Changes also came in the carrying of mail during the war, particularly in American cities. Prior to World War I, women had served as mail carriers in some rural communities, but none served in cities.
MRS JOHNSON: With this war on, everyone’s got to do their bit. A bit makes it sound like something small, something easy. With so many men away to fight, us women have got to do way more than a bit.
MRS JOHNSON: With this war on, everyone’s got to do their bit. A bit makes it sound like something small, something easy. With so many men away to fight, us women have got to do way more than a bit.
In this blog post, Jabour explores the multitude of women who dressed as men to fight—and die—in all the major battles of the Civil War. 'I Wanted to Do My Part': Women as Soldiers in Civil ...
Women At War (or Les Combattantes ... Edward Berger’s futile (and fatal) tale of World War I through the eyes of a 17-year-old German conscript has a *checks notes* whopping nine Oscar ...
The names of 134,712 men and women who died in World War One will be projected on to the Scottish Parliament building on Armistice Day but what does that figure represent? The death toll of Scots ...