Royal Canadian Air Force Women's Division
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The Royal Canadian Air Force Women's Division was an element of the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) formed during the Second World War. The Women's Division was originally called the Canadian Women's Auxiliary Air Force, which formed in 1941. Women's Division personnel were commonly known as WDs.
WDs supported the war effort by taking over more mundane wartime responsibilities from men, who were made available for combat duties and to instruct in British Commonwealth Air Training Plan schools across Canada. The original 1941 order-in-council authorized "the formation of a component of the Royal Canadian Air Force to be known as the Canadian Women's Auxiliary Air Force, it's function being to release to heavier duties those members of the RCAF employed in administrative, clerical and other comparable types of service employment.". Duties, however, expanded as the war progressed. Among the many jobs performed by WDs, they worked as Service Police, parachute riggers, clerks, photographers, air photo interpreters, and wireless operators. Many WDs served overseas with 6 Group. Approximately 17,000 women served with the Women's Division before it was discontinued in December 1946. The WD motto was We Serve That Men May Fly.
[edit] References
- Ziegler, Mary. We Serve That Men may Fly - The Story of the Women's Division of the Royal Canadian Air Force. Hamilton: RCAF (WD) Association., 1973.