1941, with the
attack on Pearl Harbor, marked the start of the second world war for the US. At this time, Gee was a freshman enrolled at the
University of California, Berkeley to study
physics. and her mother worked at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard as a
welder.), of which there were no black women, two Chinese-Americans, one Native-American, and a few Jewish women. Gee graduated from the WASP training program as part of Class 44-W-9 on November 8, 1944. At the time of its initiation, becoming a WASP did not award those who were deployed military status; the WASP was considered a
civilian organization. The program was used as an assistance for the formal US military, and the start of the program allowed male pilots to be deployed elsewhere. In her time as a WASP, Gee was assigned to work at the
Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada. Gee realized that she and her fellow pilots shared a love of flying and patriotism. Some of her jobs while working as a WASP included preparing planes for war, training male pilots for use of their instruments, and copiloting
B-17 aircraft during gunnery practice. She and her co-WASPs could use their experiences to expand on a women's capabilities in the military, she also details that she experienced sexism and discrimination while serving; these remarks were challenges that WASPs accepted in continuing to fly. An experience of note that Gee recalled involves racial discrimination; she was mistaken as being of Japanese descent, one of the enemy states of the US during WWII. Once, after landing a plane, she was mistaken by a pilot for being an enemy pilot, a Japanese kamikaze, or a spy. Gee's responded by stating that she was an American. == Post-WWII: physics and politics ==