Women and War Work by Helen Fraser
page 157 of 190 (82%)
page 157 of 190 (82%)
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keen and will train, plenty of opportunity for them in peace-time
occupations in civil, mechanical or electrical branches in connection with municipal, sanitary and household questions and in laundries, farms, etc. The women architects and these women could very well co-operate closely. Women clerks and secretaries will remain largely after the war. Fewer men will want these posts as we are convinced there will be big movements among our men to more active work, to the land and to the Dominions overseas. Women on the land will in numbers stay there, and there is a distinct movement among women with capital to go in for farming, market gardening, bee-keeping, poultry-keeping, etc., still more. The war has made more of our fathers and mothers realize the right of their daughters to education and training, and there are very few parents in our country now, who think a girl needs to know nothing very practical, and has no need to go in for a profession. Our women's colleges have more students than ever and the war has done great things in breaking down these old conventional ideas. The war, in fact, has shaken the very foundations of the old Victorian beliefs in the limited sphere of women to atoms. Our sphere is now very much more what every human being's sphere is and ought to be--the place and work in which our capacity, ability or genius finds its fullest vent--and there is no need to worry about restricting women or anyone else to particular spheres--if they cannot do it, they cannot fill the sphere, and that test decides. The dear old Victorian dugouts grow fewer and fewer in number, but we never must forget that the great powers of women have not come in a night, miraculously, in the war. They are the |
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