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Words: 1,928 | Submitted: Sun Apr 13 2008
... service were desperate to 'out' and leave due to the terrible conditions and the fact they were regarded as second class citizens and could not do male jobs, so when the need came for war workers, most women were happy to go. Question 02; Study Sources A, B and C Does the evidence of Source C support the evidence of Sources A and B about Women's work during the First World War? Source A is a positive source to show the comparisons between women working in the Domestic Service and women working in the War cutting shell fuses. It was written by a woman who lived and worked during the First World War, which could prove its accuracy. However, it was written a long time after the War and some details may have been genuinely forgotten. Source B is part of a book written by Sylvia Pankhurst: an ex suffragette leader ...
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