VE Day 75

LADIES, DON’T BULLY LIKE HITLER’S BIG SISTER

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Woman pressed into taking on new responsibi­lities at work had the challenge of unfamiliar roles to learn – and also the patronisin­g attitudes of the period.

For an indication of the tests facing women in the workplace, check out the Daily Mirror’s Stop– and THINK column from July 11, 1940:

We were discussing the way in which women are being promoted to fill posts in factories, offices, workshops.

Said one man, ‘Putting a woman in authority is like putting a child in long trousers – they’re both certain to trip themselves up.’

You’ve heard those disparagin­g remarks about women bosses as often as I have. The pity of it is that so often they are true. And now women who have never been more than subordinat­es are tasting authority for the fifirst time. It is a heady draught.

How easy to fuss like an old hen, putting one’s staffff offff their stroke; to be on one’s dignity; to bluster and bully like Hitler’s big sister.

Yet though the bossy busybody makes the most noise, she doesn’t get the most out of her staffff. The quiet, calmly confifiden­t woman does that.

She asks people to do things – but they know it is an order.

She listens to their suggestion­s – but those suggestion­s must be good.

I said she was confifiden­t. That is her secret. Too often the blustering exterior of the bossy woman hides an inferiorit­y complex.”

 ??  ?? LEFT The Womens Land Army (Pests Department) were employed in south Wales as ratcatcher­s, and here’s a record catch. March 1944
LEFT The Womens Land Army (Pests Department) were employed in south Wales as ratcatcher­s, and here’s a record catch. March 1944
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