Albertine M. Aarents, Operator

 

Quick Facts

  • Unit: Two
  • Deployed: A second unit of operators, led by Chief Operator Inez Ann Murphy Crittenden, sailed on the troopship Carmania on March 29, 1918.
  • Repatriated:
  • Hometown at Time of Enlistment: Denver, Colorado
  • Original Hometown (if Known):
  • Education:
  • Occupation at Enlistment:
  • Lifespan:
  • Remarks: Groups Nos. 1 and 2 are made up of experienced telephone operators. (Birth of the AEF Signal Corps Girls - 1918)

 

Articles and Documents on GG Archives

 

"Hello Girls" Documents & Reference Materials

Exhibit B: Application for Membership in Telephone Unit in France (1918), Adele L. Hoppock.

Application for Membership in the Signal Corps Telephone Unit (1918)

How the Army recruited and screened bilingual operators for service in France. Features Exhibit B with Adele L. Hoppock’s questionnaire—language attestations, medical fitness, instruction pledge, and wartime commitment.

 

The first unit of U.S. Army Signal Corps telephone operators, 1918.

223 Women of the U.S. Army Signal Corps Telephone Operators Overseas (1918–1919)
Explore the earliest compiled roster of 223 “Hello Girls,” the U.S. Army Signal Corps telephone operators who served overseas during World War I. Based on 1918–1919 press and Signal Corps reports, this list reflects the original wartime recognition of these women’s service and leadership.

Includes names, operating units, and select period photographs—an invaluable snapshot of how the women of the Signal Corps were viewed during the war itself.

 

The first group of U.S. Army Signal Corps telephone operators trained for foreign service in 1918.

Roster and Hometowns of the WWI “Hello Girls” – U.S. Army Signal Corps Telephone Operators (1918–1920)
Explore the complete roster of 223 women and two men who served as U.S. Army Signal Corps telephone operators during World War I. Organized by unit and hometown, this list reveals the national and international scope of the bilingual operators who kept the American Expeditionary Forces connected across France.

This roster serves as a cornerstone for genealogists, educators, and historians researching the pioneering women who made military communications possible.

 

Photograph Shows General John J. “Black Jack” Pershing (1860-1948), Who Served as Head of the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I.

Exhibit H — Pershing’s Commendation of Signal Corps Operators (1918)

Dated 20 November 1918, this concise commendation credits “the officers and men and the young women of the Signal Corps” for wartime communications—an A.E.F.-level nod that explicitly includes the Hello Girls.

 

Front cover of the 1918 Memento of the Telephone Operating Units Signal Corps.

Memento of the Telephone Operating Units – Signal Corps (1918)
Explore the rare commemorative booklet presented to the U.S. Army’s “Hello Girls” at Christmas 1918 in France—filled with officer commendations, photographs, and personal keepsakes.

This artifact offers a tangible link between the women’s frontline service and their later fight for veteran recognition.

 

M. Olive Shaw, Unit 2 Signal Corps operator, 1918.

Affidavit of M. Olive Shaw (1977)

Unit 2 operator describes dual Army oaths, regulation uniforms/insignia, orders to Hoboken (Mar 1918), war risk insurance, and service at St. Nazaire, Brest, and Tours—a concise primary source on women’s military status in the AEF.

This affidavit is a compact primary source for the “military status” question—citing orders, insurance, command, discipline, and insignia—core to later recognition efforts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photographs

 

Second Group of Telephone Operators Ready for France, to Serve with the American Expeditionary Forces.

Second Group of Telephone Operators Ready for France, to Serve with the American Expeditionary Forces. The Telephone Review, April 1918. | GGA Image ID # 1927e19cd4. Click to View a Larger Image.

 

 

 

External Resources

 

 

 

Repository Information

The Gjenvick-Gjønvik Archives (GG Archives) is cataloged with the Library of Congress under MARC Org Code: WiMfGGA and ISIL: US-wimfgga.

Current location:
N91W16562 Pershing Ave, #1
Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin 53051-2170, USA

Note: Historic addresses listed in earlier MARC records include Marietta, GA and Woodstock, GA. These appear in authority files but are no longer active.

 

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