Today I got to visit one the of the Bay Area’s newest and I
must say, best museums. It’s the Rosie the Riveter World War II Home
Front National Historical Park. The park is still a work in progress, but in 2012, a
temporary visitor center/museum opened with exhibits and short films.
The museum helps tell the story of the women and men who
worked building ships as well as worked in other war industries that kept our
forces overseas well supplied in the fight to preserve our freedom. They remind you at the museum that, in
part, the war was also won right in Richmond, California. It’s an amazing story of a town of
23,000 across the Bay that was a mix of industry and truck farms in 1941. It quickly mushroomed to 130,000 people
plus all those who came in to work from surrounding communities. Their contribution to the war effort
included 747 ships built in Richmond during World War II, some in just a few days.
It was an amazing feat and it happened all over the Bay Area and
throughout the country. Even my
own great grandmother was part of the effort. She worked assembling radios for the military back in
Buffalo.
After the visiting museum we went across the way to the
former Ford Assembly plants that ceased making private automobiles during the
war and switched to making tanks.
It’s now a nice restaurant. But the day wasn’t over. We drove to
the other side of the harbor (past lots full of newly delivered cars from
Japan). We were given a tour of
the SS Red Oak Victory,
one of the few remaining cargo ships built during the war at Richmond’s Kaiser
Shipyards. Our guide was a World
War II veteran who served on a similar victory ship. The final stop of the day was at the Rosie the Riveter
Memorial. It’s in a waterfront
park that was part of the shipyard.
The memorial is laid out along a walkway and short dock the length of
one of the keel’s of a victory ships built by the workers in Richmond.
One of the highlights of the day was getting to meet Betty
Reid Soskin. She is our nation’s
oldest national park ranger at 92 (she has held the job since she was 85). Recently she came to the America’s
attention when she was featured in news
reports about the federal government shutdown. Meeting pop celebrities is of no interest to me, meeting a
star like Ranger Soskin (pictured below) was both an honor and
inspirational.
I’ll be going back, and anyone who visits is going to be
taken to up to Richmond, this national park is as important for Bay Area
visitors to see as Muir Woods or Point Reyes.
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