Land Girls' Army. Men from Australia's rural districts have "joined up for the duration" in such ...

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Accession Number 009694
Collection type Photograph
Object type Black & white
Physical description Black & white
Maker Cranstone, Edward Lefevre (Ted)
Place made Australia: Victoria, Stawell
Date made 18 September 1941
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

Land Girls' Army. Men from Australia's rural districts have "joined up for the duration" in such large numbers that the production of the pastoral and farming industries was seriously threatened. Country and city girls have helped to solve the labour problem. This series of photos shows three Melbourne society girls at work on a 2000 acre farm near Stawell, Victoria. They are members of the Land Girls' Army, and they also are serving "for the duration". So adept have they become that their employer wishes it were for longer. The sheaf is not too good, but there is nothing wrong with the way it is being "pitched". Flora Hendy can stack a load of hay as well as she can pitch it. She and the other girls also do the haymaking and the chaffcutting. One of a series of photographs taken on 17 and 18 September 1941 at "Killara", near Stawell, Victoria, by the Department of Information which were later used to promote and recruit for the Australian Women's Land Army (AWLA). Three members of the Country Women's Association Land Army (CWALA), Helen McGregor, Carmen Virgoe and Flora Hendy, were working on the property and were depicted undertaking a variety of manual tasks. The CWALA was formed in June 1940.