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Rosie Stories Book 7 Stepping Up for Victory Tina Rongstad Falk

Tina Rongstad Falk: Coffee, Cookies and Conversation

Posted August 11, 2017 .

Tina Rongstad was the 10th of ten children born in Pinewood, Minnesota to Norwegian immigrants.  All her siblings were first generation Norwegian-Americans.  Her mother joked that she had so many children she started to number them; for example – Nina (#9) and Tina (#10).  “I was born in a log cabin on the farm.  We … read more »

Married Women were also Rosie The Riveters: Iva’s Story

Posted June 9, 2016 / Filed under: .

Even the married women did their part during World War II. Before the war, Iva Van Alstine was a married housewife with five children. Her husband Harold had a local job and she stayed home and cared for the children. At the time Pearl Harbor was bombed on Dec 7, 1941, Iva was 26 years … read more »

A Nebraska Bomberette: Louise’s Story

Posted September 6, 2012 .

Louise Unkrich:  In 1943 I graduated from Olds High School, located in southeast Iowa. The summer after graduation, I read in the Des Moines Register about American Technical School in regards to drafting. I signed up for this four-week session and received a certificate in aircraft sheet metal training. During my training at ATS, our … read more »

Rosie Romances: Jean and Ed, Through Thick and Thin

Posted May 25, 2008 / Filed under: .

Jean M. Holloway:  Our romance started in April 1944. I was a senior in high school and Ed had just signed up for service in the U.S. Nary. Ed went to boot camp in Sampson, N.Y.. I graduated high school on June 4, 1944 and applied for a clerk’s job in Watson Flagg Machine Co. … read more »

Railroad Rosie Saves the Day: Pauline’s Story

Posted September 6, 2005 .

Pauline Barker Booth: I was working as a waitress during the war in Winslow, AZ. I had two children. My girlfriend was working for the railroad and she asked me to come and work with here, so I did. The pat was okay and there was a place to live, rent-free. There were 3 girls … read more »

Cracking the Code: Betty Lou Goes to Washington

Posted September 6, 2001 .

Betty Lou Gore:  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 WWII was converted into a Signal Corps Army … read more »