Women’s Auxiliary Air Force


A poster encouraging you to join the WAAF WAAF (Women's Auxiliary Air Force) - female auxiliary service in the Royal Air Force, British Air Force. Founded in June 1939, it participated in the Battle of Britain.

This unit performed the same tasks as men, except fighting and flying combat aircraft. Their main duties were focused on barrage balloons. Hidden in the shelters also observed the amount and location of Luftwaffe aircraft, and the observation data passed to the fighter command. At the outbreak of World War II, WAAF had a population of 1,700. Four years later, in 1943, this number increased to about 180,000. Similar tasks in the British ground troops were performed by the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS), and in the Navy Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS, popularly Wrens in Polish wrenki). The ATS was, among other things, Princess Elizabeth, the late Queen of England, Elizabeth II, maid in 1945 as a driver and car mechanic.

The Polish Assistant Women's Service (PSK, Pestki), an auxiliary military formation, was created at the end of 1941 on the initiative of General Władysław Anders during the formation of the Polish Armed Forces in the Soviet Union.

The tasks of women serving in PSK included: providing wound care, operating hospitals and kitchens, working in schools for war orphans. They also worked as secretaries in the bars and counters. At the peak of the number of PSK ranks, there were about seven thousand volunteers. Bibliography

Women's Auxiliary Air Force Association (ang.)



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