Close
Boeing Images
Cart (0)
Login / Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Linked assets
Celebrating our History of Diversity
Celebrating our History of Diversity
Conceptually similar
35-11-2lb.tif
Employees Working Together on a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress Assembly
Two Female Employees Riveting
Four Women Riveting a B-17 Tail
North American Aviation Female Employee Drilling on Airplane Part
William Edward Boeing - American Aviation Pioneer
Dora Miles and Dorothy Johnson
Two "Rosies" Working Together
Woman Employee Working on a C-47 Airplane
Boeing Employees Bucks Rivets on a B-17 Flying Fortress
Woman Working at Douglas
Woman Performing B-25 Mitchell Engine Repair
Building the C-97 Stratofreighter
The 5,000th B-17 Flying Fortress "5 Grand"
Boeing ACH-47A Chinook Illustration
Boeing ACH-47A Chinook
Boeing 702X Satellite in Space
Man and Woman Bucking Rivets (Riveting)
Rosies atop an Douglas Aircraft
"Five Grand" B-17 Launching
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Annabella Morgan portrait
Annabella Morgan rode the train from New Orleans to Seattle shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941—she was headed to the Boeing plant on Marginal Way for a new job and a good paycheck. The 20-year-old had a good supply of food and “a large bottle of sarsaparilla” to see her through the five-day train ride across the country. Once in Seattle, Morgan wasted no time getting hired by Boeing as a “rivet bucker” for B-17s, a job that had her holding a flat bar on one side of the fuselage to catch the rivets. Morgan says, “It didn’t take me long to learn!” and adds that she was the best bucker in the plant, which placed her in high demand with the riveters. Soon she was promoted to riveter, with a pay increase from 99 cents to $1.29 an hour. She remembers the factory shutting down when the air raid sirens blew. But most of all, this Rosie with an intrepid spirit remembers that “people clapped and cheered” on August 15, 1945, when President Harry Truman was heard over the loudspeaker announcing that the war was over. Her job at Boeing ended shortly after that.
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Unique identifier
BI474599
Boeing ID
020-Morgan-Photo.tif
Type
Image
Size
3600px × 4168px 57MB
License type
RM
Keywords
Boeing
diversity
GEDI (global, equity, diversity, & inclusion)
attack
Black ethnicity
factories
food
fuselages
holding
large
long
one
portraits
riveting
rivets
Rosie the Riveter
TIME
vintage / retro
women
Restrictions