Marie G. Rennick, Operator

 

Quick Facts

  • Unit: Seven
  • Deployed: Group 7 was ready to board ships for France when the Armistice was declared, so they did not deploy; however, all had volunteered, were fully trained, and were ready to serve in combat.
  • Repatriated:
  • Hometown at Time of Enlistment:
  • Original Hometown (if Known):
  • Education:
  • Occupation at Enlistment:
  • Lifespan:

 

Articles and Documents on GG Archives

 

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 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.

 

Engraving of Enid A. Mack (Pooley), Unit 7 Signal Corps Telephone Operators, 1918.

Affidavit of Enid M. Pooley (1977) — Unit 7 Signal Corps Telephone Operator
A first-person account from a Unit 7 operator who took the oath, wore the regulation Signal Corps uniform, trained with PT&T/AT&T, and was staged to embark when the Armistice (11/11/1918) halted deployment. Pooley’s sworn statement became key evidence in the Hello Girls’ recognition effort.

Affidavits & Testimonies · Last updated: January 2025

 

 

 

Photographs

Class of Young Women in Training for Service as Telephone Operators in France.

Class of Young Women in Training for Service as Telephone Operators in France. These Are in Addition to Those Whose Pictures Have Already Appeared in the News Lower Row, Left to Right: Helen Bixby, 3245 N. Illinois St., Indianapolis; Marie Lenglet, Springfield, Ill.; Olive Creelman, 1246 Leland Ave., Chicago; Marie Rennick, 136 W. Grand Blvd., Springfield, Ill.; Dorothy Dunbar, 5443 Kimbark Ave., Chicago. Upper Row, Left to Right: Alisse Lambert. 6230 Kimbark Ave., Chicago; Alice Longelier, 167 Ontario St, Chicago; Elsa Freeman, 6052 Harper Ave., Chicago; Marguerite Monnet, 5425 Kenmore Ave., Chicago; Minnie Goldman, 4738 Grand Blvd., Chicago; Cecile Joncas, 6710 Perry Ave., Chicago; Elizabeth Cheabrough, 1269 N. State St, Chicago; Frances St John, 1401 E. Fifty-seventh St., Chicago; Marguerite Derlis, 5817 Kenwood Ave., Chicago; Yvonne Haas, Wauconda, Ill. Photograph © International Film Service. Bell Telephone News, May 1918. | GGA Image ID # 19b5ee3dcb

 

 

 

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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