Dollys on Dollies

Posted May 17, 2016 / Filed under: .

By Lucille LaTulip Johanson I had just graduated from high school in Cloquet, Minnesota in June of 1942, and in July I had a chance to go to visit my sister in Chicago who was a nurse in a local hospital.  I left for my visit on July 5, 1942.  When I arrived, her husband, … read more »

Etna Young Sullinger: American Red Cross Nurse Volunteer

Posted / Filed under: .

My mother, Bernyce Etna Young Sullinger was a 30 year old newlywed at the time of Pearl Harbor.  She and her husband, William “Sully” Sullinger, were living in Hillsdale, New Jersey, a New York City suburb.  Before her marriage, Etna grew up in Georgia, and Florida and trained as a nurse in Mobile, Alabama. Soon … read more »

Cascade Health Solutions – Hospice

Posted May 3, 2016 / Filed under: .

Margaret Scott Thompson was born in August 1925. She met her Husband Charles Thompson and they were married in October 1943. It was the middle of World War II.  Charles went to Rhode Island with the Navy and Margaret went to work as a “Rosie the Riveter” at the Goodyear Air Craft factory in Akron, … read more »

USO Leads to Romance

Posted December 8, 2015 / Filed under: .

Rosie Lorraine Miller met her future husband at the USO, became engaged, then did not see her fiancee’s face or hear his voice for three years! Lorraine writes, “I was born on a dairy farm in Fulton, MD, one of two girls and two boys. When I was seventeen years old I heard President Roosevelt … read more »

Down on the Farm

Posted / Filed under: .

Rosie Dorothy Rice Schultz joined The Women’s Land Army to do farm work so that she could help feed citizens at home and troops abroad.  Newly married, her husband of six months off to war, and a desk job in Washington D.C., Dorothy was interested in helping local farmers. On Sundays, she would go with … read more »

Take The Bad With The Good

Posted / Filed under: .

Rosie Marjorie Gallun worked with some men who did not appreciate women workers, found a better job helping to make bombers, and then became a MARINE! Marjorie writes, “We lived near Buffalo, New York where I graduated from high school in 1940. Because of the depression, most everyone had been on welfare. Unemployment was high. I had always … read more »

Proud Reflections From Rena the Rosie

Posted / Filed under: .

Rosie Rena Van Buren was a shell casing inspector who knew a soldier’s life depended on her accurate work. Rena writes, “In 1941, I was an 18 year-old single mother in Frostburg, Maryland. I lived on a quiet street where everyone knew everyone else and many were related.  On December 7, 1941, my life changed. … read more »

World War II Mattie Cora Custus Lee Simpson 1910-2003

Posted September 29, 2015 / Filed under: .

Written by Clyde and Danette Simpson 9/2015   This picture of my mom, Cora Lee Simpson, viewed right, and also her friend on the left, name unknown, worked at the Climax Molybdenum, Company, a Mine in Climax, Colorado, which has been said to have been started in 1879 by about 250 people who completed it … read more »

A Lucky Life (A Rosie Among Us)

Posted June 8, 2015 / Filed under: .

2015 marks the 70th anniversary of the end of WWII. From Pearl Harbor until the end of the war contributions to the war effort came from all US citizens by soldiers and civilians alike. Civilians collected vital raw materials like metal and paper, rationed food and fuel, and worked in factories producing the needed products … read more »

Riveter Carmella Woods recalls her WWII aircraft work

Posted May 29, 2015 / Filed under: .

When World War II broke out, Carmella Wood, 92, wanted to do her part. “They attacked Pearl Harbor. Before you knew it, all the boys were going into the service,” said Wood, a Summerlin-area resident. “I wanted to go, too, to do my part for this country. My father — he was from Italy — … read more »

Betty Lou, Decatur, GA – 103 More Stories Book, Page 47

Posted May 27, 2015 / Filed under: .

“The telegram from the War department instructed me to report to Arlington Hall, Virginia, on September 1, 1943 at 0800 hours. I kissed my teaching job good-bye and packed my bags. Arlington Hall had been a small college just outside Washington, D.C. which during World War II was converted into a Signal Corps Army Post. … read more »