National Post

She was the real inspiratio­n for Rosie the Riveter

REVEALED IN SCHOLAR’S SIX-YEAR QUEST

- Margalit Fox The New York Times News Service

Unsung for seven decades, the real Rosie the Riveter was a California waitress named Naomi Parker Fraley.

Over the years, a welter of American women have been identified as the model for Rosie, the war worker of 1940s popular culture who became a feminist touchstone in the late 20th century.

Fraley, who died Jan. 20 at 96 in Longview, Wash., staked the most legitimate claim of all. But because her claim was eclipsed by another woman’s, she went unrecogniz­ed for more than 70 years.

“I didn’t want fame or fortune,” Fraley told People magazine in 2016, when her connection to Rosie first became public. “But I did want my own identity.”

The search for the real Rosie is the story of one scholar’s six-year intellectu­al treasure hunt. It is also the story of the constructi­on — and deconstruc­tion — of an American legend.

“It turns out that almost everything we think about Rosie the Riveter is wrong,” that scholar, James J. Kimble, told The Omaha WorldHeral­d in 2016. “Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.”

For Kimble, the quest for Rosie, which began in earnest in 2010, “became an obsession,” as he explained in an interview for this obituary in 2016.

His research ultimately homed in on Fraley, who had worked in a navy machine shop during Second World War. It also ruled out the best-known incumbent, Geraldine Hoff Doyle, a Michigan woman whose innocent assertion that she was Rosie was long accepted.

On Doyle’s death in 2010, her claim was promulgate­d further through obituaries.

Kimble, an associate professor of communicat­ion and the arts at Seton Hall University in New Jersey, reported his findings in “Rosie’s Secret Identity,” a 2016 article in the journal Rhetoric & Public Affairs.

The article brought journalist­s to Fraley’s door at long last.

“The women of this country these days need some icons,” Fraley said in the People magazine interview. “If they think I’m one, I’m happy.”

The confusion over Rosie’s identity stems partly from the fact that the name Rosie the Riveter has been applied to more than one cultural artifact.

The first was a wartime song of that name, by Redd Evans and John Jacob Loeb. It told of a munitions worker who “keeps a sharp lookout for sabotage/ Sitting up there on the fuselage.” Recorded by bandleader Kay Kyser and others, it became a hit.

The “Rosie” behind that song is well known: Rosalind P. Walter, a Long Island woman who was a riveter on Corsair fighter planes and is now a philanthro­pist.

Another Rosie sprang f rom Norman Rockwell, whose Saturday Evening Post cover of May 29, 1943, depicts a muscular woman in overalls ( the name Rosie can be seen on her lunch box), with a rivet gun on her lap and “Mein Kampf ” crushed gleefully underfoot.

Rockwell ’ s model is known to have been a Vermont woman, Mary Doyle Keefe, who died in 2015.

But in between those two Rosies lay the object of contention: a wartime industrial poster displayed briefly in Westinghou­se Electric Corp. plants in 1943.

Rendered in bold graphics and bright primary colours by Pittsburgh artist J. Howard Miller, it depicts a young woman, clad in a work shirt and polka- dot bandana. Flexing her arm, she declares, “We Can Do It!”

( In 2017, The New Yorker published an updated Rosie, by Abigail Gray Swartz, on its cover of Feb. 6. It depicted a brown- skinned woman, sporting a pink knitted cap like those worn in recent women’s marches, striking a similar pose.)

Miller’s poster was never meant for public display. It was intended only to deter absenteeis­m and strikes among Westinghou­se employees in wartime.

For decades, his poster remained all but forgotten. Then, in the early 1980s, a copy came to light — most l i kely from the National Archives i n Washington. It quickly became a femin- ist symbol, and the name Rosie the Riveter was applied retrospect­ively to the woman portrayed.

This newly anointed Rosie soon came to be considered the platonic form. It became ubiquitous on T- shirts, coffee mugs, posters and other memorabili­a.

The i mage piqued the attention of women who had done wartime work. Several identified themselves as having been its inspiratio­n.

The most plausible claim seemed to be that of Geraldine Doyle, who in 1942 worked briefly as a metal presser in a Michigan plant.

Her claim centered in particular on a 1942 newspaper photograph.

Distribute­d by the Acme photo agency, the photograph s howed a young woman, her hair in a polkadot bandana, at an industrial lathe. It was published widely in the spring and summer of 1942, though rarely with a caption identifyin­g the woman or the factory.

Naomi Fern Parker was born in Tulsa, Okla., on Aug. 26, 1921. The family moved wherever the work of her mining engineer father took him, living in New York, Missouri, Texas, Washington, Utah and California, where they settled in Alameda, near San Francisco.

After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the 20-yearold Naomi and her 18- yearold sister, Ada, went to work at the Naval Air Station in Alameda. They were assigned to the machine shop, where their duties included drilling, patching airplane wings and, fittingly, riveting.

It was there that the Acme photograph­er captured Naomi Parker, her hair tied in a bandana for safety, at her lathe. She clipped the photo from the newspaper and kept it for decades.

As he searched for the woman at the lathe, Kimble scoured the internet, books, old newspapers and photo archives for a captioned copy of the image.

At last he found a copy from a vintage photo dealer. It carried the photograph­er’s original caption, with the date — March 24, 1942 — and the location, Alameda. Best of all was this line: “Pretty Naomi Parker looks like she might catch her nose in the turret lathe she is operating.”

Kimble located Fraley and her sister, Ada Wyn Parker Loy, then living together in Cottonwood, Calif. He visited them in 2015, whereupon Fraley produced the cherished newspaper photo she had saved all those years.

“There is no question that she is the ‘ lathe woman’ in the photograph,” Kimble said.

An essential question remained: Did that photograph i nfluence Miller’s poster?

As Kimble also learned, the lathe photo was publ ished in The Pittsburgh Press, in Miller’s hometown, on July 5, 1942. “So Miller very easily could have seen it,” he said.

Then there is the telltale polka- dot head scarf, and Fraley’s resemblanc­e to the Rosie of the poster. “We can rule her in as a good candidate for having inspired the poster,” Kimble said.

IT TURNS OUT THAT ALMOST EVERYTHING WE THINK ABOUT ROSIE THE RIVETER IS WRONG. WRONG. WRONG. WRONG. WRONG. WRONG. — SCHOLAR JAMES J. KIMBLE, WHO SAYS HIS SEARCH FOR THE REAL MODEL FOR THE WARTIME ICON BECAME AN ‘OBSESSION’

 ?? JOHN D. FRALEY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Naomi Parker Fraley in 2015 with the Rosie the Riveter poster that became a feminist touchstone.
JOHN D. FRALEY VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Naomi Parker Fraley in 2015 with the Rosie the Riveter poster that became a feminist touchstone.

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