Current:Home > reviewsDecades after their service, "Rosie the Riveters" to be honored with Congressional Gold Medal -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
Decades after their service, "Rosie the Riveters" to be honored with Congressional Gold Medal
View
Date:2025-04-18 07:25:47
This week, a long-overdue Congressional Gold Medal will be presented to the women who worked in factories during World War II and inspired "Rosie the Riveter."
The youngest workers who will be honored are in their 80s. Some are a century old. Of the millions of women who performed exceptional service during the war, just dozens have survived long enough to see their work recognized with one of the nation's highest honors.
One of those women is Susan King, who at the age of 99 is still wielding a rivet gun like she did when building war planes in Baltimore's Eastern Aircraft Factory. King was 18 when she first started at the factory. She was one of 20 million workers who were credentialed as defense workers and hired to fill the jobs men left behind once they were drafted into war.
"In my mind, I was not a factory worker," King said. "I was doing something so I wouldn't have to be a maid."
The can-do women were soon immortalized in an iconic image of a woman in a jumpsuit and red-spotted bandana. Soon, all the women working became known as "Rosie the Riveters." But after the war, as veterans received parades and metals, the Rosies were ignored. Many of them lost their jobs. It took decades for their service to become appreciated.
Gregory Cooke, a historian and the son of a Rosie, said that he believes most of the lack of appreciation is "because they're women."
"I don't think White women have ever gotten their just due as Rosies for the work they did on World War II, and then we go into Black women," said Cooke, who produced and directed "Invisible Warriors," a soon-to-be-released documentary shining light on the forgotten Rosies. "Mrs. King is the only Black woman I've met, who understood her role and significance as a Rosie. Most of these women have gone to their graves, including my mother, not understanding their historic significance."
King has spent her life educating the generations that followed about what her life looked like. That collective memory is also being preserved at the Glenn L. Martin Aviation Museum in Maryland and at Rosie the Riveter National Historic Park in Richmond, California, which sits on the shoreline where battleships were once made. Jeanne Gibson and Marian Sousa both worked at that site.
Sousa said the war work was a family effort: Her two sisters, Phyllis and Marge, were welders and her mother Mildred was a spray painter. "It gave me a backbone," Sousa said. "There was a lot of men who still were holding back on this. They didn't want women out of the kitchen."
Her sister, Phyllis Gould, was one of the loudest voices pushing to have the Rosies recognized. In 2014, she was among several Rosies invited to the White House after writing a letter to then-Vice President Joe Biden pushing for the observance of a National Rosie the Riveter Day. Gould also helped design the Congressional Gold Medal that will be issued. But Gould won't be in Washington, D.C. this week. She passed away in 2021, at the age of 99.
About 30 Riveters will be honored on Wednesday. King will be among them.
"I guess I've lived long enough to be Black and important in America," said King. "And that's the way I put it. If I were not near a hundred years old, if I were not Black, if I had not done these, I would never been gone to Washington."
- In:
- World War II
Michelle Miller is a co-host of "CBS Saturday Morning." Her work regularly appears on "CBS Mornings," "CBS Sunday Morning" and the "CBS Evening News." She also files reports for "48 Hours" and anchors Discovery's "48 Hours on ID" and "Hard Evidence."
TwitterveryGood! (2)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- 'Thickest black smoke': 36 dead, thousands flee as Hawaii wildfires rage in Maui. Live updates
- Utah man suspected of threatening President Joe Biden shot and killed as FBI served warrant
- Colorado County Agrees to Pay $2.5 Million in Jail Abuse Settlement After Inmate Removes His Own Eyeballs
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Mississippi businessman ousts incumbent public service commissioner in GOP primary
- Suspending Kevin Brown, Orioles owner John Angelos starts petty PR war he can’t win
- Target adding Starbucks to its curbside delivery feature at 1,700 US stores: How to order
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Auto shoppers may be getting some relief as 2023 finally sees drop in new car prices
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- RHOBH Alum Diana Jenkins Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby With Fiancé Asher Monroe
- Putin profits off global reliance on Russian nuclear fuel
- After decades, a tribe's vision for a new marine sanctuary could be coming true
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Louisiana race for governor intensifies, but the GOP front-runner brushes off criticism
- Stop Waiting In Lines and Overpaying for Coffee: Get 56% Off a Cook’s Essentials Espresso Maker
- Save $50 on the PlayStation 5 and shop deals on PS5 games now
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
A Tennessee judge throws out the case of a woman convicted of murder committed when she was 13
A Tennessee judge throws out the case of a woman convicted of murder committed when she was 13
West African leaders plan to meet on Niger but options are few as a military junta defies mediation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Newly unveiled memo cited in Trump indictment detailed false electors scheme
Disney to boost prices for ad-free Disney+ and Hulu services and vows crackdown on password sharing
Las Vegas food service workers demanding better pay and benefits are set to rally on the Strip