From VOA:
“Oldest US Active Park Ranger
Retires at 100”
The oldest active park ranger in
the United States is hanging up her hat at the age of 100. Betty Reid Soskin
retired Thursday after more than 15 years at the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home
Front National Historical Park in Richmond, California, the National Park
Service announced. Soskin “spent her last day providing an interpretive program
to the public and visiting with coworkers," a Park Service statement said.
She led tours at the park and museum honoring the women who worked in factories
during wartime and shared her own experience as a Black woman during the
conflict.
She worked for the U.S. Air Force
in 1942 but quit after learning that “she was employed only because her
superiors believed she was white," according to a Park Service biography. “Being
a primary source in the sharing of that history – my history – and giving shape
to a new national park has been exciting and fulfilling,” Soskin said in the
Park Service statement. “It has proven to bring meaning to my final years.” Soskin
won a temporary Park Service position at the age of 84 and became a permanent
Park Service employee in 2011. She celebrated her 100th birthday last
September. “Betty has made a profound impact on the National Park Service and
the way we carry out our mission,” Director Chuck Sams said. “Her efforts
remind us that we must seek out and give space for all perspectives so that we
can tell a more full and inclusive history of our nation.”
Soskin was born Betty Charbonnet
in Detroit in 1921 but recalled surviving the devastating Great Mississippi
Flood of 1927 while living with her Creole family in New Orleans, according to
the Park Service biography. Her family then moved to Oakland, California, and
Soskin remained in the San Francisco Bay Area, where in 1945 she and her first
husband founded one of the first Black-owned record stores in the area, the
biography said. She also was a civil rights activist and took part in meetings
to develop a general management plan for the Home Front park. She has received
several honors. She was named California Woman of the Year in 1995. In 2015,
Soskin received a presidential coin from President Barack Obama after she lit
the National Christmas tree at the White House. In June 2016, she was awakened
in her home by a robber who punched her repeatedly in the face, dragged her out
of her bedroom and beat her before making off with the coin and other items.
Soskin, then 94, recovered and returned to work just weeks after the attack.
The coin was replaced. Soskin also was honored with entry into the
Congressional Record. Glamour Magazine named her woman of the year in 2018.
^ This is a really interesting
story and woman. ^
https://www.voanews.com/a/oldest-us-active-park-ranger-retires-at-100-/6510701.html
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