CF&I Women of WWIIMain MenuThe Spirit of 1942The Spark Plug ClubThe Nail RoomGoils Make CoilsFemale InspectorsFirst female inspectors, 1946Minnequa School of NursingSally ThompsonWanted for Victory!Giving Money to Uncle Sam"Oh for the Life of a Marine"CartoonsVictory Canning and GardeningThe Steel YBlood DriveTruck DriversVictoria Miller39460033159c0605b61f802e1d65a3994bef40b3Steelworks Center of the West
Spark Plug Club, 1940s
12016-04-12T08:58:30-07:00Christopher J. Schrecka2fcfe32c1f76dc9d5ebe09475fa72e5633cc36d93302plain2016-04-12T09:47:35-07:00Christopher J. Schrecka2fcfe32c1f76dc9d5ebe09475fa72e5633cc36d
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12016-04-12T09:35:27-07:00The Spark Plug Club7plain2016-04-13T18:07:46-07:00 As men left CF&I employment to join a branch of the armed services, women were required to fill those positions. Their presence became much more common doing clerical work assisting in the administrative, financial, sales, photography and media departments. Some women even filled physically grueling and dangerous positions in the production areas that had once only employed men. In addition to their new duties, dozens of women joined the Spark Plug Club, a social and philanthropic group for women sponsored by the company. Charities the Spark Plug Club supported varied through the years, but mainly focused on producing children’s parties and activities at CF&I’s YMCA, and assisting needy Pueblo families with bedding, clothing, and food. Members maintained their normal work schedule and participated in club activities during their off hours.