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Flaxley Woods, Forest of Dean: Life of a Lumber Jill

Women donning roles to chop trees and cut logs

During World War One, Britain was in desperate need of more timber. Imported supplies were being bombed and sunk at sea and local woodland was mismanaged before being controlled by the Forestry Commission. Wood was needed for pit props and acetone production in the Forest of Dean, and ship building nationally.

With men fighting on the Western Front, and locally being needed in the mines, women had to take on the role of felling trees, cutting the logs to a desired length and moving them to the railway lines.

Historian, Cecile Hunt, explains how in 1916/17 women were recruited by the Women’s Land Army into a subdivision called the Women’s Timber Service or endearingly known as β€˜Lumber Jills’.

The Lumber Jills lived on site in tents or wooden huts. Hayley Clayton from the Forestry Commission reflects on how difficult the conditions must have been: β€œWhen you’ve got wet and soggy you just want to go home and get warm and dry…It would have been a very very tough life… sore and uncomfortable for them by the end of the day.”

The lack of forestry management pre-war led to the Forestry Act of 1919. The Forestry Commission, a governmental organisation, was set up to restock and harvest the nation’s woodlands.

Presented by Cecile Hunt, local historian and Hayley Clayton, Community Ranger.

Location: Flaxley Woods, near Littledean, Forest of Dean GL17 0EA
Image: Lumber Jills, courtesy of IWM

Release date:

Duration:

8 minutes

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