| *COLONEL RUTH CHENEY
STREETER USMCWR
Colonel
Ruth Cheney Streeter, the first Director of the United States Marine Corps
Women's Reserve, died 30 September 1990 in Morristown, New Jersey. She earned
the Legion of Merit for "outstanding services" during World War II
and served from the time the Women's Reserve was activated on 13 February 1943,
until 7 December 1945, when she resigned her commission.
The colonel was awarded the
Legion of Merit on 4 February 1946. The accompanying citation states in part:
"Exercising judgment, initiative and ability, Colonel Streeter rendered
distinctive service in directing the planning and organization of the Women's
Reserve of the Marine Corps and skillfully integrating women into the basic
structure of the Corps, carefully selected, trained and properly assigned them
as replacements for men in shore establishments."
Born 2 October 1895 at
Brookline, Massachusetts, Colonel Streeter attended schools abroad and
graduated from Bryn Mawr College at Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, in 1918. During
the depression years following 1930, she worked in public health and welfare,
unemployment relief and old-age assistance in her home state of New Jersey. She
was one-time President of the Welfare Board in Morris County, New Jersey. She
also served as a member of the New Jersey State Relief Council, New Jersey
Commission of Inter-State Cooperation, and New Jersey Board of Children's
Guardians.
Long interested in
aviation, the colonel completed a course in aeronautics at New York University
and served as adjutant of Group 221, Civil Air Patrol. She learned to fly in
1940 and in 1941 became the only woman member of the Committee on Aviation of
the New Jersey Defense Council. The same year she also acted as chairman of the
Citizen's Committee for Army and Navy, Inc., for Fort Dix, New Jersey. She
received her commercial pilot's license in April 1942.
Colonel Streeter was the
first woman to hold the rank of major in the Marine Corps. She was appointed to
that rank on 29 January 1943. She was promoted to lieutenant colonel on 22
November 1943, and to the rank of colonel 1 February 1944.
When Colonel Streeter left
the Marine Corps in December, 1945, General A.A. Vandegrift then Commandant of
the Marine Corps, wrote her a commendatory letter, which is quoted in part:
"…It is with deep regret
that I contemplate your leaving, and I cannot let the occasion pass without
conveying to you some expression of my admiration and appreciation of your
outstanding service as Director of the Marine Corps Women's Reserve from its
inception in January 1943 until the present time.
"Over that period, the
Marine Corps Women's Reserve grew in size to a maximum strength of 831 officers
and 17,714 enlisted. It set a standard of excellence which, in my opinion,
could not have been excelled and would be difficult to equal."
Colonel Streeter is joint
donor with her mother of the Cheney Award, given annually to some member of the
United States Air Force for "acts of valor or extreme fortitude or
self-sacrifice." The award commemorates the memory of Lieutenant William
H. Cheney, the colonel's brother, who was killed in an aviation accident in
World War II.
In addition to the Legion
of Merit, Colonel Streeter's medals include the American Campaign Medal and the
World War II Victory Medal.
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