½ûÂþÌìÌÃ

A large group of women all lined up at different levels ready for a big group photograph.

Women and work

“I am perfectly certain, that it is high time that women’s interests were in the hands of their own sex.” Helena Normanton, 1918.

Background

Across our heritage collections, we hold extensive archives relating to women and work. There are personal papers of pioneering women who gained entry into different professional fields. There are also papers of activists and campaigning groups who worked to bring equality to the workplace. Here are some broad topics and highlights from the collection.

Sylvia Pankhurst in her studio.
Sylvia Pankhurst in her studio.

Women in the Arts

Our archives hold the papers of women who worked in the arts, for example as actresses, jewellers, artists, and of organisations who campaigned for equality for women in the industry. These include:

  • was a jeweller in the early 20th century. Her diaries describe her training at art college.
  • was a cross-dressing actress who was also a member of the .
  • operated during the 1980s campaigning on many issues affecting women in the entertainment industry such as portrayal of women, racism, state funding of the arts, working hours and conditions, abortion / childcare facilities. The group was also support network for women and ran workshops and providing information.

Women in the Church

Women’s ordination to the priesthood was debated by some during the women’s suffrage campaign. It remained a campaign issue until 1994 when the first women were ordained. Relevant archives include:

  • became Assistant Preacher at the City Temple in London in 1917. This was highly unusual at a time when the Church of England did not formally allow women to preach. In 1929, she established the , marking the beginning of a long campaign for the ordination of women
  • The was founded in 1979 to campaign for women to be ordained in the Anglican Church. 

Women in the Civil Service

Women first worked in the Civil Service as clerks and shorthand writers during the late 19th century. Women also became factory inspectors. After the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act in 1919, women could now apply for higher-graded positions in the Civil Service. Relevant archives include:

  • began her working life as a sanitary inspector and then as a factory inspector.
  • became Chief Lady Inspector of Factories from 1897 until 1920.
  • was formed in 1897 when women clerks’ pay and annual increments were suddenly reduced.
  • was formed in 1916 with the objective of achieving equal pay with male civil servants
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Enid Locket Rosser in 1928.

Women in Law

Women read Law at University but could not officially practice as solicitors and barristers in the UK until the passing of the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act in 1919, which removed any legal barrier to women to work as lawyers on the grounds of their sex. Archive highlights include:

  • was one of four women who challenged the Law Society’s refusal to admit women as members in 1913. Ten years later, she was the only one from this group to be issued with a certificate to practise as a solicitor.
  • archive charts her fight to join the Bar of England and Wales and open it up to women. She was the first woman to be admitted to an Inn of Court on 24 December 1919 and was called to the Bar in 1922.
  • , a student at ½ûÂþÌìÌÃ, was called to the Bar in 1927. Her unpublished memoir reveals a different perspective on the legal profession, to that of Helena Normanton’s, despite prejudice and hardship.

Women in Media

Our archives include women who worked in different branches of the media such as journalism, book publishing, advertising and public relations. There are also campaigning organisations who worked to bring about gender equality in the industry.

  • was a documentary film-maker during and after the Second World War. During the 1950s she moved into screenwriting and remained active as a journalist.
  • , established in 1970, campaigned for women to be employed in senior positions, especially in the BBC and ITV, and for a better, less sexist slant to stories about women.
  • was established in 1974 to publish literature which challenged gender and sexual stereotypes and where a method of work would be employed that was identifiably feminist.
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Staff at Endell Street Military Hospital.

Women in Medicine

We hold material relating to pioneering women in medicine. These include:

  • Letters from recounting her journey to become a doctor.
  • and the setting up of women-only Endell Street Military Hospital in Covent Garden during the First World War.
  • , orderly at Endell Street Military Hospital
  • , the National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies response to the First World War.
300 group leaflet
A 300 Group leaflet.

Women in Politics

We hold the papers of women MPs who worked to achieve women’s equality. These include:

  •  (MP who founded the Married Women’s Association in 1938 to bring about equality in marriage). Find out more about women in politics in our  exhibit. 
  • Claire Short (MP established  in response to her bill to ban erotica such as ‘Page 3’ in national newspapers).
  •  stood unsuccessfully as a Liberal candidate in many elections. She taught Personnel Management at ½ûÂþÌìÌà from 1946-1978 and conducted a number of studies into women’s employment.

There are also papers of organisations that campaigned to increase the numbers of women entering Parliament.

  • The group  campaigned for more women MPs in the 1940s.
  • , founded in 1980, encouraged more women to stand for public office, as councillors or MPs. 
A poster detailing the achievements of women scientists. This is one of a set and it features Rosalind Franklin a biophysicists showing a drawing of her and the DNA helix.
An Equal Opportunities Commission poster.

Women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)

On these areas, we hold:

  • The  and journals such as the  (founded in 1919).
  • The letters of Caroline Haslett, the President of the Women’s Engineering Society (within the ).
  • The papers of , a Society member. Ira’s papers contain material on the International Conference of Women Engineers and Scientists. You can find more information about the history of women in engineering on the  and  websites. 
  • Items of women in accountancy, such as the archives of , the first woman to qualify as a Chartered Accountant, who was also the Treasurer of the Fawcett Society.  
  • Our collections also include posters produced by the Equal Opportunities Commission related to careers in science, such as the biophysicist, Rosalind Franklin; the animal behaviour scientist, Jane Goodall; and the astronomer, Caroline Herschel.  also celebrate women doctors (such as Elizabeth Blackwell and Edith Pechey). 

How to search

These are some of the highlights from the archives. You can find more material by searching the catalogue using a person’s name, organisation, or occupation, or by using terms such as “performing arts”, “entertainment”, “actress”, “Women journalists”, “lawyers”, “legal profession”, “women’s employment”, “medicine”.

How do I access?

Most of the material highlighted here is part of our special collections, which are open to all but must be consulted in our reading room. Find out how to book your place and order material on our  page.

How do I get further help?

If you need any further help with these collections, please get in touch with our Curator for Equality, Rights and Citizenship, Gillian Murphy

Find out more