ABSTRACT

Women ‘kept the home fires burning’ while their men went off to war. This is the usual image of the part played by women in the First World War, reinforced through countless posters, government exhortations and even popular songs. It is very far from the truth. As this remarkable book shows, originally published in 1987, the truth was that women showed themselves capable of undertaking many roles hitherto the sole prerogative of men, a position accepted during the emergency of war but quickly ‘righted’ once peace was restored: the women who had helped to win the war were displaced by the returning heroes from the Front.

Diana Condell and Jean Liddiard selected more than 150 superb contemporary photographs, and these unique pictures, with extended captions and accompanying text, illustrate the many and varied roles played by women in the First World War. Many of the photographs had never been published before and they reveal dramatically the extent to which women took over the day-to-day running of society during the war. Fulfilling these roles helped to change women’s perceptions of themselves and their place in the social fabric: the photographs are arranged thematically to reveal this and how society’s own view of women was altered as a result.

The book also tells the story of the war from the female viewpoint, assessing its effect on the women involved. It focuses in a neglected but vital part of the history of the emancipation of women and also raises questions about what sort of victory they had worked for.

In quality and range this was a pioneering study. More than that, through the haunting quality of its images it creates a pathway into the mind and world of the past.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Britain before 1914

chapter Chapter I|14 pages

The Domestic Sphere Expands

'Womanhood Offers Her Gifts At Her Country's Door' (Caption on a woman's suffrage banner)

chapter Chapter II|34 pages

Beyond the Traditional Feminine Role

'Who Would Be Free, Herself Must Strike The Blow' (Caption on a poster for the National Union of Women Teachers)

chapter Chapter III|18 pages

From Response to Initiative

‘Women Demand the Right to Serve' (Women’s Right to Serve, March 1915)

chapter Chapter IV|42 pages

From Family to Factory

'Without Women Victory Will Tarry' (Address by David Lloyd George 17 July 1915)

chapter Chapter V|42 pages

Servants of the State

'The Girl Behind the Man Behind the Gun' (Caption from a recruiting poster)

chapter Chapter VI|26 pages

From Housewife to Heroine

'Votes for Heroines as Well as Heroes' (Slogan from Votes For Women 26 November 1915)

chapter |4 pages

Chronology