Mary Cole-Minett was 19 years old when she tried joining the army in 1939 to serve in the Second World War.
She was turned away because she had to be 21.
Two days later â with an angry father by her side still mad over her first attempt to try and serve in the war â Cole-Minett made a pledge with her best friend Flo Ellis to apply for the Womenâs Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF). They both got in.
According to Forces War Records, the WAAF was formed on June 28, 1939, to help women aid in the war effort and to help change the social status and attitudes of women at the time.
By 1943, the organization employed more than 180,000 women.
Remembrance Day ceremonies planned throughout Central Okanagan
Born in 1919 in Liverpool, England, Cole-Minett still remembers the Air Force decision that would set a precedent for the rest of her life.
âI was mad at all of the people fighting. I didnât have any idea at the time of what was going to happen,â Cole-Minett recalled.
âMe and Flo made the decision to help fight what we thought were these terrible people at the time, and that was that.â
Cole-Minett was the eldest of seven siblings in her family. She and her brother were the only two family siblings that served in the war.
During her four years with the WAAF, Cole-Minett helped to assemble, package and fix broken parachutes for pilots in the war.
She still remembers her day-to-day tasks while serving.
âI would go to the local airport to meet the guys coming back from their trips and fighting. Iâd get all of the broken parachutes and take them back to the maintenance facility to fix them all up again.â
Photos of Cole-Minett and her friend Flo Ellis (Connor Trembley file)
Cole-Minett still recalls some of the sadder moments from the war, such as pilots not making it back home.
âSometimes, the men wouldnât come back after being on duty. You knew all the pilots and everybody. I guess it was kind of sad. Some of them you liked more than others when they came back.
âAfter the pilots returned, people would sometimes ask, âwhereâs Joe today?â I guess he didnât make it.ââ
Even 70 years later, Cole-Minett remembers all of the familiar faces sheâs kept in contact with over the years.
âIâve managed to keep in with friends with pretty much everyone in that era. I think of different friends at different times, especially Flo Ellis. I remember her so well.â
Cole-Minett later joked that sheâs pretty much outlived all her friends, including all her siblings.
After Remembrance Day, Cole-Minett said she will carry on plans she has already started to mark her 100th birthday next month.
âIâm going to have big piles of tea. The neighbours are all talking about giving me a party.â
âWe have the nicest neighbours that you could meet anywhere in the world. All of the places Iâve lived, Âé¶čAVâs the nicest.â
Cole-Minett is also expecting a birthday card from Queen Elizabeth and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as part of the celebrations.