This section contains 1,241 words (approx. 5 pages at 300 words per page) |
Born c. 1922
Factory worker
"The first work I had after the Depression was at a shell-loading plant in Viola, Kentucky. My mother, my sister, and myself worked there."
Prior to World War II (1939–45), women usually only worked outside of the home following the completion of their education until marriage. However, as twelve million men joined the military in the early 1940s, critical industrial jobs faced a worker shortage. Peggy Terry was one of nineteen million women who found work on the home front during the war years. Not only did the work vastly improve women's personal financial condition, but it opened the doors much wider for the acceptance of women in the workplace in America.
An Early Life of Need
Peggy Terry was born around 1922 to a family that lived in poverty for most of her early years. Her mother was born in Kentucky...
This section contains 1,241 words (approx. 5 pages at 300 words per page) |