You've likely seen the iconic image before - a woman in a red polka-dot bandana, rolling up her sleeve and flexing her muscle ...
Behind the poster were the women themselves. During WWII, the demand for labor skyrocketed ... The WASPs were civilian pilots who ferried aircraft, tested new planes and trained male pilots.
A district official reportedly told middle school teacher Sarah Inama that in this political climate, her welcoming message was a "personal opinion." ...
By the end of World War II, that number had spiked to more than ... The "We Can Do It" poster many of us think about when someone mentions Rosie the Riveter was just one in a long line of war ...
From the French senator going viral in the US to the hidden menace lurking in French soil, via French regional stereotypes ...
During World War II, Rosalind P. Walter earned the nickname “Rosie the Riveter” for her record-breaking work in U.S. military ...
The Senate health committee announced Thursday morning that it was canceling a planned hearing on Weldon’s nomination because ...
Nuclear armament of the U.S. and the USSR in the 1940s; establishment of NATO and the Warsaw Pact; the Space Race; the Cuban Missile Crisis; glasnost and perestroika in the USSR; the fall of the ...
During World War II, women assisted in manufacturing wartime ... The New York Times reported that Miller created a 1943 poster for the Westinghouse Electric Corporation that became one of the ...
And women had secured their place in history and proved their value in the workplace. The classic image of “Rosie the Riveter ...
From Gray & Co's Cari Gray to Scott Dunn Private’s Jules Maury, these travel masters have connections to open doors around ...