Essay On Ww2 Women

Words: 470
Pages: 2

While women worked in a variety of positions previously closed to them, the aviation industry saw the greatest increase in female workers. When world war 2 started, to help build the supplies necessary to win the war, women found employment as electricians, welders and riveters in defense plants to help support troops and help support the army in the war. During the war times, the decrease in the availability of men in the work force also led to an upsurge in the number of women holding non-war-related factory jobs. In addition to factory work and other home front jobs, some women joined the armed services, serving at home and abroad. These women, each of who had already obtained their pilot’s license prior to service, became the first women to fly american military aircraft. They transferred planes from factories to bases, transporting cargo and participating in simulation strafing and target missions. By the "mid-1940s", the percentage of women in the american work force had expanded from "25 percent" to "36 percent". Though women were crucial to the war effort, their pay continued to lag far behind their male counterparts. Female workers rarely earned more than "50 percent of male wages". …show more content…
Also individuals civilians purchased U.S. war bonds to help pay for the high cost of armed conflict. A woman who toiled in the defense industry came to be known as a “Rosie the Riveter", the strong, bandanna-clad Rosie became one of the most successful recruitment tools in american history, and the most iconic image of working women during world war 2. The Rosie the Riveter campaign stressed the patriotic need for women to enter the work force, and they did, in huge