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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Mon Jan 22, 2018, 05:31 PM Jan 2018

Naomi Parker Fraley, the Real 'Rosie the Riveter,' Dead at 96 [View all]

Source: The Daily Beast



Naomi Parker Fraley, a California woman who posed for the famous “Rosie the Riveter” poster died Saturday, her family confirmed Monday. Fraley, who was 96 at the time of her death, posed for the picture while working at an Alameda, California factory in 1942. The famous picture, which showed Fraley flexing her arm with the caption “We can do it!” became an iconic feminist image. But for decades, Fraley was not identified as the model in the picture, and scholars mistakenly concluded that a different female factory worker had posed for the portrait. Fraley was only widely recognized as the real “Rosie the Riveter” in 2016, after scholar James J. Kimble published an article revealing the findings of a six-year investigation into Rosie’s identity.

READ IT AT THE NEW YORK TIMES

Read more: https://www.thedailybeast.com/naomi-parker-fraley-the-real-rosie-the-riveter-dead-at-96?ref=home

21 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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My kids learned a few years ago that my mother had worked in defense plants during WW2. Arkansas Granny Jan 2018 #1
Both of my Moms parents worked for Boeing aircraft in California. oneshooter Jan 2018 #17
Thanks for this post. That picture is often used on twitter and now I know the origin. iluvtennis Jan 2018 #2
Thank you, Rosie, and all the other Rosies Kristofer Bry Jan 2018 #3
My eldest aunt was a Class A tig welder Solly Mack Jan 2018 #4
My grandma bent tubes in the Long Beach area during WWII denbot Jan 2018 #5
my mother was a machine lathe operator in nyc..... getagrip_already Jan 2018 #6
RIP Rosie (AKA Naomi) fantase56 Jan 2018 #7
My avatar here at DU! CTyankee Jan 2018 #8
I had an aunt and neighbor who worked down at the Philly Naval shipyard during WW2. BumRushDaShow Jan 2018 #9
Yes, women loved their experience in the factories, but when the war was over and the men CTyankee Jan 2018 #10
At the time, women were treated like placeholders and were expected Arkansas Granny Jan 2018 #19
Who wrote famous book about how women were steered back to house and kitchen after WWII? bobbieinok Jan 2018 #11
Most of those heroic women lost their jobs when the GIs came home FakeNoose Jan 2018 #13
My aunt & neighbor were in college at the time BumRushDaShow Jan 2018 #15
More like when the GI's returned home the war was over. oneshooter Jan 2018 #18
our paper today had a notice for a woman who had done WW2 industrial work pansypoo53219 Jan 2018 #12
She didnt talk about it much, but my grandmother was a Ferrets are Cool Jan 2018 #14
QEPD nt Xipe Totec Jan 2018 #16
Rest now Naomi. We will carry on. riversedge Jan 2018 #20
RIP Rosie and all the other 'Rosies' burrowowl Jan 2018 #21
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