"Rosalind was such an inspiration to so many young women in this world. She and so many other women of that time really changed what standards were. Thank you, Roz!"
– Olivia Johnson, teacher,
Marceline, MO, Mar 22, 2021
"RIP Rosie the Riviter. You are an inspiration to decades of women to go after what they want."
– Nancy Cooley,
Rio Rancho, NM, Apr 21, 2020
"God is a God of all Comfort and he will Comfort the family's..My heartfelt condolences to the family's..."
– A friend,
Apr 11, 2020
"Miss Walter live at a special time and comes from what I think was a special generation of people. To the family I am sorry for your loss and may God continue to be with the family."
– VH,
TX, Mar 27, 2020
"My condolences to the Rosalind Walter family. My you be comforted by fond memories and God."
– A friend,
Mar 23, 2020
"Hats off to another Rosie the Riveter! Here's the 1st paragraph of Alice Hughes' syndicated column about then-Rosalind Palmer, July 1943: Probably the most popular pet name around the country for a woman factory worker is "Rosie the Riveter. It is a national gagbut not in our town. We really have a Rosie the Riveter, who is Rosalind Palmer, 19, a dark-tressed society doll, who has just finished a year of hard work as a night shift welder at the Sikorsky aircraft plant at Bridgeport. Conn. The song was a hit and its title a popular appellation for months by the time Hughes met her in New York and was thus inspired to celebrate her in the July 17, 1943 installment of her syndicated column. Her latter-day whimsical notion that Hughes' column about her inspired the song notwithstanding, hats off."