With thousands of men away serving in the armed forces, British women took on a variety of jobs during the Second World War. They also played a vital role on the home front, running households and fighting a daily battle of rationing, recycling, reusing, and cultivating food in allotments and gardens.
From 1941, women were called up for war work, in roles such as as mechanics, engineers, munitions workers, air raid wardens, bus and fire engine drivers.
At first, only single women, aged 20-30 were called up, but by mid-1943, almost 90 per cent of single women and 80 per cent of married women were working in factories, on the land or in the armed forces.
There were over 640,000 women in the armed forces, including The Women’s Royal Naval Service (WRNS), the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force (WAAF) and the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS), plus many more who flew unarmed aircraft, drove ambulances, served as nurses and worked behind enemy lines in the European resistance in the Special Operations Executive.
In cities, the Women’s Voluntary Service prided itself on doing ‘whatever was needed’, including famously providing support (and much needed tea and refreshments) to victims of the Blitz and those sheltering in Underground stations.
In the Special Operations Executive (SOE), Churchill recruited around 60 women “to set Europe ablaze”. They were deployed behind enemy lines, usually by parachute or fishing boats, to help form a ‘secret army’ of resistance fighters preparing the way for the Allied invasion.
Below is a collection of some of historic photographs of British women at work during World War II.
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Eleanor Roosevelt talking with woman machinist during her goodwill tour of Great Britain, 1942. |
A Merlin Is Made- the production of Merlin engines at a Rolls Royce factory, 1942. |
Rachel Bingham scrubs the floor of the WVS canteen on her return to the Canteen Service depot, somewhere in London in 1941. |
Women of the American Ambulance Great Britain wash an ambulance car of the surgical unit to pass the time between call-outs at their depot, somewhere in London, 1944. |
A woman of the American Ambulance Great Britain receives a telephone call requesting their attendance at an incident, 1944. |
A Merlin is made: the production of Merlin engines at a Rolls Royce factory, 1942. |
Miss Winifred Small (left) is a BBC soloist and professor at the Royal Academy of Music. Here she can be seen giving a violin lesson to a female first year student at the Academy, 1944. |
Cotton worker Lilian Alston fits cones of yarn into the V-shaped creel of the warping frame at a cotton mill, somewhere in Lancashire, 1945. |
Female workers at an armament depot at a Royal Naval Cordite Factory, Holton Heath. |
Workers at the small factory of J & F Pool Ltd operate lathes to bore and face the nose ends of mortar bombs, 1943. |
A group of war workers stand, on a grassy mound at a coastal test range to watch as soldiers launch mortar bombs from the beach immediately below them, 1943. |
A group of war workers stand in a row on a grassy hill on a coastal test range to watch mortar bombs being launched, 1943. |
Rose Pillon offers advice to a passengers from the 'Tickets and Information' window at this London Underground station, 1942. |
Lilian Carpenter and Vera Perkins drive their horse-drawn cart through London's West End on the way to their first delivery of the day, 1943. |
Shipbuilding: Female welders at work on a merchant ship at Greenock, 1945. |
Cordite production at a Royal Naval armaments factory at Holton Heath, 1945. |
Shipbuilding: Mrs Agnes Smith, a fifty year old mother of ten, was a forewoman of a Greenock shipbuilding yard. |
Hawker employees Winnie Bennett, Dolly Bennett, Florence Simpson and a colleague at work on the production of Hurricane fighter aircraft at a factory in Britain, in 1942. |
Betty Pridie receives some first aid for a sore finger from her female supervisor in Slough Training Centre's medical room, 1941. |
Women's voluntary service run Children's Clothing Exchange, Norwood, London, 1943. |
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Water-cooled machine guns just arrived from the USA under lend-lease are checked at an ordnance depot in England, 1941. |