May 18, 2021 |
Diane Otto Watkins wanted to become a professional musician after high school in 1973. She didn't have much money for college, and she didn’t see many opportunities available for women. So she joined the Women's Army Corps.
"My parents told me I had to have a job and medical and dental and a roof over my head and be out of the house," Watkins said.
Watkins played clarinet for four years at Cedar Ridge High School in Matawan, New Jersey, During her senior year at Cedar Ridge, she auditioned for the WAC Band in November 1972 at Fort Monmouth. After she graduated from high school in June, she entered the Army on delayed entry at the age of 18.
Watkins went through basic training at Fort McClellan from August to September of 1973. She played clarinet in the all-female 14th Army [WAC] Band from 1973-76 at Fort McClellan, and she also played drums for the marching band. The WAC Band had 72 musicians.
During her years with the Women's Army Corps, she held the ranks of private through specialist four. Her fellow female soldiers called her "Otto,” the nickname from the sergeant's dog in the Beetle Bailey comic strip. "You don't want to know how many cartoons got pasted to my barrack's door," she said laughing.
Her secondary jobs included serving as company clerk, barracks sergeant and heavy truck operator. She had a 5-ton truck license. Whenever the band traveled to a performance, she drove the 5-ton military vehicle.
"When the Women's Army Corps deactivated in 1976, I reenlisted to be in the Military Police Corps," the retired chief warrant officer four said. She retired from the Army in 1994 after 21 years of service. Her last assignment was as a polygraph examiner at Fort Carson, Colorado.
After leaving the WACs, she became a military police officer and was immediately promoted to sergeant in the 111th MP Company at Fort McClellan, Alabama. She was a military officer from 1976-78 and became a criminal investigation division agent from 1978-94. Her career took her to Germany, Washington, D.C., Georgia, Kentucky and Colorado.
"Very productive," Watkins said of her career. "I completed all my education goals. I did all the travel I wanted to do."
She earned an associate degree in criminal justice from the State University of New York in 1979 and a bachelor's in criminology with a minor in psychology from the University of Maryland in 1985. In December 2000, she earned a master's in criminal justice from Armstrong Atlantic State University in Savannah, Georgia. Besides being a Vietnam-era veteran, she is also a Persian Gulf War-era veteran.
Watkins remembers the challenge of being in uniform during the turbulent years of the Vietnam War.
"Travel was difficult because strangers would accost us in the airport. We had to travel in uniform. We had to remove our name tags when we traveled," she said. "People would spit on us in the airports and call us names."
She experienced this while traveling in Atlanta and Newark, New Jersey, in 1973-74. She remembers feeling anxious while marching with the band in a parade in about 1973.
"The crowd on the sideline started to close in on us while we were marching, but nothing happened because the police restored order," she said.
Other than those incidents, she said the band's performances were well-received at high schools and concerts. They were part of the recruiting and morale and welfare efforts.
Watkins was raised in South Amboy, New Jersey. She was the second of three children with an older brother and younger sister. Her father, George Otto, was a combat veteran of World War II in Europe with the 101st Airborne Division. Her mother, June, was a registered nurse. Her parents married when George Otto returned from the war.
Watkins' husband of 27 years, Bill Moore, retired in 2001 after 26 years with the Army and Air Force Exchange Service. She has a stepson, a stepdaughter and a grandson. She and her husband have a 40-acre ranch on Bonner Peak in Colorado.
Watkins was part owner and operator of the Star Bar-B-Q in Fort Collins, Colorado, from 2001-06.
Watkins attended the WAC Band reunion in 2018 at Fort McClellan and she plans to return in October 2022. "And we play a reunion concert," she said. "We got the band back together."
Watkins shared her thoughts on being a member of the Women's Army Corps during the Vietnam War.
"It was a means to have a life and get out of poverty and get my education," she said. "If you wanted to be in the military and be a musician, you were going to be a WAC. You had to go in the WAC Band. It was the only option. It was the only branch that had a band that allowed women, so it was pretty special."
She continues to play the clarinet and saxophone and serves as a concertmaster with the Wellington Community Band. She sewed 555 masks from February through November 2020 and donated more than 360 masks to veterans, nurses at nursing homes, family and friends. At 66 she volunteers at Veterans Affairs in Cheyenne, Wyoming, and she is a Colorado master gardener.
(Skip Vaughn is an editor at the Redstone Rocket at Redstone Arsenal in Alabama.)
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