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(H)our History Lesson: Women’s Contributions to the Home Front in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, WWII Heritage City

Color poster with three white women, one in coveralls, one in a welder's helmet and one with a typewriter
The 1944 poster, “Soldiers without Guns,” includes a picture of a woman welder. Welding was one role women had in Pittsburgh.

Adolph Treidler, artist; Library of Congress.

About this Lesson

This lesson is part of a series teaching about the World War II home front, with Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania designated as an American World War II Heritage City. The lesson contains photographs, two newspaper articles, and an interview to contribute to learners’ understandings about the home front contributions of women in Pittsburgh.

Women worked and served in many ways in Pittsburgh during World War II. The lesson does not cover all roles but shares a variety through primary sources and photos for students to consider. The first two readings focus on women in industry, while the third shares about a woman in service. You may choose to divide the readings into two lessons to look at the types of work separately or use it to compare, in the same lesson, across the many roles of women in Pittsburgh.
Other lessons about women and World War II can be found on the theme page for Teaching with Historic Places.

Objectives:

  1. Explain why women entered Pittsburgh’s industry workforce, and the importance of this to home front efforts.

  1. Describe the experiences of women working on the home front in Pittsburgh, with details such as workplace safety, living conditions, types of jobs, challenges, and benefits.

  1. Compare historical perspectives on women in the workforce during World War II.

Materials for Students:

  1. Photos 1- 6 (can be displayed digitally)

  1. Readings 1, 2, 3 (three primary)

  1. Recommended: map of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to refer to throughout lessons

  1. Extension: Civics and History Connection

Getting Started: Essential Question

How did women in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, contribute to the home front efforts?

Reading to Connect

By the numbers:

  • “In such traditionally masculine institutions such as blast furnaces, steel works and rolling mills, where only 1 per cent of workers were women in 1939, they now represent 6 per cent. In aircraft and parts factories the percentage of women employees jumped from 1 per cent in 1939 to 39 per cent in 1943. And in the production of aircraft engines the increase was from 1 per cent in 1939 to 28 per cent in the summer of 1943.” - “Background of News: Women Wage-Earners" by Burt P. Garnett (November 4, 1943, p. 16 in The Pittsburgh Press)

  • By September 1943, more than 30,000 workers in U. S. Steel’s mills were women, approximately just under 9% of the workforce (340,000 U.S. Steel company workers)

Quotations to consider:

“I think they (men) resented us at first, but they knew that we were there to do a job until the men came back and they respected us. They just weren't ready for us. Like I said they didn't have bathrooms for us or make any accommodations.”

- Mary Jane Farrell Scherer, January 1993

“. . . the men would stand around and talk about you in groups or they would tell you, you weren't strong enough to do that job . . . The reason, I think the men resented us was the girls who had been there . . . had seniority and could be inspectors. And men resented this because that paid more than something else that they would do.”

-Leona Dobis Farmerie, August 1992

- Both quotations are sources from interviews in Pittsburgh, PA; Women in Steel Industry, Harrisburg, PA: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.

Black and white photo of African American woman in overalls, holding a hose in front of a truck
“Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Lillie Smith, working as a car washer in a garage, earns fifty-five cents per hour. She formerly did housework but likes this much better; she has one brother in the U.S. Army,” June 1943

Marjory Collins, Library of Congress

Student Activities

Questions for Reading 1 and Photos 1-4

  1. In the photos, what jobs are shown? Why were these positions important to the war effort?

  1. In Reading 1, why was Snyder’s study conducted?

  1. How does the reading describe why women working in industry was crucial to the home front efforts?

  1. Do you think information like from Snyder’s study, was influential in providing women jobs in industry in Pittsburgh? Why or why not?

  2. In the quotations to consider, both women speak about men resenting them for working at the steel mills. Why do the women think the men feel this way? What additional factors do you think may have caused resentment?

Questions for Reading 2

  1. What considerations were there for women’s safety?
  2. Why do you think the author refers to comfort and attractiveness with work clothes?
  3. What are some of the challenges women faced working in this field, as described in the reading?

Questions for Reading 3, Photos 5-6

  1. What was Martin’s work in Pittsburgh?

  1. How did pollution in Pittsburgh at the time impact the recruits?

  1. What made Martin’s service in Pittsburgh both, in her words, “worthwhile” for her and “devastating?”

Lesson Closing

  1. Using the photos and readings from the lesson, make a list of some of the many jobs that women held in Pittsburgh to support the home front efforts.
  2. Finally, answer the essential question with evidence: How did women in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, contribute to the home front efforts?

This lesson was written by Sarah Nestor Lane, an educator and consultant with the Cultural Resources Office of Interpretation and Education, funded by the National Council on Public History's cooperative agreement with the National Park Service.

Part of a series of articles titled Pittsburgh, PA, WWII Heritage City.

Last updated: February 2, 2024