Book description
During the Second World War, over 1. 5 million women found themselves
thrust into the previously male dominated domain of the workplace,
having to learn new skills within a matter of weeks. Their contribution
to the war effort often remains unheralded, but it is without doubt that
these women played a central role in an Allied victory. Kathleen
Church-Bliss and Elsie Whiteman were two such women. The previous owners
of a genteel restaurant, they volunteered for war work and soon found
themselves in an aircraft components factory. Thrown into tough
industrial work, they kept a joint diary providing a unique insight into
life in a wartime factory. Working for Victory reveals the poor
conditions suffered on the factory floor, as well as the general
disorganisation and bad management of this essential part of the war
effort, but it also describes how war work opened up a new world of
social freedom for many women. This diary, both tragic and humorous,
brings women's war work vividly to life.

