The Oklahoman

‘Rosie the Riveter’ joins another battle

Masks meant to bring attention to Senate bill

- Peg Quann

LEVITTOWN, Pa. – At age 94, Mae Krier is back on the front lines, hard at work, helping her country.

One of the nation’s original “Rosie the Riveters” employed by Boeing in Seattle during World War II, she built B-17 and B-29 bombers to help support the war effort decades ago.

Now she’s fighting a different war, as her still nimble fingers turn out face masks to prevent spread of the deadly coronaviru­s.

“People say to me, ‘You helped win WWII and now you are helping our country win this battle over this virus.’ These are nice things to hear,” Krier said.

She makes the mask like the red polka dot bandanas she also makes to remind people of the Rosies, those women who toiled in manufactur­ing plants with their heads wrapped in bandanas so their hair wouldn’t get tangled in the machinery they used to make supplies for the military serving overseas.

They were depicted by a World War II era poster of “Rosie the Riveter” created by J. Howard Miller in 1943.

Krier is on a crusade to have the Rosies remembered for the service they gave in helping to win that terrible war.

And the U.S. House of Representa­tives has agreed with her that the Rosies should be honored with the Congressio­nal Gold Medal, but so far, the Senate hasn’t followed suit.

“Sen. (Robert) Casey is the one who introduced this bill. The first year it didn’t pass, so now we are working really hard to get it passed this year. There are so many deserving people out there to compete with, so it isn’t an easy thing to do,” she said. Senate Bill 892 needs more than 60 co-sponsors, but so far Krier said only 29 have supported it.

A similar bill also had a tough climb in the House when first introduced in March 2019 by Rep. Jackie Spier, D-Calif., with three original co-sponsors, including Rep. Brian Fitzpatric­k, R-Pa., and two other California representa­tives.

But after Krier got back from visiting Normandy for the 75th anniversar­y of D-Day, where she sat with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, dozens more representa­tives co-sponsored the bill, which was approved by the House and sent to the Senate for considerat­ion in November, according to Congress.gov.

Since then, Krier has traveled across the country, trying to convince senators to support the measure, but had to stop in March because of the coronaviru­s. In previous years, the medal has been awarded to individual heroes, entertaine­rs, sports figures and religious leaders as well as groups, including military units.

Krier started making the Rosie face masks to have something to do while in quarantine at her home.

“It kept me from getting bored. ... I’ve got to be careful. My only exercise I’m getting is my trip to the refrigerat­or,” she quipped. And she still gets out on her riding mower to cut the grass.

The face masks, like the bandanas, are helping her advertise the cause for the original Rosies to receive the Gold Medal. Many are, like Krier, in their 90s, and their numbers are dwindling.

“Someone put it on Facebook and it’s sky-rocketed,” she said about requests that have come in. “People are wonderful.”

They even sent elastic, thread and other supplies to help with the project.

So far, she’s made and distribute­d about 200 of the Rosie masks around the country. Pennsylvan­ia state Rep.

“I like it. It’s a way of keeping our legacy alive.”

Mae Krier, speaking of her mask-making effort

Melissa Shusterman, D-Phoenixvil­le, has worn one in the state Legislatur­e and other people working in Washington have sent her photos of their families wearing the masks.

Krier said she herself became a Rosie because her hometown in North Dakota lost its heart when the young men left for the service during World War II. So she, her sister and a girlfriend headed to Seattle to join in the war effort.

She started working on bomber production in May 1943 and continued until the war ended, even working with Italian prisoners of war who helped in the factory.

“We treated them so well, some of them married and stayed here,” Krier said.

She married her sailor husband, Norman Krier, in April 1945. He was a good dancer, she recalled.

They moved to be near his family. The couple had a daughter and son and were married almost 70 years before Norman passed at age 93.

“I’ve had a really good life,” she said, noting she now has three great-great grandchild­ren, including a little girl named Sadie Mae after her. She still has her health and goes to visit her doctor about every six months

Krier got married a few days after President Franklin Roosevelt’s death and that unsettling time was terrifying for young people, she said. They had grown up with only one president, since Roosevelt was in his fourth term in office.

She recalls they didn’t know much about Harry Truman or how he would conduct the war, which was winding down in Europe but still going on in the Pacific. She said it must have been a “terrible burden” on the new president to use the atomic bomb to end the war.

“It’s important that we go down in history,” she said about the Rosies, who made the planes, ships, vehicles and armaments that helped win the war. If distributi­ng the face masks get the Senate to award the woman the Congressio­nal Gold Medal, she’s all for making more. “I like it. It’s a way of keeping our legacy alive,” she said.

 ??  ?? Mae Krier makes red masks with polka dots, like the bandanas worn by “Rosie the Riveter.”
Mae Krier makes red masks with polka dots, like the bandanas worn by “Rosie the Riveter.”
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