FDR Presidential Library

It's August 1942 and girls, well, are starting to man up. Pictured here are two students from Roosevelt High School in Los Angeles, who, under the guidance of the Victory Corps, are learning how to operate a rifle. (Although the presence of lockers in the background is suspect. Why are they shooting in the hall? What are they shooting at? Isn't the photographer in harm's way? Why is the scene so dramatically lit?)

This is most likely a photo op, but the image does illustrate a reality of the early WWII era. The original caption reads, "Training in marksmanship helps girls ... develop into responsible women." Upon graduation, these girls' male peers faced conscription, leaving them to carry on life in America. They needed to learn how to protect themselves, and in some cases, that included the operation of firearms.

The Victory Corps was a nationwide education initiative charged with the task of preparing students for life in wartime on the fronts or at home. This included a strong focus on physical fitness but also studies in "war useful" subjects and an increase in academic rigor. "A bomber navigator who does not get the correct mathematical answers does not bring his plane and crew back," the nation's education commissioner told the New York Times in 1942.