Window Washers

1917

In this striking photo from 1917, a group of young women balance confidently on ladders, buckets in hand, washing windows on a London street. With the sign “Girls Wanted” visible above, and “George Webster” signage suggesting a commercial or residential building, this image captures a moment of transformation in British society during World War I.

As thousands of men went off to fight, women stepped into traditionally male roles—from munitions factories and farms to street-level services like this. Washing windows may seem like a modest job, but it was a powerful symbol of resilience and adaptability during a time of upheaval.

Their uniforms, headscarves, and determined expressions speak of duty, endurance, and a quiet revolution taking place across Britain: the rise of working women.

📷 Have an old photo from your family archive? Help preserve stories like this at Oldpik.com.

SEO Tags:
1917 women workers London, female window washers WWI, British homefront labor photos, London women at work 1910s, historical images of UK during war, City of London wartime photographs, George Webster London history

Contributed by OldPik on January 6, 2025

Image

Window Washers
You must be logged in to comment on the photos.
Log in

No comment yet, be the first to comment...

Nearby photos

Photo of Alice Liddell taken by Lewis Carroll

Building the Metropolitan Railway.

c. 1852 OldPik

Zoological Gardens in Regents Park

c. 1845 OldPik

Earliest known photograph of Victoria, here with her eldest daughter, Victoria

The Nelson Column, Trafalgar Square