War Economy
Women's Organisations for War Work
Women's Organisations for War Work
Most of the wartime effort of women was by individuals who became salary or wage earners, and accepted employment in industries where wartime recruitment of men had left vacancies. However, a great deal of unpaid work was also done, while a considerable organisation was devoted to attracting more women into war work and co-ordinating their efforts. A group of Women's Auxiliary Services was set up and played an important part in freeing men for the armed forces and for essential work.
1 Parliamentary Paper H-11a, Report of the National Service Department, 1946, p. 28.
From the register, the Auxiliary organised groups of voluntary workers. The largest was the Canteen Section, twenty thousand strong, who helped staff canteen huts at military camps, service clubs and hospitals throughout New Zealand. Next in importance was the Clerical Section of ten thousand members who undertook the bulk of the clerical and typing work for the Home Guard and the Emergency Precautions Scheme. For long periods members attended in the evenings at army offices and at service camps to overtake arrears of clerical work. Their clerical and typing contribution played an important part in the mobilisation of New Zealand's military forces, especially during the period in 1942 when the possibility of Japanese invasion required diversion of all possible manpower to active service.
The third most numerous group was the Transport Group, comprising five thousand members trained in all aspects of civilian transport. In most districts, members of this group were seconded to the Emergency Precautions Scheme and undertook convoy duties, collection of waste paper and similar work.
There was a Hospital Group of two thousand women who, besides undertaking hospital visiting, trained as hospital aids in kitchen and laundry work. Members also performed voluntary work for Hospital Boards, such as clerical and telephone work, and admission of patients.
Smaller groups of women were concerned with vegetable growing, obstetrical work and signalling.
Up to October 1942 the Auxiliary was responsible for the recruitment of women for the Women's Auxiliary Armed Forces, and, throughout the war, helped with national campaigns such as loans, bond sales, and patriotic fund appeals. The Auxiliary performed valuable work by co-operating with the National Service Department in keeping in touch with members of the Women's Land Service and by acting in an advisory capacity on the general welfare of service personnel and the employment of women in war work.
1 15 August 1945.
The Women's Army Auxiliary Corps came into being towards the end of 1941, when a draft of thirty volunteers embarked for the Middle East. This corps reached a peak strength of 4600 in July 1943. By VJ Day the numbers had shrunk to about 2500, and by March 1946 fewer than a thousand women were still serving.
The strength of the Women's Royal Naval Service in New Zealand rose steadily after its inception in May 1942 to a peak of over five hundred in October 1944. Most of the women served ashore, in clerical or domestic work, although some were engaged in manning motor-launches in the Auckland harbour. Over a thousand women in these three services served overseas.
The Women's Land Service, where over two thousand women were serving by the second half of 1944, was established on a small scale in 1940 to supplement male labour on farms when recruitment started to have serious effects. The contribution made by these women is discussed in the chapter dealing with farming.1
1 Chapter 8.