doctors felt that they women were to delicate for such work, ( exact answer from my book)
doctors felt that they women were to delicate for such work, ( exact answer from my book)
Women helped in the farms, industries, and as nurses in the battlefield.
Yes. Nothing restricts women from joining the military to become nurses.
Most Women aren't inteligent enough to be doctors
Women for the most part replaced the men who were at war on the farms. They also became battlefield nurses like Clara Barton.
There were not many work related roles for women in the 1900s. Most women were homemakers while others were teachers, maids, nurses, and a very few doctors.
nurses, bus drivers, train drivers, driving instructors, ambulance drivers, Doctors
Nurses, doctors, factory workers, drivers, all of the jobs left behind by service members.
The role of working women in the world's economy has been continually changing. Women went from working as just teachers and nurses to being lawyers and doctors.
Many men did want to have to show themselves to women they didn't know. Women also have the same feelings, even today, about male doctors.
Until World War II, women who served in the wars were primarily nurses and secretaries. During World War II, women were used as pilots to fly soldiers to and from the battlefield areas. They flew the planes that flew soldiers home.
Dorothea Dix was the superintendent of women nurses for the union.
Women went to world war 1 as nurses and helped the men that had been wounded or injured. Some of the nurses worked at the hospital near the battles while other women traveled and built tents in where they would help the wounded men and perform surgry or help doctors operate.