From the April 23, 2015, USA Today "Model for Norman Rockwell's Rosie the Riveter painting dies" by Melanie Eversley.
Mary Doyle Keefe, 92, the overall clad, sandwich eating gal with a rivet gun on her lap featured in the May 1943 Saturday Evening Post cover, is no longer doing her thing for the war effort.
She grew up in Vermont and was a friend of Rockwell who posed twice for the painting because she was wearing a white blouse in the first effort which was deemed inappropriate for the subject.
This was not the same woman as the one who was shown flexing her muscles in the poster that was so often seen back then and even today.
--GreGen
My Cooter's History Blog has become about 80% World War II anyway, so I figured to start a blog specific to it, especially since we're commemorating its 70th anniversary and we are quickly losing this "Greatest Generation." The quote is taken from Pearl Harbor survivor Frank Curre, who was on the USS Tennessee that day. He died Dec. 7, 2011, seventy years to the day. His photo is below at right.
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