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Park In Richmond
Honors Women Who Reshaped Workforce During World War II:
WARTIME HEROES
By John Geluardi
CONTRA
COSTA TIMES
Article Launched:07/29/2007 03:00:46 AM PDT
Few
would argue that World War II was the most significant
event of the 20th century in forging our identity as a
nation and a people.
The war profoundly changed our economy, politics,
arts and sciences. And to understand the depth of that
change, you need only to visit Richmond's Rosie the Riveter/WWII
Home Front National Historic Park.
"During the war, we see for the first time
women joining the workforce in substantial numbers, racially
integrated assembly lines, the first pre-paid health care
system and government sponsored child care, which was the
progenitor of the Head Start program," said Park Superintendent
Martha Lee. "These things grew into powerful social movements
after the war, and here in Richmond, we have rich examples
of how those seeds were planted."
Summer bus tours of the Rosie the Riveter
park -- giving visitors broad insight into life in Richmond
during the war through buildings, documents, artwork, welding
artifacts, a Victory ship and even a near-mint condition
wedding dress -- have been so popular that officials have
added two additional tours in August.
"The tours filled up really quickly, and
we're still taking names on the waiting list," said Program
Manager Lucy Lawliss. "We had this incredible response
that we were not prepared for."
The park consists of numerous official locations,
mostly on or near the city's waterfront, and dozens of
unofficial sites. The tour takes visitors to Kaiser Shipyard
No. 3, where there are five historic buildings, a 220-ton
wartime whirley crane, the SS Red Oak Victory ship and
five dry docks where the Rosies helped build and launch
ships.
Then the tour swings by the first Kaiser
Hospital, the Maritime Child Development Center, the first
government sponsored preschool and day care, and Atchinson
Village, one of the first examples of public housing.
The Rosie the Riveter park tells so many
histories that it attracts a wide variety of visitors,
some interested in wartime industry, others in the social
movements spawned during the war and some who simply want
to experience nostalgia.
"I came because I like the feeling of connection
with my father's generation, which is quickly passing away," said
Nancy Webb, a park visitor and Richmond resident. "I also
love the feeling of being in history today."
Perhaps the park story with the most significance
now is that of Rosie herself. It was during the war that
women stepped into the huge industrial breach across the
country, manufacturing cars, tanks, ships and anything
else needed in the war effort. Women irretrievably smashed
all myths of what their social roles should be.
Rosie's image has become
a potent symbol of female empowerment. Consider this:
When U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi was sworn in as the first
female speaker of the House, she wore the "We Can Do It" button
depicting a determined Rosie with her denim sleeves rolled
up over her well-muscled arms.
Presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton also is capitalizing on the image by using it on
campaign T-shirts, posters and coffee mugs.
One of the park's gems is 85-year-old interpreter
Betty Reid Soskin, who during the war worked as a file
clerk in the segregated Boiler Makers Auxiliary 36 union
hall.
Soskin, who officially was hired by the National
Park Service last week as a community outreach assistant,
wore her dapper, forest-green Park Service uniform and
broad-rimmed ranger hat for the first time during a recent
tour.
"Wearing this uniform, I feel like I have
some real authority," Soskin quipped with a broad smile. "I
should be directing traffic or something."
Soskin has been a tireless voice for making
sure the black wartime experience -- both the positive
steps toward integration and the presence of discrimination
-- has a prominent place in the park's history, Lee said.
"When I got here, some people thought Rosie
was a park that commemorated the experience of white females
during the war," Lee said. "Betty has challenged us to
embrace all of our stories for better or worse. We need
to look at the truth of our history, and Betty has been
an inspiration for that."
Soskin kicked off the
recent tour by showing a four-minute video, "Of Lost Conversations and Untold
Stories," which she wrote and narrated. The short piece
captures the pride African-Americans experienced when wartime
ships were named after prominent black scientists, educators,
poets and abolitionists.
"When the SS Robert T. Abbott, named for
the publisher of the Chicago Defender, was launched, it
was the social event of the year," Soskin said.
With the rise of women in business and politics,
the significance of the Rosie the Riveter park is bound
to grow, Soskin said.
"The history we have in Richmond is just
coming into itself," Soskin said. "The city will be able
to re-imagine itself through this park. Richmond has no
idea yet of her role in this nation's history."
Reach John Geluardi at 510-262-2787 or jgeluardi@cctimes.com.
rosie information:
PARK WEB SITES: http://www.rosietheriveter.org and http://www.nps.gov/rori
BETTY REID SOSKIN'S BLOG: cbreaux.blogspot.com
"UNTOLD STORIES" VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hc490zRLWMA
TOUR INFORMATION: 510-232-1544 or 510-232-1547
