Girls of the night in Blainville
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This article was published more than 10 years ago. Some information may no longer be current. She has pearly white hair and stands two inches shy of five feet, an unlikely warrior on an uncelebrated front.
Rita Alarie was a soldier of industry in the Second World War. She says she was just doing her job. Alarie was only 17 when she left her family farm northwest of Montreal and walked through the gates of the Plan Bouchard, a sprawling wartime factory devoted to arming the Allies.
Every day, she changed into a smock and stood 4 p. And they realized that women can do many things — sometimes better than men. Alarie's wartime work and the place where she did it have largely been forgotten in the passage of time. The Plan Bouchard has slipped into obscurity, its vestiges reduced to a few ghostly ruins in the woods of the lower Laurentians. But now city staffers in Blainville are trying to reconstitute the story of the lost industrial powerhouse and track down former employees like Ms.
Alarie, intent on offering them a measure of belated recognition for their work. But it's been forgotten. In its time, the Plan Bouchard — a mistranslation of the Bouchard Plant — was a massive industrial enclave of 6, workers who churned out munitions around-the-clock for troops overseas.
It rose in the dense woods of present-day Blainville, spreading out onto a site that included a hospital, baseball diamond, four tennis courts, 30 Ping-Pong tables, more than work buildings and a Catholic chapel.