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Export Date: 13 July 2021 Correspondence Address: Walsh, B.; Lancaster UniversityUnited Kingdom References: Bidwell, Brigadier Shelford, (1977) The Women's Royal Army Corps, pp. 25-26. , (London: Leo Cooper Ltd); Gwynne-Vaughan, Helen, (1941) Service with the Army, p. 56. , also (London); Philo-Gill, Samantha, (2017) The Women's Army Auxiliary Corps in France 1917-1921, , (Barnsley: Pen and Sword); World War I service medal and award rolls, 1914-20, and National Army Museum, army service records, , www.nationalarchives.gov.uk; (1916) Telegraph and Telephone Journal, 3, pp. 125-126. , also (-17); Priestley, R. E., (1921) Work of R.E. in the European War, 1914-18: The Signal Service (France), p. 61. , (London, repr., East Sussex: Naval & Military Press, 2006); Hall, Brian N., (2017) Communications and British Operations on the Western Front, 1914-1918, pp. 68-69. , (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press); Priestley, Work, p. 58; Priestley, Work, p. 292; http://www.samhallas.co.uk/bt_museum/telegraph.htm, explains this procedure; Priestley, Work, p. 14; Marwick, Arthur, (1977) Women at War 1914-1918, p. 88. , (London), remains one of the most useful studies to consult, having provided a solid basis for many subsequent studies; (2009) Regulations for the Queen Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps 1918, pp. 33-39. , reprint of Army Council Instructio 652 of 1918 (Naval & Military Press Ltd., in association with the Imperial War Museum); https://www.gchq.gov.uk/features/hush-waacs; (1922) Statistics of the Military Effort of the British Empire during the Great War 1914-1918, p. 204. , (War Office, March); Marwick, Women at War, p. 169. , also; Gould, Jennifer Margaret, (1988) The Women's Corps: The Establishment of Women's Military Services in Britain, p. 449. , (London); Noakes, Lucy, (2006) Women in the British Army: War and the Gentle Sex, 1907-1948, p. 81. , (London: Routledge), cites a higher figure, but she has not given any new source to confirm this suggestion; Messenger, Charles, (2005) Call to Arms: The British Army 1914-18, p. 256. , (London); Hay, Marjorie, (1919) On Waactive Service, p. 93. , (Whitfield: Plymouth Press); (1917) Telegraph and Telephone Journal, 3, p. 138. , (July); (1938) OCA Gazette, 17 (4), p. 2. , (April): (in a speech given by former chief controller Dame Helen Gwynne-Vaughan, CBE); POST 31/99/10//62 and 72 are GPO record forms noting their commended work during air raids, , BT Archives; (1919) Telegraph and Telephone Journal, 5, p. 16. , (December-January); Clinton, Alan, (1984) Post Office Workers: A Trade Union and Social History, pp. 73-74. , (London: Allen & Unwin); Glew, Helen R., (2010) Women's Employment in the General Post Office, 1914-1939, p. 212. , (PhD diss., University of London, Institute of Historical Research); Clinton, Post Office Workers, p. 242; Marwick, Women at War, p. 83; Frahm, Jill, Women Signalers in World War I France, p. 10. , https://www.nsa.gov/Portals/70/documents, sets out an excellent assessment of their work in assisting AEF troops to help the BEF achieve a successful outcome in France; Cobbs, Elizabeth, (1917) The Hello Girls, , (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press), which explains the setting up of and difficulties encountered by the American army women; Dennant, Lynda, (1998) Women at the Front during the First World War: The Politics of Class, Gender and Empire, p. 178. , (PhD diss., University of Warwick); Downs, Laura Lee, (2004) Writing Gender History; Gullace, Nicoletta, (2004) The Blood of Our Sons; Hunt, Karen, (2002) Equivocal Feminists: The Social Democratic Federation and the Woman Question, pp. 1884-1911; Thom, Deborah, (1998) Nice Girls and Rude Girls; Watson, Janet, (2007) Fighting Different Wars; Priestley, Work, p. 161; Gwynne-Vaughan, Service, 3, pp. 91-130. , pt