Skip to main content
Record photography, not for public use
WAVES Uniform Jacket
Record photography, not for public use

WAVES Uniform Jacket

Original OwnerOriginally owned by Elizabeth Ann Nolan American, 1924 - 2017
DesignerDesigned by House of Mainbocher American, 1929 - 1971
Date1944-1946
MediumWool, plastic
DimensionsBodice (center back x shoulder span): 26 1/4 × 15in. (66.7 × 38.1cm)
ClassificationsCostume
Credit LineGift of Elizabeth Barnicle
DescriptionU. S. Navy WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service) uniform dress jacket worn by Elizabeth Nolan.

The jacket is a navy blue, single breasted, notch lapel blazer with long sleeves and a front, four button closure. The blazer has shoulder pads, likely Polyurethane foam. The notched lapel features hand attached circular collar patches on both the proper right and left sides, the patches are black and embroidered with a white anchor atop a gray-blue three bladed boat propeller. The proper left sleeve features a navy blue patch with a white embroidered eagle and three red chevrons, indicating a Petty Officer First Class. There are navy blue tabs on both the proper right and proper left sides of the bodice. The blue molded plastic buttons feature a bald eagle holding an anchor. The blazer has interior breast pockets on both the proper left and proper right sides of the bodice. The proper right breast pocket features an embroidered patch depicting an anchor, it reads, “Made and sold under the authority of U.S. Navy. U. S. Women’s Naval Reserve.” There is a name tag at the interior neckline that reads, “Elizabeth A. Nolan.”
Object number2017.37.6
NotesSubject Note: During WWII, women were eager to get involved in the war effort. Despite political resistance from those who believed women had no place in the Navy, President Roosevelt passed the Navy Women’s Reserve Act into law on July 30, 1942, creating the Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES). This opened up new opportunities for women, allowing them to work as aviation mechanics, photographers, control tower operators, and parachute riggers. Although WAVES were not allowed to serve aboard combat ships or aircraft, these women were stationed at 900 shore stations in the continental U.S., later expanding to Alaska and Hawaii. By the end of WWII, more than 84,000 women had served in the WAVES. After the war, Congress passed a law allowing women to gain permanent status in all branches of the U.S. military, effectively disbanding the WAVES organization.

On March 15, 1944, twenty-one-year-old Hartford native Elizabeth “Betty” Nolan, joined the WAVES, where she was assigned to the Naval Air Station in Alameda, CA. To prepare, she attended the U.S. Naval Training School at Hunter College, NY, and Yeoman School at the Iowa Teachers College, Cedar Falls, IA. After the war, Betty worked in the Patent Department of the Underwood Research Laboratories until she and her husband, John P. Barnicle, started their family.
On View
Not on view
Record photography, not for public use
Elizabeth Ann Nolan
1944-1946
Record photography, not for public use
Elizabeth Ann Nolan
1944-1946
Record photograph, not for public use or publication. INTERNAL USE ONLY.
Thorngate Uniforms Inc.
1986-2001
Record photography, not for public use
Elizabeth Ann Nolan
1944-1946
Record photography, not for public use
Elizabeth Ann Nolan
1944-1946
Gift of Mrs. Houghton Bulkeley,  1969.48.4  Photograph by David Stansbury. © 2009 The Connectic…
Virginia Grover
1942-1945
Record photograph, not for public use or publication. INTERNAL USE ONLY
Thorngate Uniforms Inc.
1986-2001
Gift of Charles S. MacDonough, 1847.12.0  © 2008 The Connecticut Historical Society.
Commodore Thomas MacDonough
1812-1814
Man's Uniform Jacket
Peter Kostecki
1941-1945