The Mercury News

A ‘riveting’ history for these ‘Rosies’

Gathering marks second National Rosie the Riveter Day in honor of women who worked on homefront during World War II

- By Chris Treadway

RICHMOND >> Connie Gomez, 94, still has vivid memories of working in the Kaiser shipyards during World War II.

It was a time of sacrifice, but also a time of unity, she said Wednesday at a gathering marking the second National Rosie the Riveter Day.

“The people were from all over the states. They had so many nationalit­ies, but they were all behind the effort,” said Gomez, now a San Lorenzo resident. “We all worked hard, but we were glad to do it.”

Gomez, her father and siblings commuted in a single car from Pittsburg each day to the Richmond yards, where she worked as a welder.

“Women really came out during the war, and I was glad to do it,” she said alongside other “Rosies” at the local observance at the Rosie the Riveter/ World War II Home Front National Historical Park.

Joining her was her husband of 70 years, Raymond Gomez, 94, a decorated veteran of D-Day.

The couple met before the war and correspond­ed regularly while he was overseas and she was working at the shipyards.

“I still have some letters,” she said.

“I think it’s long overdue,” Gomez said of the national recognitio­n, the result of bipartisan legislatio­n introduced by in the U.S. Senate by Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr. of Pennsylvan­ia and in Congress by U.S. Rep. Jared Huffman of California with co-sponsorshi­p by U.S. Reps. Mark DeSaulnier and Jackie Speier of California, and U.S. Rep. Brian K. Fitzpatric­k of Pennsylvan­ia.

Women who broke barriers by filling defense industry positions in the service of their country

were “sometimes ridiculed, and many were pushed out the door when the war ended,” said Marsha Mather Thrift, executive

director of the Rosie the Riveter Trust, the nonprofit partner of the Richmond national park. “We owe these women a great debt of gratitude.”

The experience of each Rosie is unique, and the Richmond park still hopes to hear more from other homefront workers who have yet to come forward.

“Please contact us, we want your stories,” said Kelli English, chief of interpreta­tion at the Richmond park (www.nps.gov/rori/).

Margaret Archie, 95, was a member of a family of sharecropp­ers who came to Richmond from Arkansas during World War II for war work but encountere­d barriers as an African American woman.

“My father was working here and he had to pay under the table to get her in,” said Archie’s daughter, Malissa White.

She said Archie first worked in the narrow bottom of ships, where the space was too small to stand, then worked on the scaffoldin­g, which was precarious in another way. Then she was trained and worked as a welder until she became pregnant and finally left.

The women who worked on the World War II home front long ago learned the importance of setting and achieving goals and now they have a new one: Seeing that a national day in their honor is made an annual event.

Phyllis Gould of Fairfax in Marin County and Mae Krier of Levittown, Pennsylvan­ia, observed the Wednesday’s event in Washington, D.C., where they were scheduled to lobby Congressio­nal representa­tives to make the day an annual event.

Gould, 96, was one of the first six women hired as welders at the Kaiser yards, while Krier, 92, worked at the Boeing aircraft factory in Seattle. The pair successful­ly lobbied for the initial Rosie the Riveter Day in 2017.

Gould, never one to think small, would like to see the observance become a national holiday.

“We’re going to make it happen,” she said in a January interview. “I’m 96 — I don’t have time left for all this stalling and putting off.”

“[The Rosies were] sometimes ridiculed, and many were pushed out the door when the war ended. We owe these women a great debt of gratitude.”

— Marsha Mather Thrift, executive director of the Rosie the Riveter Trust

 ?? PHOTOS BY HALEY NELSON ?? Marian Sousa, 92, left, inspects her newly gifted mug as Kay Morrison, 94, and Josephine Lico, 103, say cheers at the National Rosie the Riveter Day celebratio­n at the Rosie the Riveter Visitor Education Center in Richmond.
PHOTOS BY HALEY NELSON Marian Sousa, 92, left, inspects her newly gifted mug as Kay Morrison, 94, and Josephine Lico, 103, say cheers at the National Rosie the Riveter Day celebratio­n at the Rosie the Riveter Visitor Education Center in Richmond.
 ??  ?? Lico points out her friend, Stella Bruno, in a group photo from the Felice and Perrelli Canning Co. at the National Rosie the Riveter Day celebratio­n.
Lico points out her friend, Stella Bruno, in a group photo from the Felice and Perrelli Canning Co. at the National Rosie the Riveter Day celebratio­n.

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