Women officially served in the military for the first time in World War I, in noncombat roles. Female telephone operators served overseas with the Army, and 10,000 nurses were stationed near the front in Europe. In the U.S., many women filled jobs that had been held by men but left vacant because of the draft. Though most women lost their jobs once men returned from the war, their efforts further fueled the women’s suffrage movement, which led to the 19th Amendment in 1920, granting women the right to vote.