|
Jane Tucker describes changing perceptions of women's work in World War II.
|
|
Jane Tucker remembers the shock of wearing pants on the job at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation in Savannah during World War II.
|
|
Jane Tucker discusses the value of war bonds during World War II.
|
|
Jane Tucker describes her family's train trip to Savannah to obtain jobs at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation.
|
|
Jane Tucker discusses some of the items rationed during World War II.
|
|
Jane Tucker describes how she managed to pay for college.
|
|
Jane Tucker remembers where she was when she heard the news of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
|
|
Jane Tucker describes her mother's job as a switchboard or telephone operator in Lineville, labama, before World War II.
|
|
Jane Tucker describes a weeklong period when the machinists at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation struck for more money.
|
|
Jane Tucker discusses the commonplace anti-Semitism present in her hometown.
|
|
Jane Tucker describes her jump in salary after getting a job at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation in Savannah during World War II.
|
|
Jane Tucker discusses her sister's work at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corporation.
|
|
"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…
|
|
"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.
|
|
Jane Tucker describes one of the most painful injuries sustained by rod welders, the flash burn.
|
|
Jane Tucker describes her first job at a five and ten cent store in Lineville, Alabama.
|