fight for their freedom, slave women follow. Cathay Williams, a slave from Missouri, is forced to serve the Union Army as a cook. After her service was over, she disguises herself as a man (under the name William Cathay) and becomes a Buffalo Soldier. She is the only known ex-slave woman to have done so. She fought successfully for two years before a doctor discovered she was a woman and she was discharged. The Army refused to recognize her service or give her a pension.
1901: After three years of hiring female nurses as government contractors, the Army finally enlists its first group of women. In 1901 nurses become part of the regular Army. They are hired for three-year stints but are not allowed to become officers.
1908: The Navy establishes a nurse corps.
1914–1918: Some estimate more than thirty-five thousand women serve in the military during the war, with more than twenty-five thousand serving overseas throughout Europe as, among other things, nurses, secretaries, and phone operators.
1939–1945: These years saw some of the most significant advancements in military service for women. More than one hundred thousand women enlist in the Army, and roles for women expand for the first time under the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps, created in 1942. Some female pilots take on stateside missions usually reserved for men through the newly created Women’s Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs). But nursing is still by far the most popular military occupation for women. More than sixty thousand nurses serve during the war. Black women, who had been fighting for years to serve as nurses, are finally allowed to join the Army Nurse Corps in greater numbers. African American women also make other strides during the war. Heard of the Tuskegee Airmen? A woman, Willa Brown, aids the group. Brown started an aviation school with her husband and trained male pilots to qualify for advanced flying school at the Tuskegee Institute. Another black female pilot, Janet Bragg, trained at the Tuskegee Institute with male pilots. She was the only woman there and experienced a tremendous amount of discrimination from white and black men alike. A white male instructor failed her on the flight examination, Bragg said much later when recounting the experience during an interview with the Smithsonian Institution. She said the instructor told her after she landed the plane that she’d done as well as any man, but that he’d never given a colored woman a license to fly, and he didn’t intend to start that day. A racially segregated Army also denied the commercial pilot entry into the WASPs.
1948: Three years after the war ended, regular and reserve Army status is officially opened to all women.
The Women’s Armed Service Integration Act creates a female reserve for the Army, Air Force, and Marines. Six years earlier, the Navy Women’s Reserve Act created the WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service).
1950: Female soldiers enter a combat theater for the first time as Army nurses, the only women allowed to do so during the war.
1951: Female reservists are forced into active duty for the first time.
1953: Fae M. Adams becomes the first female physician commissioned as an officer in the regular Army Medical Corps, as a first lieutenant.
1960–1973: Women serve in Vietnam as nurses training the South Vietnamese as early as 1956. By 1967 some five hundred thousand American troops, men and women, are on the ground in Vietnam. But the first female officer from the Women’s Army Corps actually landed in the country five years before that. By the end of the war about eleven thousand women (mostly nurses) had been stationed in the conflict zone. Just as during World War II decades earlier, the need for troops forces a boon in progress for women in the armed forces. By 1972 all noncombat jobs are opened to women, and women are allowed, for the first time, to command men. Nearly sixty thousand troops died as a result of the Vietnam War and eight of them were women. In 1967 rules for retirement and promotion are opened to female officers in all branches.
1976: Enlistment age is reduced for women.
1979: For the first time men and women have the same qualifications for enlistment. The Women’s Army Corps, no longer needed, was officially disbanded the year before. Women have been integrated into the regular Army and reserves for about thirty years.
1980: First women graduate from West Point.
1983: Four female military police officers deploy to an active combat zone; eventually one hundred women serve in Grenada. Females fly for the first time in conflict.
1988: Secretary of Defense Frank C. Carlucci issues a Standard Risk Rule that “excluded women from noncombat units or missions if the risks of exposure to direct combat, hostile fire or capture were equal to or greater than the risk in the units they supported.” Six years later Defense Secretary Les Aspin rescinds the rule, allowing women to serve in any units except those “below brigade level whose primary mission is to engage in direct combat on the ground.” This 1994 directive sets women up to serve in combat zones without acknowledging their combat roles through pay or title.
1989: Captain Linda Bray leads her military police unit on what is supposed to be a routine mission to capture a kennel of guard dogs in Panama. But when her unit arrives, members of the Panamanian Defense Forces (PDF), which had been using the location as barracks, open fire. Bray tells her soldiers to return fire, becoming the first woman to command and lead a unit into battle. Bray and her thirty soldiers (both men and women) of the 988th Military Police Company fight for three hours during the December battle, which was on day one of the US invasion of Panama. The unit kills three PDF soldiers. Bray’s work, although applauded (not one American soldier died), forces public discussion about whether there is still a distinction between combat and noncombat units (tactical military police companies are supposed to fall into the latter category) during conflict. It is the first time the military questions whether “frontlines” still exist or shield women from direct combat.
1990–1991: The first war after which military commanders admitted that women were critical to combat readiness, the Persian Gulf War is also the first that openly diverges from conventional definitions of frontlines. Guerilla warfare puts the forty thousand women who serve at greater risk of injury and death. It is the first modern-day war in which women were held hostage—Major Rhonda Cornum and Specialist Melissa Coleman are held for a week and thirty-three days, respectively, as Iraqi prisoners of war. For the first time women take on virtually all combat roles in every way but name. They fly helicopters into combat, launch missiles, and command male soldiers.
1993: President Bill Clinton officially ends the exclusion of women on aircraft and ships that carry out combat missions, though women had already flown aircraft into combat zones.
1994: A shift in Department of Defense (DOD) assignment policy—one that had given units some leeway in assigning women based on billeting availability and physical requirements—opens some thirty-two thousand Army and forty-eight thousand Marine positions to women.
The Army chief of staff announces that all Army basic training will fully gender integrate. A gender-integration steering committee begins making recommendations for smooth transitions of all basic training units.
1994–1995: The Army once again begins experimenting with gender integration in basic training after initial experiments in the 1980s failed. Men and women participate in mixed-gender basic training classes for the first time in Fort Jackson, South Carolina, and Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.
1998: The first woman takes command of a Navy combat ship.
2001–PRESENT: As combat roles for women have expanded, so has the necessity for women to fight. More than 11 percent of the forces deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan have been women, and most of these women have served more than one tour.
2003–2004: The first group of women, known as Team Lioness, form a female engagement team that serves in Ar Ramadi, Iraq. The women, with little to no combat training, engage in firefights and are assigned to combat missions with male infantry units. The group of twenty women follow infantry units into battle to search and question Iraqi females, becoming an integral part of intelligence collection.
2005: Two women establish themselves as early heroes of the war in Iraq. Sergeant Leigh Ann Hester, of the Kentucky National Guard 617th Military Police Company, earns a Silver Star for valor in combat after leading military police officers in a counterattack against fifty insurgents who attacked their convoy. Specialist Ashley J. Pullen, of the same Kentucky National Guard unit, earns a Bronze Star for bravery.
2007: RAND National Defense Research Institute releases a report in which it states that both the Army and DOD policies that delineate when and how women can serve in combat and noncombat units are ambiguous and hard to understand. In Iraq, the report says, it seemed as if the Army was complying with some policies and not others and that some personnel were concerned that strictly following protocol would keep women out of operations in Iraq and hurt the Army’s mission. In other words, military personnel on all levels were defying the rules of engagement to use women in combat, as they knew women were mission critical. But without an official rules change, women are still not getting credit for combat duty. The RAND report states, “In many ways, the language and concepts in the current policy for assigning women do not seem well suited to the type of operations taking place in Iraq. The focus on a defined enemy and the linear battlefield… is inappropriate to Iraq.”
2009: The Marine Corps adopts the US Army’s Team Lioness program, renaming the groups of women who attach to infantry units female engagement teams (FETs). One of the earliest iterations of the FET program occurs with the 3rd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment in Farah Province, Afghanistan.
2010: The Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services and the Military Leadership Diversity Commission recommend eliminating combat exclusion policies and opening all military career fields and schools to women.
FEBRUARY 2012: The Department of Defense opens thousands of positions to women in all branches of service after striking down a 1990s policy that banned women from collocating with combat units and opening battalion-level positions to women in ground combat units.
NOVEMBER 2012: Marine Captain Zoe Bedell, Marine First Lieutenant Colleen Farrell, Air Force Major Mary Jennings Hegar, and Army Staff Sergeant Jennifer Hunt sue Defense Secretary Leon Panetta to open all combat positions to women.
2013: Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff encourages Panetta to end combat exclusion for women.
JANUARY 2015: The Army misses its deadline to open all combat roles to women set by the Obama administration in 2012, though the Navy and Air Force have already opened nearly all combat positions.
AUGUST 2015: First Lieutenant Shaye Haver and Captain Kristen Griest become the first women to graduate from the Army Ranger School.
DECEMBER 2015: Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter announces that the Pentagon will open all combat jobs to women by early 2016.
MAY 2017: More than two hundred years after Deborah Sampson, the first American woman to fight in combat, broke the law to defend American independence, eighteen women graduate from the U.S. Army’s infantry basic training, the first women to do so. They meet the same gender-neutral standards as their male counterparts. In a New York Times report Drill Sergeant Joseph Sapp referred to one of his female recruits as a “hoss”—a high compliment. “Forget male-female,” he said. “She’s one of the best in the company. She’s one you’re happy to have.”