A friend’s mother was wounded while
serving on an anti aircraft battery near Hull
during World War 2. This Remembrance week I would like to write about the many
women who served in both World Wars. I have decided to concentrate of the
Second War as the Post and Times has bound volumes of the period. During the
war it carried features on the local men and women whom served.
The largest organisation Auxiliary Territorial
Service (ATS) which had by the end of the war over 190,000 serving women
carrying out a variety of tasks such as manning anti aircraft batteries through
to clerical, telephonists and radar operators. It was work that carried risks
as over 700 were killed.
Typical was Leek woman Isabel Williams who was
22 in 1943 and was attached with the Royal Corps of Signals as a wireless
operator having joined the services from Leek Moorlands Building Society. Most
local women joined the ATS which was followed in numbers by the Women’s Auxiliary
Air Force- the WAAF. Evelyn Mee of Wellington
St felt the call of patriotic duty and joined the
WAAF working at an aircraft base in the South of England. Many WAAF’s were
based at Fighter Command bases which put them in great danger as bases, such as
Biggin Hill , were targets in the
first raids by the Luftwaffe in the Battle of Britain. Many WAAF’s served as
the eyes of Fighter Command as they plotted the movements of incoming enemy
aircraft. There were 183,000 women, who joined the WAAF at its height in 1943,
191 were killed in combat.
The Women’s Royal Navy Service was popularly
known as the Wrens and had originally been set up in 1917, at the outbreak of
the Second they were reformed and at their peak numbered 75,000. 100 died in
the conflict. Again a Wren’s duties mirrored that of women in the other
services working as cooks, wireless operators and clerical support.
Among Leek women was Joan Aggas of Daisy Bank
whose father had fought in the First War and was the Secretary of the local British
Legion. Another Wren whose family will have particular memories of Victory in
Europe day was May Goldstraw of West St who married Petty Officer Trowell of Cambridge in that week and left to live in East Anglia .
Women were engaged in all areas and
not just in the Services. Isobel Ede of Longsdon served as a Queen Alexandria
Nurse having trained at a local hospital. Women also worked in munitions
including my Auntie Ethel at Swynerton following another relative who had
cleaned out gas shells at a factory in Hanley during the First War.
War inevitably brings casualties and sadly one
local woman was killed working in the Land Army in May 1944. Nancy Meredith
aged 21 of Park Road
worked with the Timber Corps and died in a road accident. The newspaper report
of her death said that she liked the outdoor life.
On a lighter note other women were
doing their bit to help the war effort as in 1943 two young Macclesfield women
were caught trying to break into the American camp at Blackshaw Moor and as the
war progressed other women were stopped by the Police trying to fraternise with
our war time allies.
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