In 1941, Florence Conrad, a wealthy American widow who had lived in France for many years, returned to New York. She had driven an ambulance during the 1940
Battle of France, and afterwards transported supplies to prisoner-of-war camps. She believed that an all-women’s ambulance corps would free men for fighting. She began raising money and looking for drivers, eventually buying 19 Dodge WC54 ambulances. She and her lieutenant, Suzanne Torrès, recruited a dozen women, most of them French, who had been shut out of their country by the Nazi Occupation. They learned basic auto mechanics at the old World’s Fair grounds in
Flushing, Queens, took army-run first-aid courses, and volunteered at New York hospitals to increase their medical skills. As the name Lafayette had been taken by the volunteer pilots of WWI, they named themselves the Rochambeau Group after the revolutionary-era general. Accepted by the Free French Army, they sailed to Morocco, where another 22 French women joined. Florence Conrad managed to get the ambulance unit integrated as part of the Second Armored Division, led by
General Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque. After further training in Algeria, the division men nicknamed the ambulance drivers “Rochambelles,” a name that has stuck ever since. When they were set to sail to England in May 1944, American transporters refused to let them to board: no women allowed. General Leclerc stepped in: “They’re not women, they’re ambulance drivers!” ==Into the War==