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Rosie the Riveter |
I took a wonderful walk along the Columbia River Waterfront on a sunny afternoon and took in the view of one of my favorite statues; a metal sculpture of a woman representing the many women who worked in the Vancouver shipyards during WW2.
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Wendy the Welder |
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Brief story of Women at War |
My neighbor,in her late 80s, told me about her adventure in 1941, traveling to Vancouver from Pennsylvania, alone, on a bus, to become an employee of the Kaiser Company. She was only 16 and ran errands for the main office. I can just imagine this tiny young woman whisking about, blond pony tail flying as she be-bopped from site to site. She told of having the male shipbuilders flirt with her, asking her to let them show her around the entrails of the not completed ships. She was told there was a special gold bolt in the bowels of the ships that they could display for her. She loved the attention, but didn't fall for the 'gold bolt' ploy. But, she said, she knew many of these men and would often frequent a nearby dance venue, on the weekends, where they would go to enjoy themselves. To this day she still loves dancing and nice looking men. She has unbounded energy and a well vocalized appreciation of the young men who do work in landscaping and construction in our neighborhood. Blue eyes twinkling, under a bonnet of blond curls, and a smile reminiscent of many a flirt she offers home made lemonade and cookies to all sun bronzed male bodies who are so fortunate.
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Fort Vancouver used for housing and staging deportation of US troops | |
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Vancouver side of Columbia River |
The Vancouver Shipyard in 1939 and Kaiser Permanente in1945 fostered by industrialist Henry J Kaiser are still viable interests.
Fort Vancouver, a few blocks away, established in in 1825 and used as a staging site for US soldiers in WW1 and WW2, is now a combination of historic village and historic barracks. Although there is a U. S. Grant house, President Grant never slept there, but George C Marshall did occupy Marshall House.
Still enjoying beauty in the NW, J