The role that women played during the First World War must not be forgotten.
Women not only kept the home fires burning but also from 1917 they could be found, for the first time, in a military role.
Women not only kept the home fires burning but also from 1917 they could be found, for the first time, in a military role.
The Women's Army Auxiliary Corps
© IWM (Art.IWM PST 13171) |
In January 1917 the first women
were recruited into the British Army to serve in a non-nursing role. The Women's
Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) provided a range of duties for the army including cooking, vehicle maintenance and clerical duties, thus enabling more men to take up
a fighting role. In 1918 Queen Mary became the patron of the WAAC and the corps
were renamed as the Queen Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps (QMAAC).
BBC Schools World War One |
Although recruiting women into
the army wasn’t popular, by March 1917, commander-in-chief of the British Army,
Sir Douglas Haig, realised that women could play a vital role in the British
Army stating “the principle of employing women in this country (France) is
accepted and they will be made use of wherever conditions admit.”
The WAAC was organised into four
units, cookery, mechanical, clerical and miscellaneous. The War Office confirmed
that any job given to a member of WAAC, had to result in a man being released
for front-line duties.
Pay in the Women’s Army Auxiliary
Corps was reliant on the work done. In the lower ranks, unqualified work was
paid at the rate of 24 shillings a week. Shorthand typists could get 45
shillings a week. Money was also deducted per week for food although uniforms
and accommodation were free.
There were no officer ranks in
the WAAC as it was deemed that only men could achieve commission status,
however, over 57,000 women enrolled and often worked very close to danger at the
front-line. Three military medals for gallantry were subsequently awarded to women.
The QMAAC was eventually
disbanded in September 1921.
The Women’s Royal Naval Service
(WRNS) was formed in November 1917, with 3,000 women.
The Women’s Royal Air Force
(WRAF) was born on 1 April 1918 with the Royal Air Force. Members of both the
WAAC and WRNS transferred to the new service, which grew to 32,000, serving at
home and in Germany and France. They undertook mechanical and technical roles
as well as cooking, driving and administration.
The WRAF and WRNS were both dissolved in 1920.
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