When it comes to world wars the focus usually centres around veterans, those who served on the front lines of combat.
For that combat to happen, however, hundreds of Canadian women worked in Toronto building plans and ammunition needed for battle.
Mickey Schienle was one of those women.
鈥淭he war was on and we knew that they had to do all this work, that鈥檚 how they got their guns and any supplies or whatever they needed over there,鈥 Mickey said.
鈥淥f course, that had to be done over here. Instead of continuing with their education a lot of us just decided to put in our help.鈥
Mickey was 18 when the Second World War broke out.
One job she had was in an ammunition plant in Ontario.
鈥淲e lived in a dorm and the pillows, they used white pillow slips. From whatever was in the air it turned our pillow slips orange. Not real orange, but you could see the orange hue on it, so we were breathing all that stuff. No masks or anything.鈥
Mickey laughed when she mentioned the unhealthy air.
鈥淲ell, I don鈥檛 think so, but I still managed to get this far,鈥 said the 99-year-old.
Regular bomb drills, bunkers separating rooms of explosives, and meticulous cleanliness to avoid disaster were all part of everyday life for these women.
Mickey also spent a great deal of time working on the Lancaster planes, her preferred job during the war.
鈥淭hey had these jiggs鈥nd the nose of the plane was on there. The panels that are on the outside, made of aluminum or whatever, are just sort of clipped on there with some sort of clip. So, we had to put rivets through. Drill holes where all these joints were鈥 and then put the rivet in.
鈥淢ost of the time I was on the inside and they called it bucking. You had a bucking bar and you had to hold it up against the rivet to make it flatten so that it would keep the panel on,鈥 she explained.
Lancasters were strategic bomber planes, allowing considerable accuracy even at night. The Lancaster was pivotal in the war and is considered the most effective British heavy bomber of the Second World War.
鈥淲hat they needed there we were producing. Without us, they couldn鈥檛 have had the war. Maybe we shouldn鈥檛 have done it,鈥 Mickey laughed.
When the war came to an end, the woman received no recognition, not even a handshake.
鈥淭he PA system came on and they said, 鈥楾he war is over, turn off your machines. You can go home. Collect your paycheque at your usual place and time.鈥 That was it. No severance, no thank you, no nothing.鈥
On the cusp of becoming a centenarian, Mickey now lives in a retirement home in 琉璃神社.
With the ongoing war in Ukraine, Mickey says thoughts of a third world war have crossed her mind.
鈥淵ou think about it because you don鈥檛 know what they鈥檙e going to do. Especially with the way, Putin acts, talking about nuclear stuff. It鈥檚 kind of scary when you think about it. If they start with anything like that鈥 might as well say goodbye to the world.鈥
So on Nov. 11, don鈥檛 forget about the hundreds of women who worked behind the scenes, just like Mickey, who supported the fight for freedom.
READ MORE: Okanagan Indigenous veterans were stripped of their status after war efforts
brittany.webster@blackpress.ca
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