|
|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
Here, now fully updated for the twenty-first century, is the
complex and fascinating history of the formation of the British
Women Police. Full of drama, intrigue and humour, it also captures,
through well-authenticated primary material, the colour and manner
of the times. Remarkable women abound in this book, from the
wealthy and eccentric Margaret Damer Dawson to the
excitement-hungry ex-suffragette Mary Allen; and from the alluring
but ill-starred Mrs Stanley to the tireless Mrs Peto. A few famous
faces like Winston Churchill, Lady Astor and Adolf Hitler also
feature, as does the women police's arch-enemy: the magistrate
Frederick Mead. The pressure for the appointment of women police
began well before World War I. Anti-white-slave traffic
organizations felt they would help to stem the flow of prostitutes
to and from Europe and suffragettes wanted them to ensure fairer
treatment for women from the police and courts of law. But it was
the Great War that gave them a launching pad for their battle.
Early policewomen fought much public and police prejudice,
wondering all the time how far to hold out for their ideals and how
much to compromise for the sake of some official recognition; the
eternal problem when breaking new ground. Their story, which was
played out not only in the streets and courts of Great Britain and
the House of Commons but in a defeated Germany and strife-torn
1920s Ireland, as well as in prohibition-era USA, ended in victory
with their official integration into the force in the 1970s, but
the battle did not end there, as our story shows...
Joan Lock's warm and nostalgic account of her three years of
training as a young student nurse in the early 1950s. Perfect for
fans of CALL THE MIDWIFE. When Joan Lock began her formal training
as a young nurse in the 1950s, she was unprepared for the strict
discipline and long hours which were to follow and quickly realised
she was no Florence Nightingale. Her honest and humorous account of
the next three years reveals her most intimate experiences of being
a nurse: from dealing with temperamental surgeons to fighting off
flirtatious patients. Labelled a trouble-maker, Joan and her
friends tested their strict Sisters' patience as they climbed
through windows, slept through lectures and broke every thermometer
that passed through their hands. But through it all, Joan found
herself touched by the people she met and their heart-warming
stories.
|
Loved (Paperback)
Joan Locke
|
R192
Discovery Miles 1 920
|
Ships in 18 - 22 working days
|
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.