by Charly Mann
The University of North Carolina during World War II was primarily a women's college. Almost all college aged men in the United States were serving in the armed forces. Men were still everywhere on campus, but they were cadets dressed in khaki. Most were enrolled in accelerated Navy military training programs so they could be rapidly deployed to combat. In fact there were so many Navy men in training at the University that most slept four to a room if they could find accommodations in Chapel Hill. Many had to find housing in Durham.

This is the typical distribution of women to men among the University of North Carolina's 1944 graduating class
During 1942 and 1943 the town's businesses could barely handle all these new residents. There were long lines at almost every restaurant, and the cadets in training often fell asleep waiting in line to get food. There was often resentment among Chapel Hill's permanent residents about these Navy men because they were not considered students or townspeople.

Squadrons of airplanes flying over Chapel Hill were normal during World War II. Until 1942, when Airport Road was built, the road to Horace William Airport was very curvy and dangerous to drive.
The women who were Carolina's only real students had no real aspirations of getting an education where they could find a career after graduation. Most wanted nothing more than for the war to end and the men to return to civilian life. Then they expected to get married and raise their children. Over the years, I have talked to more than a dozen women who attended UNC during the war years and all of them said they found tremendous satisfaction being mothers, and that for the most part their lives had been very happy.
These women dreamed that after the war they would live happily ever after as mothers and wives, and most of them did. I wonder how many women today dream the same dream.

It is hard to imagine that there was ever a restaurant over the Carolina Theater, but during the War years every space avilable was used to sell food. Atter the war, the upstairs contained Carrington Smith's, the manager's, office, and the room for the movie projector. The restrooms were also upstairs.

This is a list of the University of North Caroina students killed or missing in action in 1943

What is it that binds us to this place as to no other? It is not the well or the bell or the stone walls. or the crisp October nights. No, our love for this place is based upon the fact that it is as it was meant to be, The University of the People.



I really get a kick out the hairstyles of the women during this period. The beauty parlors in town must have done a thriving business.