War Workers Hostels, 1941 (pg. 2)

1941 1939-1945 "War Workers Hostels, 1941 (pg. 2)" [HFR0053b], 1941 The dispersal of factories and the building of Royal Ordnance Factories in isolated areas required residential hostels to be built for war workers. The first was opened in January 1941 and a National Service Hostels Corpor...

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Bibliographic Details
Institution:TUC - Trade Union Congress Library
Language:English
Published: United Kingdom 1941
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10796/1D6ED670-3EE8-4D28-8362-BE18BDC7228A
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/D8C71105-428D-4736-B798-8BDACB0AFD39
Description
Summary:1941 1939-1945 "War Workers Hostels, 1941 (pg. 2)" [HFR0053b], 1941 The dispersal of factories and the building of Royal Ordnance Factories in isolated areas required residential hostels to be built for war workers. The first was opened in January 1941 and a National Service Hostels Corporation [with Margaret Bondfield as one of the directors] was established. By the end of the war, the Corporation was managing 155 hostels with accommodation for 36,000 industrial workers, 17,500 miners and over 18,500 building workers. Separate hostels were built for young miners and agricultural workers. Workers slept in single bunk cubicles and there was a sick bay, dining room and welfare facilities. Charges ranged between 25-30 shillings a week and included 2 full meals plus a snack daily. This document, written in August 1941 by the General Secretary of the Workers Educational Association, Ernest Green, proposes that the WEA become involved in organising social and educational activities in the hostels.
Physical Description:Letter
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