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  1. Land girls did a wide range of jobs, including milking cows, lambing, managing poultry, ploughing, gathering crops, digging ditches, catching rats and carrying out farm maintenance work. Lumber jills cut down trees and did associated work.

  2. Women were initially asked to volunteer to serve in the Land Army and, from December 1941, could also be conscripted into land work. At its peak in 1944, there were more than 80,000 women – often known as 'land girls' – in the WLA. Land girls did a wide variety of jobs on the land.

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  3. The Women’s Land Army employed over 200,000 women between June 1939 and November 1950. These women, known as Land Girls, replaced male farm workers who had gone to war. Coming from all walks of life, Land Girls were critical to increasing the country’s food production.

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  4. Apr 20, 2015 · The Women’s Land Army played a fundamental role in Britain during World War Two. The Women’s Land Army helped to provide Britain with food at a time when U-boats were destroying many merchant ships bringing supplies to Britain from America. Members of the WLA sawing wood. The Women’s Land Army was first created during World War One.

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  5. Womens Land Army. The Women's Land Army was reformed in June 1939 to provide additional agricultural labour as farm workers were called up for service in the armed forces. The difficulty of importing food during the war, meant that production in Britain needed to be dramatically increased. At first all Land Girls were volunteers, but when ...

  6. The Women’s Land Army was created during both World War One and World War Two to help ease the shortage of male farm labour, this was essential to secure food production and operate farm...

  7. May 5, 2015 · How important was the WI during World War II? What kind of role did it play? It was the largest voluntary women’s organization in the country that was non-military. At the outbreak of the war it had 328,000 members with institutes in one in three English and Welsh villages.

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