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“Rosie the Riveter” posters showing signatures of women wartime factory workers are seen at the offices of the Rosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front National Historic Park in Richmond, California. Photo: AP

Real ‘Rosie the Riveter’, inspiration for iconic wartime poster, dies at 96

Obituaries

A woman identified by a scholar as the inspiration for Rosie the Riveter, the iconic female World War II factory worker, has died in Washington state.

The New York Times reports that Naomi Parker Fraley died Saturday in Longview. She was 96.

Multiple women have been identified over the years as possible models for Rosie, but a Seton Hall University professor in 2016 focused on Fraley as the true inspiration.

James J. Kimble published his findings in the journal Rhetoric & Public Affairs, saying a photo of Fraley at work, wearing a distinctive polka dot headscarf, was the basis for a widely seen poster of a woman flexing with the caption, “We can do it!”

Fraley was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, she went to work at the Naval Air Station in Alameda, among the first women to do war work there.

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