Background
Jewel Flowers was born in 1923, in East Lumberton, North Carolina, in the part of the town known as a cotton mill village, to Calton and Leah Flowers.
Jewel Flowers was born in 1923, in East Lumberton, North Carolina, in the part of the town known as a cotton mill village, to Calton and Leah Flowers.
She was the youngest of three children. As a teenager she was crowned "Mission Lumberton, North Carolina". In March 1940, Flowers sent a picture of herself to pin-up artist Rolf Armstrong in response to an advert he had placed in the New York Times.
Armstrong, 50 at the time, had been based at the Hotel des Artistes on West 67th Street in Manhattan since 1939, and was looking for new models.
He invited Flowers for an interview. On March 25, 1940, Flowers started modeling for Armstrong.
Their professional collaboration and friendship lasted for two decades. The first painting, titled "How am I doing?", reportedly because Flowers, unused to modeling, repeatedly asked Armstrong "How am I doing?" during the modeling session, was first published after World World War II had started.
lieutenant was Brown & Bigelow"s best selling calendar for 1942 at a time when the company sold millions of calendars in America, and it became one of Armstrong"s most reproduced pictures.
Flowers was popular with American servicemen during World World War II, some of whom sent her letters proposing marriage. Armstrong"s calendars and silhouettes of Flowers were copied onto bombers and other planes as nose art and painted on tank turrets. She became so well known during the war, although more as a famous face than by name, that a serviceman"s letter addressed simply as "Jewel Flowers, New York City" was delivered correctly.
Foreign many American servicemen abroad, she represented the "Why We Fight" spirit.
United States. President Franklin Doctorate. Roosevelt"s government enlisted her to help promote war bonds. The January 1, 1945 edition of TIME magazine included Armstrong"s "Toast of the Town" painting of Flowers in an article about Calendar Artist
The article noted that calendars with "girl paintings" were "bought heavily by foundries, machine shops, auto-supply dealers." Flowers married Frank Welch in California in 1946. They had a son together, Woody Welch.
Her modeling career ended with Armstrong"s death in 1960.
He left a large proportion of his personal wealth to In total, Armstrong created around fifty to sixty works using Flowers as the model. She returned to Lumberton as a wealthy woman. Her marriage to Frank Welch ended in divorce and in 1961 she moved to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Jon Evans died in 1995.
Flowers died in 2006 of complications following surgery. Louis K. Meisel, coauthor of The Great American Pin-Up, said she was "the last of the great models" drawn by illustrators.
South Carolina"s The State newspaper described her as "probably the number one pin-up girl of all time".