They did the jobs the mens used to do & kept factories & other work places running while men were at war
The life of women in the revolutionary war changed as the war went on. Women were recognized more due to working for the husbands and doing work that the men could not do because they were fighting. After the war ended women were recognized more often and had women's rights.
Australian women became more independent due to the responsibilities the women had to face when the men went to war.
It is said that logistically, women won the war (in reference to World War 2) because women were responsible for working in the industry. This was due to the fact that most of the able bodied men were fighting the war.
Manufacturing jobs opened up to women and upped their earning power. This was due in part to their experience earned in factories during the war.
ww1 never lead to women suffage the suffage had been there before ww1
First of all, there was hardly any poverty in America after the holocaust. Due to the bombing war efforts, many men and women were working to make weapons for the war.
Women at war were usually nurses or bomb and ammunition makers
A war can not be fought by women
The War of Women was created on 2003-08-12.
Igbo Women's War happened in 1929.
No. war is war and the death, misery, and loss of family are the result. Throughout history women and children have been the casualty of war. Children loose parents, are killed, or maimed with things like land mines. In some areas of the world they are sold or forced into fighting. Child armies are not unusual. Women loose husbands, fathers, and children due to war. Millions are treated as chattel, raped, and sold into sexual slavery.
Seeing as during the time, women were striving to get better conditions because the men thought of them as the people who would stay at home and clean, look after the children, etc. The men didn't call these working women during the war a special type of name due to the sexism. They were just referred to as "Working women" or "Working-class women"