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#1 Posted : 29 September 2009 14:44:00(UTC)
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Posted By Swis Alexander Redgrave, the Chief Inspector of Factories wrote in his annual report: "I doubt very much whether the office of factory inspector is one suitable for women... The general and multifarious duties of an inspector of factories would really be incompatible with the gentle and home-loving character of a woman..." This was in 1879. Time has changed since.
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#2 Posted : 29 September 2009 15:56:00(UTC)
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Posted By Clare Gabriel Have they really?
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#3 Posted : 29 September 2009 15:59:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ian Blenkharn That could be said of many men too - I'm certain Clare would agree
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#4 Posted : 29 September 2009 19:57:00(UTC)
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Posted By D. Hilton Swis I am shocked there was no link to a newspaper article.
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#5 Posted : 29 September 2009 23:25:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ron Hunter I recommend "Her Majesty's Inspectors of Factories, 1833-1983: Essays to Commemorate 150 Years of Health and Safety Inspection" for a contemporaneous and entirely opposite view. Women Inspectors were those most feared by Mill owners, and did a thorough job! Your chap Redgrave was wrong - the facts proved otherwise. Nothing to be bitter about either, other than a fear of women entering into any previously male-dominated occupation. Why do you headline this as "bitter fact"?
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#6 Posted : 30 September 2009 08:50:00(UTC)
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Posted By Flic Hardly a bitter fact - it simply reflected some of the views prevalent at the time, and that society allowed people to express these views freely. Flic
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#7 Posted : 30 September 2009 10:25:00(UTC)
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Posted By Swis The Factory Inspectorate was formed in 1833 and it only employed male inspectors for the first 60 years. After several years of campaigning by the Women Activists, first lady inspector was appointed in 1893. Again…It was not a ‘shocking’ attitude at the time but definitely seems a bitter fact when compared to modern times.
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#8 Posted : 30 September 2009 10:34:00(UTC)
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Posted By Swis P>S> Redgrave is NOT my chap...lol..
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#9 Posted : 30 September 2009 11:33:00(UTC)
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Posted By Hossam his statement reflected a reasonable point of view at the time I guess.. 1870's!!.. the very harsh factories environment was not woman gentleness friendly I believe
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#10 Posted : 30 September 2009 12:21:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ron Hunter The workforce in those "harsh" mills and factories being predominantly women and children. The Redgrave statement perhaps being more about class division and the 'gentle' classes as opposed to any gender divide perhaps.
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#11 Posted : 30 September 2009 12:57:00(UTC)
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Posted By Phil Rose Clare, you are staying remarkably quiet! I reckon Clare could tell you that there are still some pretty 'grim' industrial undertakings out there. I have been to a few that are like going back to the dark ages. I think that the HSE History was a recent link off the HSE website.
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