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Women in the Weather Bureau During World War II - LaVera Roland
LaVera Roland, one of the first women hired by the U.S. Weather Bureau during World War II, poses with a salmon she caught while stationed on Tatoosh Island, Washington. Roland worked as an observer for the Weather Bureau from 1943 to 1946, performing duties that included climatology, surface, and upper air observations.

Women in the Weather Bureau During World War II - LaVera Roland

By NWS Heritage Projects Editorial Staff

Editor's Note: The following first-person account of LaVera Roland first appeared in Women in the Weather Bureau During WWII by Kaye O'Brien and Gary Grice, 1991.

 

I worked for the Weather Bureau from 1943 to 1946 at Tatoosh Island and in the Portland city office. In 1943 a vacancy occurred and I was available. (I lived on the station and therefore knew that the Weather Bureau needed a new employee.) I left the Weather Bureau in 1946, due to pregnancy.

My previous educational background included three years of college. The Weather Bureau provided on-the-job training. My first impression of the Weather Bureau was that it was a man's world I stepped into, but I was well received. Morale on station was good. I think one of my major contributions was in doing my daily assignments.

My duties included Climatology, surface and upper air observations. I worked all shifts, (eight-hour shifts), and 48 hours a week. Pay at the time was low. There were seven men and one woman at my duty station.