Return
to News

EDITORIAL
Friday, September 08, 2006
Rosie's special park
CONGRATULATIONS
ARE in order. Richmond's Rosie the Riveter Park, a monument
to the city of Pride and Purpose's vital role in the
World War II effort, is a finalist for the National League
of Cities Municipal Excellence Award.
The
honor is given to outstanding programs that demonstrate
innovative public-private partnerships. Rosie the Riveter
World War II Home Front National Park is one of 57 nominated
finalists in the midsize city category, and the only
candidate from Contra Costa County.
With
so many grim headlines coming out of Richmond these days,
it's far too easy to forget the city's rich history.
Rosie
the Riveter Park, which opened to the public in 2003,
will remind future generations of what park organizers
call, the "rich historical sacrifice, patriotism, technology,
organization, leadership and social interaction," that
Richmond embodied during the war years.
During
the early '40s, Richmond's population swelled from 20,000
to 100,000 people as rural blacks fleeing Jim Crow, migrated
from the south to work in Richmond's factories and the
Kaiser shipyards.
Sharecroppers
and farmers were retrained as welders and factory equipment
operators.
Meanwhile,
with many of the men away at war, women were pouring
into the workforce, taking over factory jobs that were
once the exclusive domain of men. Rosie the Riveter became
the archetype of this strong, patriotic, gutsy woman.
Someone
had to look after the children while the women worked.
That led to the creation of the first government-funded
day care facilities in the country.
Factory
workers needed medical care to stay healthy and productive.
The nation's first HMO, which would later become Kaiser
Permanente, came into being. Fittingly, the park celebrates
workplace diversity, as well as the country's first group
medical care and day care.
Rosie
the Riveter Park sits on the 150-acre site that once
housed the booming shipyards and factories that supported
the war effort.
The
National Park Service manages the park, which consists
of nine sites that have wartime significance. Those include,
Terminal 3, the home of the Red Oak Victory Ship, the
Ford Assembly building, which converted from making cars
to Jeeps; and the Rosie the Riveter memorial, a stainless
steel sculpture that looks like a ship's hull.
We
applaud all of the elected officials, business and community
leaders who worked so hard to create the park and convinced
the National Park Service of its historical significance
not only to Richmond, but to the entire nation.
The
awards will be announced in December at the League's
Congress of Cities and Exposition in Reno, Nevada.
We
wish Richmond the best of luck.
Also
see the NLC Nomination
Document
