Cymru'n Cofio / Wales Remembers

Page 62

MUNITIONETTES AND CANARY GIRLS In autumn 2016 the National Waterfront Museum in Swansea hosted an exhibition about the women recruited to work in munitions factories during the First World War. Nicknamed ‘Munitionettes’ or ‘Canary Girls’, they found the hazardous, heavy work brought them a new freedom, such as work outside the home and even fame on the football pitch. The rush to do one’s duty and fight at the front left a shortage of skilled male workers in factories across Britain. Women, most of whom did not work, were in domestic service or previously did menial, unskilled work, were now recruited to work in industry. The Shell Crisis in 1915 led to a new Government department, with David Lloyd George as the first Minister of Munitions. Lloyd George was credited with driving increased supply. Munitions factories became the largest single employer of women in the UK, with over 900,000 being employed in the industry. Even though they did the same job as the men, and often worked 12-hour shifts, they were paid half the wage. By June 1917 the factories that the women worked in produced over fifty million shells a year. By the end of the war the British Army had fired around 170 million shells.

At the National Explosives Factory, located at Pembrey, near Burry Port, the women worked with TNT – a highly poisonous substance. It contained picric acid which had the effect of turning the skin of the women who worked with it bright yellow, giving rise to the nickname ‘canary girls’. During the war, women became more involved in sports such as football and cricket. Football teams were formed at munitions factories across Britain and the government actively encouraged the women to take part as they believed it was good for their health and kept them fit to work in the factories. This exhibition explored the personal stories of some of the women and toured some of the other National Museum Wales sites.

Left: Heavy cotton khaki overall and cap worn by a woman working in a munitions factory. Location and wearer unknown. Donated to the National Museum of Wales in 1919. © Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales

CYMRU’N COFIO WALES REMEMBERS 1914−1918 |

61


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Articles inside

Aftermath and final thoughts

4min
pages 124-126

Acknowledgements

0
page 127

Wales at War app

0
page 121

Poem: Communing by Ifor ap Glyn

1min
pages 122-123

A new digital archive: cymru1914.org

1min
pages 119-120

A digital memorial

1min
page 118

Considering legacy

1min
page 117

David Lloyd George and the Paris Peace Conferences

2min
pages 113-114

A fitting memorial

0
page 116

Tree Beacons: Linking the First World War with our forests in Wales

1min
page 115

RAF aircraft named in honour of Lionel Rees, VC

1min
page 112

Week-by-week blog and displays in Ceredigion

1min
page 109

David Lloyd George

1min
pages 110-111

Centenary of the race riots

1min
page 108

Poem: My Living Soul by Mari Wyn Jones

1min
pages 102-104

on the poetry of war and peace in Wales

3min
pages 105-107

Celebrating women and women’s suffrage

2min
page 100

Royal British Legion thank you

0
page 101

Wales’ youth message of peace and goodwill

1min
pages 96-97

1918: The return to peace

0
pages 98-99

RAF Centenary

1min
page 95

Coastal connections

2min
pages 93-94

Poppies for Remembrance

1min
page 92

Musical tribute from young Welsh musicians

1min
page 91

U-Boat project 1914-18: Commemorating the war at sea

2min
pages 88-89

Nawr yr Arwr/ Now the Hero – Immersive theatre in Swansea

2min
page 90

Pages of the Sea

1min
pages 86-87

The centenary of the Armistice

3min
pages 84-85

Poem: Heroes by Eric Ngalle Charles

1min
pages 80-83

Remembering the policemen who served in the war

0
page 79

Weeping Window: Poppies at the Senedd

1min
pages 75-77

Dark Clouds Over the Woollen Industry

1min
page 78

Poetry of Loss

1min
page 73

Edward Thomas collection and restoration

1min
page 74

Digitising Hedd Wyn’s Yr Arwr

0
page 71

Y Gadair Wag |The Empty Chair: Creative poetry commemoration

1min
page 72

Commemoration of the Third Battle of Ypres (Passchendaele

1min
page 69

A home kept alive

3min
page 68

The unusual connection between Ireland and Fron-goch

1min
page 63

Poem:Watchkeeper by Nerys Williams

1min
pages 64-67

Munitionettes and Canary Girls

1min
page 62

Forget me not: Postcards from the First World War

1min
pages 59-61

Poppies: Weeping Window at Caernarfon Castle

1min
page 57

In a single day: We’re here because we’re here

1min
page 58

Creating a cinematic commemoration – Journey’s End film

1min
page 56

Overnight candlelit vigil to commemorate the Battle of the Somme

1min
pages 53-55

Mametz: Aled Rhys Hughes and David Jones

0
page 52

South Wales Western Front Association

1min
page 51

Wales and the Battle of the Somme

3min
pages 49-50

Poem: Names by Alan Llwyd

3min
pages 46-48

DyddiadurKate – Tweeting from the past

1min
page 42

The Great War and the Valleys

1min
pages 43-44

Recreating Y Gadair Ddu / The Black Chair

1min
page 45

Bring Them Home

0
page 41

Belief and Action – Remembering different voices

1min
pages 38-39

Faces of the Fallen

1min
page 40

When Dai Became Tommy

1min
page 37

Commemorating Gallipoli

1min
page 36

The Merchant Navy

0
page 29

Poem: Was it for this? by Gillian Clarke

1min
pages 30-33

The theatre in the wood – Remembering Mametz Wood

0
page 28

Efforts and Ideals – Prints of the First World War

1min
pages 25-27

Conserving our war memorials

3min
pages 34-35

Digitising the Book of Remembrance

1min
page 24

Commemoration through heritage

1min
page 23

Learning resources on Hwb

0
page 22

Candlelit vigil to commemorate the outbreak of war

0
page 19

Welsh Memorial in Langemark, Flanders

1min
page 20

First Minister’s Foreword

1min
page 5

The 1914 Christmas Truce: An exhibition at Bodelwyddan Castle

3min
pages 17-18

Cymru’n Cofio Wales Remembers 1914-1918

1min
pages 7-8

14-18 NOW

0
page 12

Marc Decaestecker: Flemish cafe owner

0
page 21

Sir Deian Hopkin’s Foreword

1min
page 6
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