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Words: | Submitted: Mon Nov 07 2005
... years. These 'Munitionettes', as they came to be called, accounted for a large proportion of women in the workplace. To the extent that by mid 1917 it is estimated that women produced around eighty per cent of all munitions. Women at War :In what ways were women involved in the War effort? The largest influx of women into the workplace was in the transport industry where they took on work as conductresses (and sometimes, as drivers), on buses, trams and underground trains. '...by February 1917 the total number of bus conductresses leapt from the timorous handful of the previous year to about 2,500, some half of whom, it was said, were former domestic servants.' A great number of women had come to work in fields as varied as commerce, administration, education, forestry and agriculture. The 'Women's Land Army' alone employed over 260,000 women as farm labourers. ...
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