Women During Ww1 Essay

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Women During WW1 By: Briana Creeger Women represented the turning point in history during world war 1. During WW1 women had jobs while the men were away at war, some women worked in the military, and women fought for equal rights. When men went off to war they left their wives and kids to defend themselves. With so many men going off to war the working industry needed people to work. The Board of Trade issued a proclamation that asked every able woman to take up employment. This made the labor market to be overflowed with women. The number of women workers increase from 3,224,600 to 4,814,600. Of that number, 200,000 were employed in government department jobs and 500,000 were employed in private offices as clerical workers. Engineering had the biggest increase with 700,000 women in that field. Many jobs became a job because the war needed materials to be made. Some other fields women had jobs in were teachers, factory workers, bus-conductress, lift-girl, bank clerk, ticket-collector, motor-driver, munition maker, police, firefighter and many other jobs. Tough jobs were in high demand such as keeping furnaces hot, building ships, unloading coal. Since it was the most dangerous and dirty jobs, not everyone wanted that position. “Industries that previously excluded women now welcomed them” (John Simkin). Also, women worked with military too. …show more content…

Many women applied for a pilot position but only a few were accepted. The most common jobs women pilots got were checking on the advancement and location of enemy soldiers, artillery and reconnaissance pilot and test pilots. The first female pilot was Princess Eugenie M. Shakhovskaya. Marie Marvingt was the first woman pilot to be involved in a combat operation. The first time female nurses served overseas was on April 6, 1917. This was a turning point in history because it leads up to women becoming more