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Role of Women In WWI Role of Women In WWI

Role of Women In WWI - PowerPoint Presentation

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Role of Women In WWI - PPT Presentation

Elizabeth Farnsworth PreWorld War I W omen typically played the role of the homemaker  Women were judged by their beauty rather than by their ability  Their position and status were directed towards maintaining the annual duties of the family and children  ID: 551538

war women men jobs women war jobs men worked work factories industries working world wwi employment women

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Slide1

Role of Women In WWI

Elizabeth FarnsworthSlide2

Pre-World War I

Women

typically played the role of the homemaker.  Women were judged by their beauty rather than by their ability.  Their position and status were directed towards maintaining the annual duties of the family and children.  These duties consisted of cleaning and caring for the house, caring for the young, cooking for the family, maintaining a yard, and sewing

clothing.Women had worked in textile industries and other industries as far back as 1880 but had been kept out of heavy industries and other positions involving any real responsibility.  Women worked hard, but their jobs were often done in their own or someone else's home. Only about 20% of the workforce was female and the majority of unmarried.

W

orking

women were

servants.Slide3

Changes for Women

As men left their jobs to serve their country in war overseas, women replaced their jobs.   

As a result, the number of women employed greatly increased in many industries.  In the U.S. there were, before the war, over eight million women in paid occupations.  After the war began, not only did their numbers increase in common lines of work, but as one newspaper stated, “There has been a sudden influx of women into such unusual occupations as bank clerks, ticket sellers, elevator operator, chauffeur, street car conductor, railroad trackwalker, section hand, locomotive wiper and oiler, locomotive dispatcher, block operator, draw bridge attendant, and employment in machine shops, steel mills, powder and ammunition factories, airplane works, boot blacking and farming

.”  Slide4

Changes for Women

Many of these women were married, and some were mothers whose husbands or older sons had gone to fight. 

Women were also seen as vital resources for wartime aids, and various wartime slogans such as “You should aid nation in the war” and “Everyone has to be a helper” created involvement for women in many industries. Women's pay was lower than men's, even when they were doing the same work. However many working women were better off than they had been in the past. Women who took jobs in munitions factories, were better paid than they had been in their previous jobs sewing clothes or cleaning houses.Slide5

Statistics

Women’s employment rates increased during WWI from 23.6% of the working age population  in 1914 to between 37.7% and 46.7% in 1918 

By 1917 munitions factories, which primarily employed women workers, produced 80% of the weapons and shells used by the British ArmyThe employment of married women increased sharply – accounting for nearly 40% of all women workers by 1918 Slide6

General Female Occupation

Even though many women were in high demand for industries where previously men were dominant, long-established feminine jobs were still common during the war. 

There were full listings of open positions for general housework and other general domestic jobs.  The war actually created more domestic jobs because many women who worked in factories and outside their homes were not able to care well enough for their children.Slide7

Women In the War

As more men were drafted and had to leave their jobs, the U.S. government and various industries

went looking for female workers who could replace their men’s jobs.  In 1917 and 1918, there were a number of demands for female stenographers, telegraphers, and phone operators.  The Women’s Defense League was also placing a lot of effort to fill the unemployed gap.  Potential

telegraphers had to learn the code through memorization or by familiarizing themselves to carry out their work efficiently.Slide8

Women In the War

The Red Cross organized non-professional women to aid in relief work.  To help the war effort, many women joined the Red Cross as nurses.

They rolled bandages, knitted socks, and worked in military hospitals.  Most of the women were wives and mothers of soldiers of all classes.  The Red Cross organization also created a women’s bureau, which appointed a national

committee of women that made an effort to recruit every available woman in the campaign to make adequate funds and supplies.  Women in the Red Cross were also helpful in recruiting men who had not joined the war.  One method in Britain was by showing a man in civilian clothes with white feathers as a mark of cowardice.  Another method was by making women speak at public meetings, encouraging others

to have

nothing to do with men who had not joined the war.

This was spreading

propaganda

.

Women

also went over seas as members of the

Voluntary Aid Detachment of the Red Cross

.  Volunteering brought them out of the house and into the public. Slide9

Jobs for Women in WWI

Sewing uniformsBattlefield nursingWorking in factories: making guns, clothes, backpacks, bullets, etc.

 this was the largest employment for womenStenographers, telegraphers, and phone operators.Postal workersGovernessesEverything in the war except for fightingSlide10

3 Military Auxiliary JobsSlide11

1- Women in Nursing

Young women and girls worked as nurses during World War I.  When

the United States entered World War I in April 1917, the Navy had 160 nurses on active duty.  Over the next year and a half, this number increased more than eight-fold as the Nurse Corps expanded to meet the war's demands, Young women volunteered to join the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD).  VAD's came from a variety of backgrounds: cooks, domestic servants, laundry workers etc.  Their medical training was basic, but the fact that they went to the war zone meant that they could help badly wounded soldiers and give them basic medical treatment. Slide12

2- The Women’s Land

Army

With so many men away fighting, someone had to bring in the harvests and keep the farms going.  The government decided that more women would have to become more involved in producing food and goods to support their war effort.  The Women's Land Army played a crucial role in doing this when the men who would normally work on the farms never returned or returned disabled from the war.  Slide13

3- Women in Factories

Some of the most important work done by women was in the ammunition factories.  With

the young men away fighting, this very important work was done by women.  It was very dangerous to work with explosive chemicals because it meant that one explosion in a factory could trigger many other ones.  Women not only worked in ammunition factories, but they also worked as power machine operators and in naval station machine shops as well.  Slide14

Women Striking

Women were paid half the wages of men and worked in conditions that were sometimes dangerous and unhealthy.  In munitions plants, acid fumes from high explosives damaged workers’ lungs. I

t also turned their skin bright yellow.  Thousands of women worked long hours filling shells with explosives, so accidental explosions were always a risk.  Women often went on strikes in order to receive more money and better working conditions because they received very little for working as hard as they did.“The National Women’s Trade Union League representing 150,000 organized working women have met together for counsel and for action.” However, the war did not raise women's wages.  Employers got around wartime equal pay policies by employing several women to replace one man, or by dividing skilled tasks into several less skilled stages.  Slide15

Conclusion- what women gained

World War I was to give women a chance to show a male-dominated society that they could do more than simply bring up children and stay at home.  

In World War I, women played a vital role in keeping soldiers equipped with ammunition and in many senses they kept the nation moving with their help in various industries.  With so many men volunteering to join the army, and with so many casualties in the war, a space was created in employment, and women were called on to fill these gaps.  

Before the war, women had no socio-economic power at all.  By the end of the war, women had proved that they were just as important to the war effort as men had been.  Women found employment in transportation including the railroads and driving cars, ambulances, and trucks, nursing, factories making ammunition, on farms in the Women's Land Army, in shipyards etc. Before the war, these jobs had been for men only with the exception of nursing.Slide16

Activity 1:

Before WWI

During WWI

Fill this chart out with what women did before WWI compared to what they did during WWISlide17

Activity 1: Answer Key

Before WWI

During WWIHomemakers:Working in factories

cookingBattlefield nursingcleaningWomen’s Land

Army

caring for children

Phone

operators, telegraphers, s

tenographers

sewing

Sewing uniforms

maintaining

a yard

Postal workers

NOT DOING INTENSIVE

LABOR

EVERYTHING

EXCEPT FOR FIGHTING

Possible answers for this chartSlide18

Activity 2

To fill in

online and see larger,

go to link

http://www.puzzlefast.com/en/puzzles/20150331415111Slide19

Activity 2: Answer Key

To fill in

online and see large , go to linkhttp://www.puzzlefast.com/en/puzzles/20150331415111Slide20

Citations

http://depts.washington.edu/labhist/strike/kim.shtml

http://www.striking-women.org/module/women-and-work/world-war-i-1914-1918http://www.puzzlefast.com/en/puzzles/20150331415111