Search for tag: "jane tucker"

Jane Tucker: We Can Do It!

Jane Tucker describes changing perceptions of women's work in World War II.

From  Adina Langer 189 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: "Women did not wear pants."

Jane Tucker remembers the shock of wearing pants on the job at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation in Savannah during World War II.

From  Adina Langer 56 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: War Bonds

Jane Tucker discusses the value of war bonds during World War II.

From  Adina Langer 12 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Troop Trains

Jane Tucker describes her family's train trip to Savannah to obtain jobs at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation.

From  Adina Langer 6 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Ration Books

Jane Tucker discusses some of the items rationed during World War II.

From  Adina Langer 19 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Pearl Harbor

Jane Tucker remembers where she was when she heard the news of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

From  Adina Langer 5 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: College Tuition

Jane Tucker describes how she managed to pay for college.

From  Adina Langer 7 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: One Jewish Family

Jane Tucker discusses the commonplace anti-Semitism present in her hometown.

From  Adina Langer 6 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Switchboard Operator

Jane Tucker describes her mother's job as a switchboard or telephone operator in Lineville, labama, before World War II.

From  Adina Langer 3 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: $1.20 an Hour

Jane Tucker describes her jump in salary after getting a job at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation in Savannah during World War II.

From  Adina Langer 173 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Machinists Strike

Jane Tucker describes a weeklong period when the machinists at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation struck for more money.

From  Adina Langer 1 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: "She Volunteered."

Jane Tucker discusses her sister's work at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation.

From  Adina Langer 7 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Wartime Housing

"I didn't have running water 'till I was 16," says Jane Tucker of the duplex apartment she lived in after moving to Savannah to get a job at the Southeastern Shipbuilding…

From  Adina Langer 11 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Dating a Serviceman

"Do what you can for the serviceman," Jane Tucker says, recalling a common motto during World War II. In the clip Tucker describes a soldier who took her on several dates to USO dances.

From  Adina Langer 3 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Flash Burns

Jane Tucker describes one of the most painful injuries sustained by rod welders, the flash burn.

From  Adina Langer 236 plays 0  

Jane Tucker: Five and Dime

Jane Tucker describes her first job at a five and ten cent store in Lineville, Alabama.

From  Adina Langer 196 plays 0