TEMPORARILY CLOSED – Currently the Mercury Shop is closed both in store and online due to strike action by unionized Staff of Non-Public Funds, which the Mercury Shop staff are apart of. For updates please visit The Mercury Shop and Military Communications and Electronics Facebook pages. We’re very sorry for the inconvenience. Any medals purchased for mounting from 20 November onward will likely not be completed until sometime in January.
TEMPORARILY CLOSED – Currently the Mercury Shop is closed both in store and online due to strike action by unionized Staff of Non-Public Funds, which the Mercury Shop staff are apart of. For updates please visit The Mercury Shop and Military Communications and Electronics Facebook pages. We’re very sorry for the inconvenience. Any medals purchased for mounting from 20 November onward will likely not be completed until sometime in January.
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Switchboard Soldiers: A Novel
GL- 6501

Switchboard Soldiers: A Novel

Regular price $24.99 $0.00 Unit price per

 In June 1917, General John Pershing arrived in France to establish American forces in Europe. He immediately found himself unable to communicate with troops in the field. Pershing needed telephone operators who could swiftly and accurately connect multiple calls, speak fluent French and English, remain steady under fire, and be utterly discreet, since the calls often conveyed classified information.

At the time, nearly all well-trained American telephone operators were women—but women were not permitted to enlist, or even to vote in most states. Nevertheless, the U.S. Army Signal Corps promptly began recruiting them.

More than 7,600 women responded, including Grace Banker of New Jersey, a switchboard instructor with AT&T and an alumna of Barnard College; Marie Miossec, a Frenchwoman and aspiring opera singer; and Valerie DeSmedt, a twenty-year-old Pacific Telephone operator from Los Angeles, determined to strike a blow for her native Belgium.

They were among the first women sworn into the U.S. Army under the Articles of War. The male soldiers they had replaced had needed one minute to connect each call. The switchboard soldiers could do it in ten seconds.

Deployed throughout France, including near the front lines, the operators endured hardships and risked death or injury from gunfire, bombardments, and the Spanish Flu. Not all of them would survive.