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World War II’s Rosie the Riveter arose from the imagination of a Pittsburgh artist.
In late 1942, a Pittsburgh freelance artist named J. Howard Miller painted a poster for Westinghouse Electric, his biggest client. All told, Miller designed 42 posters that would be hung on nearly 2,000 bulletin boards and factory walls across the country as wartime production kicked into high gear. This particular poster, however, was one of his simplest and most powerful compositions: a confident, bandana-coifed “woman war worker” making a muscle. A cartoon balloon above her head contained the message, “We Can Do It!” In the post-war years, this image, now recognized worldwide as “Rosie the Riveter,” has taken on added meaning and importance.
Some historians would have us believe that Miller’s iconic Rosie had little public impact during the war because it was distributed only to Westinghouse plants that posted it in an effort to boost morale and stimulate production. In fact, the “We Can Do It!” poster had a ripple effect that redounds to Pittsburgh’s credit to this day. But how did Miller’s portrait of a Westinghouse worker in Pittsburgh become Rosie the Riveter?
The convergence of the image and name was entirely serendipitous. In late 1942, as Miller put the finishing touches on his pretty but powerful “poster girl,” the song-writing duo of Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb came up with a catchy tune that Kay Kyser, Allen Miller, The Four Vagabonds and others quickly popularized.
Millions of Americans turned up their radios to hear how “Rosie the Riveter” worked all day long, rain or shine, on the assembly line: “She’s making history, working for victory, Rosie [rat-a-tat-tat] the Riveter!” The hit song was released during the same week as Miller’s poster in February 1943. Hundreds of thousands of war workers saw the posters just as the Rosie the Riveter radio craze swept the nation.
The image was photographed and republished in a variety of publications. Millions of Americans then saw Norman Rockwell’s satirical Rosie image on the May 29, 1943, cover of the Saturday Evening Post. Playing on Miller’s theme, Rockwell’s Rosie makes a muscle while nonchalantly eating a sandwich, her foot perched disrespectfully on a copy of Hitler’s “Mein Kampf.” Rockwell’s “Rosie” image was put to work selling war bonds and raising funds for the war loan program.
Rockwell’s original painting ended up in the hands of Mrs. P.R. Eichenberg of Mt. Lebanon. She won it in a nationally publicized raffle, though by war’s end it had been acquired by a company that manufactured (you guessed it) rivet guns and other pneumatic tools. (The model for Rockwell’s painting, Mary Doyle Keefe, of Simsbury, Conn., died last week, on April 21.)
Tough copyright restrictions limited the use of Rockwell’s image, and the Saturday Evening Post-Rockwell partners themselves ran afoul of copyright laws. Thousands of posters depicting Rockwell’s cover girl were pulled off newsstands because they bore the unlicensed title “Rosie the Riveter.” The lawyers chose not to chance crossing songwriters Evans and Loeb, who, they figured, had the better claim to the name.
Above: Rosie’s creator, J. Howard Miller, in 1967.
The Heinz History Center’s new exhibit on Pittsburgh’s contributions to World War II — We Can Do It! WWII — runs through Jan. 4. Covering the battlefront and the homefront, the exhibit includes 10,000 square feet of artifacts, life-size figures and interactive displays on subjects ranging from female war workers to local Tuskegee Airmen to the first Army jeep, made in Butler.
Miller reprised his Rosie character again and again. In April 1943, before Rockwell’s Rosie had appeared, he depicted Rosie at work with her rivet gun. Behind her, a colonial woman loads a musket. The poster’s bold caption reads: “It’s A Tradition With Us, Mister!”
The artist clearly adopted Rosie the Riveter as a worthy subject, perfect for reinforcing his concept of empowered female workers and the “We Can Do It!” message, which had been inspired by employees at Westinghouse’s East Pittsburgh Works. In late 1942, these workers adopted a “Let’s Show Them!” slogan. At rallies and for news cameras, many of the 25,000 workers rolled up their sleeves and raised a clenched fist — the very pose adopted by Miller’s “Rosie.”
Many people then wondered whether Miller’s Rosie was based on a real worker, and some claimed that they had discovered her working in a Detroit aircraft plant. Rose Monroe was feted as the real Rosie and even appeared in a motion picture. But Miller’s Rosie, though inspired by Westinghouse workers, was a figment of his fertile imagination. The same woman appears in his other work. She represents the artist’s ideal of feminine beauty — with perhaps an extra measure of determination added in. As time passed, Miller’s Rosie became the most popular and recognized depiction of the female war worker.
So it seems that Pittsburgh’s war workers inspired Miller’s poster, which Americans embraced as Rosie the Riveter after hearing Kay Kyser’s radio rendition of the Evans and Loeb song. Rockwell’s magazine cover portrait famously satirized Miller’s poster and firmly fixed the idea of Rosie the Riveter in the minds of Americans.
During the war, American women entered the workforce, got driver’s licenses and engaged in activities traditionally reserved for men. When the war ended, millions of women left the factories and the work force, got married and raised families. They took to these pursuits with the same energy and enterprise that characterized their war work. The baby boom resulted in a population explosion and the best educated, most prosperous generation that America — and the world — had ever seen. Women of the baby boom generation were as likely to go to college as their male counterparts. The daughters and sons of Rosie the Riveter and GI Joe ushered in the sexual revolution of the 1960s-1980s and major changes in women’s rights. Miller’s “We Can Do It!” poster was rediscovered and redeployed as a feminist icon. It now is one of the most recognized images in the world.
Pittsburgh was a keystone in the American “Arsenal of Democracy,” and Pennsylvania produced more steel than all of the Axis Powers combined. And, if that is not enough to swell a Pennsylvanian’s heart with pride, just know that Pittsburgh has a strong claim to “Rosie the Riveter,” whose “We Can Do It!” attitude shaped the world we know today.