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Edna Owen

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Edna Owen (more generally referred to by her married name Mrs Herbert Sumner Owen) is probably best known for her contributions to the training of female wireless operators in the US during World War One. She was the director of the wireless training course run by the National League for Women's Service at Hunter College, New York; trained female wireless operators at the YWCA in New York City; and was a founder and chairman of the Women's Radio Corps.

Early life and marriage

Edna Owen (more generally referred to by her married name Mrs Herbert Sumner Owen) was born Erna von Rodenstein and later became the wife of Herbert Sumner Owen, a Mayflower descendant and businessman in Utah. While in Utah, Owen campaigned against polygamy before they moved east to New York.

Wireless work in World War One

In March 1917 and less than a month before the US entered the World War One, Owen was appointed the director of a wireless training course for women organised by the National League for Women's Service at Hunter College, New York. Owen was also chairman of the wireless division of the National League for Woman's Service.

Owens was also one of the co-founders of the Women's Radio Corps, attached to the US Army Signal Corps and established to train women as wireless operators during the war.[1] Throughout the war, Owens also ran a radio training class at the YWCA in New York where alumni included Belle Baruch.[2]

A mere six days after the US entered the war in April 1917, Owens offered to provide 500 licensed female wireless operators in six months. In order to achieve this highly ambitious goal, Owen campaigned tirelessly to add recruits, lecturing up to 200 young women at once in lectures in New York and Washington, D.C., on the "many wonderful opportunities" brought by the occasion of the "great world war. . . . [I]t is your duty to prepare yourselves in order that you may set men free, that they may go to the front and fight for you and yours."[1]

References

Template:Research help

  1. ^ a b Magoun, Alexander. "The Wireless Women of World War I". Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  2. ^ "Radio Class at New York City's YMCA". Retrieved 16 May 2014.

Sources and Further reading