A Life Marked by D-Day
June 6, 1944 — one of the most significant dates of the 20th century. It determined the outcome of World War II and, consequently, the shape of the modern world. On that day — the famous D-Day — the Western Allied forces launched “Operation Overlord,” landing tens of thousands of troops on the beaches of Normandy in northwestern France. It marked the beginning of the end for the bloodiest war in history and became the turning point that led to the Allies’ victory and the final defeat of the Nazi regime.

That same day would forever shape the life of a young Greek-American woman. On June 6, 1944, 17-year-old Maria Bandouveris, a bright and beautiful brunette, graduated from Arlington High School, a suburb of Boston. That same day, with the encouragement of her family — especially her father, who had to sign her employment papers due to her age — and the support of her teachers, she entered the U.S. Armed Forces.
It was the beginning of a career that would last a lifetime.
A few weeks ago, Maria Bandouveris passed away at the age of 98. Her death might have gone unnoticed beyond a short mention in the local newspaper — if not for one extraordinary fact: she had served continuously in the U.S. military for 81 years, longer than anyone else in American history.

A Record-Breaking Career
From the day she was hired until her death on September 5, 2025, Bandouveris remained an active employee. Born on May 26, 1927, she spent her entire adult life in service — including 74 years with the U.S. Air Force (USAF), where she began working in 1951 and remained until her passing.
Her exceptional physical fitness, mental clarity, and unwavering dedication made her a model employee — and ultimately, the longest-serving federal worker in U.S. history. Many believe it is only a matter of time before her name is officially entered into the Guinness World Records.

A Lifetime at Hanscom Air Force Base
For most of those eight decades, Bandouveris held positions of real responsibility. In her final 30 years, until the day before her death, she served as executive assistant to the executive program director of the Directorate of Cyberspace and Networks at Hanscom Air Force Base in Massachusetts — a major installation employing 10,000 people, with a budget of $15.6 billion for her department alone.
She worked five days a week, full-time, often putting in overtime — always with the same energy and enthusiasm she had shown since her first day. Over her 81-year career, she logged an astonishing 24,500 workdays — a number that speaks to her almost superhuman dedication.
For all those years, she followed the same daily routine: leaving her home on Newport Street in Arlington at dawn, commuting 20 minutes to Hanscom, and returning home each evening — never missing a beat, never choosing retirement, even though she could have lived comfortably on her well-earned pension.
Witness to a Century of History
Through her decades of service, Bandouveris witnessed nearly every major global event of the last century:
from D-Day and the fall of Nazi Germany, to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Korean and Vietnam wars, the Cold War, the Gulf Wars, the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, the attacks of September 11, and the more recent wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.
During her tenure, she met U.S. Presidents, First Ladies, Secretaries of Defense, Massachusetts governors (including Michael Dukakis), and countless senators and congressmen such as Edward Kennedy. She personally greeted President Jimmy Carter on his first Air Force One flight landing at Hanscom, as well as Bill Clinton and Pentagon leaders William Cohen and Donald Rumsfeld.

Over time, she became a living symbol of the Hanscom base, an institution in her own right. When she was honored in 2020 for 76 years of service, her commanding officer, Colonel Katrina Stephens, presented her with the U.S. flag that flew above the base, saying simply:
“You are a legend.”
Breaking Every Record
Until Bandouveris, the U.S. record for longest public service was held by a Navy employee who had worked nearly 78 years. Unlike many countries, U.S. federal law sets no mandatory retirement age, allowing employees to continue as long as they remain capable — a policy that allowed Maria to keep doing the work she loved.
Work as a Calling
For Bandouveris, work was not merely a job but a way of life. While most people mark their wedding or the birth of their children as life’s defining days, for her, it was the day she started working.
Raised in a traditional Greek-American household built on faith, integrity, and discipline, Maria viewed her colleagues as family. Her motivation was never wealth or ambition but service, duty, and connection to those around her — the values she carried every day for 81 years.
From Immigrant Roots to National Icon
A second-generation Greek-American, Maria was born to Apostolos and Konstantina (née Sofronas), who emigrated separately to the U.S. in 1914, later marrying and raising four children — George, Peter, James, and Maria — in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Her brother Peter, who served in the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II and later worked 17 years as an aircraft engineer at Hanscom, was her inspiration to join the Air Force.
Maria began her career at the South Boston Army Station as an administrative assistant and later transferred to the Naval Supply Corps School at Harvard, before joining the Army Air Corps in 1946 — a year before the creation of the modern U.S. Air Force in 1947.

In 1951, she moved to Hanscom Field, where she would remain for the rest of her life.
A Legacy of Dedication
Over the years, she worked with 17 of the 19 commanders in the base’s history, often saying that each new leader made her job feel fresh again. “Every three years I get a new commander,” she said in 2015. “Each one has a different leadership style, so every time it feels like starting a new job.”
She received countless awards, including the Air Force Gold Pin for 50, 60, and 70 years of service, the Medal for Exceptional Civilian Service, and commendations from Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey, and Senators Edward Markey and Elizabeth Warren.
Earlier this year, Hanscom Air Force Base renamed Building 1606 — where she had spent most of her career — to “Maria A. Bandouveris Building” in her honor.
Her Philosophy
Maria often said:
“I have two families — my personal one and my professional one. I’ve been very lucky to work with the best of the best, and I’ll stay as long as I can. I keep going because I love my job and the people I work with.”
She never married or had children, finding her true family in the Air Force community she served so faithfully.
Maria Bandouveris passed away peacefully on September 5, at the age of 98. Her funeral took place on September 20 at the Greek Orthodox Church of the Taxiarchs in Watertown, attended by relatives, members of the Greek-American community, and her many colleagues.
She was laid to rest at the Cambridge Cemetery, on the banks of the Charles River — a fitting resting place for the longest-serving public servant in U.S. history, and a true legend of the American Air Force.
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