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Holm was born Jeanne Marjorie Hannes on June 23, 1921, in Portland, Oregon. She enlisted in the Army in July 1942, soon after the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) was established by Congress . She attended Officer Candidate School at Fort Des Moines , Iowa, and in January 1943, received a commission as a "Third Officer," the WAAC equivalent ...
Jeanne M. Holm was a Knowledge Architect at Jet Propulsion Laboratory and was involved in the NASA Knowledge Management team. [1] She has since moved on to other opportunities. Holm was the project manager for the NASA Portal.
Jeanne M. Holm (1921–2010), US Air Force major general; first woman promoted to brigadier general in the Air Force; first woman promoted to major general in the US armed forces [8] Grace Hopper (1906–1992), US Navy rear admiral, pioneering computer scientist who coined the term "bug" Olaf M. Hustvedt (1886–1978), US Navy Vice Admiral
Jeanne M. Holm (1921–2010), U.S. Air Force major general Karl Eric Holm (1919–2016), Swedish Army lieutenant general Norbert Holm (1895–1962), German Wehrmacht major general
It would become aligned under Air University's Jeanne M. Holm Officer Accession and Citizen Development Center on 11 June 2009. On 16 June 2016, it would be realigned to the First Air Force under Air Combat Command, as part of an effort to better integrate CAP as a Total Force Member. [8]
2010 – Jeanne M. Holm, American general (b. 1921) 2012 – Cyril Domb, English-Israeli physicist and academic (b. 1920) 2013 – Sanan Kachornprasart, Thai general and politician (b. 1935) 2013 – Ahmed Rajib Haider, Bangladeshi atheist blogger [81] 2014 – Thelma Estrin, American computer scientist and engineer (b. 1924)
Jeanne M. Holm is promoted to major general in the U.S. Air Force, the first woman in the United States Armed Forces to achieve the rank. Her date of rank is set retroactively at July 1, 1970. Her date of rank is set retroactively at July 1, 1970.
Jeanne M. Holm became the first woman in the United States Air Force to receive the rank of general. She had enlisted in the Air Force in 1948 as a student at Lewis and Clark College because, as she noted in her remarks, "I was between semesters, had nothing to do anyway, and was flat broke."