大象传媒

How did women's jobs change?

An illustration of working women from offices, farms and others during World War One

Life for women changed a lot because men were away at war.

Many women took paid jobs outside the home for the first time.

By 1918 there were five million women working in Britain.

The money they earned helped the family's budget and they made new friends in the factory, office or shop.

An illustration of working women from offices, farms and others during World War One
Back to top

Watch: What jobs did women do at home?

Watch our video to find out more about women's work on the home front.

Back to top

What jobs did women do in towns?

Lots of women took jobs in shops and offices.

Some women were so good at typing that they became known as 'typewriters' - named after the machines they used!

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 3, Two women operate a telephone exchange switchboard during World War One, Clerks dealt with letters, filing and typing As more women started to work in offices, they were trained in tasks like bookkeeping (keeping a log of money) and working a switchboard (a telephone control centre).
Back to top

What was the Land Army?

Women worked in all areas of farming, including operating ploughs, a large machine which prepares soil for growing crops.

Food production became very important due to shortages because of the war.

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 3, Women in the Land Army shovelling stacks of hay on a farm., Women's Land Army Forage Corps By 1917 more and more women were working on farms as 'Land Girls'. In the Forage Corps women fed and stacked hay bales on British farms.
Back to top

What jobs did women do to help the war effort?

Like the women who went to help on the front line, women in Britain also worked for the war effort.

The war created lots of new jobs. Other jobs focused on protecting people.

Many women were brought in to build munitions (weapons). By 1918 nearly a million women had jobs linked to munitions.

They worked with explosives which made some workers ill or their skin turn yellow.

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 2, Female munition workers cutting copper bands for shell cases and oiling the machinery in a Birmingham factory, March 1918., Women worked in munition factories all over the country One of their jobs was cutting copper bands on shell cases and oiling the machinery.
Back to top

Unequal pay and voting rights

A large carriage full of suffragettes campaigning in London in 1910
Image caption,
The Suffragettes were one of many groups asking for better rights.

Despite doing the same jobs as men, women were paid less.

Shop workers were paid around half as much. Teachers earned less than 80 per cent of a man's salary.

Only British men were allowed to vote to choose a government.

This was unfair and lots of women protested to demand better rights.

Women's rights

In 1918 women with property over the age of 30 were given the right to vote.

In 1928 this was extended to all women over the age of 21.

Life on the home front during the war let women prove they could work as hard as men in a wide range of jobs. They deserved the same rights.

A large carriage full of suffragettes campaigning in London in 1910
Image caption,
The Suffragettes were one of many groups asking for better rights.
Back to top

Activity 1: Quiz 鈥 Women on the home front

Back to top

Bitesize Primary games. game

Play fun and educational primary games in science, maths, English, history, geography, art, computing and modern languages.

Bitesize Primary games
Back to top

More on World War One

Find out more by working through a topic