Edna Young

Last updated
Edna E. Young
Edna Young (foreground) NH 106756 (cropped).tif
Edna Young (foreground) at her swearing in, 1948.
Died2012
AllegianceUnited States
Service / branchNavy
RankChief Petty officer
Known forFirst black woman sworn into the regular US Navy in 1948

EdnaEarle Young (reportedly died 2012) was a United States Navy sailor. In 1948, she became one of the first enlisted women, and the first black woman, to be sworn in the Navy. Young later became the first woman in United States Navy history to be promoted to chief petty officer.

Biography

The first six woman to be enlisted in the regular Navy are sworn in on July 7, 1948. NH 106756.tif
The first six woman to be enlisted in the regular Navy are sworn in on July 7, 1948.

By September 2, 1945, Edna Young enlisted in the Women's Naval Reserve. [1] There, she was a clerical worker, working in dependent benefits. [2]

On July 7, 1948, Yeoman Second Class Young became one of the first six women, and the only black woman out of those six, to be sworn into the regular Navy. [3] [4] She was sworn by Rear Admiral George L. Russell alongside Chief Yeoman Wilma J. Marchal, Hospital Corpsman First Class Ruth Flora, Aviation Storekeeper First Class Kay L. Langen, Storekeeper Second Class Frances T. Devaney, and Teleman Doris R. Robertson. [5] [6] The enlistments marked a new era for the Navy. [7]

Later, Chief Yeoman Young became the first enlisted woman, and first black woman to become chief petty officer. [8] [9]

Young reportedly died in 2012. [10]

References

  1. "Chief Yeoman Edna Young". United States Navy. Retrieved 2025-02-24.
  2. Nelson, Dennis Denmark (1948). The Integration of the Negro Into the United States Navy, 1776-1947. Department of Sociology, Howard University.
  3. "Remembering the First Black Women Naval Officers". The Sextant. Retrieved 2025-02-24.
  4. "Navy Commissions First African American Woman Officers". The Sextant. Retrieved 2025-02-24.
  5. "U.S. Navy History: First enlisted women sworn into regular Navy, July 7, 1948". www.doncio.navy.mil. July 7, 2024. Retrieved 2025-02-24.
  6. "NH 106756 Rear Admiral George L. Russell, USN (Judge Advocate General of the Navy)". public2.nhhcaws.local. Retrieved 2025-02-24.
  7. Hall, Mary-Beth (2014-09-01). Crossed Currents: Navy Women in a Century of Change. Potomac Books, Inc. pp. 129–131. ISBN   978-1-61234-729-5.
  8. "Remembering the First Black Women Naval Officers". The Sextant. Retrieved 2025-02-24.
  9. "Chief Yeoman Edna Young". www.navy.mil. Retrieved 2025-02-24.
  10. "Navy salutes Black History". The Florida Times-Union. February 13, 2013. Retrieved 2025-02-24.