preview

Women's Role In World War II

Decent Essays

In World War II women never had it easy like men, they had to work harder in order to get the same respect that men had. In the 19th century women's roles were being criticized, and stereotyped. Women had more of a responsibility than men, because they were only seen as housewives, and had to prove everyone in their society wrong. From World War I to World War II , it was very tough for the women, because men felt like females didn't deserve to be in the same environment as them. Females served in segregated units, and had to deal with sexual harassment. Women would have to prove themselves by going on strikes to get people's attention for them to receive equal rights, for example, being able to vote. Females have faced discrimination and …show more content…

The first women to take factory jobs were primarily minority and lower-class women already in the workforce, who left lower-paying, traditionally female jobs to take higher-paying factory jobs.Women were an important part of the massive logistical effort required to support armies of millions of soldiers on multiple fronts using complex machinery. There were more than 6.5 million women working in the defense industry by 1944, and many more who worked in government offices doing clerical or administrative tasks (“Women’s Role: How Important was the Role of Women in World War II?”). Women started with basic jobs, like typists, clerks, and filers. Women donated blood, grew victory gardens, collected scrap metal, and generally helped to lift the nation’s morale (“Women’s roles and rights in the United States”). More than 2,700 Liberty Ships, primarily cargo or troop-carrying ships, were manufactured, many by the 1,000 African American women employed at the Kaiser shipyard in Richmond, Virginia (“Women’s Role: How Important was the Role of Women in World War II?”). Approximately one million African-American men and women served in the armed services, half of them overseas. They made up almost half of the transportation corps and truck companies and played a large role in helping to rebuild Europe. There were twenty-two black combat units that fought, among other places, at the Battle of the Bulge and in six European countries (“African Americans in the Military”) The women that did serve in World War II worked either at home or overseas as nurses or they made their own organizations. Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps held a wide variety of jobs previously filled by men, thereby freeing up those men for combat positions so that, in theory, the war could end sooner. The Women Airforce Service Pilots volunteered to fly military planes for non-combat purposes between 1942

Get Access