Rosie's Mom: Forgotten Women Workers of the First World War

TitleRosie's Mom: Forgotten Women Workers of the First World War
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication2002
AuthorsBrown, Carrie
Number of Pages240
PublisherNortheastern University Press
CityBoston
Abstract

Although the World War II posters of Rosie the Riveter and Wendy the Welder remind us of the women who contributed to the nation's war effort in the 1940s, the women workers of World War I are nearly forgotten. In this volume, the author recovers these women of an earlier generation through lively words and images. She takes readers back to the time when American women abandoned their jobs dipping chocolates, sewing corsets, or canning pork and beans to contribute to the war effort. Trading their ankle-length skirts and crisp white shirtwaists for coarse bloomers or overalls, they went into the munition plants to face explosives, toxic chemicals, powerful metal-cutting machines, and the sullen hostility of the men in the shops. By the end of the war more than a million American women had become involved in war production. Not only had they proven that women could be trained in technical fields, but they also had forced hazardous industries to adopt new health and safety measures. And they had made a powerful argument for women's voting rights. In telling the story of these women, this volume explores their lives and their work, their leaders and their defenders, their accomplishments and their bitter disappointments. Combining a compelling narrative with copious illustrations, this book offers many insights concerning women and industry at a crucial moment in U.S. history.

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49805364

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