Before Rosie the Riveter, Farmerettes Went to Work
During World War I, the Woman’s Land Army of America mobilized women into action, sustaining American farms and building national pride
- By Elaine F. Weiss
- Smithsonian.com, May 29, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Purnell, who would make her career as a writer and editor of an influential poetry journal, was getting a crash course in the less romantic aspects of farmerette life. As word of their good work spread, more northern and southern California farmers asked for WLA units to be based near their orchards and ranches. The newspapers charted the farmerettes’ summons into the golden groves with headlines like: “Hundreds Go Into Fields at Once” and “Women to Till Thousands of Southern California’s Acres.” Sunset magazine carried an editorial in its July issue titled “The Woman’s Land Army is Winning” illustrated by a photo of farmerettes in uniform posing with hoes slung over their shoulders like guns.
The Los Angeles Times sent one of its star reporters, Alma Whitaker, to spend a day working with a Land Army unit, and she came away rather dazzled. Describing one farmerette as “tall and husky and wields a spade like a young Amazon her sword” and another as possessing “a pair of shoulders and muscular arms like a bantam lightweight” Whitaker was taken with the farmerettes’ serious attitude:
“This woman’s land army, composed of able-bodied young women, selected just as the men are selected by the army, for their physical capacity, their good characters, their general deportment, and trained and disciplined even rather more strictly than the men... are acquitting themselves with amazing efficiency.”
Whitaker took note of the Land Army uniform, which became a hot topic of conversation in that summer: “The official uniform has called forth criticism,” she reported. “Farm laborers don’t wear uniforms. But those uniforms are proven to be an essential and desirable asset, for not only are they intensely practical, but they have exactly the same effect on girls as they do on the men—one lives up to a uniform.”
As in the military, the Land Army uniform also served as a great social equalizer and provided a powerful sense of social cohesion. “The cotton uniform,” wrote one California farmerette, “soon muddy and fruit stained, in which some girls looked picturesque, but no one overwhelmingly beautiful, leveled all distinction except those of personality, manners and speech.”
As the season progressed, Idella Purnell was promoted to the captaincy of her own squad of Land Army workers. But amid the grape vines of Lodi, captain Purnell encountered what every American feared in this time of war: the snake in the garden, the saboteur. At first Purnell assumed the woman was simply that lesser form of wartime menace, the slacker, not willing to do her share, but Purnell’s suspicions hardened when her lazy farmerette resorted to shoddy picking: “She took to sabotage,” Purnell explained. “Green grapes, rotten grapes—anything and everything went into her boxes, tossed there by a hand careless of the precious bloom—and they all were only half full.
Purnell tried to handle the situation herself:
I remonstrated—mildly at first. I showed her again…At noon I made a special talk to the girls for her benefit, in which I pointed out that we were soldiers just as much as the ones ‘over there,’ that we too had a chance to make good—or to be classified as slackers and cowards. I made it clear that a slacker was a person who tried to palm off poor boxes of grapes for good ones. One bad bunch ruins a whole box, and that is the same as helping shoot cannonballs at our boys.
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Comments (13)
My grandmother was also part of the Women's Land Army of America and I have great pictures of her and her fellow farmerettes. They don't look so very different than back to the landers from the 60s and 70s dressed in overalls and playing guitars and singing together - but their purpose was certainly a different one.
Posted by Deb Thomas on December 27,2011 | 05:47 PM
My grandmother was a farmerette! I have this crazy picture of her and her farmerette friends in a barn, in their matching coveralls and caps, posing with cigarettes. When I saw the picture in a stack she was sorting, I asked her about it, and she said, during WWI, she worked on a farm with other girls, to help with the war effort. For fun, they posed together, all holding cigarettes (she insisted they were just pretending). She said they were "Farmerettes." I had no idea she was part of a larger mission until I posted the picture on Facebook. A friend was so interested in the picture, he googled "farmerettes" (and WWI, probably) and found this article for me! I've ordered the book from the library -- can't wait!
Posted by Clare on May 10,2011 | 01:03 PM
I'd like to join the chorus and also state I'd never heard of these women before now & I also would like to see more stories like this.
With the right story, any movie about these women will be a blockbuster.
My aunts were "Rosies" during WWII (my mom was too young) and I'm glad we know about their contribution during WWII.
However, it's a shame so few people have ever heard about these wonderful 'Famerettes' of WWI. These women volunteered for hot, dusty, back-breaking work and did a great job. Good for them! I hope California, at least, has some sort of memorial to these women.
Posted by Christy on June 4,2010 | 09:48 PM
I only heard of the Women's Land Army when I went to London two years ago and learned of the Women's Land Army of WW2 which basically saved the UK from starvation in the 1940's. I never knew such a thing existed before. When one elderly English woman told me that the Americans had a Land Army, too, I was stunned. Never had I ever heard of women's contribution to the war effort. So, I came back stateside and did my own research. I interviewed women who were either in the Land Army in England, or who had grandmothers and mothers in the Land Army in the US during WW1. What stories! They had to grow all the food, but were forbidden to eat the very things they grew (and in the field, while harvesting, nibbling on leaves of the harvest was considered theft and thereby punishable. Plus, they got paid half of what men working on the same farm were paid - and out of that pay, they had to fork over more than half of it to the host family with whom they lived while they worked on their farms!) This WW1 Women's Land Army story is finally told, at long last. They blistered and bled to keep a nation from starving - so where is the Hollywood blockbuster "Saving the USA?"
Posted by helen demetria on April 21,2010 | 02:07 PM
I am really glad I read this article. I had no idea that we had ladies doing this during WW1 no one has ever made mention of them. I have heard much about Rose the Rivetor but these ladies deserve to have their names and deeds honored just the same. Thank You ladies.
Posted by Dori on March 15,2010 | 06:38 PM
As a history major and recent student in a women's study class I was intrigued by the story of the WWI era Farmerretts. The accomplishments and patriotism of women during America's war has rarely registered on our society's radar. I lay this largely at the feet of historians.
Women have served and died for our country since it's earliest day's and few have received the recognition which they deserve. I look forward to reading future Smithsonian articles on this topic.
Posted by Carol Traxler on December 17,2009 | 08:27 PM
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 | 05:00 PM
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 | 08:14 PM
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 | 07:09 PM
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 | 05:40 PM
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 | 04:10 PM
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 | 02:35 PM
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 | 11:25 AM