top of page
Search
GVHeritage Groups
The Role of Women in WW1
In 1914, as Britain's men headed abroad to fight, women took their place in huge numbers in the jobs that were left vacant - factories, shop
GVHeritage Groups
The Union of Women - 1 in 5!
British labour leaders maintained an anti-war stance up until the point that the government declared war on Germany. By the end of...
GVHeritage Groups
Exhausting, Dangerous & Horrific (and not just on the front line)
Following the outbreak of war on 4 August 1914, the British Red Cross formed the Joint War Committee with the Order of St John. Working...
GVHeritage Groups
Dorothy at the Front!
Pressure from women for their own uniformed service to assist the war effort began in August 1914. After a War Office investigation...
GVHeritage Groups
Women’s Land Army & Women’s Forestry Corps
The efforts of the Women’s Land Army in the First World War have been largely forgotten, and the fact that the organisation left so few ...
GVHeritage Groups
Dilution & Substitution - curse or blessing?
In 1915 the historian G.D.H. Cole described 'dilution' as 'the introduction of the less skilled worker to undertake the whole or part ...
GVHeritage Groups
United We Stand!
Bristol Women's Defence Relief Corps Across the country, women volunteered to help in the war effort. New branches of the armed services...
GVHeritage Groups
Bristol Clippies, Detectives & the Tramway Riots
Women were first used as conductors or "clippies" (as they were nicknamed) on the trams during World War One. They began work in ...
GVHeritage Groups
Munitions - Necessity v Nostalgia
Women in Industry - Here to Stay? Before the war, working class women were mainly involved in domestic service, ‘sweated’ labour and...
bottom of page