Tributes are flowing in for Betty Reid Soskin who left us today at age 104.
At Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historical Park, she became the iconic face of Richmond’s national park, and even the Park Service, itself. Glamour Magazine named her woman of the
year in 2018.
She was forced to cut back her work at age 98 due to a stroke, but she did not formally retire until age 100, as the Park Service’s oldest ranger – ever.
Ten years ago, President Barack Obama invited Betty to participate in the 2015 National Christmas Tree Lighting, where she introduced the president.
Her popularity as a park ranger resulted from her ability to interpret the WWII Home Front story from diverse points of view. As a person of color, she knew personally of the racial discrimination
and segregation on the Home Front but was also able to deeply appreciate the “We Can Do It” spirit where all Americans pulled together to achieve ultimate victory in WWII.
Some of her other honors:
- 1995: Named “Woman of the Year” by the California State Legislature.
- 2005: Honored by the National Women’s History Project as one of the nation’s ten outstanding women “Builders of Communities and Dreams.”
- 2016:Received the Silver Medallion Award from the World War II Museum in New Orleans (one of only two women recipients, alongside Elizabeth
Dole);Awarded the Sierra Club’s Trailblazer Award for her lifetime of service and advocacy; Attended the grand opening of the Smithsonian National Museum of African-American History and Culture as Interior Secretary Jewell’s guest. - 2018:Honored at the Makers Conference in Hollywood; Published her book, Sign My Name to Freedom, based on her blog documenting her life
experiences. - 2019: Featured in the Rosie the Riveter Trust documentary, No Time To Waste: The Urgent
Mission of Betty Reid Soskin, which highlights her work and influence within the NPS.
Betty gained national fame in 2013, during the government shutdown, when media outlets wanted to interview her as the oldest National Park Service ranger, to get her take on the shutdown. Betty
participated in
numerous national television interviews but managed to stay out of the political fray, saying that she wanted to focus what little time she had left on getting back to work, sharing her stories
of the WWII home
front.
After years of writing a blog (https://cbreaux.blogspot.com/) detailing her life and related events, Betty’s autobiography, “Sign
My Name to Freedom,” describes a century of her remarkable life, now being made into a documentary film by the same name. See
https://www.signmynametofreedom.com/.

There are dozens of videos of Betty performing and storytelling on You Tube.
I remember In 2005, Judy Hart was superintendent of Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historical Park, and I was president of Rosie the Riveter Trust, the park’s nonprofit partner. Betty
had been on the staff of California Assembly Member Dion Aroner and later Loni Hancock where she had worked on many issues involving the new national park. In 2005, Judy Hart recruited Betty to work for the Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historical
Park but lacked a source of funding. Not wanting to lose the opportunity to bring Betty aboard immediately, she found and arranged a grant to Rosie the Riveter Trust, and Rosie the Riveter Trust compensated Ranger Soskin her first three years.
Betty Reid Soskin, nation’s oldest park ranger, has died. She was 104
Betty Reid Soskin, one of the nation’s most iconic park rangers, died peacefully at her home in Richmond on Sun., Dec. 21, 2025. She was 104.
by Richmondside
staffDec. 21, 2025, 1:34 p.m.Updated Dec. 21, 2025, 4:07 p.m.

Betty Reid Soskin is pictured in 2016. She retired from her park ranger role at age 100 and passed away on Sun., Dec. 21, 2025 at home in Richmond, Ca. She was 104.
Credit: Associated Press
Betty Reid Soskin, who retired as the nation’s oldest park ranger, died peacefully
at her home in Richmond Sunday morning, her daughter announced on Facebook. She was 104.
The post said she was with her family when she passed away.
“She led a fully packed life and was ready to leave,” they wrote. A more formal obituary has since been posted.
Details about a public memorial will be announced later. In lieu of flowers mourners are invited to show their love and respect for Soskin by making donations to her namesake school, Betty Reid Soskin Middle School,
where she recently celebrated her birthday with a joyous gathering among admiring children and family members who sang her the
birthday song and showered her with letters and cards.
Supporters can also support an effort to finish a documentary film, “Sign My Name To Freedom,” about her journey
to reclaim her own lost music that she had been too afraid to share. It’s scheduled to be released in 2026. (Her memoir, published in 2018,
is of the same name.) Her story is also told in the film “No Time to Waste,” produced in association with the Rosie the Riveter Trust.
A clip from “Sign My Name to Freedom,” a documentary about Betty Reid Soskin’s hidden life as a singer/songwriter and a Civil Rights pioneer , and her journey to re-explore
her music 60 years later.
Word of her passing spread quickly on Sunday afternoon. Within 55 minutes of the announcement being posted, more than 300 people had paid their respects online, with the number later swelling to 500. Among the
comments:
She was a blessing to multitudes.
A great one to always remember!!
A national treasure.
Oh, such a great spirit and wonderful author, speaker, and inspiration to so many people.
Hopefully we can carry on with her insistence to have the truth known.
Reid Soskin is perhaps most famous for her 15 years of national park service, where she told visitors the stories of unsung marginalized World War II workers at the Rosie
the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historical Park in Richmond. But many might not know that before that she was also involved in the park’s development, helping to ensure that the stories that were told fairly represented all of the workers’
experiences. Her park service earned her a presidential coin from President Barack Obama.
Reid Soskin reinvented what being middle-age is all about
But at her September birthday party, she told Richmondside in an interview that her life really began at 50, when she could finally focus on shaping her own definition of who “Betty” really was.

Betty Reid Soskin attended the 25-year celebration of the Rosie the Riveter park in Richmond last March. Credit: David Buechner for Richmondside
That new version of herself after 50 was many things. An established songwriter — she and her husband opened one of the first Black-owned music stores in Berkeley in 1945. A filmmaker. An author (including a blog).
And a storyteller of people of all colors.
“We work to get to 50 but then we get there and we begin to wonder how long it’s going to be,” Reid Soskin told Richmondside. “We never stop to realize that that is exactly what it is. We only have today.”
Put simply, she was a woman who rewrote what it means to be “middle age,” as she started her park service stint at age 84, published her book at 96 and was among Glamour magazine’s women
of the year at 97, telling the magazine:
“History has been written by people who got it wrong. But the people who are always trying to get it right have prevailed. If that were not true, I would still be a slave like my great-grandmother.”
A description of her book, at the time it was published, captured the incredible breadth of what her life bore witness to:
“In Betty Reid Soskin’s 96 years of living, she has been a witness to a grand sweep of American history. When she was born in 1921, the lynching of African-Americans was a national disgrace, minstrel shows
were the most popular American form of entertainment, women were looked at suspiciously by many for exercising their right to vote, and most African-Americans in the Deep South could not vote at all.
“From her great-grandmother, who had been enslaved until she was in her mid-20s, Betty heard stories of slavery and the difficult times for Black Folk that immediately followed. In her lifetime, Betty has seen the nation begin to break down its race and gender
biases, watched it nearly split apart in the upheavals of the Civil Rights and Black Power eras, and, finally, lived long enough to witness both the election of an African-American president and the re-emergence of a militant, racist far right.”

Betty Reid Soskin greeted well-wishers at her 104th birthday party at Betty Reid Soskin Middle School in El Sobrante. Credit: Jana Kadah/Richmondside
In her own words, writing through torrents of tears
Those who miss her already might find comfort in perusing her own words, as between 2003 and 2019 she was a prolific writer, hosting the blog, “CBreaux Speaks,” with “breaux” an apparent nod to her Louisiana heritage,
meaning cajun slang for “friend.”
In what appears to be her last post, on Aug. 7, 2019, written through sobbing tears, she said, she details her
memories of crossing the Mason-Dixon line on a 1935 train trip from the West Coast to the South at age 14, unaware that the imaginary line marked the very real point at which segregation practices were enforced.
The Black passengers were marched into a car of their own and as the realization of what this meant sunk in, Reid Soskin experienced a life changing shift.
“Shame and humility had been absorbed through every pore,” she wrote. “I would carry them the rest of my life after that long and awkward march of disembodied shame and inexplicable humility. This
would be the moment in history when my racial identity would be forever baked into my being; where my black identity would become irrevocably fixed.”
Yet she also saw that she was part of something larger, as once everyone was together they enjoyed good food and music and warmth.
“Even at 14 I was made aware by that experience that I was part of a larger family, at least temporarily. I believe that this is what sustained me through the Sixties, that feeling of an unbreakable relatedness
to that greater cause.”

Betty Reid Soskin at the Rosie the Riveter national park in Richmond. Credit: Associated Press/file
Reporter Jana Kadah contributed to this report.

Want to receive TOM BUTT E-FORUM delivered to your email address?
Click here to sign-up to receive the E-Forum. Tom Butt is the former mayor of Richmond, CA, having served 27+ years until January of 2023, eight of those as elected mayor. Tom Butt is an architect and founder of the 50-year
old Richmond architecture-engineering firm Interactive Resources. He serves on the board of two Richmond nonprofits,
Rosie the Riveter Trust and
East Brother Light Station, Inc. Visit the
Tom
Butt website for additional information about Tom Butt’s activities and a digest of past E-FORUMS going back to 2000,
http://www.tombutt.com. Subscription to this service is at the personal discretion of the recipient and may be terminated by selecting “unsubscribe from
this list” at the bottom of this email. This site may contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of environmental,
political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section
107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml.
If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond ‘fair use’, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
|