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Commander Darlene Marie Iskra, USN (Ret.) PhD
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Copyright © 2010 Alliance for National Defense. All rights reserved |
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Commander Darlene Iskra retired from the U.S. Navy in April 2000, after 21 years of service. While in the service, she took advantage of the opportunities the Navy had to offer in the expansion of women’s roles that occurred in the 1980s and 1990s. She was one of the first female line officers to graduate from the Naval School of Diving and Salvage in Washington, D.C. in May 1980, before attending Surface Warfare Officer School and reporting to her first ship, the USS HECTOR (AR-7) in December 1980. She served on four salvage ships, as Operations Officer on USS GRASP (ARS-51), Executive Officer on USS PRESERVER (ARS-8) and USS HOIST (ARS40). She assumed command of USS OPPORTUNE (ARS 41) in December 1990 in Naples, Italy, becoming the first woman commander of a commissioned naval vessel. She also served on several Navy staffs. Her highest award was the Defense Meritorious Service Medal. She has Master of Arts degrees in National Security and Strategic Studies from the Naval War College, and in Sociology from the University of Maryland. In 2002 she worked for Senator Maria Cantwell of Washington state as a Women’s Research and Education Institute (WREI) Congressional Fellow. During her fellowship, she helped staff and pass an amendment to the 2003 Defense Authorization Bill, which forbade the Department of Defense from requiring U.S. servicewomen to wear the abaya garment while stationed in Saudi Arabia. For this work, she was awarded the University of Maryland, College of Behavioral and Social Sciences Phillips Award in 2005. This award recognizes graduate student excellence in research most likely to affect public policy. She was also awarded the Center For Teaching Excellence, Distinguished Teaching Assistant for Academic Year 2003-2004 and the Charles H. Coates Graduate Research Award, University of Maryland, 2000-2001, for her Master’s thesis, which documented the continued negative discourse regarding women in the Navy over time. She received her PhD in December 2007, and worked as the Deputy Director for the Leadership Education and Development Program at the University of Maryland, College Park until May 2010. She currently resides in Bremerton, WA and is an adjunct professor at Columbia College of Missouri teaching on-line, and Brandman University, teaching at the Naval Submarine Base, Bangor, WA. See additional data on Commander Iskra at http://images.military.com/women/women-at-war.htm |

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Notable · Among first female line officers to graduate from the Naval School of Diving and Salvage; · First woman commander of a commissioned naval vessel and subject of Jeopardy question for that accomplishment. |
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More about Commander Iskra |
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Fame and fortune might have been in the cards for Jeopardy contestants on February 24, 2009, if they had only visited the AND website and checked the retired Navy commander and Alliance for National Defense secretary/treasurer’s biography:
“She assumed command of USS OPPORTUNE (ARS 41) in December 1990 in Naples, Italy, becoming the first woman commander of a commissioned naval vessel.”
Jeopardy host Alex Trebek and Jeopardy’s fact checkers didn’t do a lot better with Cdr. Iskra’s unique place in history than the contestants, who were stumped by the question: Rather than phrasing the correct answer as ‘commander’ or ‘commanding officer,’ it was given as ’captain.’
No way to get passing grades from now-educator Iskra who earned her PhD in late 2007 and is now Deputy Director for the Leadership Education and Development Program at the University of Maryland, College Park.
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Jeopardy question highlights Cdr. Darlene Iskra’s place in Naval history
“In 1992, Darlene Iskra took an opportune time to become the Navy's first female one of these, on the USS Opportune." — Jeopardy question, February 24, 2009. |
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AND’s Cdr. Iskra part of military.com Women at War presentation |
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AND’s own Cdr. Darlene Iskra was one of 17 military women whose careers and achievements were highlighted in military.com’s slide show on the history of women at war.
The site also features a ‘click-through’ to more information on Cdr. Iskra (shown at the right in a Mark V diving suit) at the Library of Congress Veteran’s History Project’s Experience War series featuring excerpts from a film interview with the first woman to command a commissioned U.S. Navy vessel.
See the military.com slide show here;
View the Library of Congress material here.
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Officer and a gentlewoman: Darlene Iskra made history as first female commander of a U.S. Navy ship
By ERIN JENNINGS
BREMERTON — When Darlene Iskra joined the Navy in early 1979, she was looking for a steady job with benefits. She received much more: a successful career that would see her become the first female commander of a Navy ship. "I knew I was the first (woman) and I felt a responsibility to show that equal opportunity works in the Navy," said Iskra, who recently moved to Bremerton. Iskra's rise to command wasn't easy.
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