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Who are the Women in National Parks?

麻豆传媒 History Research Looks at Women and Commemoration in the North American West, Pacific

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Black woman in uniform
Betty Reid Soskin brought the stories of racial discrimination and segregation into the interpretation at the Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front, a National Historical Park site that commemorates the work of women who took up industrial labor for the war production effort. (Luther Bailey/National Park Service)

About this Blog

See related news feature article on this 麻豆传媒 project, documenting women in National Parks, here

This blog is condensed from an article written by by Ellen Hartigan-O'Connor, Lisa G. Materson and Charlotte Hansen Terry, 麻豆传媒 Department of History. The full article, complete with footnotes, is

Reflecting on her own experiences as a civilian working for the U.S. Air Force during World War II, wrote in her memoir, 鈥淚 have such a love-hate relationship with Rosie!鈥

In the California Bay Area, activist Betty Reid Soskin brought the stories of racial discrimination and segregation into the interpretation at the Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front, a National Historical Park site that commemorates the work of women who took up industrial labor for the war production effort. The famous image of a white working woman 鈥 a Rosie 鈥 flexing her bicep, circulates on magnets and potholders sold at the park and elsewhere, reinforcing a partial truth. Soskin鈥檚 interpretive work insists on commemorating the full truth, of expanded work opportunities contrasted with enduring racial hierarchy, both born of the region鈥檚 imperial legacies.

Commemoration always includes a struggle over whose interpretations and politics will prevail. Vigorous debate accompanied the 2020 centennial celebration of the 19th Amendment, which created a vast electorate of new voters and removed sex as a bar to voting, but left in place barriers set by race, class and colonial status. Just four years after the ratification of the 19th Amendment, the United States passed the Immigration Act of 1924 that deemed Asian people 鈥渁liens ineligible for citizenship,鈥 indicating ways that race and imperialism underlay 鈥渨omen鈥檚 suffrage.鈥 The double edge of the amendment was sharpened by the legacy of U.S. colonialism on the North American continent and overseas with implications for Soskin, 鈥淩osies,鈥 and the Asian-American women forcibly removed from the California Bay Area during World War II.

National Parks first created in the West

National Parks  鈥 first created in the U.S. West and later expanded further into the Pacific World 鈥 were part of the double edge of U.S. empire, and they offer valuable contemporary sites from which to recover women鈥檚 lives in the past by looking at the women who created them, worked in them, and lived in and around them. In fact, diverse women have used park sites for their own political and historical purposes. Indigenous women have used parks that historically erased the history of their ancestors鈥 dispossession to call attention to it and to showcase their nations鈥 cultures.

White women, deploying their own political power, led numerous efforts to preserve 鈥渇rom injury or spoliation鈥 these same landscapes that were functioning homelands to Indigenous women and their families. To place women鈥檚 lives in time and physical space in the contemporary U.S. West and Pacific expands interpretation of public monuments and memories to encompass a deep history of conquest, empire-building, and unequal citizenship that National Parks themselves facilitated and have often erased. In women鈥檚 family connections, working lives, and activism for rights and representation, we understand the richness of a story just beginning to be commemorated.

Colonial intimacies and kinship

Nineteenth-century histories of American men who moved West often reported that they 鈥渄ied single鈥 when in fact they had Mexican or Native wives and large extended families. This dominant narrative is still reflected in many National Parks, which commemorate white men鈥檚 lives as solo adventurers, while erasing the multi-racial, multi-cultural families that typified the area. Such stories also conceal the basis of white men鈥檚 political and economic power in the region, which rested on these same family connections. In fact, women played key roles in the 鈥渋ntimacies鈥 of U.S. conquest.

Intimacies shaped economic mobility in the West and the Pacific. Kinship networks were the basis of the global fur trade from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries. Strategic marriages between each wave of colonizers and the families already occupying the land were essential to the political and economic goals of first the Spanish and then the United States. Kinship histories are therefore essential to understanding a place such as the Point Loma Lighthouse in San Diego. In 1775, Juan Bautista de Anza recruited Mexican families to create a Spanish stronghold in what is now California on a journey that included widow
. She settled and married in San Diego, and her children rose to prominence in Spanish colonial society. A century later, , born to a prominent Californio family, married Robert Israel, an Anglo veteran of the U.S.-Mexican War who moved into the territory surrendered by Mexico to the United States. In the new U.S. state of California, Israel was absorbed into the Alip谩s family, who helped establish the couple as ranchers and later as partners in keeping the Point Loma Lighthouse guiding trading ships into San Diego Bay.

Wide vista of mountains and sky
Panorama of the Big Hole Battlefield in Montana, part of the Nez Perce National Historic Park, famed for a battle between the Indians and the U.S. Army during one of the last of the Indian Wars in the US. (