News

A riveting immersive show honoring Rosie the Riveter and the women who built history. This immersive theatrical experience brings Rosie the Riveter to life, honoring the real women who joined the ...
India Peters, a 106-year-old Fort Collins resident, recently celebrated her birthday. Peters worked as a "Rosie the Riveter" factory worker at Douglas Aircraft Company during World War II.
Donna Graves couldn’t believe it when she heard that the LGBTQ+ exhibit she created at the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historic Park in Richmond, California, was in jeopardy.
The poster we all know as Rosie the Riveter was not known throughout the U.S. during World War 2. Instead, only the people who worked at the company saw the posters, and for just two weeks.
What else did these amazing women do during World War II?” Washington, D.C., fifth-grader Raya Kenney thought as she watched ...
The Fourth of July parade in Ypsilanti, Michigan, almost came to an end this year after organizational changes put its future ...
Rosie the Riveter is known as a cultural icon that encouraged women to join the workforce during wartime. But the name is often associated with the 1942 “We Can Do It!” poster created by J ...
Rod's Donuts mural Three more are in the works, including one to honor Rod's Donut Shop, which has been a Twin Cities institution for nearly half a century. It will depict Rod Smith, the shop's ...
Louise Lewis was only 18 when she began working as a Rosie the Riveter, assembling the wings of B-17 bombers in a factory in Bakersfield. Louise Ruth Carpenter Lewis grew up during a time in America ...