Catalogue description Records of the National Advisory Centre on Careers for Women

This record is held by London University: London School of Economics, The Women's Library

Details of 6/WEF
Reference: 6/WEF
Title: Records of the National Advisory Centre on Careers for Women
Description:

Minutes and papers of the Executive Committee, the Advisory Committee, the Employment Committee and the Annual General Meeting; annual reports and reports of the Women's service Bureau; Financial Committee minutes, papers and accounts; Advisory Department agendas and reports; correspondence; circular letters.

Date: 1910-1979
Related material:

Further records of the National Advisory Centre on Careers for Women, the Women's Employment Federation and Careers for Women are held by the Women's Library in the records of Careers for Women (see GB 0106 6/CFW).

Held by: London University: London School of Economics, The Women's Library, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

National Advisory Centre on Careers for Women

Physical description: 12 boxes, 4 oversize boxes
Access conditions:

This collection is open for consultation. Intending readers are advised to contact The Women's Library in advance of their first visit.

Administrative / biographical background:

During the First World War, the London National Society for Women's Suffrage opened a Women's Service Department to find openings for volunteer workers as well as taking the lead in training women for war work. At the end of the war when the parent organisation became the London National Society for Women's Service, the section turned its attention to the problems of women left unemployed by the returning male workers and became the Women's Employment Department, continuing its work until 1922. Attempts were made by the Carnegie Trust, which funded its activities for a time, to integrate it with the Central Bureau for the Employment of Women, but this failed and the department closed due to financial problems. In 1933, this function was largely taken over by a new group called, initially the National Federation of Organisations Concerned with the Employment and Training of Women, soon renamed the Women's Employment Federation. It maintained close connections with the LNSWS, and shared premises with them until 1939 with the LNSWS president Ray Strachey as its first organising secretary. It too was funded by the Carnegie Trust but this time its object was to co-ordinate the work of organisations dealing with women's employment, to prevent overlapping and to assist each in its individual work by offering opportunities for consultation and co-operation between them. Policy and the election of the executive committee were the responsibility of the constituent organisations which were drawn from the pool of organisations concerned with the employment and training of women, including the Association of Assistant Mistresses, the Association of Head Mistresses, the Midwives Institute, the National Association of Women Pharmacists, the Council of Women Civil Servants, as well as women's schools and universities. The group contained an Advisory Department which collected information on careers and openings which were then available to members and the public, as well as organising advice, publications and speakers. Between 1935 and 1940 it received an average of 3816 enquiries annually and in 1939 was asked to compile a national register of women workers. At the outbreak of the Second World War, the group moved to Bedford College. When its main organiser, Ray Strachey, died in 1940, others took over the work and it was her friend, Irene Hilton, that remained the Federation's organisation secretary from 1948 until 1971, when it became the National Advisory Centre on Careers for Women. This remained its name until 1991 when it became Careers for Women. It ceased operating in 1995.

Link to NRA Record:

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