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#1
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I thought of today and what it means and came across this article.
Here's a bit from the Seattle Times of May 30, 2005, from Nancy Bartley, staff reporter: Florence Abrahamson was only 15 when she went to war for the first time. She was a married mother of three, with a son in the Navy, when duty called again more than 20 years later. Now 102, Abrahamson is being honored by legislators, officials in her hometown of Aberdeen, and by Seattle's Museum of Flight as one of a number of "Rosie the Riveters" who worked on Boeing and de Havilland airplane assembly lines during wartime. Abrahamson, however, is among the rarest of them all: She is the Northwest's last surviving "Rosie" from two world wars - and perhaps the only one anywhere, Museum of Flight officials believe. An upcoming trip to Seattle for the recognition ceremony and a tour of Boeing, all part of the museum's week of Memorial Day events, have significance for Abrahamson: For the first time, she will actually see a finished version of the B-17 bomber she worked on during World War II. For the Aberdeen woman, whose blue eyes loom large behind her spectacles, it's all much ado about what, to her, was "just duty" and "what anyone would have done." "Here is a gal who worked in two world wars," said Polson Museum Director John Larson. The rarity of that "just blew us away." The museum selected Abrahamson as this year's "Pioneer of the Year" for her contributions to the community and for her long history in the Grays Harbor area. Abrahamson's work life began shortly after her father died, which left her mother a widow with five children to support. Abrahamson and her brother were the two eldest. In 1917, at the beginning of America's entrance into "The Great War," the Grays Harbor Commercial Co. in Cosmopolis, one of the first sawmills in the harbor and located where the Weyerhaeuser pulp mill is now, needed help manufacturing de Havilland warplanes. While Abrahamson's brother was readily accepted, the company was torn over whether to hire women. When Abrahamson was hired in 1918, she dressed in overalls - daring attire at a time when proper ladies wore long skirts - and walked to work at the factory every morning from the family home less than a mile away. She spent her days making spruce lath for the de Havilland DH-4 biplane, the only U.S.-built warplane to see World War I combat. Her life was regulated by the steam plant's whistle, which signaled the start of work, lunch and end of the day. World War I was different from the war that followed, she said. Although Grays Harbor citizens - including her husband-to-be, Hugo Abrahamson - served in the military, the fighting in Europe seemed more remote than that of World War II. After the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, Aberdeen citizens shaded their windows at night. The Boeing Aberdeen factory was camouflaged with trees on the roof. Japanese submarines lurked off the coast. And American warplanes patrolled the harbor. By then, Florence and Hugo were married and living in house they built in 1925. He was working at a mill, and she was employed at a small grocery when the new war effort called. She tied a red bandana over her hair, donned a pair of slacks and became a riveter, fastening the aluminum skin onto B-17s. But as she placed rivet after rivet, she always wondered what the final plane looked like, with all those carefully laid rivets stitching the aluminum together as precisely as if she had been cross-stitching a sampler. She was so fast that co-workers asked her if she was "trying to win the war all by yourself." And she proved herself so capable - despite being left-handed in an occupation set up to accommodate only the right-handed - that she became an inspector, checking the work of others. Later, she would help make components for more than 5,000 B-29s. Now, Abrahamson's day of discovery is closing in. "The important title being bestowed on you must fill your heart with fond memories and a warm sense of pride for your enormous wartime contributions," state Rep. Gigi Talcott, R-Tacoma, wrote to her. Her efforts are "appreciated by every American who has experienced liberty and freedom." Thursday, Abrahamson will join a number of other Rosie the Riveters as guests of the Museum of Flight. Sporting her Boeing security badge from World War II, she will be accompanied by four of her six grandchildren for a tour of Boeing and the museum's B-17G "Fuddy Duddy." Abrahamson's husband died in 1974 and the last of her three children in 2004, but she is adored by her surviving grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. All have heard her colorful stories: Her assembly-line days; the ordeal of taking a driver's test for the first time at 57, after her son taught her to drive in a Pontiac so large she nicknamed it "the beast." After failing once, she passed the test on her second try but slammed the cranky license examiner against the dash when she braked too hard. "I wake up at night thinking about it even after all these years," she said. And no one will forget her arrest - sometime past the age of 60 - for a fishing violation. "I was caught fishing in a fish hatchery," she admitted sheepishly. Fishermen friends kept advising her to go farther up the Satsop River. "How was I to know it was part of the hatchery?" Afterward, when she showed up at church, the congregation "sang the prisoner's song" when she walked in, she recalled. And there was a fund drive at some stores to help her pay her fine. The judge ultimately dismissed the charge as long as she promised to "fish somewhere else." She figured that was good advice and went to Westport, Grays Harbor County, where she then won a 1964 fishing derby with a 48-pound salmon. She smiles in satisfaction at the thought. Just like she does when she thinks of those days during the war when she could fasten a rivet quick as anything. Nancy Bartley: 206-464-8522 or [email address had been here] in a letter to Florence Abrahamson Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company -- 'X-No-Archive: yes' That's the story |
#2
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![]() "Kim" wrote in message news ![]() I thought of today and what it means and came across this article. I'm sure the fine lady was an excellend riveter, but the copyrighted article (you had permission to reproduce it?) has NOTHING to do with Memorial Day, when we honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. |
#3
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![]() K=D8HB wrote: "Kim" wrote in message news ![]() I thought of today and what it means and came across this article. I'm sure the fine lady was an excellend riveter, but the copyrighted arti= cle (you had permission to reproduce it?) has NOTHING to do with Memorial= Day, when we honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. (sigh) Steve, K4YZ |
#4
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KØHB wrote:
"Kim" wrote in message news ![]() I thought of today and what it means and came across this article. I'm sure the fine lady was an excellend riveter, but the copyrighted article (you had permission to reproduce it?) has NOTHING to do with Memorial Day, when we honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. As Charlie Brown would say, 'good grief!!" Don't you have something to do today Hans? |
#5
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![]() K4YZ wrote: K=D8HB wrote: "Kim" wrote in message news ![]() I thought of today and what it means and came across this article. I'm sure the fine lady was an excellend riveter, but the copyrighted ar= ticle (you had permission to reproduce it?) has NOTHING to do with Memori= al Day, when we honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. (sigh) =20 Steve, K4YZ Where's Jimmy "the Riveter" on this one? |
#6
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No, Hans, I did not have permission to reproduce it said sarcastically. I
believe I've seen many, many times, articles from newspapers and websites quoted on the web. Wrong? Don't know. And, I beg to differ with you. For me, it had everything to do with Memorial Day. Kim W5TIT "KØHB" wrote in message ink.net... "Kim" wrote in message news ![]() I thought of today and what it means and came across this article. I'm sure the fine lady was an excellend riveter, but the copyrighted article (you had permission to reproduce it?) has NOTHING to do with Memorial Day, when we honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. |
#7
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For me, Memorial Day is more than honoring those who have died. Death comes
naturally for a soldier (I've heard that somewhere and it's something that really made an impression upon me). But, everyone who ever had anything to do with creating war, going to support it's efforts, staying home to support it's efforts (as in the case of the article from the Seattle Times), all kinds of heroes: sung and unsung, they all deserve our moment of pause and recognition--MORE than on days like today. But, days like today give us all a collective moment or two to recognize the magnitude of sacrifice that those people made--whether on the shores of war or in the cities of our nation to keep her engines moving and take care of our soldiers and their families and, if you'll think about it, to give those soldiers something to come home to, even. 'Nuff said... Kim W5TIT PS--Who's "Jimmy" the riveter (or was that a colloquialism for a "man" riveter? "bb" wrote in message oups.com... K4YZ wrote: KØHB wrote: "Kim" wrote in message news ![]() I thought of today and what it means and came across this article. I'm sure the fine lady was an excellend riveter, but the copyrighted article (you had permission to reproduce it?) has NOTHING to do with Memorial Day, when we honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. (sigh) Steve, K4YZ Where's Jimmy "the Riveter" on this one? |
#8
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![]() "Kim" wrote in message .. . For me, Memorial Day is more than honoring those who have died. Death comes naturally for a soldier (I've heard that somewhere and it's something that really made an impression upon me). But, everyone who ever had anything to do with creating war, going to support it's efforts, staying home to support it's efforts (as in the case of the article from the Seattle Times), all kinds of heroes: sung and unsung, they all deserve our moment of pause and recognition--MORE than on days like today. But, days like today give us all a collective moment or two to recognize the magnitude of sacrifice that those people made--whether on the shores of war or in the cities of our nation to keep her engines moving and take care of our soldiers and their families and, if you'll think about it, to give those soldiers something to come home to, even. 'Nuff said... Kim W5TIT And very nicely said. It reflects how I feel too. Dee D. Flint, N8UZE |
#9
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![]() Kim wrote: For me, Memorial Day is more than honoring those who have died. Death comes naturally for a soldier ... I should hope not. I think that death comes hard for most, soldier or not. |
#10
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![]() "KØHB" wrote in message ink.net... "Kim" wrote in message news ![]() I thought of today and what it means and came across this article. I'm sure the fine lady was an excellend riveter, but the copyrighted article (you had permission to reproduce it?) has NOTHING to do with Memorial Day, when we honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice. That is typical W5TWIT, totally bassackwards thought pattern. Dan/W4NTI |
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