The Golden 14: How Black Women Exploited a Loophole to Serve During World War I

Published: 28 February 2025

By Joanna Guldin
via the Military.com website

Golden-Fourteen-Public-Domain

The ‘Golden 14’ Black women were known as ‘Yeowomen’ or ‘Yeomanettes’ and performed vital clerical work during World War I. (Photo courtesy of www.blackpast.org)

It all started with a broken promise.

In 1916, President Woodrow Wilson was reelected to a second term in the White House after campaigning to continue his noninterventionist policies when it came to Europe’s grinding war. Using the slogans “America First” and “He Kept Us Out of War,” Wilson promised nervous Americans that he would not send their children overseas to fight a war that — in his estimation — did not concern the United States.

Until it did. In January 1917, Germany ended its pause on torpedoing ships in the Atlantic Ocean and began blowing merchant vessels out of the water. That same month, the British decoded a telegram intercepted from the German foreign minister to the German diplomat in Mexico, suggesting an alliance between the two nations in an effort to oppose the U.S.

Just five months after an election won on isolationism, Wilson asked Congress to declare war on Europe’s Central Powers. It did on April 6, 1917.

This created a problem that some — including former president Teddy Roosevelt — had seen coming. The U.S. wasn’t ready for war: While European powers had entered World War I with large, standing armies, the U.S. military ranks were paltry by comparison. Warfare had changed, too. Suddenly, the nation had to swell its ranks and train untested draftees in new technologies and tactics.

Enter the Naval Act of 1916. Enacted a year before with broad, gender- and race-neutral language, the law allowed “all persons who may be capable of performing special useful service for coastal defense” to enlist in the Navy‘s reserve force. Originally created as a response to low enlistment during peacetime, the Navy realized it could use the law to help with a manpower deficit during wartime.

Navy Secretary Josephus Daniels was an unrepentant white supremacist and segregationist who was instrumental in disenfranchising Black North Carolinians and stoking the deadly 1898 Wilmington Insurrection through his influential newspaper. Paradoxically, he was an ardent supporter of white women’s rights. Just before the declaration of war — and with Daniels’ support — the Navy began drumming up white female recruits.

Perhaps Daniels couldn’t imagine that the technicality used to usher white women into the Navy would be the same loophole through which 14 Black women would climb into history as the Navy’s first enlisted Black women. Seizing an opportunity to fill desk positions, John T. Risher, a Black supervisor, assigned those women — some of whom had tried to enlist previously and were denied for erroneous reasons — to his staff.

Later known as the Golden 14, they were attached to the USS Triton and were part of the Muster Roll Division out of Washington, D.C. In their role as “Yeowomen” or “Yeomanettes,” they performed vital clerical work, freeing up men to serve in other capacities that were not open to women.

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