Women in the wartime workforce 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. 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
airships, 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.: He recalls: The women were coming into the work force. I was given the responsibility to train them. I showed them the rivet gun, how it worked. How the holes were drilled. What a buck bar was and how to work as a team. I gave them the basics. And then monitored their progress. The Rosies placed the rivets into the “nacelles” (the big aluminum ring) that covers the engines of the B-17 bombers. Many women discovered they enjoyed the autonomy these jobs provided them with. It expanded their own expectations for womanly duty and capabilities. However, this was seen as unnatural and as men began to return home from the war, the government instituted another propaganda campaign urging women to "return to normalcy". 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, or perhaps because it was assumed that most would be housewives. One government advertisement asked women: "Can you use an electric mixer? If so, you can learn to operate a drill."
Propaganda was also directed at their husbands, many of whom were unwilling to support such jobs. , 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. Over six million women got war jobs; black, Hispanic, white, and Asian women worked side by side. 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!" 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. However, some of these women continued working in the factories. The overall percentage of women working fell from 36% to 28% in 1947. The identity of the "real" Rosie the riveter is debated. Candidates include: •
Rosina "Rosie" Bonavita who worked for
Convair in
San Diego, California. •
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. • '''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. Born in
Pulaski County, Kentucky, in 1920, she moved to
Michigan during World War II. The song "Rosie the Riveter" was already popular when Monroe was selected to portray her in a promotional film about the war effort at home. "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. In Canada in 1941,
Veronica Foster became "Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl", Canada's poster girl representing women in the war effort. A 1944 drama film,
Rosie the Riveter, borrowed from the Rosie theme and starred
Jane Frazee as Rosalind "Rosie" Warren. ==The song==