Read Bomb Girls--Britain's Secret Army Online
Authors: Jacky Hyams
Acton, London, 1944: Older women workers making cannon shells.
© Getty Images
Betty Nettle: Betty started work at the Bridgend Arsenal as a 17 year old in 1942.
Betty (
centre
) with two of her sisters. The Bridgend factory transformed the lives of thousands of women in the area.
Margaret Proudlock (
left
) and her good friend Sadie. They worked as a pair, punching cotton into pans of hot acid.
Margaret (
seated, front row, far right
) and her co-workers at Drungans: they’d often burst into song to keep themselves cheerful.
An early shift at the bomb factory.
© Getty Images
Electric arc welding at a major shell producing factory.
© Getty Images
Doing her bit: working on shell caps in the busy afternoon shift.
© Getty Images
Munitions women drink milk to reduce the harmful effects of their exposure to lead.
© Getty Images
Margaret Curtis and husband Jack on their wedding day, December 1945.
Margaret’s reference when she left the factory as the war ended in 1945.
Margaret, (
seated
) with some of the other girls working on ‘A’ Shift
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ePub ISBN 978 1 78219 716 4
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First published in hardback in 2013
ISBN: 978 1 78219 442 2
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