Menu
![]() As never before, women were pulled by the gravity of a total war that stretched from Singapore to Stalingrad. ![]() “War is no longer confined to trenches and battlefields,” she said. Days after the attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into the Second World War, President Franklin Roosevelt’s wartime confidante, Anna Rosenberg, exhorted American women to “keep things going, no matter what happens… to take the men’s places in the shops and factories… We must carry on when those we hold dearest are fighting.” Like her commander-in-chief, Rosenberg knew WWII would be different from all others. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |