First World War The WRNS was formed in 1917 during the
First World War. On 10 October 1918, nineteen-year-old
Josephine Carr from
Cork became the first Wren to die on active service, when her ship, the
RMS Leinster was
torpedoed. By the end of the war the service had 5,500 members, 500 of them officers. In addition, 2,867 Wrens, 46 officers and 2,821 other ranks who had previously supported the
Royal Naval Air Service chose to be transferred to the RAF
Royal Air Force. The WRNS was disbanded in 1919.
Second World War At the beginning of the
Second World War,
Vera Laughton Mathews was appointed as the director of the re-formed WRNS in 1939 with
Ethel (Angela) Goodenough as her deputy. The WRNS had an expanded list of allowable activities, including flying transport planes. At its peak in 1944 it had 75,000 active servicewomen. During the war 102 WRNS members were
killed in action and 22
wounded in action. One of the
slogans used in recruitment posters was "Join the Wrens and free a man for the Fleet". Wrens were prominent as support staff at the
Government Code and Cypher School at
Bletchley Park; they were the direct operators of the
bombes and
Colossus used to break Axis codes and cyphers.
Post-war era in
Malta, 1964. The WRNS remained in existence after the end of the war although Mathews retired in 1947 In October 1990, during the
Gulf War,
HMS Brilliant carried the first women officially to serve on an operational warship. That same year, Chief Officer
Pippa Duncan became the first WRNS officer to command a Royal Navy shore establishment. The WRNS was finally integrated into the Royal Navy in 1993, when women were allowed to serve on board navy vessels as full members of the crew. Female sailors are still informally known by the nicknames "wrens" or "Jennies" ("Jenny Wrens") in
naval slang. Before 1993, all women in the Royal Navy were members of the WRNS except
nurses, who joined (and still join)
Queen Alexandra's Royal Naval Nursing Service, and medical and dental officers, who were commissioned directly into the Royal Navy, held RN ranks, and wore WRNS uniform with gold RN insignia. A series of exhibits on the history of the WRNS are part of the
Western Approaches Museum in Liverpool. ==Ranks and insignia==