Women and War Work by Helen Fraser
page 71 of 190 (37%)
page 71 of 190 (37%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
|
bombing our homes and our workshops finds the workers, men and women,
only made more determined. The women handle high explosives in the "danger buildings" for ten and a half hours in a shift, making and inserting the detonating fuses, where a slip may result in their own death and that of their comrades. Working with T.N.T. they turn yellow--hands and face and hair--and risk poisoning. They are called the "canary girls," and if you ask why they do it they will tell you it isn't too much to risk when men risk everything in the trenches--and sometimes the one they cared for most is in a grave in France or on some other front, and they "carry on." The Prime Minister paid a tribute to munition makers in one of his speeches when he said: "I remember perfectly well when I was Minister of Munitions we had very dangerous work. It involved a special alteration in one element of our shells. We had to effect that alteration. If we had manufactured the whole thing anew it would have involved the loss of hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammunition at a time when we could not afford it. But the adaptation of the old element with a fuse is a very dangerous operation, and there were several fatal accidents. It was all amongst the women workers in the munition factories; there was never a panic. They stuck to their work. They knew the peril. They never ran away from it." THE PROTECTION OF WOMEN IN INDUSTRY |
|


