From 1917 to 1919, the Woman's Land Army of America brought more than 20,000 city and town women to rural America to take over farm work after men were called to war.
Most of these women had never before worked on a farm, but they were soon plowing fields, driving tractors, planting and harvesting. The Land Army's "farmerettes" were paid wages equal to male farm laborers and were protected by an eight-hour workday. For many, the farmerettes were shocking at first--wearing pants!--but farmers began to rely upon the women workers.
Inspired by the women of Great Britain, organized as the Land Lassies, the Woman’s Land Army of America was established by a consortium of women’s organizations--including gardening clubs, suffrage societies, women’s colleges, civic groups, and the YWCA.
The WLA provided a fascinating example of women mobilizing themselves and challenged conventional thinking about gender roles.
Like Rosie the Riveter a generation later, the Land Army farmerette became a wartime icon.
The following excerpt from Fruits of Victory: The Woman’s Land Army in the Great War chronicles the farmerettes of the California division of the Woman’s Land Army.
A brass band welcomed the first unit of the California Woman’s Land Army when it arrived in the town of Elsinore on the first of May, 1918. The whole community turned out to greet the fifteen women dressed in their stiff new uniforms. The Chamber of Commerce officials gave speeches of welcome, the Farm Bureau president thanked the “farmerettes” for coming, and the mayor gave them the keys to the city.
The Land Army recruits drove the fifty miles from the WLA headquarters offices in downtown Los Angeles to Elsinore in style: the mayor had dispatched a truck to chauffeur them. At the welcoming ceremonies, Mayor Burnham apologized for the lack of an official municipal key ring, and offered instead a rake, hoe, and shovel to the farmerettes, “emblematic of their toil for patriotic defense.” The grateful citizens of Elsinore gave the farmerettes three loud cheers.


Comments
I am so glad I read this article! I am ashamed to say I have never heard of the Farmerettes- and I wonder how many more have no clue about this piece of our history? Thank you for enlightening me that in all eras women have stepped up to do whatever it takes to help the country- not just the Rosie the Riveter decade.
Posted by Gracie T. on June 1,2009 | 08:25AM
At age 79, I certainly remember Rosie the Riveter in World War two, but I never heard about the Farmerettes in World War one.
I also asked my wife whether she had ever heard of the Farmerettes and what they did during WW one, and she never heard about them either. Thanks for enlighting us.
Posted by George Nazareth on June 10,2009 | 11:35AM
It does not amaze me that I too have never heard for this movement nor does it surprise me that it indeed existed. Hats off to us all - we do what needs to be done with very little fanfare in most cases because it would take too much time and time is generally not the ally.
Posted by Tommye Lynn on June 10,2009 | 01:10PM
My Mother in law, who recently passed away, worked as a Rosie the Riveter. What a wonderful time for the women of the war era, they set the standards and paved the path for many of today. Thank you for the article on the Farmerettes, a piece of history, I did not know about.
Posted by Barbara Metcalf on June 10,2009 | 02:40PM
Don't feel bad if you never heard of these hard-working women. It's been the nature of history to discount women's contribution to society, so until "Rosie" came along there wasn't much acknowledgement of women as patriots or movers and shakers. And, of course after the war the women in industry (and in the pilot's seat) were expected to step aside for returning men. My granddaughters don't have to be satisfied with being left out of history, thank goodness.
Posted by Jamie on June 10,2009 | 04:09PM
Thanks for the Farmerette article! Aren't women amazing!! I grew up during WWII and am so excited to see your honor the women who saw a need and jumped into getting the job done! I'm forwarding this to my son who lives near Lake Elsinore as I'm sure he isn't aware of this fascinating piece of history!
Posted by Barbara Aasheim on June 10,2009 | 05:14PM
As a student of history, I was familiar with the WLA. However, Ms. Weiss' article provided me with a lot of new and fascinating information.
Posted by Sue Story on June 13,2009 | 02:00PM