Florence Finch

Florence Ebersole Finch (October 11, 1915 – December 8, 2016) was a Filipino-American member of the World War II resistance against the Japanese occupation of the Philippines.

Life
Finch was born Loring May Ebersole October 11, 1915 in Santiago, the Philippines. Her father was American and her mother was Filipino.

Prior to the Japanese invasion of the Philippines, Finch was working at the G-2 (Intelligence) Headquarters of the U. S. Army in Manila. There she met her husband, an American soldier named Charles Smith, who would be killed in action in the Philippines in 1942.

At the start of the occupation, she managed to suppress her American heritage and to secure a job at the Philippine Liquid Fuel Distributing Union, which was controlled by the occupying Japanese forces. There, between June 1942 and October 1944, she assisted the resistance movement by diverting fuel destined for Japanese use, falsifying documents for resistance members to obtain supplies, and using her position to facilitate acts of sabotage. In 1944, she was discovered as having worked in the resistance and was arrested, tortured, tried and sentenced to three years of imprisonment. She remained in captivity until February 10, 1945, when, weighing just 80 pounds, she was rescued by the American troops liberating the Philippines.

Following the war, she moved to Buffalo, New York, where she joined the U.S. Coast Guard.

She died December 8, 2016, in Ithaca, New York. Finch was given a military funeral with full honors in April 2017.

Awards
Finch was awarded the American Medal of Freedom in 1947. She was also awarded the Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Ribbon, the first woman to be so decorated.

In 1995, the Coast Guard named a building on Sand Island in Hawaii in her honor.