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Rosie the Riveter
Richmond, California
Rosie the Riveter
National Park Service Richmond, CA Redevelopment

Fundraiser Gala Dinner
Friday, September 28, 2007
6:00 pm - Cocktails          7:00 pm - Dinner

The Rosie the Riveter Trust Fundraiser Gala Dinner
will kick off the Home Front Festival-by-the-Bay.

You need to be there! Your business needs to be represented at the formal opening of Rosie the Riveter
WWII Home Front National Historical Park!

Gala Dinner Invitation

The Ford Building Craneway is located at 1414 Harbour Way South, Richmond, California

The event will be held at the edge of the Bay in the dramatic, glass-enclosed Craneway of the historic waterfront Ford Assembly Building, where tanks were outfitted for World War II.
“Think Big" — a Kaiser Exhibit” will be on display for the first time in Richmond.

This is the first event ever to be held in the restored craneway!

Ford Assembly PlantIf you or your business would like to attend the gala dinner and help support Rosie the Riveter Trust, contact the following for tickets or table sponsorships for “Launching of Rosie the Riveter” at the future site of the National Park Service’s Visitor Education Center by being a sponsor. Your generosity will be recognized in the program.

·   Rosie the Riveter:  $5,000 table of 10
·   Rosie the Welder: $3,000 seats for 6
·   Rosie the Electrician: $2,000 seats for 4
·   Rosie the Pipe Fitter: $1000 seats for 2

Individual Seats are $150 (These are not sponsor level and are not acknowledged in the program).

Please RSVP by September 12th.
Contact: Jane Bartke, Launching of Rosie the Riveter Event Co-Chair. 510.235.1315. Omabartke@aol.com


The Home Front Festival will be held Friday, Saturday & Sunday, September 28th, 29 & 30th and is going to be a wonderful event with music, entertainment, history, kids activities and art, along with the “Launch” of the Rosie the Riveter WW II Home Front National Historical Park and the YMCA Fun Run/Walk.

USO PosterKeep checking www.homefrontfestival.com for more information as it develops.

One of the exciting events planned for that weekend is the USO Dance and Show on Saturday evening, Sept. 29th, from 7 to 10 p.m. in the Ford Building.  See the invitation  and order your tickets now. (Large file but worth it.)

On the evening of September 28th, there will be gala fundraiser dinner for Rosie the Riveter Trust in the newly rehabilitated Craneway of the Ford assembly Building, the first ever event to be held there.

The “Think Big" — a Kaiser Exhibit” will be on display for the first time in Richmond. It will be held at the edge of the Bay in the dramatic, glass-enclosed Craneway of the historic waterfront Ford Assembly Building, where tanks were outfitted for World War II.

If you or your business would like to attend the gala dinner and help support Rosie the Riveter Trust, contact the following for tickets or table sponsorships for “Launching of Rosie the Riveter” at the future site of the National Park Service’s Visitor Education Center by being a sponsor. Your generosity will be recognized in the program.

  •    Rosie the Riveter:  $5,000 table of 10
  •    Rosie the Welder: $3,000 seats for 6
  •    Rosie the Electrician: $2,000 seats for 4
  •    Rosie the Pipe Fitter: $1000 seats for 2
  •    Individual Seats: $150 (These are not sponsor level and are not acknowledged in the program)

Please respond to:
Jane Bartke, Launching of Rosie the Riveter Event Co-Chair, 510.235.1315, Omabartke@aol.com

ribbon   ribbon   ribbon   ribbon   ribbon

Emily Yellin, author of the critically acclaimed Our Mothers’ War, has been selected as the keynote speaker for the event.
Our Mothers’ War is Emily Yellin’s first book. She has been a longtime contributor to The New York Times. Her work has also appeared in Time, Newsweek, The International Herald Tribune and other publications. In 2004, she contributed the chapter about women to the WWII Memorial commemorative book, The World War II Memorial: A Grateful Nation Remembers.

Our Mothers' WarBorn in White Plains, New York, Emily Yellin grew up in Memphis, Tennessee. She received a B.A. in English literature from the University of Wisconsin – Madison, and an M.S. in journalism from Northwestern University. In the mid-1990s, she taught journalism at The University of Memphis. She has also lived in New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and London, but currently lives in Memphis, with her dog Sophie Yellin.

Eloquent and eye-opening, this ground-breaking book is the first to give full voice to the wide array of real women behind the stock female images of World War II. From Wonder Woman to Rosie the Riveter, and the everyday heroes, and even a few villains, in between -- these are not your father’s war stories.

Acclaimed by The New York Times as an “important new book,” and an example of “first-rate research and reporting,” and by The Washington Post as, “exceptionally well-written,” Our Mothers' War portrays women as equal partners in fighting and winning a war that forever transformed the way women participated in American society.

Readers will come to see the surprisingly vast scope of American women's experiences during that pivotal era. Our Mothers' War offers a comprehensive portrait of what American women from all walks of life were doing and thinking, on the home front and abroad.

Sparked by finding a journal and letters her mother had written home from the Pacific while serving with the Red Cross, journalist Emily Yellin embarked on a broad investigation of how the women of her mother's generation responded to this time when their country asked them to step into roles they had never been invited, or allowed, to fill before.

Drawing on a wide range of sources, including personal interviews and previously unpublished letters and diaries, Yellin brings to life intimate tales of women working as spies, war correspondents, disc jockeys, pilots, and prostitutes, as well of women building ships, planes and bombs, sending their husbands, brothers and sons off to war, and joining the military themselves for the first time in American history.

Our Mothers' War gives center stage to one of World War II’s most essential, but often overlooked, American fighting forces.