Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

BBC,8 mins

The birth of the Women’s Royal Naval Service

World War One At Home

Available for over a year

In 1917 women were finally allowed to serve with the Royal Navy. The Wrens did jobs that some officers had thought were only suitable for men. It helped to give the women new confidence and laid the foundation for their service in the Second World War. The Women’s Royal Naval Service recruited more than five thousand women during the war to ‘free men for the fleet’. At first they served in such roles as typists, cooks and drivers but quickly moved on to more demanding jobs including coding and telegraphy, as their ability became apparent. Behavioural standards were enforced as part of a concern to cultivate a professional image. The WRNS was disbanded in 1919 but reformed in 1939. The service continued until 1993 when the women became part of a more unified Royal Navy. Location: Portsmouth PO1 3LJ Image: Imperial War Museums Q19741 Gardeners of the WRNS tending a garden outside the Officers' Mess, Osea Island, Essex.

Programme Website
More episodes