Britain's oldest surviving female WWII veteran, 103, told top brass 'I haven't come from Jamaica to be a typist' before becoming first black woman radar operator defending UK's coast
- Ena Collymore-Woodstock objected to being given a clerical job at War Office
- Volunteered for Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) and was trained in military drill
- Many of the 600 female volunteers from Caribbean faced racism and sexism
At 103 she is Britain's oldest surviving female Second World War veteran – and she battled top brass to be allowed out from behind a typewriter to play a vital role defeating the Nazis.
The Mail on Sunday can reveal that Jamaican-born Ena Collymore-Woodstock – one of the first women to set sail from the Caribbean to help the Allied effort after answering a recruitment advertisement in 1943 – objected to being given a clerical job at the War Office.
Having survived a torpedo attack on the boat she travelled on, she arrived in London and was given the job because she had worked as a court clerk in Kingston.

Jamaican-born Ena Collymore-Woodstock, 103, was one of the first women to set sail from the Caribbean to help the Allied effort after answering a recruitment advertisement in 1943
But after a few weeks, Mrs Collymore-Woodstock, who was then just 26, wrote an angry letter to Army bosses telling them: 'I haven't come all this way just to be stuck behind a typewriter!'
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