The Second World War at UNB

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A radar detection set used during the Second World War, located between the Bonar Law-Bennet Library and the Engineering Building, (ca. 1955). PR; Series 1; Sub-series 1; Item 4749.

The outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 signalled significant changes for UNB as a whole, with numerous male students enlisting throughout the war and the entirety of the female student population occupied with aiding the war effort. Two women in particular took up the call to arms; Barbara and Margaret White, identical twin sisters, became the first co-eds in the class of 1943 to join the Armed Forces, enlisting in the Women's Division of the Royal Canadian Air Force. The White sisters left UNB in the winter of 1943 before completing their year, but they were able to return to Fredericton and receive their degrees in May. The twins garnered a great deal of attention at Encaenia when they attended wearing their "Air Force Blue" uniforms.

UNB women students helped the war effort by knitting for the soldiers and organizing teas and dances to raise money for the Red Cross, though students activities at the university were generally curtailed. The Junior Tea, an elaborate social event at UNB which was traditionally held in the spring and organized by the junior women in honour of the senior women, was cancelled in 1941 due to the war because the women decided to focus on the war effort. This decision was an unpopular one, with the junior class ostracized for a time, but the women felt the Tea to be "frivolous" during a time of war.

All women students were also expected to participate in a war service program. This included three hours a week of physical training and drill as well as lectures and courses in first-aid. In 1943, UNB became the first university in the Maritimes to establish a unit of the Canadian Red Cross Corps. The CRCC unit was intended to train college women to be a "disciplined body of women workers" for the Red Cross. Despite an initial excitement over the program, the UNB Corps was soon disbanded as its members decided they would be more useful helping at the blood bank or for making bandages, as the lectures and drill were of little practical worth. A contributing factor to the women's dissatisfaction with the CRCC was the issue of uniforms. While their male counterparts received free uniforms, the women were expected to pay for theirs, which cost approximately ten dollars at the time. As many of the women could not afford this extra expense, they wore white armbands adorned with a red cross.

The aforementioned blood bank was established by the Red Cross in 1941 as a blood-processing laboratory on UNB's Fredericton campus. Many UNB women volunteered at the lab as part of their war effort, and one early woman faculty member, Frances Crocker, was the Chief Technician of the blood bank which was overseen by C.W. Argue, a professor of Biology at UNB. The volunteer work, though essential, was described as "pure drudgery", but the efforts of the women students enabled the technicians to do more specialized work.

Source(s):

  • The Brunswickan, vo. 63, no. 18, 3 March 1944, p. 3.
  • The Brunswickan, vol. 60, no. 6, 1 November 1940.
  • The Brunswickan, vol. 62, no. 5, 23 October 1942.
  • The Brunswickan, vol. 62, no. 17, 26 February 1943.
  • The Brunswickan, vol. 63, no. 3, 15 October 1943.
  • Up the Hill, 1940-42.
  • Senate Minutes (UA RG 40), Book 5 (1927-1943), p. 227, 245, 272.
  • Montague, Susan. A Pictorial History of the University of New Brunswick. Fredericton: University of New Brunswick, 1992, p. 87.

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