YOUR TOWN

Halifax Historical Society to host exhibit on Women’s Army Corps during World War II, Daytona Beach history

An interactive display on the WACs is expected to draw interest and visitors will learn about the attraction of the beach and its spot in surfing history.


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  • | 2:00 p.m. September 10, 2024
Women’s Army Corp march on the Daytona Beach boardwalk. Photo courtesy of the Halifax Historical Society
Women’s Army Corp march on the Daytona Beach boardwalk. Photo courtesy of the Halifax Historical Society
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Two very important chapters in Daytona Beach history — the World’s Most Famous Beach and an invasion of the Women’s Army Corps during World War II — will be highlighted in an exhibit opening Oct. 1 at the Halifax Historical Society and Museum.

“We are very excited about these exhibits, for all the tourists and residents of this area,” said Richard Sala, president of HHS.

An interactive display on the WACs is expected to draw interest and visitors will learn about the attraction of the beach and its spot in surfing history. The exhibit will be visited by the Florida Association of Museums membership in conjunction with a state meeting at the museum.

Early in 1941, Congresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers introduced a bill to establish an Army Women’s corps, separate from the nursing unit. The attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, galvanized those efforts.

The training site in Daytona Beach for the Women’s Army Corps, formerly the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps, was selected as one of three in the nation with the help of some close friends, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and college founder Mary McLeod Bethune. It was seen as a way to boost the ailing tourist industry, using hotel room as housing.

Women volunteers who would fulfill an official role in the war in the coming months were recruited and brought to Daytona Beach, where government housed them in hotels until a cantonment was built in what was then known as the Welch Area. Some lived in tents at Bethune Beach. Due to a supply mix-up, shipments of woolens were sent to Daytona Beach while cotton clothing went to the Des Moines facility.

At one time, there were 14,000 of the 150,000 recruits nationwide in Daytona Beach. They were sworn in at ceremonies at the Beachside Boardwalk. Word came down on Dec. 13, 1943, that the military training center here would close.

The cantonment became the Welch Convalescent Center to treat wounded servicemen, until 1946, until it was closed by the Army.

Although it was the duty of WAC members to keep traffic off the beach at night during the war, the 23 miles of hard-packed sand had served as the city’s welcome mat since the late 1800s.

Daytona Beach is also known as being known for the home of a unique form of recreation — surfing. Daytona Beach became Florida’s Surf City as young men swam out from shore to balance themselves on long, narrow boards with the goal of riding the waves into shore.

Surfer Tom Blake came here in 1933 and soon introduced his hollow surfboards. The Whitman Brothers, who started out in Miami Beach, drove into Daytona Beach with their Hawaiian-style boards. They joined a growing number of young men who became surfing pioneers. Nearly 90 surfboards were built in shop classes at Seabreeze and Mainland High Schools.

Daytona Beach’s reputation for speed grew over the years with the advent of motorized cars, who raced along the white sands in time trials, later competing on the beaches in Volusia County.

Memorabilia from the WAC’s and mementoes of Daytona Beach’s famous oceanfront playground will be featured in a series of displays within the exhibits starting Oct. 1.

HHS President Sala said the WAC display will be interactive for FAM, featuring live models in uniform and a special surprise for those who follow the footsteps as a new recruit in the Army unit.

The museum at 252 S. Beach St., Daytona Beach, is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Admission is $10. Children 12 and under are free. For more information, call 386 255-6976.

 

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