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Elizabeth Roche
Week of
July 3, 2000
Decorated
World War II veteran and Wellesley Person of the Week, Elizabeth
"Betty" Roche, was a native of Michigan's upper peninsula's "Copper
Country". Roche, whose family was heavily invested in the Wolverine
Mining Company, entered Wellesley College in 1929.
Betty Roche's maternal grandmother was born
in East Machias, Massachusetts (now Maine). And according to Copper
Country regional historian Kevin E. Musser, the upper peninsula
mining industry and the Boston area had a strong, long term economic
connection. "Almost all the money to develop this region came from
Boston. One of the early books written about this region is aptly
titled "Michigan Copper and Boston Dollars" (Gates, William B.,
Jr., Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press, 1951)." Musser continued, "The
influence of Boston extends to town and street names like Beacon
Hill, Concord City, Boston Location, Painesdale (named after William
Paine, of Paine Webber of Boston, owner of the Copper Range Consolidated).
The stamp mill for the Champion Copper mines in Painesdale were
located in Freda, which was named after Paine's daughter."
Roche's family suffered financially during
the Depression, and Betty Roche was forced to leave Wellesley College
in 1931, after completing only 2 years of study. She is considered
a member of the class of 1933. While at Wellesley, she became the
first "First Year" to be a member of a Wellesley College varsity
athletic team. She earned letters in basketball and lacrosse.
Always lamenting her premature withdrawal
from Wellesley College, her schooling eventually resumed, and she
earned both a B.A. and an M.A. from the University of Michigan,
where she was a history scholar.
Following the bombing of Pearl Harbor, in
December 1941, Betty Roche became part of the first
group of females to train to be officers in the US Army. She
earned her commission in August, 1942, and took charge of a 6 company
female training batallion. At the Army
Command and General Staff College she took the accelerated wartime
course. At the Pentagon, she oversaw all female soldiers in the
Army's Combat Service Support "Ordinance Corps."
As a volunteer under General
Douglas MacArthur, Roche served in battle areas in New Guinea
and the Philippines. In the words of her nephew, Terence Roche Murphy,
"New Guinea and the Philipines were no places for a Wellesley lady.
Which was exactly why a Wellesley lady like Betty Roche volunteered
to serve there." One of 656 female soldiers to receive awards for
New Guinea combat actions, Betty Roche received a second combat
award for her role in the liberation of the Philippines, and many
additional awards in later years. These include the Air
Force Commendation Medal and the Asiatic
Pacific Campaign Medal.
Following the war, and after a stint as an
English professor at Michigan Technological University, in Houghton
MI, Betty Roche returned to the military, and joined the Air Force
as an officer, serving in Washington, D.C., Germany and Turkey on
military and political assignments. She retired from the Air Force
as a lieutenant colonel, in 1965.
Elizabeth Roche died of cancer at her Atlantic
Beach, Fla., home on Jan. 21, 2000, at the age of 88. She was buried
with full military honors at Arlington National Cemetery.
Written by Mur Wolf
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