Veronica Foster, known in World War II Canada as "Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl" for her widely publicized armament work at the Inglis factory in Toronto

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Veronica Foster, known in World War II Canada as "Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl" for her widely publicized armament work at the Inglis factory in Toronto
Fate Brought Us Together: About Veronica Foster (Human/Reincarnated Sigyn)
“The younger sister of Astrophysicist, Jane Foster, Veronica used to be a normal, extroverted woman who was set to follow after her family in attending Culver University with plans to get a degree in cultural studies with a major in Mythology ...until the fire happened. Since then, Veronica has been haunted by strange dreams involving Norse Gods with no understanding of what was happening to her.
However, she receives her answer when she takes a trip with her sister on one of her research missions in New Mexico, coming across a man claiming to be Thor: God of Thunder. When he tells her she is the Goddess Sigyn reborn, Veronica is in for the awakening of a lifetime.”
Part of my “Fate Brought Us Together” (A Logyn Series)
Sigyn Variants: Sigyn, Lady Loki’s Wife, Dark!Sigyn, Fox Sigyn
Veronica Foster, also known as Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl. She worked at a Canadian weapons factory during WWII and was Canada's answer to Rosie the Riveter.
Veronica Foster
The Shrike|Orión
"Fact": The reason their nicknames are "masculine" is because the police believed it was a man who committed the crimes. Orion means "The Hunter", and Veronica knows the use of firearms and hunting knives. In addition to "hunting" her victims.
Ronnie the Bren Gun Girl, Veronica Foster. "Before Rosie the Riveter, there was Ronnie the Bren Gun Girl.
Veronica Foster was just 19 when she began working in the John Inglis and Company factory in Toronto’s Liberty Village — now home of the JAZZ.FM91 studios — during the Second World War. The plant was making heavy appliances and machinery until the war prompted the company to shift its operations to manufacturing Bren light machine guns for the British and Canadian militaries." Story here.
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veronica foster, popularly known as "ronnie, the bren gun girl"; similar to the more commonly known "rosie the riveter". was a canadian icon representing nearly one million canadian women who worked in the manufacturing plants during World War II.
Veronica Foster, popularly known as “Ronnie, the Bren Gun Girl”, was a Canadian icon representing nearly one million Canadian women who worked in the manufacturing plants that produced munitions and materiel during World War II. Foster worked for John Inglis Co. Ltd producing Bren light machine guns on a production line on Strachan Avenue in Toronto, Ontario. Source