Browse Items (35 total)

  • Tags: wwii

PlaskonResinGlue_LibbeyOwensFord_Glass.jpg
One of the other essential products that Libbey-Owens-Ford produced and utilized during WWII was resin glue, a glue used to secure airplane parts together. As the images show, many women worked with the glue in the company's Plaskon division to…

aaff_americanmagazine_1944-09_p45.jpg
American Magazine highlighted the incredible career of Elinore Herrick, the Director of Labor Relations for Todd's Shipyards, who served as an emblem for the industrial woman, especially during World War II.

aaff_americanmagazine_1943-04_p66.jpg
Along with the push for "victory gardens," the United States' War Advertising Council produced a "vitamins for victory" campaign that pushed for agriculture, self-sufficiency, and good health on the home front.

aaff_waclife_1945-05_cover.jpg
Once women had been fully established in the military during WWII, the U.S. War Department released a pamphlet titled "WAC Life," which outlined the roles and duties of female officers in the Women's Army Corps during the war.

aaff_life_1943-03-15_p75.jpg
In 1943, LIFE published an article that gave a behind-the-scenes look into the "life" of WAVE officers during their training; this aided in the mass understanding of women's roles during the war and brought their efforts into the limelight.

aaff_independentwoman_1946-08_p221.jpg
Margaret Hickey, a women's advocate and President of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs from 1944-1946, delivered a speech at a conference with a call to action: that women become more politically active and create a…

aaff_independentwoman_1943-06_p163.jpg
In June of 1943, Independent Woman Magazine released an informative call-to-action article about women's involvement in "winning the war." The information includes solving the manpower problem, concerns with drafting and equal wages, community…

aaff_newyorktimesmagazine_1943-01-24_p20-21.jpg
The New York Times published a spread in 1943 of the women in the varying uniforms that women took on in their roles during WWII.

aaff_youregoingtoemploywomen_1943_cover.jpg
In 1943, the War Department released a booklet to persuade its ranks of the importance of employing women in the military during the war. The booklet lists women's strengths and abilities that the department believed would bring the United States…

aaff_americanmagazine_1944-11_cover.jpg
Even before the end of WWII, American Magazine released an edition with a cover that explicitly acknowledged the most prominent post-war concern: women's jobs.
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