When most people think of American women during World War II, the iconic ‘Rosie the Riveter’ comes to mind. Rosie was the modern factory girl – a woman who could effortlessly bridge the gap between masculine and feminine. The war industry during WWII gave women the opportunity to earn the...
Alice Kessler〩arrisKessler-Harris, Alice. ""Rosie the Riveter": Who Was She?" Labor History 24, no. 2 (1983): 249-253.
"The way it turned out," Krier said, "we all ended up being Rosie the Riveters during the war." CBS News Philadelphia Krier made planes for Boeing for two years. "They take you downtown, put a piece of sheet metal in a vice, and they teach you how to drill holes and how to r...
Hanson, Gayle M.B
Byline: Meredith Somers, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Dorothy May was six months pregnant when she...By SomersMeredith