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The Promotion of Agricultural Education for Adults: The Lancashire Federation of Women's Institutes, 1919–45
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 October 2008
Extract
A recent article in Rural History illustrated how the Women's Institutes between the wars Were influenced by contemporary feminism. The argument of the article was that in seeking to change the material condition and status of countrywomen, and in effect, emulating craft trades union strategies, the WI movement sought to alter perceptions of women's labour in the home by enhancing their skills, encouraging co-operative endeavour and promoting an ‘active domesticity’. Furthermore, the domestic arena was extended to cover all aspects of rural life related to the home, garden, farm or allotment.
However, as time passed between the wars, less interest was shown in agricultural work outside the home, and, as Morgan states elsewhere, the agricultural ‘side’ of the movement became ‘severely diminished’. Whilst one might not seriously quarrel with this statement with reference to some periods of WI history, it is, nevertheless, a somewhat reductive approach to have taken when considering the interwar period. During that time, there is evidence to suggest that in some regions at least, WI members maintained more than a passing interest in agriculture per se. This was not simply in relation to the production and preservation of food, but rather as a means of maintaining the influence of women in rural policy making. This interest can be best detected in the educational sphere, from the promotion of classes in a wide range of agricultural activities and demonstrations at agricultural and horticultural shows, to WI membership of local agricultural education committees. Furthermore, the National Federation of Women's Institutes (NFWI) fought in many ways to maintain the agricultural ‘side’ of the movement because it was an integral part of its wider mission to educate countrywomen, particularly those who were destined to live and work in the Empire
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References
Notes
1. Morgan, M., ‘Jam making, Cuthbert Rabbit and Cakes: Redefining Domestic Labour in the Women's Institute 1915–1960’, Rural History, 7:2 (1996), 207–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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6. Report by the Inter-Departmental Committee on the Practical Education of Women in Rural Life, HMSO, 1928, chaired by Lady Denman, the LFWI President.
7. Mrs. Assheton was the wife of Ralph Assheton, JP, County Alderman and High Sheriff of Lancashire, and member of the Carlton Club. Their son, Ralph, became the first Lord Clitheroe due to his services as Conservative Party Chairman, 1944–6. Mrs. Assheton was also President and founder of the Clitheroe Division of women Conservatives in the Clitheroe Division 1911–30. She joined her husband on Lancashire County Council in 1928 and served on various sub-committees during the interwar period, including the Public Assistance Board.
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18. For example, Miss Pratt, Mr A.T.A. Dobson and Lady Trevelyan represented the Ministry of Agriculture on the NFWI Executive Committee in 1937, as did Miss Cox, from the Board of Education, Miss Healey from the Land Settlement Association and Mr. G. North from the Ministry of Health.
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38. The LFWI won the National Mark Inter County Trophy during 1934–5.
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50. There were many Quakers in the interwar WI movement and the NFWI had to acknowledge their views.
51. WILF 10/1 31/7/40. Lady Mary Taylor was by then Vice-President of the NFWI.
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