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Women war workers of Birmingham

To the first world war now, and the highly dangerous job of working in the Birmingham munitions industry. Most have no captions from the IWM website as I guess this info was highly classified at the time:-
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1918

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Aeroplane Frame Tug Welding 1918

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Turning Gas Mask Angle Tubes 1918

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Camoflaguaging Gun Carriages 1918

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Turning Aluminum Shell Fuse Caps 1918

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Steel Hardness Testing 1918

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Priming Pin Tinning 1918

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Welding Birmingham Technical School 1918

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Tapping Friction Tubes 1918

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Primer Plug Manufacture 1918
 
again great photos mark...all those mothers going off to do their bit...i can only assume those awful contraptions that are laid out are those body gas suits for babies. toddlers ..awful looking things but we had to have them

lyn
 
Some more under the same heading:-

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Shell Weighing 1918

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Soldering Cigarette Tins 1918

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Shell Gauging 1918

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Shell Brass Plug Manufacture 1918

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Priming Pin Sorting 1918 (what a belter of a job this must have been.....)

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Copper Band Cut Gauging 1918

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Gauging Fuse Manufacture 1918

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Munitions Factory Birmingham 1918

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Mould Making Birmingham Technical School 1918

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And finally in this section - the ultimate definition of "being laid back on the job" - TNT Factory Birmingham 1918
 
Now lets go to the Austin Motors Factory which, in 1918 was making aeroplanes for the war effort - again with lots of female labour:-
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Fuselage Stitching

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1708471138337.pngFun in the Carpentry Shop!!!

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Spray Painting

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1708470724618.pngPainting Distinction Markings

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1708471066054.png1708471102199.pngGroup photocalls!

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1708471175566.pngAirframe Manufacture

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Canvas Doping

And - finally in this set - the ladies even helped to build the factory!!
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Great photos Mark of women munitions workers in WW1. Many of these photos look like publicity material, everyone happy and clean. But the reality was a dangerous and dirty job.

I wondered if any of the photos were of the Wolseley factory when they made munitions, my grandmother worked there 1914 onwards.
 
Great photos Mark of women munitions workers in WW1. Many of these photos look like publicity material, everyone happy and clean. But the reality was a dangerous and dirty job.
totally agree viv...without the women workers the wars would not have been won...as you said their work was dirty and dangerous..no health and safety...one wrong move in the munitions factory and they were blown to bits...respect

lyn
 
Great photos Mark of women munitions workers in WW1. Many of these photos look like publicity material, everyone happy and clean. But the reality was a dangerous and dirty job.

I wondered if any of the photos were of the Wolseley factory when they made munitions, my grandmother worked there 1914 onwards.
Hi Vivienne - posed shots - in most cases I think yes. Wolseley - not sure - as I said at the top because of the nature of the subject some do not have much detail on the captions. I have copied sets for Kynochs, Canal work, Railways, ATS recruitment and a munitions factory in Coventry which I will try to continue to post tonight. Also copied sets of visits from Montgomery and Churchill, loads of posters and many of bomb damage in Birmingham and Coventry which I will post onto the most appropriate threads. The IWM website looks like an absolute goldmine - I've hardly scratched its surface so far! Easily as good if not better than the Historic England and National Railway Museum websites!
 
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This is the Drews Lane munitions workers - taken about 1917. My grandmother (age 19) and her sister are on this photo, but not sure which ones. I've posted this before, but only just noticed the boards beneath the central man's legs. Are these items they were making ?
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Not only dangers of being blown up, but look how close they were working to those leather belts driving the machines. Certainly no health and safety. When I worked at McKecknie Brothers in Ladywood in late 40s my uncle was the works photographer and had to take photographs of all accidents, many of them caused by the leather drive belts. Some very blood curdling incidents.
 
Not only dangers of being blown up, but look how close they were working to those leather belts driving the machines. Certainly no health and safety. When I worked at McKecknie Brothers in Ladywood in late 40s my uncle was the works photographer and had to take photographs of all accidents, many of them caused by the leather drive belts. Some very blood curdling incidents.
When I served my apprenticeship late 50’s early 60’s I would say 80% of our machines were belt driven. We were a machine tool company and had lots of machines. When you heard that “SNAP” of a belt letting go, you ducked down as low as you could go! I was lucky, many not so!
 
Thats all for tonight folks - will try to post more tomorrow including an explanation of what the £$%& is about to happen to this poor girl.....View attachment 189211
OK - from last nights quiz question - so who and where is this?????
No - it was not the latest act in the circus, but the Coventry Ordinance Works in 1917 (just over the border but close enough)!
The girl (who I assume was selected purely for her size) was being inserted into the barrel of a 15-inch naval gun presumably to clean its interior:-
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It looks like a damn tight fit - I know I would not get in there - ever.......
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At least she had a bit more room (but not much.....) when she was also inserted into the other end!
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This was a monster of a gun barrel - I will post more photos of it on another thread:-
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Lots of women were employed here in various roles - these ladies are fuse head packing:-
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And these folk are fuse head machining:-
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Here is a puzzle - the captions all say "Great Central Railway Birmingham" - but the Great Central came nowhere near Birmingham from what I can research - Rugby or Leicester were about as close as it got according to this map from Wikipedia:- 1708554807394.png
The only thing I can think of is that the locomotive was being serviced in Birmingham (you can see Great Central on one of the tenders, and also a building in the background that looks like it cound be Tyseley works) - I suppose in wartime they would have had to service anything they could - any thoughts anyone?

Anyway the photos are a damn good set and who am I to argue with the Imperial War Museum - so here we go - all dated 1918:-
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Now a random selection of female war workers all from the IWM website:-

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Fire Guard Boxfoldia Bournbrook 1943

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Army Equipment Exhibition Birmingham City Centre 1944

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Female "Bargee" (think this is the correct term...) Tipton Green Cotterill Colliery Branch Birmingham Canal 1942

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National Fire Service Training Centre Augustus Road 1942

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Birmingham Toy Factory Worker 1918

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Female War Workers waiting to leave from New St Station on postings 1941
 
Here is a puzzle - the captions all say "Great Central Railway Birmingham" - but the Great Central came nowhere near Birmingham from what I can research - Rugby or Leicester were about as close as it got according to this map from Wikipedia:- View attachment 189255
The only thing I can think of is that the locomotive was being serviced in Birmingham (you can see Great Central on one of the tenders, and also a building in the background that looks like it cound be Tyseley works) - I suppose in wartime they would have had to service anything they could - any thoughts anyone?

Anyway the photos are a damn good set and who am I to argue with the Imperial War Museum - so here we go - all dated 1918:-
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Great photos Mark! The B&W looks really great.........
 
And finally - a set of portraits of ATS Recruitment Staff in the Birmingham Recruitment Office in 1942 - most are from this office but some from places like Coventry, Dudley and Kidderminster:-
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Once recruited and trained, ATS personnel performed such tasks as storewomen:-
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And Ack-Ack gun operation! (this one is somewhere in Birmingham in 1943)
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This is the Drews Lane munitions workers - taken about 1917. My grandmother (age 19) and her sister are on this photo, but not sure which ones. I've posted this before, but only just noticed the boards beneath the central man's legs. Are these items they were making ?
View attachment 189220
only just spotted your photo viv...nothing more annoying than having a photograph that shows our rellies but we dont know where they are..no idea what those boards are though

lyn
 
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