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Grace Banker and Her Hello Girls Answer the Call

The Heroic Story of WWI Telephone Operators

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Led by twenty-five-year-old Grace Banker, thirty-two telephone operators — affectionately called "Hello Girls" back in the US — became the first female combatants in World War I.
Follow Grace Banker's journey from her busy life as a telephone switchboard trainer in New York to her pioneering role as the Chief Operator of the 1st Unit of World War I telephone operators in the battlefields of France. With expert skill, steady nerves, and steadfast loyalty, the Signal Corps operators transferred orders from commanders to battlefields and communicated top-secret messages between American and French headquarters. After faithfully serving her country —undaunted by freezing weather and fires; long hours and little sleep, and nearby shellings and far off explosions — Grace was the first and only woman operator in the Signal Corps to be awarded the Army's Distinguished Service Medal.
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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2021
      An overlooked hero of World War I is given her due. In a more innocent time, when going to war was considered an adventure, Grace Banker answered the U.S. Signal Corps' call for women telephone operators. College educated when women generally weren't and already training switchboard operators at 25, she was named chief operator of a group known as the Signal Corps Girls and sent overseas to connect military calls from England to France, sometimes from secret locations. Quotes from Banker's diary and letters accompany Friddell's straightforward, descriptive text, bringing to life her dedication, humor, and fearlessness. Baddeley's appealing, comics-style illustrations provide a strong sense of time and place, depicting the White protagonist amid a mostly but not all-White cast; some of the doughboys are soldiers of color. The focus is on her accomplishments and the positive aspects of her story; the tale ends with a return home with headlines full of praise and a distinguished service medal while the endnotes reveal that women in her position were not recognized as service members and were not seen as veterans eligible for benefits until 1977, after her death. Overall, this overlooked piece of history--the role of women during World War I--is presented in engaging detail, and the result is a captivating depiction of a smart, spirited woman who found a way to use her skills and intelligence to benefit her country in an unexpected way. (This book was reviewed digitally with 11-by-18-inch double-page spreads viewed at 67.5% of actual size.) An absorbing look at one woman's achievements during World War I. (timeline, notes, bibliography) (Picture book/biography. 6-10)

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2021
      Grades 1-4 Recounted with the same plucky spirit as its heroine, this picture-book biography of Grace Banker is a heartening story of grit, charm, and bravery. At the age of 25, Banker replied to a newspaper ad for female telephone operators willing to help the war effort in France during WWI. Banker was promptly hired and put in charge of 33 other young women, collectively referred to as Signal Corp Girls or Hello Girls. Saturated illustrations use action-packed panels and show Banker and her ""girls"" maintaining upbeat attitudes in the face of inhospitable and often dangerous surroundings. All told, these women played a vital role in keeping army headquarters in communication with the battlefront, and Banker received the Distinguished Service Medal for her work. Back matter expounds upon the general lack of gratitude shown to the Hello Girls, who were denied veterans' benefits on the technicality that they weren't soldiers. This section also features a detailed time line and facts about WWI and how switchboards worked, the latter being worth a glance before reading the main text.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      March 1, 2021
      Already a college graduate and an instructor at a switchboard operators' school, Grace Banker (1892-1960) "was used to marching in a man's world" when she answered a newspaper ad to join U.S. troops in France as a telephone operator in the army's Signal Corps during World War I. Banker was named chief operator of the first-ever unit of women soldiers; the thirty-three women risked their lives on the dangerous voyage overseas in 1918 and on the front, where they tirelessly relayed orders until the final ceasefire was uttered from Banker's phone. Soon after, she received the Distinguished Service Medal -- the army's "highest honor for someone not in combat" -- the first and only woman operator to ever do so. Friddell's narrow focus on Banker's twenty months of service highlights an inspiring, little-known story of everyday "girls" (as the text calls them) stepping up to heroically serve their country -- despite gender injustices -- and making history. The text incorporates, via blue type and speech bubbles, Banker's own words from diaries and interviews, providing readers with a fascinating firsthand account of the experience. Baddeley's attention to historical detail in her ink, acrylic, and digital-media illustrations helps accurately depict potentially unfamiliar, antiquated concepts such as switchboards, dazzle ships, and trench warfare. Black-and-white photographs of Banker and her unit accompany a timeline in the back matter, which also explains their postwar fight to be recognized as veterans by the U.S. government, additional facts about operating a switchboard, statistics about these brave women, and a bibliography. Cynthia K. Ritter

      (Copyright 2021 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2021
      Already a college graduate and an instructor at a switchboard operators' school, Grace Banker (1892-1960) "was used to marching in a man's world" when she answered a newspaper ad to join U.S. troops in France as a telephone operator in the army's Signal Corps during World War I. Banker was named chief operator of the first-ever unit of women soldiers; the thirty-three women risked their lives on the dangerous voyage overseas in 1918 and on the front, where they tirelessly relayed orders until the final ceasefire was uttered from Banker's phone. Soon after, she received the Distinguished Service Medal -- the army's "highest honor for someone not in combat" -- the first and only woman operator to ever do so. Friddell's narrow focus on Banker's twenty months of service highlights an inspiring, little-known story of everyday "girls" (as the text calls them) stepping up to heroically serve their country -- despite gender injustices -- and making history. The text incorporates, via blue type and speech bubbles, Banker's own words from diaries and interviews, providing readers with a fascinating firsthand account of the experience. Baddeley's attention to historical detail in her ink, acrylic, and digital-media illustrations helps accurately depict potentially unfamiliar, antiquated concepts such as switchboards, dazzle ships, and trench warfare. Black-and-white photographs of Banker and her unit accompany a timeline in the back matter, which also explains their postwar fight to be recognized as veterans by the U.S. government, additional facts about operating a switchboard, statistics about these brave women, and a bibliography.

      (Copyright 2021 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.7
  • Lexile® Measure:1120
  • Interest Level:K-3(LG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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