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OCN

OCN

Volunteers reporting on community issues in Monument, Palmer Lake, and the surrounding Tri-Lakes area

OCN > 2406 > Palmer Lake Historical Society, May 18 – Colorado’s Rosie the Riveter

Palmer Lake Historical Society, May 18 – Colorado’s Rosie the Riveter

June 1, 2024

By Marlene Brown

Above: Gail Beaton Photo by Marlene Brown.

The Palmer Lake Historical Society (PLHS) welcomed Gail Beaton, humanities and historical author who portrayed in Chautauqua-style Gail Murphy: Colorado’s Rosie the Riveter May 16 at the Palmer Lake Town Hall. Beaton had the audience riveted to their seats during her lively performance of a young woman working in factories during World War II. Supporting the war effort and their families, women worked in factories making bullets, guns, and other ammunition.

“Rosie the Riveter” was the name that was given to the thousands of women working the factories as welders, airplane builders, and mechanics. Many women had never worked outside the home, but with a lot of the men away to war the government asked up to 6 million women to fill the jobs that needed to be done.

Beaton’s book Colorado Women in World War II interweaves nearly 80 oral histories—including interviews, historical studies, newspaper accounts, and organizational records—and historical photographs (many of the interviewees themselves) to shed light on women’s participation in the war, exploring the dangers and triumphs they felt, the nature of their work, and the lasting ways in which the war influenced their lives.

Beaton offers a new perspective on World War II—views from field hospitals, small steel companies, ammunition plants, college classrooms, and sugar beet fields—giving a rare look at how the war profoundly transformed the women of this state and will be a compelling new resource for readers, scholars, and students interested in Colorado history and women’s roles in World War II. See Beaton’s website for more information on this book and her other historical books regarding women in Colorado: www.gailbeaton.com.

**********

On June 6 at 7-8:30 p.m. at the Palmer Lake Town Hall, the PLHS will host a book launch on its newest publication: The U.S. Forest Service Monument Nursery, 1907-1965 by author Dan Edwards. He will give an illustrative talk about the history of the Monument Nursery and the background and the story about why the book was written.

PLHS meetings are usually on the third Thursday of the month at Palmer Lake Town Hall, 42 Valley Crescent, 7-8 p.m. (doors open at 6:30 p.m.). For more information about future presentations and membership, go to www.palmerdividehistory.org.

Marlene Brown can be reached at marlenebrown@ocn.me.

Other PLHS columns

  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, Jan. 15 – 2026 board installed at annual meeting (2/4/2026)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, Oct. 16 – Ancient days of Garden of the Gods explored (10/30/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, Sept. 18 – Pioneers Museum: past and present (10/2/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, July 19 – The power of print (7/31/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, June 15 – Father’s Day Ice Cream Social (7/3/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, May 15 – Author recounts life of Nikola Tesla (6/7/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, April 17 – Women of the Colorado gold rush era (5/3/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, April 21 – General Palmer’s life explored (4/5/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, Jan. 16 – 2024 events recalled (2/1/2025)
  • Palmer Lake Historical Society, Dec. 19 – Palmer Lake holds 91st annual Yule Log Hunt (1/4/2025)
<- June Library Events – Summer Reading Program now open to all ages
-> On the Trail (in memory of Tim Watkins) –  Palmer Lake bridge dedication ceremony

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