Knitting~Crochet~Spinning~Color Theory~Talking with friends~Meeting up with knitters in my area~Listening to great music while knitting~felting~the beauty of sprang, heddle weaving, cardweaving and the like~Amigurumi~Knitting and Crochet in High Fashion~Single Crochet ScarfCrocheted quick necklace made of just a chain and knots.Jillian's Diamond ScarfBetsey's Xmas StockingREAD ON FOR SOME KNITTING HISTORY Knitting for Victory -- World War I During World War I Americans of all ages were asked by the United States government to knit wool socks, sweaters, and other garments to warm American soldiers at home and abroad. Most of this knitting was produced by volunteers working under the auspices of the American Red Cross. During the course of the war more than 6,000 Seattle-area knitters as well as knitters from other parts of the state produced hundreds of thousands of knitted items for the war effort. The United States declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917. Germany surrendered and the war was over on November 11, 1918.Wristlets, Mufflers, Sweaters, SocksIn the summer of 1917 the American Red Cross put out an urgent call for knitted goods and hospital supplies to help fight the war. Their immediate need was for one and a half million each of knitted wristlets, mufflers, sweaters, and pairs of socks. The need for the socks was paramount: The trench warfare conditions under which the war was fought meant that soldiers spent weeks or months entrenched in wet and in winter freezing conditions.For American soldiers in the trenches or on the march in France, warm socks made all the difference. The boots these soldiers wore (the 1917 Trench Boot) were made of heavy retanned cowhide with thick soles. Although in theory water-repellant, the boots ripped out at the seams fairly quickly. They had iron heels and five rows of hobnails (to prevent slipping) hammered into the soles. These hobnails conducted the cold from the frozen ground directly to the soldiers’ feet.An improved version (1918) called the Pershing Boot added an extra sole and thus extra warmth, but a soldier could not bend his foot in the rigid boot and his feet remained cold, sore, and often wet. These boots were not insulated in any way, and soldiers took to wearing two pairs of thick wool sock. This required them to wear boots two sizes larger than their regular size. Allowing for wear and tear and the prudent practice of changing socks often in order to avoid contracting trench foot (a fungus), the need for a continuous supply of warm wool socks was endless.Knit For Sammie“Knit for Sammie!†became the rallying cry of American Red Cross knitters. American soldiers were called Sammies, short for Uncle Sam, or doughboys. The term doughboy dates to the Civil War, and refers to the large brass buttons on the coats of Union infantrymen. The buttons resembled boiled dumplings called doughboys.Sammie needed wool helmets and vests, chest covers and fingerless mitts to allow trigger access. Knitters also produced so-called stump socks to cover amputated limbs. The Red Cross issued patterns and yarn, collected finished goods, and shipped them to Europe.Knit One, Purl TwoThe quality of the finished products varied widely according to the knitter’s skill level but even garments with a few dropped stitches kept soldiers warm. Most women and many men already knew how to knit when the war began. Those who didn’t quickly learned. Some ace war-effort knitters specialized in reworking others’ shoddy work before the garments were turned over to the Red Cross.Military commanders were required by the War Council to account for the donated Red Cross garments “as though they were government property regularly supplied by the Quartermaster Corps … This action on the part of the War Department will assure thousands of American women who have knitted sweaters and other articles for soldiers for winter use that the articles they have made will receive the same careful attention as clothing or any other article furnished by the government†(The Seattle Times, March 24, 1917)Everybody Knitting EverywhereIn Washington state, as elsewhere in the country, knitters worked both at home and in social groups. Any church, any women’s group, any auxiliary, any school, any neighborhood and many workplaces spent 1917-1918 together knitting for the Red Cross war relief effort. Knitting was acceptable at work, at school, at home, on public transportation, at social events, in theaters, and even in church. Some daring knitters even took up a complicated method suggested by the popular home magazine The Delineator: knitting two socks at once, one inside of the other.Non-knitters were urged to purchase yarn for those who knit. “One of the funds at the Seattle Red Cross headquarters which has been slowly but steadily growing is the Old Ladies’ Knitting Fund. This was first established because there were many dear little old ladies who were anxious to knit for the Red Cross, but who could not afford the 75 cents to pay for the initial allotment of the yarn. So the fund was started and now they are able to take their wool home, knit it into socks or sweaters and bring it back again†(The Seattle Times, December 16, 1917). The longshoremen of the Great Northern docks made the first contribution to this fund.In December 1917, Madame Naokichi Matsunaga, wife of the imperial Japanese consul in Seattle, formed a Japanese Ladies Auxiliary of the Red Cross. Members met several times each week to knit in the Japanese Commercial Club at Maynard Avenue and Jackson Street. It was Seattle’s first civic organization for Japanese women. “Since the entry of the United States into the war the fair maidens of the Orient have aligned themselves with patriotic movements in Seattle in which they considered their services would carry the most weight. They have demonstrated their loyalty to the land of their residence in subscriptions to the two issues of the Liberty Loan, to the various patriotic funds and in Red Cross work†(The Seattle Times, December 23, 1917).The Self-Improvement Club, an African American women’s organization, formed in Seattle during World War I for the express purpose of knitting for African American soldiers. They also wrote the soldiers encouraging letters and prepared comfort packages for them. Priscilla Maunder Kirk (1898-1992) remembered the members as “a very very dedicated group of women. They corresponded with the boys and sent packs to them, cigarettes, those [African American] boys over in World War One weren’t treated like the boys maybe in World War Two. They were discriminated against. This I know to be a fact†(Priscilla Maunder Kirk oral history).Johnnie Get Your YarnThe Junior Red Cross, launched in September 1917, was open to all American school children and was organized through the schools. In Seattle many children learned to knit through Red Cross programs, most commonly starting with simple knitted washcloths. These washcloths were sent to American soldiers and to the citizens of war-torn countries. Longtime Seattleite Blanche Caffiere knit these washcloths as a Fairview School student. The children, Caffiere remembered, carried their knitting around constantly and knit between lessons and while at play. By the time the small squares were completed they were usually black with playground grime. Caffiere’s teacher washed the children’s handiwork before forwarding it on to the Red Cross.In May 1918 the Seattle School Bulletin printed this patriotic knitting song:Johnnie, get your yarn, get your yarn, get your yarn; Knitting has a charm, has a charm, has a charm, See us knitting two by two, Boys in Seattle like it too. Hurry every day, don’t delay, make it pay. Our laddies must be warm, not forlorn mid the storm. Hear them call from o’re the sea, ‘Make a sweater, please for me.’ Over here everywhere, We are knitting for the boys over there, It’s a sock or a sweater, or even better To do your bit and knit a square.Besides knitting, the children were encouraged to enable others (especially skilled knitters) to knit for the war effort. A 1918 list of 82 suggestions titled “How Can I Help Win The War†places as Number 1, “Do mother’s work so she can knit." Along with suggestions to eat sorghum instead of sugar, sing patriotic songs, and plant trees for gun stocks, the list advises (Number 20), “Be careful of my clothes so my mother will not have to patch, and can knit.†Number 35 suggests, “Hold yarn for mother while she winds it into a ball,†and Number 76, “Help grandma so she will find time to teach mama to knit†(“Little Citizensâ€).Knitting on Campus -- Our Boys Are ColdAs male University of Washington students began leaving school in droves to volunteer for military service, female students took up their knitting needles. An October 24, 1917, editorial in the University of Washington Daily entitled “Our Boys Are Cold†warned, “With the approach of winter has come the very urgent need for knitted sweaters, scarves and socks to keep our soldiers warm and courageous for the bitter fight.†Women were reminded that Puget Sound soldiers were unused to very cold conditions and needed sweaters desperately. Many University of Washington soldiers underwent basic training in Montana before shipping out to France.At the University of Washington in Seattle, a war work room was established in room 205 of the Home Economics Hall. Gray or drab yarn and needles, as well as knitting lessons, were provided free of charge. (Students were asked for a 75-cent deposit to ensure they would return the finished sweater.) “Everyone realizes that the abnormal conditions have made increased demands on the girls,†the editorial continued, “but there are many spare moments during the day that can be used to the best advantage.†The women knit every afternoon from 1 to 4. They were not an official auxiliary to any specific group, but knit for the Red Cross, the Navy League, and any other war relief organization. The Campfire League also formed 10 units on the University of Washington campus. Students active in these units helped younger girls in elementary and high school knit and do other war work.The University of Washington Daily continued to exhort female students to knit via almost daily editorials on the subject. “She carries (her knitting bag) with her on the campus, on the streetcar, and on her shopping tours. In every spare moment she whisks out a partially completed garment of khaki colored wool and her fingers move quickly in and out, her needles click busily†(“Her Knitting Bagâ€). Or again, “Verily, a change has come over the women folk of this college world; they’re knitting now, those who never knitted before … our college women are learning to sacrifice minutes of recreation; they are learning to find more pleasure in the service of their knitting needles than in idle moments of conversation to no end, or a trip to the confectioners†(“Busy Fingersâ€). Editorials debated the relative merits of knitting during lectures, and students discussed which professors supported the practice.Personal knitting was highly frowned-upon: “When news comes that American soldiers have died merely from exposure in walking the icy decks on their watches, every stitch on a pink sweater will seem selfish. Besides this, University men in Montana have asked to have sixty sweaters sent to them before Christmas†(“Women Frown Upon Pink Knitted Wearâ€). University women doing war work (“the women behind the men behind the gunsâ€) were known as Sammie’s Sisters (“University Women Join the Sister Armyâ€).In mid-November 1917 the Faculty Wives formed their own on-campus Red Cross auxiliary chapter and took over supervising the war work room. In addition to knitting, students were taught to roll bandages and to prepare sphagnum moss pads. These pads absorbed blood much better than gauze and were a crucial part of the Red Cross war relief effort. Moss was abundant in the Pacific Northwest, and students regularly organized moss-gathering expeditions. The moss was dried, then sewn into sterile cloth to form pads. All freshman and sophomore girls at the University of Washington were required to devote two hours per week to sphagnum moss work.By February 1918 a plan was in place to get University-knit sweaters directly to soldiers who had attended the University of Washington. The sweaters and socks were issued to UW students as they enlisted, as well as being sent to former students already serving in France. “Every girl is not only encouraged, but expected to knit.†(“Women May Now Knit For Washington Menâ€) The knowledge that the soldiers, friends their own age, were truly Our Boys fueled campus knitters to labor on.So prevalent was war-relief knitting on the University of Washington campus that the 1918 student yearbook Tyee devoted eight full pages to the subject.Socks and More SocksSome knitters failed to act upon their initial good intentions. “Officers of the Seattle Red Cross are asking that every woman who has taken out yarn to be knit into garments and has had the yarn in her home beyond a reasonable length of time, either return the yarn or the knitted garment immediately. Officers believe that twenty-one days is an entirely reasonable time to knit a pair of socks … if the yarn is held out longer, relief is being kept from the men at the front†(The Seattle Times, February 18, 1918).In February 1918, 10,000 sweaters were sent to Camp Lewis, 2,190 in the week of February 20, 1918 alone. “Many of the sweaters contain notes from the makers and cheery words of encouragement are offered the men. Five hundred wristlets and 500 mufflers knitted by the folks at home have been distributed this week and the demand for them is keen.†(Seattle Post-Intelligencer, February 20, 1918)Wristlets were in high demand: “(Wristlets are) more like mittens than anything else, for there is a thumb hole and the knitted palm comes down as far as the web of the fingers…without wristlets it is difficult for the soldiers to keep the hands and wrists from becoming stiffened, which makes it very difficult for them to handle a gun or bayonet with precision ... Women of Seattle are urged to make the wristlets, which will keep the soldiers warm.†(The Seattle Times, February 24, 1918) Fort Lewis soldiers also received 2,488 mufflers and 43,547 pairs of socks from the Red Cross during February 1918. It is difficult to imagine how the region's knitters could have achieved these numbers.A. J. Ahola, secretary of the Klickitat chapter of the American Red Cross, appealed to Klickitat County knitters in a letter printed in the Goldendale Sentinel on (fittingly) July 4, 1918:"Klickitat Chapter of the American Red Cross has received a new allotment of knitted goods to be made up from July 20 to September 1, 1918, as follows: 705 pairs of socks, 100 sweaters. The yarn from this allotment is in transit from Seattle, and notice will be give of its arrival. Everybody that can knit is urged to get a supply of yarn. Those that can't knit should learn to do so; you know there are nearly a million boys in France, and more going over there every day. We must do our part to keep the boys comfortable. The Division officers do not think this is a big allotment for Klickitat county, and it is not, if all get busy. You know the boys are busy -- no doubt about that ("Red Cross Makes Urgent Appeal"). By mid-1918 the need for socks was so severe that the Red Cross begged knitters, “Don’t make sweaters … every pound of yarn that can be secured should be used for knitting socks†(quoted in MacDonald, 218). Some knitters conserved wool by using cotton yarn for the legs and wool for the feet. Wool was the best fiber for moisture absorption. Other knitters, stymied by the somewhat complicated mystique of turning the heel (i.e. knitting a heel flap and then picking up stitches along its sides to knit a gusset, forming the heel-shaped portion of the sock) began knitting heel-less tube socks. These drew praise from soldiers because they were more comfortable than socks with lumpy, poorly made heels.The Seattle Red Cross operated a knitting machine that produced long knitted tubes. The tubes were cut into 27-inch lengths and the toes purled together by hand. “When the knitting machine is once ‘set up’ with gray yarn, it knits and knits and knits.†(The Seattle Times, December 2, 1917)In September 1918, all American yarn retailers were ordered by the War Industries Board to turn over their stock of service yarn (any yarn in khaki, gray, heather, natural or white) to the Red Cross. For the next six weeks all yarn for war-effort knitting was available only through the Red Cross. This was done to ease the yarn shortage and to allow Red Cross knitting to continue uninterrupted.Final StitchesEven as the war drew to a close the Red Cross continued to broadcast the need for knitters: “Four times as many women could keep busy at the Seattle Red Cross headquarters, as are reporting there every day. More women are urgently needed.†(Seattle Post-Intelligencer, October 17, 1918) Amongst those who came to work, good natured one-upsmanship was prevalent. Here is an account in The Seattle Times: “ ‘I’ve knit fifty pairs of socks. Has anyone knit more?’ is a favorite question at the knitting department at Red Cross headquarters. The number may vary, but the question never. But Mrs. G. S. Dudley has a record which any one of the 6000 individual knitters will have to try hard to beat, because she has knit 108 pairs of socks for the Columbia Auxiliary to the Red Cross, besides numerous personal articles for the soldiers†(October 18, 1918). Seattle women would knit, declared Seattle Red Cross vice-chairman Dr. J.E. Crichton, “until all the wool in the hands of individual knitters and in the possession of auxiliaries is entirely manufactured into socks and sweaters†(The Seattle Times, January 6, 1919). The so-called War To End All Wars ended on November 11, 1918, when Germany surrendered. In the war’s final months, the American Red Cross turned its attention to the devastating 1918 influenza pandemic. Seattle knitters were finally free to take up personal knitting again. Many foreswore gray and khaki yarn for good, or so they thought. These same knitters would be the first to pick up their needles in December 1941, to once more "knit for victory." Knitting for Victory -- World War II HistoryLink.org Essay 5722On the home front during World War II (1941-1945), knitting to help the war effort and to keep American soldiers warm was a major preoccupation of Americans, particularly women. The November 24, 1941, cover story of the popular weekly magazine Life explained “How To Knit.†Along with basic instructions and a pattern for a simple knitted vest, the article advised, “To the great American question ‘What can I do to help the war effort?’ the commonest answer yet found is ‘Knit.’" The article pointed out that hand-knitters were turning out garments for soldiers despite the fact that machine-knitting was more efficient. Knitting gave people at home a way to help. The article noted that a volunteer group, Citizens for the Army and Navy, were campaigning to get one million standard-Army sweaters by Christmas. Two weeks later, on December 7, 1941, the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, and America entered World War II. At home, more and more Americans picked up their needles to knit socks, mufflers, and sweaters to keep American soldiers warm.Before Pearl Harbor, Americans had already been knitting and preparing care packages of food and clothes called “Bundles for Britain†to help besieged Londoners. Other efforts and committees -- American-French War Relief, Finnish Relief, Polish Women’s Relief Committee, and A Bit For Belgium -- soon followed. And American troops had been steadily increasing in number since Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939.Grab Your YarnMany of the earliest knitters for World War II had knit for Victory as children or young adults during World War I. Knitting was for them a natural and immediate response to war. “The men hardly have time to grab their guns before their wives and sweethearts grab their needles and yarn,†claimed Time on July 21, 1940. Knitting provided warmth and comfort for the soldier and therapeutic distraction for the knitter.Although knitting was only one of many, many ways civilians participated in the Home Front, it was pervasive and emblematic of what General Dwight Eisenhower would later call “the friendly hand of this nation, reaching across the sea to sustain its fighting men†(Eisenhower address to Congress, June 18, 1945). Factory work, childcare, nursing the sick: all had stretches of down time. On the bus going to work the assembly line at the Boeing Co. or at the Pacific Car factory, in the mid-day hours between all-night nursing shifts, in the evening listening to war news on the radio, idle hands were turned to service as Americans once again knit for victory.First Lady of KnittingFirst Lady Eleanor Roosevelt was often photographed knitting for the war effort or at least carrying her voluminous knitting bag. She effectively launched the World War II knitting effort at a Knit for Defense tea held at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City on September 31, 1941. Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt’s daughter Anna Roosevelt Boettiger, who wrote for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and was married to its publisher John Boettiger, lived in Seattle from 1936 to 1943. The so-called First Knitter of the Land was a frequent visitor.The question of why garments should be knit by hand sometimes arose during the early months of the war. Knitters countered with the fact that donated hand-knits cost the military nothing, were produced without expense and machine wear and tear, and that hand-knit socks outlasted machine-knit socks. Most importantly, “The propaganda effect of hand knitting cannot be estimated in terms of hard cash, but it is considerable. A sweater for a bluejacket. A helmet for a flying cadet, made by some devoted woman in a small town far from the war, is sure to arouse interest in the navy or Air Force among the friends of the woman doing the knitting. And she herself feels that she has an active part in this vast conflict; she is not useless, although she can do nothing else to help win the war†(The New York Times, January 22, 1942).The American Red CrossWorld War II war-effort knitting took place almost entirely under the auspices of the American Red Cross. In January 1942 the War Production Board designated the Red Cross as the single clearing agency for all knitting, and the War Production Board granted them priority status for receiving wool. Knitting was one of the services of the Production Corps, the largest of the Volunteer Special Services. Many women also knit for Victory in one of the many auxiliary units to the Red Cross. For example, Seattle’s chapter of the American Red Cross had formed in 1898 to provide war relief during the Spanish American War, and had remained active. Seattle-area residents had produced hundreds of thousands of knitted garments for the World War I war effort.Like meat, fats, sugar, and gasoline, wool was in very short supply during World War II. The war interrupted wool production worldwide. Wool produced was difficult to ship. The War Production Board set strict quotas on how the available wool could be sold and on what could be made from it.The Seattle Red Cross responded to the yarn shortage ingeniously: “Red Cross leaders are being trained at Lowell School in the old-fashioned arts of carding and spinning yarn from wool … enabling the workers to produce articles for the fighting forces at a savings of more than $3.00 a pound in original cost of wool. Arts and Crafts leaders from the Works Projects Administration at the school are teaching the Red Cross workers the technique of spinning†(The Seattle Times, June 3, 1942).The Red Cross supplied patterns for sweaters, socks, mufflers, fingerless mitts (which allowed soldiers to keep their hands warm while shooting), toe covers (for use with a cast), stump covers, and other garments. These were to be knitted in olive drab or navy blue wool yarn. A label indicating which chapter of the Red Cross had provided the garment was sewn into each piece. Surviving patterns show that these knitting patterns were typed and retyped with carbon-paper copies and shared among the knitters. Many knitters chose to knit the same item in the same size again and again so that they could memorize the pattern and produce pieces more quickly. The knitted garments were “for American soldiers and sailors assigned to posts where General Winter is an added enemy†(The New York Times, January 30, 1942).Knitters also produced 15-20 foot stretch bandages. The bandages were knit with 100 percent cotton yarn in garter stitch. Garter stitch (all stitches knit, none purled) produces a stretchy fabric that lies flat on the edges. The finished bandages were sterilized and shipped to medical units worldwide.Unlike many other metal items, steel knitting needles were too immediately useful to be melted down for scrap for the war effort. Wood, celluloid (an early plastic), and (less commonly) bone and ivory needles were also used during World War II.Mary Barclay Broderick served as Seattle Red Cross knitting chairman for the area.Purl HarderIn the Puget Sound region the call was out: “CAN YOU KNIT? There are two thousand knitted helmets that are waiting to be made to cover the heads and ears of the many gallant soldiers who are guarding Seattle these cold nights from enemy planes and sabotage, WHILE YOU AND YOU are sleeping in warm beds … they are needed NOW not tomorrow. If these soldiers put off the task of guarding Seattle, how long would we last?†(Seattle Northwest Veteran, January 3, 1942).These wool helmets were intended for the soldiers who manned the anti-aircraft guns being installed at high points throughout the Puget Sound region in January 1942. The guns were installed on sandbagged platforms ringed with powerful listening devices. They were maintained around the clock throughout the war. The knitted helmets fit under the Army-issue hard-shelled helmet. “Yarn can be purchased at Rhodes Department Store, the Bon-Marche, Sears-Roebuck, Frederick and Nelson, McDougall’s and Penney’s. Approximate cost per four-ounce skein is seventy-five cents. Ask for khaki yarn for soldier helmets ... Average knitting time for one helmet is four hours†(Seattle Northwest Veteran, January 3, 1942) The prospect of cold-eared soldiers dropping their anti-aircraft guns for want of wool helmets may have been exaggerated, but Seattle’s vulnerable coastal position created palpable fear of imminent attack among local residents.Seattle-area knitters jumped to action. By early January 1942, less than a month after Pearl Harbor, the Ravenna/Greenlake/Roosevelt area alone had 15 different groups churning out knitwear. Numbers were similar across the city. Civic pride increased exponentially as various auxiliary groups vied with each other to prove who could knit the most, the fastest. The Naval Officers Wives’ Club knit in a Victory Work Center at the Washington Athletic Club. “The Navy needs men, but it also needs knitters†(Northwest Veteran, January 3, 1942). Church basements, school lunchrooms, and members-only societies all had knitters busily clicking their needles. “Red Cross sewing and knitting should be part of every woman’s life†(Bellevue American, January 8, 1942).These groups produced a prodigious output of knitted goods. In Enumclaw a group of knitters met from 1 o'clock to 4 o'clock each Tuesday afternoon. After fortifying themselves with light refreshments they picked up their needles. Between January 1, 1943, and March 9, 1944, this group knitted 65 sleeveless army vests, 19 women’s service sweaters, 25 army helmets, 3 navy helmets, 1 navy vest, 4 army scarves, 10 heavy coat sweaters, 4 afghans, 56 children’s sweaters, 8 turtleneck sweaters, 5 pairs navy gloves and 1 navy scarf. The children’s garments and afghans were for citizens in war torn countries.The Burien City Press reported that Three Tree Point Knitters (Three Tree Point, Gregory Heights, Seahurst, and Burien) had “thirty knitters knitting all the time†(March 23, 1944). In three months this group made 244 knitted garments, representing 4,290 work hours. In Renton, Kirkland, Snoqualmie, and beyond, knitters followed the advice to “Remember Pearl Harbor -- Purl Harder†(Works Projects Administration poster, 1942). Knit and purl are the two basic stitches used to produce knitwear.Anyone who took home Red Cross yarn and then procrastinated was quickly brought into line. “Red Cross Knitting Must Be Turned In Now,†trumpeted the Vashon News-Record (March 2, 1944).Local newspapers carried advertisements with the legend “The Red Cross is at his side, and the Red Cross is you†(Harold’s Jewelers advertisement, March 9, 1944). The Red Cross supplied the war effort with knitting but also with blood, surgical supplies, medical personnel, and comfort bags for soldiers. The organization also raised money for the Red Cross War Fund.Holey SocksAs during World War I, the need for socks was paramount. Cold, wet, sore feet were the enemy as surely as German or Japanese troops. Socks wore out much faster than sweaters, and needed changing many times more frequently. The need for socks was so great that captured American soldiers held prisoner in Germany sometimes unraveled their American Red Cross-provided sweaters and re-knit the yarn into socks themselves, using straightened pointed barbed wire as improvised needles.Few at home thought to knit for the women who served as WAVES (Women Accepted For Volunteer Emergency Service), WACS (Women’s Army Corps), and WASPS (Women Airforce Service Pilots). They were not actively fighting and they were women, so it was assumed by many knitters that if they needed knitwear they could knit it themselves. The push was knitting for “The Boys,†the men on active duty.The Seattle Times interviewed Mrs. Ella V. Martin, an 87-year old Seattle knitter, “one of the champion knitters in the University Presbyterian Church Red Cross group, having completed 64 sweaters and 17 pairs of socks since the beginning of the Second World War. ... She is knitting because she has a nephew in the Seebees, and because of ‘all the boys out there fighting’ †(March 22, 1944).In addition to hand-knits, the Army and Navy relied heavily on machine-knit wool socks. For much of the War the machines that produced these socks were commandeered and used strictly for military use. Civilian socks became scarce. Seattleites who knit for the soldiers may have done so wearing their own holey socks.Unlike the World War I period in which many Seattle schoolchildren knit for the war effort, during World War II children were more occupied with growing Victory Gardens, collecting scrap metal, and collecting funds for the Red Cross. Many of these children also shouldered more self-care as their mothers took on war-effort work on local assembly lines.WAVES, WACS, and LARCSUniversity of Washington co-eds had knit for Sammy (the soldiers) during World War I. By World War II, University women were taking on factory work, shouldering a wide variety of jobs suddenly vacant when men went to war, or joining up themselves as WACS, WAVES, or nurses. By the spring of 1944 more than 2,000 University of Washington faculty and students were serving in the military. University of Washington women did knit for World War II, but only as part of a wide variety of war effort work. Most held full-time or part-time jobs in addition to their classes, and the need to fill those jobs increased steadily as the war dragged on.Within one month of Pearl Harbor, University students had organized a Red Cross Auxiliary unit on campus. Called the LARCS (Ladies’ Auxiliary for Red Cross Service) they wore white pinafores and navy blouses. “No matter what your talents are, we have a job for you,†Mrs. Eric Barr told the University of Washington Daily on January 7, 1941. One week later they opened a workroom dedicated to knitting, sewing, and bandage making in the basement of Condon Hall.Madigan Medical Center, formerly the Fort Lewis Station Hospital, treated hundreds of thousands of wounded soldiers. It was the largest army hospital in the United States, with beds to accommodate 3,806 patients. Thirty-six thousand wounded soldiers a month were being shipped back from overseas, many destined for Madigan. The Red Cross supplied knitted comfort items for these soldiers, who were also encouraged to knit as occupational therapy.With Wool and NeedlesRed Cross knitting continued unabated throughout the war, a homespun production line that stretched from house to house, and from Seattle to the soldiers fighting overseas. With wool and needles, Washington knitters did what they could, knitting their bit for Victory. Their handiwork was destined to warm and protect, and fated to suffer with the soldiers. Knitters held the knowledge that their carefully crafted socks and sweaters might be part of a soldier’s final garments and end with him, bloodstained and far from home.Germany surrendered to the Allies on May 7, 1945, and Japan surrendered on August 15, 1945. On September 2, 1945, Japan signed formal surrender papers. The war was over. Washington service personnel streamed home, troop ships docking in Seattle.After the war ended, some knitters dropped their needles for good. Others joined the rage for knitting complicated argyle patterns in a wide variety of colors -- anything, many swore, but Army-issued khaki or navy blue.excerpt taken from www.historylink.org
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