Home Fires: The Story Of The Women's Institute In The Second World War: The Story of the Women's Institute in the Second World War
Released: Sep 15, 2015
Publisher: Turtleback Books
Format: Library Binding, 384 pages
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Description:
FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Away from the frontlines of World War II, in towns and villages across Great Britain, ordinary women were playing a vital role in their country's war effort. As members of the Women's Institute, an organization with a presence in a third of Britain's villages, they ran canteens and knitted garments for troops, collected tons of rosehips and other herbs to replace medicines that couldn't be imported, and advised the government on issues ranging from evacuee housing to children's health to postwar reconstruction. But they are best known for making jam: from produce they grew on every available scrap of land, they produced twelve million pounds of jamand preserves to feed a hungry nation.
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