This Bank of England blog article discusses the roles of women bank employees.
-Editor
Janet Hogarth was the first woman to work in the Bank, appointed in 1894. Her job was to supervise a small team of women who sorted used banknotes. At the outbreak of the First World War there were only 65 women clerks appointed by the Bank, but this had risen to 1,309 by 1919.
The women clerks had a separate pay structure which was to remain until 1958 and were paid less than men. The salary scheme for the men was designed to provide a substantial increase about the time a man usually married, which the Bank judged to be around 28. The women in contrast had to leave the Bank on marriage, on receipt of a lump sum, which was essentially a dowry. This was because the Bank, in common with the Civil Service, operated a marriage bar that was strictly enforced. Whilst this may seem unfair today, the Bank were acting in accordance with public opinion of the time. The Bank's marriage bar was finally rescinded in 1949, due to post war labour shortages.
At the outbreak of the Second World War, it was decided that ‘women clerks on the permanent staff who married could, at the discretion of the Governors, remain in the service with acting rank in a temporary capacity'. Wartime saw women's range of work increase slightly to include basic clerical tasks. From 1939 to 1944 there was a 15 percent reduction in those employed in sorting and counting notes and a ten percent increase in those employed in clerical work.
During this time women also started working on banking counters. This had previously been considered unsuitable for women because it involved dealing with criminal questions.footnote[3] Wartime also saw women trained on the new office machinery such as Hollerith adding machines, but they were generally relegated to the more mundane and less intellectually challenging work.
More than 200 women from the Chief Accountant's Office were evacuated to Whitchurch and Overton in Hampshire during the war, and as their work was integrated at the lower levels, they worked side by side with men but lived in separate camps. I interviewed a number of these women some years ago and many had fond memories of their time in the countryside, particularly of fun times they had at dances hosted by American GIs posted at a camp nearby.
Some of the women who remained in London volunteered as Air Raid Wardens, and patrolled the roof of the Bank on a rota basis. I love the photo of them in their uniform from 1942.
Women fireguards on the roof of the Bank of England, 1942
To read the complete article, see:
Women, the Bank of England, and the Second World War
(https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/museum/online-collections/blog/women-the-boe-and-the-second-world-war)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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