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Rosie the Riveter

Rosie the Riveter is an allegorical cultural icon in the United States who represents the women who worked in factories and shipyards during World War II, many of whom produced munitions and war supplies.[1][2] These women sometimes took entirely new jobs replacing the male workers who joined the military. Rosie the Riveter is used as a symbol of American feminism and women's economic advantage.[3]

A "Rosie" putting rivets on an Vultee A-31 Vengeance in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1943.

Similar images of women war workers appeared in other countries such as Britain and Australia. The idea of Rosie the Riveter originated in a song written in 1942 by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb. Images of women workers were widespread in the media in formats such as government posters, and commercial advertising was heavily used by the government to encourage women to volunteer for wartime service in factories.[4] Rosie the Riveter became the subject and title of a Hollywood film in 1944.

History

Women in the wartime workforce

 
Women workers in the ordnance shops of Midvale Steel and Ordnance Company in Nicetown, Pennsylvania, during World War I (1918)

Because the world wars were total wars, which required governments to utilize their entire populations to defeat their enemies, millions of women were encouraged to work in the industry and take over jobs previously done by men. During World War I women across the United States were employed in jobs previously done by men. World War II was similar to World War I in that massive conscription of men led to a shortage of available workers and therefore a demand for labor which could be filled only by employing women.

Nearly 19 million women held jobs during World War II. Many of these women were already working in lower-paying jobs or were returning to the work-force after being laid off during the depression. Only three million new female workers entered the workforce during the time of the war.[5]

Women responded to the call of need the country was displaying by stepping up to fill positions that were traditionally filled by men. They began to work heavy construction machinery, taking roles in lumber and steel mills as well as physical labor including unloading freight, building dirigibles (which are airships similar to air balloons), making munitions, and much more. Forty women were hired by Pan American Airways to replace men in the repair and maintenance department in the hangars at LaGuardia airfield for service, repair and overhaul on the fleet of aircraft including the Boeing 314 Flying Boat flying to and from Europe. [6]  

Many women discovered they enjoyed the autonomy these jobs provided them with. It expanded their own expectations for womanly duty and capabilities. Unfortunately, this was reckoned as unnatural and as men began to return home from the war, the government instituted another propaganda campaign urging women to "return to normalcy".[7]

 
A 1943 Monsanto advertisement for refrigeration reveals ambivalence, emphasizing that after the war, women will return to their homes as "Rosie the Housewife."

Although most women took on male-dominated trades during World War II, they were expected to return to their everyday housework once men returned from the war. Government campaigns targeting women were addressed solely at housewives, likely because already-employed women would move to the higher-paid "essential" jobs on their own,[8] or perhaps because it was assumed that most would be housewives.[9] One government advertisement asked women: "Can you use an electric mixer? If so, you can learn to operate a drill."[10]: 160  Propaganda was also directed at their husbands, many of whom were unwilling to support such jobs.[11]

 
A woman operating a turret lathe (1942)

Many of the women who took jobs during World War II were mothers. Those women with children at home pooled together in their efforts to raise their families. They assembled into groups and shared such chores as cooking, cleaning and washing clothes. Many who did have young children shared apartments and houses so they could save time, money, utilities and food. If they both worked, they worked different shifts so they could take turns babysitting. Taking on a job during World War II made people unsure if they should urge the women to keep acting as full-time mothers, or support them getting jobs to support the country in this time of need.[12]

Being able to support the soldiers by making all sorts of different products made the women feel very accomplished and proud of their work. Over six million women got war jobs; African American, Hispanic, White, and Asian women worked side by side.[12] In the book A Mouthful of Rivets, Vi Kirstine Vrooman writes about the time when she decided to take action and become a riveter. She got a job building B-17s on an assembly line, and shares just how exciting it was, saying, "The biggest thrill—I can't tell you—was when the B-17s rolled off the assembly line. You can't believe the feeling we had. We did it!"[13] Once women accepted the challenge of the workforce they continued to make strong advances towards equal rights.

In 1944, when victory seemed assured for the Allied Forces, government-sponsored propaganda changed by urging women back to working in the home. Later, many women returned to traditional work such as clerical or administration positions, despite their reluctance to re-enter the lower-paying fields.[14] However, some of these women continued working in the factories. The overall percentage of women working fell from 36% to 28% in 1947.[15]

The song

"Rosie the Riveter"
 
Cover of the published music to the 1942 song
Song by Kay Kyser
Published1942
Songwriter(s)Redd Evans, John Jacob Loeb

The term "Rosie the Riveter" was first used in 1942 in a song of the same name written by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb. The song was recorded by numerous artists, including the popular big band leader Kay Kyser, and it became a national hit.[16] It was also recorded by the R&B group, The Four Vagabonds.[17] The song portrays "Rosie" as a tireless assembly line worker, who earned a "Production E" doing her part to help the American war effort.[18]

The identity of the "real" Rosie the riveter is debated. Candidates include:

  • Rosina "Rosie" Bonavita who worked for Convair in San Diego, California.[19][20][21]
  • Rosalind P. Walter, who "came from old money and worked on the night shift building the F4U Corsair fighter." Later in life Walter was a philanthropist, a board member of the WNET public television station in New York and an early and long-time supporter of the Charlie Rose interview show.[22]
  • Adeline Rose O'Malley, a riveter at Boeing's Wichita plant.
  • Rose Will Monroe, a riveter at the Willow Run Aircraft Factory in Ypsilanti, Michigan, building B-24 bombers for the U.S. Army Air Forces.[23] Born in Pulaski County, Kentucky,[24][25][26] in 1920, she moved to Michigan during World War II. The song "Rosie the Riveter" was already popular[2] when Monroe was selected to portray her in a promotional film about the war effort at home.[27] "Rosie" went on to become perhaps the most widely recognized icon of that era. The films and posters she appeared in were used to encourage women to go to work in support of the war effort. At the age of 50, Monroe realized her dream of flying when she obtained a pilot's license. In 1978, she crashed in her small propeller plane when the engine failed during takeoff. The accident resulted in the loss of one kidney and the sight in her left eye, and ended her flying career. She died from kidney failure on May 31, 1997, in Clarksville, Indiana, at the age of 77.[16]

In Canada in 1941, Veronica Foster became "Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl", Canada's poster girl representing women in the war effort.[28]

A drama film, Rosie the Riveter, was released in 1944, borrowing from the Rosie theme.

Impact

During the Second World War

 
A man and woman riveting team working on the cockpit shell of a C-47 aircraft at the plant of North American Aviation (1942)

According to the Encyclopedia of American Economic History, "Rosie the Riveter" inspired a social movement that increased the number of working American women from 12 million to 20 million by 1944, a 57% increase from 1940.[citation needed] By 1944 1.7 million unmarried men between the ages of 20 and 34 worked in the defense industry, while 4.1 million unmarried women between those ages did so.[29]

Although the image of "Rosie the Riveter" reflected the industrial work of welders and riveters during World War II, the majority of working women filled non-factory positions in every sector of the economy. What unified the experiences of these women was that they proved to themselves (and the country) that they could do a "man's job" and could do it well.[30]

In 1942, just between the months of January and July, the estimates of the proportion of jobs that would be "acceptable" for women was raised by employers from 29 to 85%.[citation needed] African American women were some of those most affected by the need for women workers.[citation needed] It has been said that it was the process of whites working alongside blacks during the time that encouraged a breaking down of social barriers and a healthy recognition of diversity.[30]

Postwar

 
Women at work on bomber, Douglas Aircraft Company, Long Beach, California (1942)

Women quickly responded to Rosie the Riveter, who convinced them that they had a patriotic duty to enter the workforce. Some claim that she forever opened the work force for women, but others dispute that point, noting that many women were discharged after the war and their jobs were given to returning servicemen.[31] These critics claim that when peace returned, few women returned to their wartime positions and instead resumed domestic vocations or transferred into sex-typed occupations such as clerical and service work.[32]

For some, World War II represented a major turning point for women as they eagerly supported the war effort, but other historians emphasize that the changes were temporary and that immediately after the war was over, women were expected to return to traditional roles of wives and mothers. A third group has emphasized how the long-range significance of the changes brought about by the war provided the foundation for the contemporary woman's movement.[33] Leila J. Rupp in her study of World War II wrote "For the first time, the working woman dominated the public image. Women were riveting housewives in slacks, not mother, domestic beings, or civilizers."[34]

After the war, as the nation shifted to a time of peace, women were quickly laid off from their factory jobs.[35] The "Rosies" and the generations that followed them knew that working in the factories was in fact a possibility for women, even though they did not reenter the job market in such large proportions again until the 1970s. By that time factory employment was in decline all over the country.[36]

Elinor Otto, known as "Last Rosie the Riveter" built airplanes for 50 years, retiring at age 95.[37]

Homages

 
A "Wendy the Welder" at the Richmond Shipyards

According to Penny Colman's Rosie the Riveter, there was also, very briefly, a "Wendy the Welder" based on Janet Doyle, a worker at the Kaiser Richmond Liberty Shipyards in California.[38]: 68 

In the 1960s, Hollywood actress Jane Withers gained fame as "Josephine the Plumber", a character in a long-running and popular series of television commercials for "Comet" cleansing powder that lasted into the 1970s. This character was based on the original "Rosie" character.[39]

One of Carnival Cruise Line's ships, the Carnival Valor, has a restaurant located on the lido deck named Rosie's Restaurant. The restaurant is mostly a tribute to Rosie, but also contains artwork depicting other war-related manufacturing and labor.

In 2010, singer Pink paid tribute to Rosie by dressing as her for a portion of the music video for the song "Raise Your Glass".

The 2013 picture book Rosie Revere, Engineer by Andrea Beaty, features Rosie as "Great Great Aunt Rose" who "Worked building aeroplanes a long time ago". She inspires Rosie Revere, the young subject of the book, to continue striving to be a great engineer despite early failures. Rose is shown wielding a walking stick made from riveted aircraft aluminum.[40]

Singer Beyoncé paid tribute to Rosie in July 2014, dressing as the icon and posing in front of a "We Can Do It!" sign often mistaken as part of the Rosie campaign. It garnered over 1.15 million likes, but sparked minor controversy when newspaper The Guardian criticized it.[41]

Other recent cultural references include a "Big Daddy" enemy type called "Rosie" in the video game BioShock,[42] armed with a rivet gun. There is a DC Comics character called Rosie the Riveter, who wields a rivet gun as a weapon (first appearing in Green Lantern vol. 2 No. 176, May 1984). In the video game Fallout 3 there are billboards featuring "Rosies" assembling atom bombs while drinking Nuka-Cola. Of the female hairstyles available for player characters in the sequel, one is titled "Wendy the Welder" as a pastiche.

Boeing Orbital Flight Test 2, an uncrewed test flight of the Boeing Starliner spacecraft to the International Space Station, carried an Anthropomorphic Test Device named "Rosie the Rocketeer." The device contained fifteen sensors to collect data on the effects of the flight on future passengers.[43]

Recognition

 
Assembling a wing section, Fort Worth, Texas, October 1942

The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter by Connie Field is a 65-minute documentary from 1980 that tells the story of women's entrance into "men's work" during WWII. Rosies of the North is a 1999 National Film Board of Canada documentary film about Canadian "Rosies," who built fighter and bomber aircraft at the Canadian Car and Foundry,[44] where Elsie MacGill was also the Chief Aeronautical Engineer.

John Crowley's 2009 historical novel Four Freedoms covers the wartime industries, and studies the real working conditions of many female industrial workers. "Rosie the Riveter" is frequently referenced.

On October 14, 2000, the Rosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front National Historical Park was opened in Richmond, California, site of four Kaiser shipyards, where thousands of "Rosies" from around the country worked (although ships at the Kaiser yards were not riveted, but rather welded).[45] Over 200 former Rosies attended the ceremony.[46][47][2]

In 2014, Phyllis Gould, one of the original Rosie the Riveters, visited President Barack Obama in support of a National Rosie the Riveter Day; the United States Senate approved the observance on March 21 in 2017. She also pushed for a Gold Medal for Rosies that will be given starting in 2022.[48][49]

Also in 2014 a nationwide program, run by the organization Thanks! Plain and Simple, was founded to encourage cities to pick a project that "Rosies" can do with younger generations, in order to educate young people about women's roles in World War II, and to involve the "Rosies", many of whom have become isolated as they have gotten older, in community projects.[50]

The name and logo of the Metropolitan Riveters, one of the founding members of the National Women's Hockey League, are inspired by the character of Rosie the Riveter.[51]

The Rose City Riveters is the fan club for the Portland Thorns Football Club, a National Women's Soccer League team in Portland, Oregon, nicknamed the Rose City. They have taken their inspiration (and their name) from the 30,000 women who worked in the Portland shipyards in Portland during World War II.[52]

Images

Westinghouse poster

 
"We Can Do It!" by J. Howard Miller, was made as an inspirational image to boost worker morale.

In 1942, Pittsburgh artist J. Howard Miller was hired by the Westinghouse Company's War Production Coordinating Committee to create a series of posters for the war effort. One of these posters became the famous "We Can Do It!" image, an image that in later years would also be called "Rosie the Riveter" although it had never been given that title during the war. Miller is thought to have based his "We Can Do It!" poster on a United Press International wire service photograph taken of a young female war worker, widely but erroneously reported as being a photo of Michigan war worker Geraldine Hoff (later Doyle).[53]

More recent evidence indicates that the formerly misidentified photo is actually of war worker Naomi Parker (later Fraley) taken at Alameda Naval Air Station in California.[54][55][56][57] The "We Can Do It!" poster was displayed only to Westinghouse employees in the Midwest during a two-week period in February 1943, then it disappeared for nearly four decades. During the war, the name "Rosie" was not associated with the image, and the purpose of the poster was not to recruit women workers but to be motivational propaganda aimed at workers of both sexes already employed at Westinghouse. It was only later, in the early 1980s, that the Miller poster was rediscovered and became famous, associated with feminism, and often mistakenly called "Rosie the Riveter".[58][59][60][61]

Saturday Evening Post

 
Norman Rockwell's Saturday Evening Post 1943 cover featuring Rosie the Riveter
External video
  Norman Rockwell, Rosie the Riveter, 7:15, Smarthistory[62]

Norman Rockwell's image of "Rosie the Riveter" received mass distribution on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post on Memorial Day, May 29, 1943. Rockwell's illustration features a brawny woman taking her lunch break with a rivet gun on her lap and beneath her penny loafer a copy of Adolf Hitler's manifesto, Mein Kampf. Her lunch box reads "Rosie"; viewers quickly recognized that to be "Rosie the Riveter" from the familiar song.[63]

Rockwell, America's best-known popular illustrator of the day, based the pose of his 'Rosie' on that of Michelangelo's 1509 painting Prophet Isaiah from the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Rosie is holding a ham sandwich in her left hand, and her blue overalls are adorned with badges and buttons: a Red Cross blood donor button, a white "V for Victory" button, a Blue Star Mothers pin, an Army-Navy E Service production award pin, two bronze civilian service awards, and her personal identity badge.[64]

Rockwell's model was a Vermont resident, 19-year-old Mary Louise Doyle,[65] who was a telephone operator near where Rockwell lived, not a riveter. Rockwell painted his "Rosie" as a larger woman than his model, and he later phoned to apologize.[64] According to two of Doyle's obituaries, however, 'twenty-four years after Doyle posed, Rockwell sent Doyle a letter calling her the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen and apologizing for the hefty body in the painting. “I did have to make you into a sort of a giant,” he wrote.'[65][66]

In a post interview, Mary explained that she was actually holding a sandwich while posing for the poster and that the rivet-gun she was holding was fake, she never saw Hitler's copy of Mein Kampf, and she did have a white handkerchief in her pocket like the picture depicts.[67] The Post's cover image proved hugely popular, and the magazine loaned it to the United States Department of the Treasury for the duration of the war, for use in war bond drives.[68]

After the war, the Rockwell "Rosie" was seen less and less because of a general policy of vigorous copyright protection by the Rockwell estate. In 2002, the original painting sold at Sotheby's for nearly $5 million.[68] In June 2009 the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, acquired Norman Rockwell's iconic Rosie the Riveter painting for its permanent collection from a private collector.[69]

In late 1942, Doyle posed twice for Rockwell's photographer, Gene Pelham, as Rockwell preferred to work from still images rather than live models. The first photo was not suitable, because she wore a blouse rather than a blue work shirt. In total, she was paid $10 for her modeling work (equivalent to $157 in 2021). In 1949 she married Robert J. Keefe to become Mary Doyle Keefe. The Keefes were invited and present in 2002 when the Rockwell painting was sold at Sotheby's.[70]

In an interview in 2014, Keefe said that she had no idea what impact the painting would have. "I didn't expect anything like this, but as the years went on, I realized that the painting was famous," she said. Keefe died on April 21, 2015, in Connecticut at the age of 92.[71]

See also

References

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  • Bourke-White, Margaret. "Women In Steel: They are Handling Tough Jobs In Heavy Industry". Life. August 9, 1943.
  • Bowman, Constance. Slacks and Calluses – Our Summer in a Bomber Factory. Smithsonian Institution. Washington D.C. 1999. ISBN 1560983876
  • Bornstein, Anna 'Dolly' Gillan. Woman Welder/ Shipbuilder in World War II. Winnie the Welder History Project. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe College. February 16, 2005.
  • Campbell, D'Ann. Women at War with America: Private Lives in a Patriotic Era (Harvard University Press: 1984) ISBN 0674954750
  • Herman, Arthur. Freedom's Forge: How American Business Produced Victory in World War II, Random House, New York, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4000-6964-4.
  • Knaff, Donna B. Beyond Rosie the Riveter: Women of World War II in American Popular Graphic Art (University Press of Kansas; 2012) 214 pages; excerpt and text search ISBN 9780700619665 OCLC 892062945
  • Parker, Dana T. Building Victory: Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II, Cypress, CA, 2013. ISBN 978-0-9897906-0-4.
  • Regis, Margaret. When Our Mothers Went to War: An Illustrated History of Women in World War II. Seattle: NavPublishing, 2008. ISBN 978-1-879932-05-0.
  • "Rosie the Riveter" Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb. Paramount Music Corporation, 1942.
  • Rosie the Riveter Collection, Rose State College, Eastern Oklahoma Country Regional History. Center. [Rosie the Riveter Collection, Rose State College] March 16, 2003.
  • Ware, Susan. Modern American Women A Documentary History. McGraw-Hill:2002.184.
  • Wise, Nancy Baker and Christy Wise. A Mouthful of Rivets: Women at Work in World War II. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1994.
  • Regional Oral History Office / Rosie the Riveter / WWII American Homefront Project The Regional Oral History Office at the Bancroft Library of the University of California, Berkeley features a collection of over 200 individual oral history interviews with men and women who worked on the home front during World War II.

External links

  • Library of Congress Webcast
  • Rosie the Riveter World War II / Home Front National Historical Park
  • Rosie the Riveter at History Channel's website.
  • Regional Oral History Office / Rosie the Riveter / WWII American Homefront Project
  • Thanks Plain and Simple, an online group of "Rosies"
  • American Rosie the Riveter Association
  • A Real-Life "Rosie the Riveter"
  • Another Real-Life "Rosie" from the Library of Congress' image set
  • Oral history interview with Audrey Lyons, a "real life" Rosie, who worked in the Brooklyn shipyard during WWII Archived 2012-12-11 at archive.today from the Veterans History Project at Central Connecticut State University
  • Oral history interview with Mary Doyle Keefe, who modeled for Norman Rockwell's "Rosie the Riveter" painting Archived 2012-12-10 at archive.today from the Veterans History Project at Central Connecticut State University

rosie, riveter, other, uses, disambiguation, allegorical, cultural, icon, united, states, represents, women, worked, factories, shipyards, during, world, many, whom, produced, munitions, supplies, these, women, sometimes, took, entirely, jobs, replacing, male,. For other uses see Rosie the Riveter disambiguation Rosie the Riveter is an allegorical cultural icon in the United States who represents the women who worked in factories and shipyards during World War II many of whom produced munitions and war supplies 1 2 These women sometimes took entirely new jobs replacing the male workers who joined the military Rosie the Riveter is used as a symbol of American feminism and women s economic advantage 3 A Rosie putting rivets on an Vultee A 31 Vengeance in Nashville Tennessee in 1943 Similar images of women war workers appeared in other countries such as Britain and Australia The idea of Rosie the Riveter originated in a song written in 1942 by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb Images of women workers were widespread in the media in formats such as government posters and commercial advertising was heavily used by the government to encourage women to volunteer for wartime service in factories 4 Rosie the Riveter became the subject and title of a Hollywood film in 1944 Contents 1 History 1 1 Women in the wartime workforce 2 The song 3 Impact 3 1 During the Second World War 3 2 Postwar 4 Homages 5 Recognition 6 Images 6 1 Westinghouse poster 6 2 Saturday Evening Post 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Sources 9 External linksHistory EditWomen in the wartime workforce Edit Women workers in the ordnance shops of Midvale Steel and Ordnance Company in Nicetown Pennsylvania during World War I 1918 Because the world wars were total wars which required governments to utilize their entire populations to defeat their enemies millions of women were encouraged to work in the industry and take over jobs previously done by men During World War I women across the United States were employed in jobs previously done by men World War II was similar to World War I in that massive conscription of men led to a shortage of available workers and therefore a demand for labor which could be filled only by employing women Nearly 19 million women held jobs during World War II Many of these women were already working in lower paying jobs or were returning to the work force after being laid off during the depression Only three million new female workers entered the workforce during the time of the war 5 Women responded to the call of need the country was displaying by stepping up to fill positions that were traditionally filled by men They began to work heavy construction machinery taking roles in lumber and steel mills as well as physical labor including unloading freight building dirigibles which are airships similar to air balloons making munitions and much more Forty women were hired by Pan American Airways to replace men in the repair and maintenance department in the hangars at LaGuardia airfield for service repair and overhaul on the fleet of aircraft including the Boeing 314 Flying Boat flying to and from Europe 6 Many women discovered they enjoyed the autonomy these jobs provided them with It expanded their own expectations for womanly duty and capabilities Unfortunately this was reckoned as unnatural and as men began to return home from the war the government instituted another propaganda campaign urging women to return to normalcy 7 A 1943 Monsanto advertisement for refrigeration reveals ambivalence emphasizing that after the war women will return to their homes as Rosie the Housewife Although most women took on male dominated trades during World War II they were expected to return to their everyday housework once men returned from the war Government campaigns targeting women were addressed solely at housewives likely because already employed women would move to the higher paid essential jobs on their own 8 or perhaps because it was assumed that most would be housewives 9 One government advertisement asked women Can you use an electric mixer If so you can learn to operate a drill 10 160 Propaganda was also directed at their husbands many of whom were unwilling to support such jobs 11 A woman operating a turret lathe 1942 Many of the women who took jobs during World War II were mothers Those women with children at home pooled together in their efforts to raise their families They assembled into groups and shared such chores as cooking cleaning and washing clothes Many who did have young children shared apartments and houses so they could save time money utilities and food If they both worked they worked different shifts so they could take turns babysitting Taking on a job during World War II made people unsure if they should urge the women to keep acting as full time mothers or support them getting jobs to support the country in this time of need 12 Being able to support the soldiers by making all sorts of different products made the women feel very accomplished and proud of their work Over six million women got war jobs African American Hispanic White and Asian women worked side by side 12 In the book A Mouthful of Rivets Vi Kirstine Vrooman writes about the time when she decided to take action and become a riveter She got a job building B 17s on an assembly line and shares just how exciting it was saying The biggest thrill I can t tell you was when the B 17s rolled off the assembly line You can t believe the feeling we had We did it 13 Once women accepted the challenge of the workforce they continued to make strong advances towards equal rights In 1944 when victory seemed assured for the Allied Forces government sponsored propaganda changed by urging women back to working in the home Later many women returned to traditional work such as clerical or administration positions despite their reluctance to re enter the lower paying fields 14 However some of these women continued working in the factories The overall percentage of women working fell from 36 to 28 in 1947 15 The song Edit Rosie the Riveter Cover of the published music to the 1942 songSong by Kay KyserPublished1942Songwriter s Redd Evans John Jacob LoebThe term Rosie the Riveter was first used in 1942 in a song of the same name written by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb The song was recorded by numerous artists including the popular big band leader Kay Kyser and it became a national hit 16 It was also recorded by the R amp B group The Four Vagabonds 17 The song portrays Rosie as a tireless assembly line worker who earned a Production E doing her part to help the American war effort 18 The identity of the real Rosie the riveter is debated Candidates include Rosina Rosie Bonavita who worked for Convair in San Diego California 19 20 21 Rosalind P Walter who came from old money and worked on the night shift building the F4U Corsair fighter Later in life Walter was a philanthropist a board member of the WNET public television station in New York and an early and long time supporter of the Charlie Rose interview show 22 Adeline Rose O Malley a riveter at Boeing s Wichita plant Rose Will Monroe a riveter at the Willow Run Aircraft Factory in Ypsilanti Michigan building B 24 bombers for the U S Army Air Forces 23 Born in Pulaski County Kentucky 24 25 26 in 1920 she moved to Michigan during World War II The song Rosie the Riveter was already popular 2 when Monroe was selected to portray her in a promotional film about the war effort at home 27 Rosie went on to become perhaps the most widely recognized icon of that era The films and posters she appeared in were used to encourage women to go to work in support of the war effort At the age of 50 Monroe realized her dream of flying when she obtained a pilot s license In 1978 she crashed in her small propeller plane when the engine failed during takeoff The accident resulted in the loss of one kidney and the sight in her left eye and ended her flying career She died from kidney failure on May 31 1997 in Clarksville Indiana at the age of 77 16 In Canada in 1941 Veronica Foster became Ronnie the Bren Gun Girl Canada s poster girl representing women in the war effort 28 A drama film Rosie the Riveter was released in 1944 borrowing from the Rosie theme Impact EditDuring the Second World War Edit A man and woman riveting team working on the cockpit shell of a C 47 aircraft at the plant of North American Aviation 1942 According to the Encyclopedia of American Economic History Rosie the Riveter inspired a social movement that increased the number of working American women from 12 million to 20 million by 1944 a 57 increase from 1940 citation needed By 1944 1 7 million unmarried men between the ages of 20 and 34 worked in the defense industry while 4 1 million unmarried women between those ages did so 29 Although the image of Rosie the Riveter reflected the industrial work of welders and riveters during World War II the majority of working women filled non factory positions in every sector of the economy What unified the experiences of these women was that they proved to themselves and the country that they could do a man s job and could do it well 30 In 1942 just between the months of January and July the estimates of the proportion of jobs that would be acceptable for women was raised by employers from 29 to 85 citation needed African American women were some of those most affected by the need for women workers citation needed It has been said that it was the process of whites working alongside blacks during the time that encouraged a breaking down of social barriers and a healthy recognition of diversity 30 Postwar Edit Women at work on bomber Douglas Aircraft Company Long Beach California 1942 Women quickly responded to Rosie the Riveter who convinced them that they had a patriotic duty to enter the workforce Some claim that she forever opened the work force for women but others dispute that point noting that many women were discharged after the war and their jobs were given to returning servicemen 31 These critics claim that when peace returned few women returned to their wartime positions and instead resumed domestic vocations or transferred into sex typed occupations such as clerical and service work 32 For some World War II represented a major turning point for women as they eagerly supported the war effort but other historians emphasize that the changes were temporary and that immediately after the war was over women were expected to return to traditional roles of wives and mothers A third group has emphasized how the long range significance of the changes brought about by the war provided the foundation for the contemporary woman s movement 33 Leila J Rupp in her study of World War II wrote For the first time the working woman dominated the public image Women were riveting housewives in slacks not mother domestic beings or civilizers 34 After the war as the nation shifted to a time of peace women were quickly laid off from their factory jobs 35 The Rosies and the generations that followed them knew that working in the factories was in fact a possibility for women even though they did not reenter the job market in such large proportions again until the 1970s By that time factory employment was in decline all over the country 36 Elinor Otto known as Last Rosie the Riveter built airplanes for 50 years retiring at age 95 37 Homages Edit A Wendy the Welder at the Richmond Shipyards According to Penny Colman s Rosie the Riveter there was also very briefly a Wendy the Welder based on Janet Doyle a worker at the Kaiser Richmond Liberty Shipyards in California 38 68 In the 1960s Hollywood actress Jane Withers gained fame as Josephine the Plumber a character in a long running and popular series of television commercials for Comet cleansing powder that lasted into the 1970s This character was based on the original Rosie character 39 One of Carnival Cruise Line s ships the Carnival Valor has a restaurant located on the lido deck named Rosie s Restaurant The restaurant is mostly a tribute to Rosie but also contains artwork depicting other war related manufacturing and labor In 2010 singer Pink paid tribute to Rosie by dressing as her for a portion of the music video for the song Raise Your Glass The 2013 picture book Rosie Revere Engineer by Andrea Beaty features Rosie as Great Great Aunt Rose who Worked building aeroplanes a long time ago She inspires Rosie Revere the young subject of the book to continue striving to be a great engineer despite early failures Rose is shown wielding a walking stick made from riveted aircraft aluminum 40 Singer Beyonce paid tribute to Rosie in July 2014 dressing as the icon and posing in front of a We Can Do It sign often mistaken as part of the Rosie campaign It garnered over 1 15 million likes but sparked minor controversy when newspaper The Guardian criticized it 41 Other recent cultural references include a Big Daddy enemy type called Rosie in the video game BioShock 42 armed with a rivet gun There is a DC Comics character called Rosie the Riveter who wields a rivet gun as a weapon first appearing in Green Lantern vol 2 No 176 May 1984 In the video game Fallout 3 there are billboards featuring Rosies assembling atom bombs while drinking Nuka Cola Of the female hairstyles available for player characters in the sequel one is titled Wendy the Welder as a pastiche Boeing Orbital Flight Test 2 an uncrewed test flight of the Boeing Starliner spacecraft to the International Space Station carried an Anthropomorphic Test Device named Rosie the Rocketeer The device contained fifteen sensors to collect data on the effects of the flight on future passengers 43 Recognition Edit Assembling a wing section Fort Worth Texas October 1942 The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter by Connie Field is a 65 minute documentary from 1980 that tells the story of women s entrance into men s work during WWII Rosies of the North is a 1999 National Film Board of Canada documentary film about Canadian Rosies who built fighter and bomber aircraft at the Canadian Car and Foundry 44 where Elsie MacGill was also the Chief Aeronautical Engineer John Crowley s 2009 historical novel Four Freedoms covers the wartime industries and studies the real working conditions of many female industrial workers Rosie the Riveter is frequently referenced On October 14 2000 the Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front National Historical Park was opened in Richmond California site of four Kaiser shipyards where thousands of Rosies from around the country worked although ships at the Kaiser yards were not riveted but rather welded 45 Over 200 former Rosies attended the ceremony 46 47 2 In 2014 Phyllis Gould one of the original Rosie the Riveters visited President Barack Obama in support of a National Rosie the Riveter Day the United States Senate approved the observance on March 21 in 2017 She also pushed for a Gold Medal for Rosies that will be given starting in 2022 48 49 Also in 2014 a nationwide program run by the organization Thanks Plain and Simple was founded to encourage cities to pick a project that Rosies can do with younger generations in order to educate young people about women s roles in World War II and to involve the Rosies many of whom have become isolated as they have gotten older in community projects 50 The name and logo of the Metropolitan Riveters one of the founding members of the National Women s Hockey League are inspired by the character of Rosie the Riveter 51 The Rose City Riveters is the fan club for the Portland Thorns Football Club a National Women s Soccer League team in Portland Oregon nicknamed the Rose City They have taken their inspiration and their name from the 30 000 women who worked in the Portland shipyards in Portland during World War II 52 Images EditWestinghouse poster Edit Main article We Can Do It We Can Do It by J Howard Miller was made as an inspirational image to boost worker morale In 1942 Pittsburgh artist J Howard Miller was hired by the Westinghouse Company s War Production Coordinating Committee to create a series of posters for the war effort One of these posters became the famous We Can Do It image an image that in later years would also be called Rosie the Riveter although it had never been given that title during the war Miller is thought to have based his We Can Do It poster on a United Press International wire service photograph taken of a young female war worker widely but erroneously reported as being a photo of Michigan war worker Geraldine Hoff later Doyle 53 More recent evidence indicates that the formerly misidentified photo is actually of war worker Naomi Parker later Fraley taken at Alameda Naval Air Station in California 54 55 56 57 The We Can Do It poster was displayed only to Westinghouse employees in the Midwest during a two week period in February 1943 then it disappeared for nearly four decades During the war the name Rosie was not associated with the image and the purpose of the poster was not to recruit women workers but to be motivational propaganda aimed at workers of both sexes already employed at Westinghouse It was only later in the early 1980s that the Miller poster was rediscovered and became famous associated with feminism and often mistakenly called Rosie the Riveter 58 59 60 61 Saturday Evening Post Edit Norman Rockwell s Saturday Evening Post 1943 cover featuring Rosie the RiveterExternal video Norman Rockwell Rosie the Riveter 7 15 Smarthistory 62 Norman Rockwell s image of Rosie the Riveter received mass distribution on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post on Memorial Day May 29 1943 Rockwell s illustration features a brawny woman taking her lunch break with a rivet gun on her lap and beneath her penny loafer a copy of Adolf Hitler s manifesto Mein Kampf Her lunch box reads Rosie viewers quickly recognized that to be Rosie the Riveter from the familiar song 63 Rockwell America s best known popular illustrator of the day based the pose of his Rosie on that of Michelangelo s 1509 painting Prophet Isaiah from the Sistine Chapel ceiling Rosie is holding a ham sandwich in her left hand and her blue overalls are adorned with badges and buttons a Red Cross blood donor button a white V for Victory button a Blue Star Mothers pin an Army Navy E Service production award pin two bronze civilian service awards and her personal identity badge 64 Rockwell s model was a Vermont resident 19 year old Mary Louise Doyle 65 who was a telephone operator near where Rockwell lived not a riveter Rockwell painted his Rosie as a larger woman than his model and he later phoned to apologize 64 According to two of Doyle s obituaries however twenty four years after Doyle posed Rockwell sent Doyle a letter calling her the most beautiful woman he d ever seen and apologizing for the hefty body in the painting I did have to make you into a sort of a giant he wrote 65 66 In a post interview Mary explained that she was actually holding a sandwich while posing for the poster and that the rivet gun she was holding was fake she never saw Hitler s copy of Mein Kampf and she did have a white handkerchief in her pocket like the picture depicts 67 The Post s cover image proved hugely popular and the magazine loaned it to the United States Department of the Treasury for the duration of the war for use in war bond drives 68 After the war the Rockwell Rosie was seen less and less because of a general policy of vigorous copyright protection by the Rockwell estate In 2002 the original painting sold at Sotheby s for nearly 5 million 68 In June 2009 the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville Arkansas acquired Norman Rockwell s iconic Rosie the Riveter painting for its permanent collection from a private collector 69 In late 1942 Doyle posed twice for Rockwell s photographer Gene Pelham as Rockwell preferred to work from still images rather than live models The first photo was not suitable because she wore a blouse rather than a blue work shirt In total she was paid 10 for her modeling work equivalent to 157 in 2021 In 1949 she married Robert J Keefe to become Mary Doyle Keefe The Keefes were invited and present in 2002 when the Rockwell painting was sold at Sotheby s 70 In an interview in 2014 Keefe said that she had no idea what impact the painting would have I didn t expect anything like this but as the years went on I realized that the painting was famous she said Keefe died on April 21 2015 in Connecticut at the age of 92 71 See also Edit Feminism portal United States portal World War II portalNaomi Parker Fraley Australian Women s Land Army Canary girl British women working in munitions G I Generation Ronnie the Bren Gun Girl the earlier 72 Canadian equivalent Ruby Loftus Screwing a Breech Ring a 1943 painting showing a female British war worker United States home front during World War II Women in the World Wars Women in World War II American women in World War II Women in the United States labor force from 1945 to 1950 Women in the workforce Woman s Land Army of America farmettes Women s Land Army British farm workers land girls Work ethic Margaret Bourke WhiteReferences Edit Rosie s proud of her band of sisters Archived December 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine by Kevin Cullen Seattle Times May 30 2004 a b c Sheridan Harvey August 1 2006 Rosie the Riveter Real Women Workers in World War II Transcript of video presentation Library of Congress Archived from the original on March 11 2011 Retrieved August 14 2007 Switky W Raymond Duncan Barbara Jancar Webster Bob 2008 World Politics in the Twenty first Century Brief Student choice ed Boston Houghton Mifflin College Div p 268 ISBN 978 0 547 05634 0 Tawnya J Adkins Covert Manipulating Images World War II Mobilization of Women through Magazine Advertising 2011 Keene Jennifer Cornell Saul O Donnell Edward 2013 Visions of America A History of the United States 2 ed Pearson Education Inc pp 697 698 ISBN 9780205092666 Wolfert Ira 8 February 1942 Feminine Grease Monkeys Girls Tune Up Giant Planes The Miami News p 1 Ford L E 2014 Rosie the Riveter Facts on File Library of American History 2nd ed via Encyclopedia of women and American politics Leila J Rupp Mobilizing Women for War p 142 ISBN 0 691 04649 2 Maureen Honey Creating Rosie the Riveter Class Gender and Propaganda during World War II p 24 ISBN 0 87023 453 6 Kennett Lee 1985 For the duration the United States goes to war Pearl Harbor 1942 New York Scribner ISBN 0 684 18239 4 Emily Yellin Our Mothers War p 45 ISBN 0 7432 4514 8 a b Wood Ursula 2004 We Can Do It New Moon 12 1 28 Archived from the original on November 30 2016 Retrieved September 30 2019 Wise 1994 A Mouthful of Rivets Women at Work in World War II San Francisco Jossey Bass ISBN 9781555427030 The biggest thrill I can t tell you was when the B 17s rolled off the assembly line You can t believe the feeling we had We did it Maureen Honey Creating Rosie the Riveter Class Gender and Propaganda during World War II p 23 ISBN 0 87023 453 6 Keene Jennifer Cornell Saul O Donnell Edward 2013 Visions of America A History of the United States 2 ed Pearson Education Inc p 698 ISBN 9780205092666 a b Marcano Tony June 2 1997 Famed Riveter In War Effort Rose Monroe Dies at 77 The New York Times Archived from the original on May 1 2018 45 discography for Apollo Records www globaldogproductions info Retrieved 2022 06 13 Rosie the Riveter Real Women Workers in World War II Journeys and Crossings Library of Congress Archived from the original on October 9 2009 Retrieved October 8 2009 Sickels Robert 2004 The 1940s Greenwood Publishing Group p 48 ISBN 9780313312991 Retrieved 5 February 2013 Young William H Young Nancy K 2010 World War II and the Postwar Years in America A Historical and Cultural Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 606 ISBN 9780313356520 Retrieved 5 February 2013 Ambrose Stephen E 2001 The Good Fight How World War II Was Won Simon and Schuster p 42 ISBN 9780689843617 Retrieved 5 February 2013 Kaplan David A Why business loves Charlie Rose Archived July 14 2014 at the Wayback Machine Fortune magazine last updated September 28 2009 10 04 pm ET Retrieved September 2 2010 Across Indiana retrieved 2020 05 27 Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives County of the Month Pulaski County Kentucky Kdla ky gov Archived from the original on November 13 2010 Retrieved April 9 2011 Pulaski s Past Historical Preservation Society The Original Rosie the Riveter Rose Will Leigh Monroe Pulaskispast com Archived from the original on May 30 2010 Retrieved January 15 2012 Raia Honors Rosie The Riveters For Their Efforts During WW II New York State Assembly Assembly state ny us December 7 1941 Archived from the original on December 24 2010 Retrieved April 9 2011 Rosie the Riveter star dead at 77 Associated Press June 2 1997 Archived from the original on November 16 2007 Retrieved August 14 2007 Ronnie the Bren Gun Girl Toronto Star March 15 2010 Archived from the original on March 9 2014 Retrieved April 8 2013 Starr Kevin 2003 Embattled Dreams California in War and Peace 1940 1950 Oxford University Press p 129 ISBN 0 19 516897 6 a b Ware Susan Modern American Women A Documentary History 2nd edition Boston McGraw Hill 2002 Lapsansky Werner Emma J United States History Modern America Boston MA Pearson Learning Solutions 2011 Print Pg 361 362 Maureen Honey Creating Rosie the Riveter Class Gender and Propaganda during World War II Amherst University of Massachusetts Press 1984 Liftoff Judy Rosie the Riveter Americans at War Ed John Resch Vol 3 Detroit Macmillan Reference USA 2005 171 174 4 vols Gale Virtual Reference Library Gale Pepperdine University SCLEC April 13 2010 Rupp Leila J 1978 Mobilizing Women for War German and American Propaganda 1939 1945 Princeton Princeton U P ISBN 0 691 04649 2 Litoff Judy Barrett 2005 Resch John P ed Rosie the Riveter Americans at War 3 171 174 Bureau of Labor Statistics DOL 1972 Occupational Employment Statistics 1960 70 PDF Report p 1 Retrieved March 21 2019 Nittle Nadra October 25 2014 Last Rosie the Riveter Elinor Otto of Long Beach to be honored presstelegram com Press Telegram Veteran Affairs Archived from the original on April 5 2015 Retrieved March 31 2015 Colman Penny 1995 Rosie the Riveter Women Workers on the Home Front in World War II Crown Publishers Inc New York ISBN 0 517 88567 0 Archived from the original on July 6 2008 Enderland Ron July 30 2007 Josephine the Plumber I Remember JFK Archived from the original on August 24 2012 Retrieved November 3 2012 Beaty Andrea Rosie Revere Engineer Archived from the original on May 6 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Winson Rebecca July 23 2014 Sorry Beyonce Rosie the Riveter is no feminist icon Here s why The Guardian Archived from the original on January 26 2017 Retrieved April 6 2015 2K Staff BEYOND THE SEA The Beginnings Of BioShock s Big Daddy 2K Games Archived from the original on August 17 2016 Retrieved July 29 2016 Elizabeth Howell 2022 05 16 Rosie the Rocketeer Meet the dummy flying on Boeing s OFT 2 test flight this week Space com Retrieved 2022 06 08 Rosies of the North Documentary film National Film Board of Canada 1999 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 3 2014 Richmond Shipyards GlobalSecurity org Archived from the original on August 16 2007 Retrieved August 14 2007 Brown Patricia Leigh October 22 2000 Rosie the Riveter Honored in California Memorial The New York Times Archived from the original on June 30 2007 Retrieved August 14 2007 About the Rosie the Riveter Memorial Design Rosie the Riveter Trust Archived from the original on August 10 2007 Retrieved August 14 2007 Hahn Jason Duaine July 29 2021 Phyllis Gould One of the Original Rosie the Riveters Dies at 99 She Did It All People Retrieved July 31 2021 Treadway Chris March 20 2017 Richmond Rosie the Riveter getting national day of recognition on March 21 East Bay Times Retrieved July 31 2021 Real life Rosie the Riveter women share their stories and philosophy Washington Post Archived from the original on July 12 2017 How NWHL s Riveters honour WW2 era women factory workers with their jerseys Sportsnet ca www sportsnet ca Retrieved 2021 05 08 Women in the Shipyards oregonhistoryproject org Archived from the original on January 29 2016 Retrieved May 6 2018 Tale of two Rosie the Riveters untangled Lansing State Journal Retrieved 2016 03 01 Fox Margalit January 22 2018 Naomi Parker Fraley the Real Rosie the Riveter Dies at 96 The New York Times Archived from the original on January 22 2018 Retrieved January 22 2018 Pretty Naomi Parker is as easy to look at as overtime pay on the News Photo Getty Images www gettyimages com Retrieved 2018 01 23 Museum Collections U S National Park Service museum nps gov Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved March 1 2016 Naomi Parker Fraley www naomiparkerfraley com Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved March 1 2016 Sharp Gwen Wade Lisa January 4 2011 Sociological Images Secrets of a feminist icon PDF Contexts 10 2 82 83 doi 10 1177 1536504211408972 ISSN 1536 5042 S2CID 145551064 Archived PDF from the original on October 8 2011 Rosie the Riveter is not the same as We Can Do It Docs Populi Archived from the original on October 25 2012 Retrieved January 23 2012 Excerpted from Cushing Lincoln Drescher Tim 2009 Agitate Educate Organize American Labor Posters ILR Press Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 7427 9 Kimble James J Olson Lester C Winter 2006 Visual Rhetoric Representing Rosie the Riveter Myth and Misconception in J Howard Miller s We Can Do It Poster Rhetoric amp Public Affairs 9 4 533 569 Archived from the original on January 24 2018 Bird William L Rubenstein Harry R 1998 Design for Victory World War II posters on the American home front Princeton Architectural Press p 78 ISBN 1 56898 140 6 Norman Rockwell Rosie the Riveter Smarthistory at Khan Academy Archived from the original on January 21 2016 Retrieved February 6 2016 Young William H Young Nancy K 2010 World War II and the Postwar Years in America A Historical and Cultural Encyclopedia Vol 1 ABC CLIO p 606 ISBN 978 0 313 35652 0 a b Fischer David Hackett 2005 Liberty and Freedom America a cultural history Vol 3 Oxford University Press pp 537 538 ISBN 0 19 516253 6 a b Mary Doyle Keefe Telephone operator who became the model for Norman The Independent 2015 05 13 Retrieved 2021 08 06 Connecticut Associated Press in Hartford 2015 04 22 Mary Doyle Keefe model for Norman Rockwell s Rosie the Riveter dies at 92 the Guardian Retrieved 2021 08 06 Society The Saturday Evening Post July 2013 Rosie the Riveter The Saturday Evening Post www saturdayeveningpost com Archived from the original on December 3 2016 Retrieved November 29 2016 a b Weatherford Doris 2009 American Women during World War II an encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 399 ISBN 978 0 415 99475 0 Rosie the Riveter Rosie the Riveter Archived from the original on April 19 2008 Retrieved April 9 2011 Waldman Loretta November 18 2007 Rosie the Riveter model going strong at 85 USA Today The Hartford Courant Archived from the original on February 9 2008 Vt woman who posed as Rosie the Riveter dies wcax com April 22 2015 Archived from the original on April 24 2015 Retrieved April 22 2015 Online MIKAN no 3195801 1 item May 1941 archived from the original on 2010 05 22 retrieved October 27 2012 Sources Edit Bourke White Margaret Women In Steel They are Handling Tough Jobs In Heavy Industry Life August 9 1943 Bowman Constance Slacks and Calluses Our Summer in a Bomber Factory Smithsonian Institution Washington D C 1999 ISBN 1560983876 Bornstein Anna Dolly Gillan Woman Welder Shipbuilder in World War II Winnie the Welder History Project Schlesinger Library Radcliffe College February 16 2005 Campbell D Ann Women at War with America Private Lives in a Patriotic Era Harvard University Press 1984 ISBN 0674954750 Herman Arthur Freedom s Forge How American Business Produced Victory in World War II Random House New York 2012 ISBN 978 1 4000 6964 4 Knaff Donna B Beyond Rosie the Riveter Women of World War II in American Popular Graphic Art University Press of Kansas 2012 214 pages excerpt and text search ISBN 9780700619665 OCLC 892062945 Parker Dana T Building Victory Aircraft Manufacturing in the Los Angeles Area in World War II Cypress CA 2013 ISBN 978 0 9897906 0 4 Regis Margaret When Our Mothers Went to War An Illustrated History of Women in World War II Seattle NavPublishing 2008 ISBN 978 1 879932 05 0 Rosie the Riveter Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb Paramount Music Corporation 1942 Rosie the Riveter Collection Rose State College Eastern Oklahoma Country Regional History Center Rosie the Riveter Collection Rose State College March 16 2003 Ware Susan Modern American Women A Documentary History McGraw Hill 2002 184 Wise Nancy Baker and Christy Wise A Mouthful of Rivets Women at Work in World War II San Francisco Jossey Bass Publishers 1994 Regional Oral History Office Rosie the Riveter WWII American Homefront Project The Regional Oral History Office at the Bancroft Library of the University of California Berkeley features a collection of over 200 individual oral history interviews with men and women who worked on the home front during World War II External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rosie the Riveter Library of Congress Webcast Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front National Historical Park Rosie the Riveter at History Channel s website Regional Oral History Office Rosie the Riveter WWII American Homefront Project Thanks Plain and Simple an online group of Rosies American Rosie the Riveter Association A Real Life Rosie the Riveter Another Real Life Rosie from the Library of Congress image set Oral history interview with Audrey Lyons a real life Rosie who worked in the Brooklyn shipyard during WWII Archived 2012 12 11 at archive today from the Veterans History Project at Central Connecticut State University Oral history interview with Mary Doyle Keefe who modeled for Norman Rockwell s Rosie the Riveter painting Archived 2012 12 10 at archive today from the Veterans History Project at Central Connecticut State University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rosie the Riveter amp oldid 1134982184, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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