• DocumentCode
    109437
  • Title

    Wartime women at work [First World Warwomen in Engineering]

  • Author

    Birkett, Dea

  • Volume
    9
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Jul-14
  • Firstpage
    52
  • Lastpage
    55
  • Abstract
    It was 1916, and at the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich, London, over 30,000 women were recruited to handle explosives, work on the cranes and assemble weapons. In Barrow, Vickers employed more than 7,000 female workers under well-paid female superintendents. In Tongland, a tiny village in the south-west of Scotland, at a factory dubbed The Feminist Munition Factory, women were making shells. The world was at war, and the whole of British society was pulling together. Women were manning the Home Front, producing the munitions, driving the transport and helping construct the machinery that would lead to victory. Yet just two years earlier, even a few hundred women having these roles would have been inconceivable. Before 1914, the main purpose of a woman in engineering was as a mere ornament. In early 20th Century Mazda advertisements, a brightly smiling woman holds up the lightbulb. That was thought to be the limits of her technical capabilities. It would take a cataclysm for women to enter technical fields in large numbers.
  • Keywords
    defence industry; labour resources; military equipment; weapons; Barrow; British society; London; Royal Arsenal; Scotland; The Feminist Munition Factory; Tongland; Vickers; Woolwich; first world war; munitions; wartime women; women engineers;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Engineering & Technology
  • Publisher
    iet
  • ISSN
    1750-9637
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1049/et.2014.0607
  • Filename
    6863802