Cleator Mill, Cumbria: Fighting for Women鈥檚 Rights
Ainsworth鈥檚 Thread Mill at Cleator Moor had won important government contracts to make khaki linen thread for army uniforms.
But poor conditions and pay triggered a strike in the female workforce in March 1915. It was raised in Parliament by William Anderson, the Labour MP for Attercliffe in Sheffield and husband of Mary MacArthur of The Federation of Women Workers.
She visited the girls at the mill and, with her support; their demands for better conditions and pay were met.
It was a small victory that carried significance for the rights of other women workers and their treatment.
The TUC see the strike at Cleator Mill as an important action in the development of the union movement.
Location: Cleator Mill, Cleator, Cumbria CA23 3DJ
Image: Workers from Cleator Mill, courtesy of the TUC collection at London Metropolitan University
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
麻豆社 Radio Cumbria—World War One At Home
Places in Cumbria that tell a story of World War One
Home Front Life—World War One At Home
Everyday life in the towns, villages and countryside
Women—World War One At Home
How war transformed the status and role of women
More clips from World War One At Home
-
The loss of HMY Iolaire
Duration: 18:52
-
Scotland, Slamannan and the Argylls
Duration: 07:55
-
Scotland Museum of Edinburgh mourning dress
Duration: 06:17
-
Scotland Montrose 'GI Brides'
Duration: 06:41