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Charlotte Winters
Charlotte Winters
Birth: 10 November 1897
Washington, D.C., USA
Death: 27 March 2007
Boonsboro, Maryland, USA
Age: 109 years, 137 days
Country: United StatesUSA
Centenarian

Charlotte Louise Berry Winters (10 November 1897 – 27 March 2007) was an American centenarian, at age 109, the last surviving female American veteran of The First World War.

Biography[]

Charlotte Winters was born as Charlotte Louise Berry in Washington, D.C. on 10 November 1897 to Mackell and Louise Bild Berry. When the Navy opened support roles to women, Charlotte and her sister, Sophie, joined in 1917. She served from 1917 to 1919 at the Naval Gun Factory in the Washington Navy Yard as a clerk. By December 1918, more than 11,000 women had enlisted and were serving in support positions. In 1919, most of the Yeoman (F) were released from the service. At that time she had attained the rank of Yeoman (F) Second Class in the U.S. Naval Reserve. Winters was able to return to the same position as a civil servant. Winters served as a secretary, and retired in 1953.

Winters helped to found the National Yeoman (F) Association in 1926 and served as its eighth commander in 1940 and 1941. She was active in the American Legion for 88 years.

Charlotte Winters died, aged 109 years, 137 days, in Boonsboro, Maryland on 27 March 2007 and was buried with full military honors at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Frederick, Maryland.[1] At the time of her death, she was the oldest living World War I veteran in the USA, leaving only three living World War I female veterans left in the world, then-108-year-old Gladys Powers, 107-year-old Ivy Campany and 106-year-old Florence Green, who served for the United Kingdom.

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