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The Women's Army Corps was a place where women could serve during World War II.
During WWII the draft was for the duration of the war or until you were unfit for combat .
Those who protested conspription during World War I did so because they disliked the ides of compelling a person to serve.
To prove they were loyal Americans
dick king smith said in his book " he served in the Grenadier Guards during the second world war"
no
Fowler
No, President Woodrow Wilson served during World War I.
Kennedy served in the US Navy during World War II.
No, not as ground forces, although they did serve in France during World War 1. US Navy battleships and cruisers in the European Theater during World War 2 would have typically carried a small number of US Marines.
yes
The Women's Army Corps was a place where women could serve during World War II.
Harry S Truman
He served in a Bavarian regiment during World War I.
Sir William MacCormac did not serve in World War 2. He lived during World War 1. See attached link.
T.S. Eliot did not fight in the war, but he did serve as a volunteer in the British Army during World War I as a way to contribute to the war effort. He worked as a firefighter during the London Blitz in World War II.
His maternal grandfather, Stanley Dunham, served in the U.S. Army during World War II.