Not all men were qualified to serve in the military. Those exempt for reasons of health or age were still able to work in factories. Additionally many women also filled the many vacant positions in factories.
Men were conscripted into military sevice. Women were to work in factories.
Yes men and women worked in factories
Rosie the Riveter represented the women who went to work in the factories while the men were off fighting during World War II. The majority of the work was to keep the armed forces supplied during the war.
THE ROLE FOR WOMEN IS to WORK IN FACTORIES, SHIPYEARD, MAKING WORLD WAPONS AND SUPPLIES FOR THE U.S TROOPS, AND MORE. THEY MOSTLY HAD TO DO THE MEN JOBS WHILE ALL THE Men
They began working in factories and mills during world war two because all the men of working age were fighting in the war.
Women were sent to the factories and men were conscripted into military service.
women working in factories in ww2 did lots. the work in the factories because all the men were fighting and they needed somebody to make supplies of the men at war. the women made aircraft's, ammunition, weapons and over thing needed. it was essential for woman to work in the factories or the allied peoples victory would have lost.
Yes. Not just in the hospital, but in factories and offices, and especially in war industries.
The men fought or stayed home as their jobs r important the women worked in the factories
Yes, the men work in factories and the women stay at home with the kids
Because the men were fighting they needed people to work in the factories to produce and supply them.
Well, the women took men's places in factories and businesses when we entered the war. We entered the war December 8, 1941, after the attack on Pearl Harbor. We left the war when Japan surrendered in August 1945.