Eno, Lillian D. Calkins, 2nd Lt

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Second Lieutenant
Primary Unit
1944-1944, USAAF Training Command
Service Years
1943 - 1944
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Second Lieutenant

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Home State
Iowa
Iowa
Year of Birth
1921
 
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This Remembrance Profile was originally created by Sgt Stephen Willcox - Deceased
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Mt. Etna
Last Address
Indian River County, FL
Date of Passing
Dec 16, 1991
 

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Last Known Activity:

Lillian D. Calkins Eno was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal on March 10, 2010 in Washington D.C. for her efforts as a WASP in World War II. The Women Air Service Pilots were formed during WWII to assist in the war effort by filling in for male pilots who had been given assignments overseas. The WASPs performed a host of tasks, including ferrying aircraft from one base to another, towing targets, and testing repaired aircraft.

"Name: Lillian Darlene Eno
Death Date: 16 Dec 1991
County of Death: Indian River
State of Death: Florida
Age at Death: 69
Birth Date: 31 Dec 1921"
Source: Florida Death Index, 1877-1998, Ancestry.com

   
Other Comments:

"Women who served in WWII recognized
Two area women remember relatives who served, will be honored with gold medal today

By Norman Moody - Florida Today - March 10, 2010

Excitement fills her voice as Teri Eno of Indialantic talks about her mother's flying exploits during World War II. On one occasion, Darlene Eno was able to safely land a plane with severe mechanical problems. 'She got out of that aircraft and kissed the groundl' Teri Eno said.

It's with  equal excitement that Teri Eno talks about the Congressional Gold Medal, the nation's highest civilian award, her late mother and other WWII pilots she flew among as Women Airforce Service Pilots will receive today in Washington, D.C. Eno and her sisters, Tina Eno and Toni Adcock, will be among the family members and veteran women pilots receiving the medal at today's celebration, which puts them among such other distinguished recipients as George Washington, Charles Lindbergh, the Wright Brothers, Mother Teresa and the Tuskegee Airmen.

Eno and her sisters will represent their mother, who died in December 1991.

'This is an incredible thrill and honor,' Teri Eno said. 'Just to be able to witness this and receive the medal for her' is an honor. Teri Eno said her mother grew up on a farm in Iowa and never gave up her dream of flying, convincing her parents that's what she should do.

'When a plane would fly over she would run outside and stare at the plane,' Teri Eno said. 'She took some flying lession in a crop duster and a Stearman. Her dad gave her $250, wished her good luck and sent her across the country to join this group of women.' More than 1,100 WASPs served in WWII. They tested and ferried aircraft from factories to bases and delivered aircraft for repair. Some of the women helped to train their male counterparts on various aircraft. Thousands more applied to be WASP pilots. Only a relative few made the cut and went on to fly military aircraft. Thirty-eight died while flying in the Army Air Corps. All those who served are being honored today in Washington, D.C.. Fewer than 300 are alive, but not all are well enough to attend the ceremony, some attendees said. Family members will represent those who have died and those too frail to attend.

The women flew all types of military aircraft to fill in for male counterparts. They all learned to fly before joining the WASPs. The women's work freed up the men for active service overseas. When American male pilots began returning home from the war, the program ended and the women were promptly sent home. 'When these women were dismissed from the service, they were dismissed,' Teri Eno said. They weren't considered part of the military. It wasn't until 1977 before they received veteran status....Teri Eno's sister, Toni Adcock, who lives in Lake Martin, Ala, said her mother was flying an aircraft when she realized that she'd stored the maps she needed for the flight back in the cargo area. She had to land the plane in an open field, open the cargo area, dig out her maps and take off again. She thought nobody would ever know about it until she landed. Her supervisor, however, asked how the landing went in the farm field. She had grain in her landing gear.

She flew airplanes such as the AT-6 Texas, BT-13 Valiant and P-47 Thunderbolt, one of the most storied fighters of World War II. 'They loved it,' Teri Eno said......"

   

  1944-1944, 61st Air Base Group

Second Lieutenant
From Month/Year
- / 1944
To Month/Year
- / 1944
Unit
61st Air Base Group Unit Page
Rank
Second Lieutenant
AFSC/MOS
Not Specified
Base, Station or City
Not Specified
State/Country
Florida
   
 Patch
 61st Air Base Group Details

61st Air Base Group
Type
Mission Support
 
Parent Unit
Air Base Units
Strength
Group
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: May 18, 2018
   
   
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2 Members Also There at Same Time
61st Air Base Group

Rector, Edward Franklin, Col, (1939-1962) A33 AAF MOS 770 Lieutenant Colonel
Sweeney, Charles W., Maj Gen, (1941-1979) A23 AAF MOS 1024 Captain

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