Our Stories are Our Purpose Our Stories are Our Purpose

Our Stories are Our Purpose

Find memory care assisted living for your loved one
Search by City, State or Zip Code
Find a community

Hospice Patient Recreates Rosie the Riveter Poster

There is no doubt that World War II was life-altering for many around the world, but it was also a time when Americans from all walks of life worked together to defend freedom. One initiative that made a pivotal impact on the war effort was the inclusion of women in the workplace. The poster child for women at work during wartime was Rosie the Riveter, a cultural icon that remains widely known to this day.

Silverado Hospice is honored to serve one of these woman. Hospice patient Louise Taylor joined the war effort in 1943 as a riveter in a Goodyear factory, where she helped make planes for aircraft carriers.

In fact, joining the war effort was a point of pride for her family. Louise and her twin sister both worked at the factory, her cousin served as a pilot and her husband fought in the famed Battle of Iwo Jima.

Silverado Hospice arranged a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for this family to get together to revisit a pivotal moment in the American history that is their heritage — recreating an iconic image known the world over.