Women and War Work eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 167 pages of information about Women and War Work.

Women and War Work eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 167 pages of information about Women and War Work.
Minister of Munitions and the Chief Officer and Chief Superintendent of the Women Police Service, who were appointed to act as the Minister’s representatives for the ‘training, supplying and controlling’ of the Force required.  The duties of the Policewomen were to include checking the entry of women into the factory, examining passports, searching for contraband, namely, matches, cigarettes and alcohol; dealing with complaints of petty offences; patrolling the neighbourhood for the protection of women going home from work; accompanying the women to and fro in the workmen’s trains to the neighbouring towns where they lodge; appearing in necessary cases at the Police Court, and assisting the magistrates in dealing with such cases, if required to.  The Force for each factory was to consist of an inspector, sergeants and constables.  Women to be trained for this work were at once enrolled by the Women Police Service and trained under a Staff of Officers.

“Since the inauguration of factory-police work for women in July, 1916, a marked success has attended the organisation, which has resulted in almost daily applications for Policewomen for factories situated in every part of the United Kingdom.  We are not able to give a list of these factories nor to mention their names in our report of the work carried on by them, but we may say that at the present time we are supplying H.M.  Factories, National Filling Factories and Private Controlled Factories.  We are sure that our patrons and subscribers will feel as proud as we are of the intrepid Policewomen who for the past fourteen months have been carrying out these duties, which, we believe, no women have hitherto dreamt of undertaking, and which have called forth qualities of tact, discretion, cool courage and endurance that would compare well with any of those whom we call heroes in the fight at the front.  We would call attention to one factory from which both the military and male Police Guard has been withdrawn.  The factory employs several thousand women in the manufacture and disposal of some of the most dangerous explosives demanded by the war.  When an air raid is in progress the operatives are cleared from the factory and the sheds and magazines are left to the sole charge of the Firemen and Policewomen, who take up the respective posts allotted to them.  The Policewomen who guard the various magazines know that they hold their lives in their hands.  We are proud to report that not one woman has failed at her post or shirked her duty in the hour of danger.  The duties assigned to the Policewomen and their officers in these factories have increased considerably in scope during the past year.  In one factory the force of Policewomen numbers 160 under one Chief Inspector, two Inspectors and twelve Sergeants, all of whom have been sworn in and take entire charge of all police cases dealing with women.  They arrest, convey the prisoners to the Women Police Charge Station, keep their own charge sheets and other official documents, lock the

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Women and War Work from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.