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JANETS. K.WATSON
1 Mrs Alphonse Courlander, 4The V.A.D. Nurse', in Women War Workers:Accounts Contributed by
Representative Workers of the Work Done by Women in the More Important Branches of War
Employment,ed. Gilbert Stone (New York [1917]), p. 207.
2 Olive Dent, A VADin France (London, 1917), pp. 14-15.
3 Pemberton to her father, 26 Nov. 1914, 1[mperial] W[ar] M[useum], Department of] Documents]
85/33/1.
4 Sylvia Beale to [Helen M.] Beale, 16 Aug. 1915, Beale [Family] Papers [Cobnor Cottage, Chidham,
Chichester]. I am grateful to the late Joan Edom, nee Beale, for giving me access to her family papers,
and for her help. I also thank her daughter-in-law, Gillian Edom.
5 Dorothy Brown to Beale, n.d. [early Nov. 1915], Beale Papers.
Helen Beale and Olive Dent were both members of Voluntary Aid
Detachments, or VADs.1 Founded in 1909 under the joint auspices of the
British Red Cross and the Order of St John of Jerusalem, during the First
World War they assisted professional nurses in hospitals.2 Many VADs
explicitly equated their service in the wards with the service of their
brothers and men friends in the trenches. They echoed KatharineFurse,
their commandant-in-chief, who wanted everyone to understand that
;the[ir] daughtersare wanted by the Country as well as the[ir] sons.'3
Perceptions of class and social status played a crucial role in determining
how different types of war work were viewed for different groups of
women. Women who wore military-style uniforms, whether upper- and
middle-class volunteers who joined paramilitary organizations at the
beginning of the war or the mainly working-class women who filled the
ranksof the official service corps founded towards the end of it, were often
criticized. Some working women, who found better pay, more interesting
work, shorterhours, and better living conditions in the munitions factories
than they were used to in domestic service, aroused mixed responses;
sometimes they were equated with soldiers, sometimes condemned for
lack of patriotism. Ideas about gender were as influential as class, as both
criticism of and support for war work were rooted in deeply held con-
victions about the need to preserve the existing social order. Comparisons
between men's and women's war work acted as a battleground for a
struggle over gender: setting limits to what women might do, defining how
they should behave, and also defining their position in society relative to
that of men. Differenttypes of war work were seen as socially acceptable or
problematic for different groups in comparison with perceptions of other
groups. Thus, while gender and class shaped perceptions of war work, at
the same time war work shaped ideas about gender and class.
* * *
The closest parallel between the work of men as soldiers and the work
available to women was drawn with the primarily middle-class amateur
nurses, the VADs. The symbolic parity of volunteer hospital service with
militaryservice recurs regularlyin contemporarywriting by both men and
women. When Ruth Manning, a VAD serving in France, returned home
1 A 'VAD' was technically the detachment itself rather than a member of it, and official documents
consistently refer to 'VAD members'. The women, however, referred to themselves and were regularly
referred to as VADs.
2 VADs performed other tasks in certain hospitals, including cooking and cleaning, and later in the war
drove ambulances. General Service VADs did clerical work, waited on tables in officers' clubs, tended
military cemeteries, all similar to the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps' work.
3 Memo, 'What We Want Included in the National Service Appeal to Women to Join Voluntary Aid
Detachments', IWM, Women at Work Collection, BRC 10 1/1.
34 Janet S. K. Watson
on leave, she discovered that she was 'looked upon as a heroine', and her
aunt asked her to wear her uniformat dinner, as a soldier would.1A soldier
patient at the First Eastern Hospital published the following tribute to his
nurses:
Such women were explicitly equated with soldiers: only a joint effort
would lead to victory. The comparison between volunteer nurses and
volunteer soldiers was made in popular patriotic literatureas well. Bobby
Little, the young officer hero of Ian Hay's widely read novels The First
Hundred Thousandand CarryingOn - After the First Hundred Thousand,
compared VADs with second lieutenants, 'the people who do all the hard
work and get no limelight'.3South Hampstead High School, a member of
the Girls' Public Day School Trust, started;a Roll of Honour for King and
Country, on which are inscribed from time to time the names of near rela-
tives of members of the School who are on active service, and of those who
are nursing abroad under the Red Cross Society'.4Only Red Cross nurses
were equated with soldiers, not women doing other war work. In order to
make the comparison, the school had to redefine the term 'Roll of Hon-
our', which usually meant soldiers killed, to mean those serving;otherwise,
women would have been almost entirely excluded.
Furse repeatedly reinforced the idea in communications, both with the
volunteers themselves and with government officials, that VADs served in
the same way as soldiers. The most striking example is a letter she sent to
every VAD on active service, closely modelled on one that Earl Kitchener,
the secretary of state for war, had sent in 1914 to every member of
the British Expeditionary Force, and which she thought so important
that she printed both letters in her memoirs. The letters are, however,
differentiated by gender: where the men are urged to do their duty
'bravely',the women are to do theirs 'loyally'. In addition to the 'courage',
'energy', and 'patience' needed by the men, the women needed 'humility'
and 'determination'.Both are reminded that the 'honour' of all rests on the
shoulders of each one, who must give 'an example of discipline and perfect
steadiness', though 'under fire' for the men, 'of character'for the women.
While the men are to 'maintain the most friendly relations with those
whom you are helping in this struggle', the women need only be 'cour-
teous'; Furse may have been worried about what would happen to, or what
would be thought of, obviously 'friendly' young women. While the men
need only be 'considerate', the women had to be 'unselfish'. The letters
then diverged significantly. Kitchener ended with a warning against
looting, and against French wine and women: duty could not be done
'unless your health is sound'. Furse added several paragraphsin praise of
-
humility, compliance, patience, and generosity especially to the Red
Cross. The religious imagery, including the addition of a specially written
'Red Cross Prayer' on the back of the letter, is more explicit. Both the
letter and the prayer explicitly portray volunteer nursing as displaced
labour for men fighting in the trenches.1
All VADs serving in military hospitals were required to be single;
twenty-one-yearsold at home, and twenty-threeabroad. These age limits,
however, were regularly circumvented. Although married men were ex-
pected to join the army, married women were presumed to make family
obligations their top priority, even during a national crisis. Although the
'host of women who have too many home ties to give themselves entirely to
war work'2were not excused by these commitments from other duties, the
expectations of them were markedly different. Immediately after the out-
break of war, the women's magazine The Lady suggested in August an
appropriate outlet for the patriotism of its readers: 'The fact one cannot
bear arms does not excuse any one from helping their country's cause by
fighting such foes as misery, pain and poverty.'3This opinion was anything
but controversial;work on behalf of the local needy had been the respons-
ibility of upper- and middle-class women for centuries. Unpaid, of course,
it was the only full-time work before the war which did not require a lady
to jeopardize her social status.4
1991), p- 2.
1 Lewis, Women and Social Action, p. 304; Carol Dyhouse, Girls Growing Up in Late Victorian and
Edwardian England (London, 1981), p. 74.
2 Gilbert Stone, 'War Organizations for Women', in Women War Workers,ed. Stone, pp. 289-94, 298,
302-5.
3 Few men in the ranks had permission to marry, and only their wives received spousal allowances;
other women were considered to be 'off the strength'. See Susan Pedersen, 'Gender, Welfare, and
Citizenship in Britain during the Great War,' American Historical Review, xcv ( 1990), 292.
4 See Peter Calahan, Belgian Refugee Relief in England during the Great War (New York, 1982), esp.
pp. 176-7.
Genderand Classin Britain 37
By contrast, when women's war work did not fit as neatly with class and
gender, both the work and the women who did it were seen as problem-
atic, and even threatening.The ideal of service equivalent to soldiers held
up to the VADs, for example, was not applied to the women who might
have seemed the more obvious candidates: the members of paramilitary
and auxiliary groups. In fact, women who wore military-style uniforms
aroused grave suspicions. This was true of both the Women's Legion and
Women's Volunteer Reserve (WVR), voluntaryorganizationsset up in the
early stages of the war, and the official organizations, the Women's Army
Auxiliary Corps (WAAC), the Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS),
and the Women's Royal Air Force (WRAF), which came later. Though all
were women's 'military'organizations,the two groups were more different
than similar. Both put women into military-style uniforms and trained
them on the parade ground to march, and although both were seen by
outsiders as 'women soldiers', they represented different social classes,
motivations, and ideas about gender roles and war service.
The sub-group of volunteers who sought to contribute to the war effort
in a more soldierly style - to emulatewhat their brothers were doing in the
army - were the 'upper-class Amazons' of the WVR.3 One of them,
Winnifred Adair-Roberts,became a captain afterlearning that 'practically
everyone I knew had joined the war in some capacity or another.'4 She
took parade and drill very seriously, and was disappointed when the
inexperience of 'recruits'prevented her from giving them any 'invigorating
drill'.5Afterquarrelswith her senior officers, she resigned in October 1915,
taking half her company with her to form the independent 'Captain
Roberts' Company'. Hers was an effort to preserve an army style despite
increasing resistance to militarism from within women's organizations.
If men could not leave the army, she could not resign from the WVR; she
must carry on with the work whether or not she enjoyed it. Her sense of
obligation and desire to measureup to expectations of performanceechoes
the words of volunteer soldiers like her brother, with whom she equated
herself.
'Tingle', who held a non-commissioned rank, used even more heavily
weighted languagein explaining a similardecision to Adair-Roberts.Sadly
pondering how few women were likely to attend the first meeting of her
WVR group following Adair-Roberts'sresignation,she felt that she under-
stood 'a little bit how a boy we know felt a little while ago when he came
out of a [battle]. His Batt[alio]n went up [with] 800 and came out two
hours afterwards [with] 200.'2 To compare resignations from the WVR
with casualties among soldiers at the front was, of course, absurd. This
lack of risk in battle partly precluded any legitimization of the women's
paramilitaryorganizations. Whereas women could not fight, should not
fight, and did not fight, combat experience was essential to the image of the
soldier.
The unacceptable link made between men and women as 'soldiers'
served as a battleground between gender identities and redefined the
boundaries between them. As Violet Markham,a vocal opponent of the
women's suffrage movement and supporter of women's war work,
explained, the women's uniformsstruck'a wrong andjarring note' because
the efforts the women were making, though worthwhile, 'hardly give
[them] a claim to assume the uniforms and titles of men who have fallen on
the blood-stained fields of Flanders or in the trenches at Gallipoli. These
things have become the symbols of death and sacrifice.They should not be
parodied by feminine guards of honour at concerts or entertainments.'
Markham'sletter was one of a number published by the Morning Post in
the summer of 1915, which overwhelmingly condemned women who
suggested that women should undertakework of this kind during the first
months of the war, there would have been a great outcry, and the
busybodies would have shaken their wise heads and said it was asking the
impossible.'1Two years of war, two years of popular acceptance of women
workers in industry and especially in munitions, a year of conscription,
and the recognition that if more women worked behind the lines, more
men could be sent to the front, led to the more ready acceptance of
women's services, now that they were officially sanctioned, not run by
upper-classvolunteers.2
The women's services were not, however, welcomed with enthusiasm
by the public. Despite agreeing that women should ;do their bit' like the
soldiers, many people continued to distrust women wearing military-style
uniform, sanctioned by the war office or not. The fact that the women's
services drew their recruits from different social and economic groups
from their predecessors both diminished some tensions about gender and
class boundaries and exacerbatedothers. Whereas the WVR had drawn its
members almost exclusively from the upper and upper-middle classes, the
WAAC, WRNS, and WRAF sought 'educated' middle-class women to act
as pseudo-officers, and large numbers of working-class women to fill the
ranks. The use of actual military titles was considered but ultimately
rejected as unsuitable.3 Dorothy Loveday, who joined the ranks of the
WAAC because she wanted to drive, told her former teacher that 'having
begun by calling them officers they are now trying to change it to "Fore-
women and Administrators".'Loveday's administrator'was at College and
is attractiveand interesting',but her room-mate'has been a dressmaker'.4
The working-class women who filled the ranks were criticized both
during and after the war for not being sufficiently attuned to ideas of
honour and service to the nation. As David Mitchell, who is embellishing
the words of the novelist F. Tennyson Jesse, explains in a popular account
of women in the First World War: it 'was not easy ... to instill a sense of
military pride and etiquette [in the WAACs]. Jewelry-bedecked
Tommettes were apt to stroll arm in arm with Tommies, for all the world
like parlourmaids on their half day off.'5 Although the WAAC described
WAAC members, then uses 'Tommettes' as if it were English; I have never encountered it anywhere
else.
1 As an example, WAAC discharge forms rated both 'work' and 'personal character'.
2 Bate to Brettell,3O Jan. 1918, IWM, DD PP/MCR/169.
3 Bate to Brettell, I5jan. 1917, IWM, DD PP/MCR/169. Bate enjoyed portraying herself as a member of
the army; though merely attached to the Army Service Corps as a Women's Legion driver, she referred
to herself as being 4in the army'. She wrote Brettell a somewhat cryptic letter in which she explained
with pride that she had been forced to eliminate detail, as it was 'censorable (doesn't that sound
important?)'. Similarly, when she injured her arm starting a difficult and heavy car, she called herself
'wounded', and asked Brettell: 'Isn't it a killing that I should be wounded first after all?' Bate to Brettell,
10 Oct., 6 Nov., 14 May 1916, ibid.
4 Loveday herself had already been passed tor foreign service: Loveday to Miss Robertson, 30 Dec.
1917, PLA Loveday.
Genderand Class in Britain 43
theatricalmanager'and 'a young war widow who was counting the hours
till she could reach her small son', not as the single women from domestic
service or the factories that most of them were. The pilot ended: Ht'snot
only their work we admire, either?1WAACs could not be praised merely
for the important work they were doing as army auxiliaries, but only as
socially acceptable and physically attractive.And the praise was also given
by a foreigner,not by a fellow-countryman.
The reverse side of attractiveness,however, was immorality,the charge
most often brought against WAACs. The very fact of being working-class
women dressed in army-styleuniforms at work, if behind the lines, in the
traditionally masculine war zone, turned them into a threat to social
stability, a threat usually portrayed in terms of sexual misconduct.
Rampantunfounded rumours told of huge numbers of WAACs sent home
pregnant. When Loveday first heard the rumours, she attributed the
pregnancies to unsupervised mixing with soldiers. When she learned the
truth- the 'number of girls sent back from France has now dwindled from
200 (rumour) to 8 (official)'2 - she criticized the soldiers' hypocrisy.
Soldiers whom she had rebuffedtold her they 'respected women much less
now than before the war and that [the women] had made themselves cheap
and had no pride'. Loveday summed up the double-bind in which
WAACs were caught: the men 'think that and yet they lead girls on and
want to larkwith them and despise them for it all the time'.3
In an attempt to redeem the WAACs' reputation, the minister of labour,
G. H. Roberts, spoke out in February1918in their support; the archbishop
of Canterbury echoed him in the same month after having visited the
troops in France the previousJuly; and the war office set up in March 1918
a commission of enquiry. The commission, of which both Violet Markham
and the Independent Labour Party organizerJulia Varley were members,
described the WAACs, who resented the slur on their characters, as 'a
healthy, cheerful, self-respectingbody of hard-workingwomen, conscious
of their position as links in the great chain of the Nation's purpose, and
zealous in its service'.4 Dorothy Pickford, a WAAC administrator (or
'officer') in France, told her sister that everyone was 'furious that a word
should be said against them'. She added that the controversy had arisen
from differing class-based ideas of 'good behaviour'. The WAACs had
their own moral code, which might be different from other people's, but
they kept to it and were not likely to change it. Compared with the Girls'
1 Hilda M. Love, 'America and the "WAACs"', newspaper clipping [no publication information],
IWM, DD 86/48/1.
2 Loveday to Robertson, 6 Feb. 1918, PLA Loveday.
3 Loveday to Robertson, n.d. [Jan. lgiorj, rLA Loveday.
4 Cowper, QueenMary'sArmy Auxiliary Corps, pp. 42-51.
44 Janet S. K. Watson
Clubs for which she had previously worked, their 'behaviour is exceed-
ingly good'.1Not good enough, however, for many members of the general
public, who continued to question WAAC morality. As a racy cartoon in
Sporting Times asked: 'Would you rather have a slap in the eye or a
WAAC on the knee?'2
Although the WRNS and WRAF - founded after the WAAC in early
1918and smaller - suffered from some of the same associations, they, too,
were ultimatelygiven a patriotic stamp of approvalby the government and
the high command. Furse, who left the VADs to become commandantof
the WRNS, was pleased to find her task easier. At first, the admiraltywas
obstructive, but her attempts to model the WRNS to the traditions of the
Royal Navy, so far as women could follow them, ultimately bore fruit.
CharlesWalkerof the admiraltytold Furse in November 1918that 'the way
you have caught on to the true Navy spirit is one of the secrets of the
extraordinarysuccess of the W.R.N.S.'3 The first lord of the admiralty,
Eric Geddes, was even more lavish in his praise:
1 Pickford to her sister Molly, 14 March 1918, IWM, DD Con Shelf, Hon. D. F. Pickford.
2 Quoted in Mitchell, MonstrousRegiment, p. 226.
3 Walker to Furse, 16 Nov. 1918, PLA [Women Collection, Dame Katharine] Furse.
4 Geddes to Furse, 18 Nov. 1918, PLA Furse.
5 M. H. Fletcher, The WRNS:A History of the Women'sRoyal Naval Service (London, 1989), p. 23.
Genderand Classin Britain 45
1 'The King's Message to the Royal Air Force', PLA [Women Collection], MissJ. G. Lambert.
2 L. K. Yates, The Woman'sPart: A Recordof Munitions Work(New York [1918]), p. 9.
3 Ethel Alec-Tweedie, Womenand Soldiers (London, [1918]), pp. 31-2; McLaren, Womenof the War,
p. 52.
46 Janet S. K. Watson
1 Angela Woollacott, On Her Their Lives Depend: Munitions Workersin the Great War (Berkeley,
'
1994), p. 115. "Equal pay" . . . was solely intended to win over men's unions to the process of dilution.
Nor in practice was it paid': Deborah Thorn, 'Women and Work in Wartime Britain,' in The Upheaval
of War: Family, Work, and Welfare in Europe, 1914-1918, ed. Richard Wall and Jay Winter
(Cambridge, 1988), p. 305.
2 'Munition Girls Are Not Too Well Paid', Daily Mail, 13 April 1916, quoted in Braybon, Women
Workers,p. 167.
3 Dyhouse, Girls Growing Up, p. 113;Woollacott, On Her Their Lives Depend, p. 133. For an inter-
esting but over-argued view on the discursive transcription of munitions work on women's bodies as a
form of social control, see Claire Culleton, 'Gender-Charged Munitions: The Language of World War
I Munitions Reports', Women'sStudies International Forum, xi (1988), 109-16.
4 Quoted in Woollacott, On Her Their Lives Depend, p. 127. The legal hours for the sale ot alcohol
were restricted during the war.
48 Janet S. K. Watson
the idea that some people have that Lloyd George's girls only work for the sake of
the wages. Of course, they could not afford to give their services, but they might
find other work nearer home, less heavy and less irksome. They realize munitions
are vital to the conclusion of the War, and they want to help by making them, no
matterwhat discomforts they are called upon to bear.2
You are off to do your bit, God bless you, and you will be constantly in my
thoughts and my prayers; but I do not suppose we shall meet again for many
months - perhaps longer - and I am going to spring a mine upon you, not a
German mine, old chap, but a truly British one. While you are at the front firing
shells, I am going into a munition factory to make shells. The job will not be as
well paid as domestic service, it will not be as comfortable as domestic service; it
not atypical; most women munitions workers knew that they were doing
what was thought of as 'men's work' but did not feel that it made them
masculine.1Similarly,they enjoyed the feeling of making a contribution to
the war effort without needing to know what was going on in France, as
middle-class women felt they had to do to prove their patriotism.
The worry about the threatfrom working women to the social order was
aggravatedfor middle-class women by 'the servant problem'. As a VAD
sympathetically asked her mother in 1916, 'are all the servants making
munitions?'2Contemporaryestimates suggest that during the war between
100,000 and 400,000 women left domestic service. Although middle-class
alarm about the dearth and quality of servants did not begin during the
First World War, the debate did then crystallize around a specific, seem-
ingly identifiable, cause:3the flight from domestic service to munitions, to
the women's services, and even to taking tickets on trams. When Peggy
Bate helped her recently married sister set up her new flat in London,
Peggy told her own sweetheart that though they had found 'laundry men
butchers bakers etc.', they had 'absolutely failed to procure a maid - such
things are unknown quantities since the war work for girls craze.'4Bate
herself considered her own war work to be important, but when working-
class women left service for war work, their 'craze'was merely frivolous.
War, by opening up to women jobs previously done only by men, did
give domestic servantsthe opportunity to earn more money. Their middle-
class employers, used to lots of help in running large houses, paid the
price. Mrs Beale lamented her daughter-in-law'sdifficulty in keeping her
staff: 'her Kate and Mary' were leaving to become tram conductors; 'it
seems a pity but the money tempts them.' Another of the Beale daughters,
Amy Worthington, was also looking for staff, because her 'pretty Elsie and
the housemaid both wish to leave to "better"themselves somehow, which
is a nuisance'.5Ethel Alec-Tweedie bewailed at length the insensitivity of
wartimedomestic servants,who remainedselfishly unawareof the financial
hardship suffered by their employers and failed to grasp that cleaning the
house of a woman helping out in a canteen or a hospital was their 'bit of
husband wrote and said, "A nice girl like you was meant to produce, not to kill" ': IWM, DD, 92/49/1.
1 See Woollacott, On Her Their Lives Depend, p. 213.
2 Pemberton to her mother, n.d. [reed. 12April 1916], IWM, DD, 85/33/1.
3 Woollacott, On Her Their Lives Depend, p. 183; Griffiths, Women's Factory Work, pp. 13-14. The
number of women in domestic service was already known to be decreasing. See, e.g., the debate over
'education' for working-class girls who might become domestic servants in Dyhouse, Girls Growing
up.
4 Bate to Brettell, 25 Dec. 1915 , IWM, DD PP/MCR/169.
5 MargaretA. Beale to Beale, 27 Dec. [1915], Beale Papers. Sylvia herself was a bit more sympathetic to
her former employees' position; though she seemed to feel a bit put out that the women were leaving
after six years' service with her, she reported to Helen that the wages were very high, which allowed for
saving: Sylvia Beale to Beale, 12 Dec. 1915, MargaretA. Beale to Beale, 6 Feb. [1916], Beale Papers.
Genderand Classin Britain 51
war work, and ... a real help to the country'.1 However, middle-class
women liked to argue both ways. When Maggie Beale and Dorothy Brown
'cut back' on a maid or two as a 'war economy', they saw it as patriotism.2
Their staff must not answer the country when it called them to the fact-
ories, but must sacrificetheir meagrewages to the war effortwhen it suited
their employers. They must not seek a newjob, nor count on keeping their
old one.
* * *
The flight of women during the First World War from domestic service to
factories and to the women's services was doubly threatening. Because
-
factory work was almost invariablybetter paid, the financial and there-
fore physical - independence of a traditionallysubordinateand dependent
group increased class tensions. Because the new work had previously been
done only by men, the power and status which accompanied the new work
increased gender tensions. These paralleltensions constantly distorted the
image of patriotic self-sacrifice employed both to mobilize women in the
war effort and to contain the social threat that their new work entailed.
Thus, the image of the patriot who was 'doing one's bit' constantly over-
lapped with the image of the immoral profligate. Working-class women
suffered most. Whether working in industry or in the women's services,
they were condemned for caring too little about the war effort and caring
too much about their wages and new styles of life. The more their
spending habits illustrated their independence, the greater the threat per-
ceived from them to the social order which must be buttressed at home in
order tojustify the deaths of millions of young men overseas.
For the same reason, the women dressed in military-styleuniforms who
filled the ranks of the women's services could not be treated as the female
equals of soldiers. Their role as 'khaki girls' undermined the social order
which the soldiers were fighting to preserve: men defended women;
women did not take independent action for themselves. Ideally, women
were seen to be suited to only two types of war work: the first was part-
time, cutting up bandages and knitting while looking after one's family.
The second was volunteer nursing, the only full-time work for women
untainted by professionalism, unthreateningbecause it was nurturingand
healing - inherentlywomen's work. Peggy Brown was correct: a volunteer
nurse was, for a woman, 'as good as a soldier'.
Stanford University