Helen G. James

Helen Grace James (born in Pennsylvania) is a Physical Therapist and US Military Veteran. She was a military officer at the United States Air Force, where she achieved the rank of Airman Second Class. She was discharged from the military as "undesirable" after the Lavender Scare campaign to remove lesbian and gay people from government employment. In 2018 she successfully sued the US Air Force to upgrade her discharge to "General Discharge under Honorable Conditions".

Life and career
Helen G. James enlisted in the United States Air Force in 1952. She started as a radio operator and was later promoted to crew chief. Finally she achieved the rank of Airman Second Class. In 1955, the Office of Special Investigations (OSI) started following and spying her as part of the "Lavender Scare" campaign. They arrested her and interrogated for hours, and finally she was discharged as "undesirable" from the US Air Force.

After that, she moved to California, where she got an advanced degree in physical therapy from Stanford University. She has been a physical therapist ever since. From 1972 she was a member of the faculty at California State University, Fresno; she went into private practice in 1989.

In 1960, she was able to upgrade her status from "undesirable" to "General Discharge under Honorable Conditions". That status didn't allow her to have access to basic services veterans receive, such as healthcare or banking benefits from the USAA. In 2018 she sued the US Air Force to change her status, making her eligible for all Veterans benefits, including access to healthcare for the US Department of Veterans Affairs and burial in a national cemetery.

In January 2018 she decided to donate her album of photographs to the Smithsonian, to be featured in the National Air and Space Museum.