Women who worked as lumberjacks were commonly called lumberjills. Not many women did this type of work. Most of them worked as lumberjills in Britain during World War II.
The Women's Timber Corps, also known as the Lumberjills, was disbanded in 1946 after World War II ended. During the war, these women worked in forests cutting down trees for timber to support the war effort.
Only some of them, the other ones are not certified lumberjacks
The Women's Land Army
in ww1 women were called canaries because of the yellow faces they got from the tnt in the factories
Camp followers.
Rosie the Riveter was what women who worked in factories were called.
When women started to work they worked in factories. They worked long hours for little pay.
They were called "suffragettes" which is a label based on the term, "suffrage" which means "the right to vote."
No they did not fight in the war. They took care of the soldiers in the war. Where they worked was called the Red Cross.
Women worked in many factories and farms in the war.
approxmately 80,000 men and women worked in law enforcement in the usa in the year 2000
Women worked in hospitals for the soldiers.