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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50077 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50077)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Maternity, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Maternity
- Letters from Working-Women
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: The Women's Co-operative Guild
-
-Release Date: September 29, 2015 [EBook #50077]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MATERNITY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-Bold text is indicated by ~swung dashes~, and italics by _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
- MATERNITY
-
- LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN
-
-
-
-
- ~ROUND ABOUT A POUND A WEEK.~ By Mrs. PEMBER REEVES. 2s. 6d. net.
-
- “The best piece of social study published in England for many
- years.”--_Manchester Guardian._
-
- “If you would know why men become anarchists, why agitators foam at
- the mouth, and demagogues break out into seditious language--here
- is a little book that will tell you as soberly, as quietly, and as
- convincingly as any book that has yet come from the press.”--Mr.
- HAROLD BEGBIE in the _Daily Chronicle_.
-
-
- ~THE FEEDING OF SCHOOL CHILDREN.~ By M. E. BULKLEY, of the London
- School of Economics. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. net.
-
- “The first comprehensive description of one of the most momentous
- social experiments of modern times.”--_Economic Review._
-
- “An admirable statement of the history and present position of the
- problem.”--_New Statesman._
-
-
- LONDON: G. BELL AND SONS, LTD.,
-
- YORK HOUSE, PORTUGAL STREET, KINGSWAY, W.C.
-
- NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN CO.
- BOMBAY: A. H. WHEELER AND CO.
-
-[Illustration: AN ANNUAL CONGRESS OF THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD.]
-
-
-
-
- MATERNITY
-
- LETTERS
- FROM WORKING-WOMEN
-
- COLLECTED BY
-
- THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD
-
- WITH A PREFACE BY
-
- THE RIGHT HON. HERBERT SAMUEL, M.P.
-
- HIS MAJESTY’S POSTMASTER-GENERAL
- LATE PRESIDENT OF THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON
- G. BELL AND SONS, LTD.
- 1915
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-BY THE RIGHT HON. HERBERT SAMUEL, M.P.
-
-
-These letters give an intimate picture of the difficulties, the
-troubles, often the miseries, sometimes the agonies, that afflict many
-millions of our people, as a consequence of normal functions of their
-lives. An unwise reticence has prevented the public mind from realising
-that maternity, among the poorer classes, presents a whole series of
-urgent social problems. These letters give the facts. It is the first
-time, I believe, that the facts have been stated, not by medical men or
-social students, but by the sufferers themselves, in their own words.
-The Women’s Co-operative Guild, unresting in their efforts for the
-improvement of the conditions of working women, have rendered a most
-useful service in eliciting these letters and in making them public.
-
-It is necessary to take action to solve the problems that here stand
-revealed, first for the elementary reason that a nation ought not to
-tolerate widespread suffering among its members, if there are measures
-by which that suffering can be obviated without indirectly causing
-worse. “Woman,” says Kant, “is an end in herself, and not merely a
-means to an end.” Apart from all question of social advantage, her
-claim for help for her own sake, when she needs help to meet the
-difficulties special to herself, is as valid as any other claim--as the
-claim of the sick man, for his own sake, to be cured, as the claim of
-the child, for his own sake, to be protected and to be taught.
-
-Action is necessary also because, for the lack of it, the nation is
-weakened. Numbers are of importance. In the competition and conflict of
-civilisations it is the mass of the nations that tells. Again and again
-in history a lofty and brilliant civilisation embodied in a small State
-has been borne under by the weight of a larger State of a lower type.
-The ideas for which Britain stands can only prevail so long as they
-are backed by a sufficient mass of numbers. It is not enough to make
-our civilisation good. It must also be made strong; and for strength,
-numbers are not indeed enough without other elements, but they are none
-the less essential. Under existing conditions we waste, before birth
-and in infancy, a large part of our possible population.
-
-How quickly some social evils will yield to treatment is seen in the
-fact that in ten years the campaign against infant mortality has
-reduced the death-rate among infants under one year of age by nearly
-a third. But it is still very excessive. It is not race or climate or
-the irreducible minimum of physical defect which accounts for a large
-part at least of the present infant death-rate. In the same towns,
-among people of the same stock, twice, sometimes three times, as many
-infants, in proportion to the number born, will die in the wards where
-the poorer classes live as die in the wards where the well-to-do
-live. The excess is mainly due to ignorance, to malnutrition, to all
-the noxious influences that go with poverty. Not nature, but social
-conditions, are to blame for the evil. Therefore it is remediable.
-
-The time is past when a shallow application of the doctrine of
-evolution led people to acquiesce in a high infant death-rate. It was
-thought that it meant merely the killing off of the weak, leading to
-the survival of the fittest, and that the process, cruel in its method,
-was beneficent in its end. There are few now who do not see that the
-high death-rate is due, in large measure, to a bad environment; and
-that by keeping a bad environment you produce unfitness. You partly
-remedy the evil, it is true, by destroying a large number of lives
-which have been made unfit to survive; but you leave, as a clog on the
-community, numbers of others not killed but weakened. The conditions
-that kill also maim.
-
-The theory, too, is passing away that the country is over-full and that
-the danger to be feared is not a lack of population but its excess.
-Because many districts are overcrowded, it does not follow that these
-islands as a whole are over-populated. So long as food supplies can be
-relied upon from oversea, it is difficult to set limits to the numbers
-that, under sound social conditions, this country can maintain.
-
-The conclusion is clear that it is the duty of the community, so far as
-it can, to relieve motherhood of its burdens, to spread the knowledge
-of mothercraft that is so often lacking, to make medical aid available
-when it is needed, to watch over the health of the infant. And since
-this is the duty of the community, it is also the duty of the State.
-The infant cannot, indeed, be saved by the State. It can only be saved
-by the mother. But the mother can be helped and can be taught by the
-State.
-
-The local health authorities have large powers, and some already are
-eager to use them. As President of the Local Government Board I was
-able to submit to them a comprehensive scheme of assistance to mothers
-in pregnancy, in confinement, and in the care of the infants, and to
-offer, to such as chose to adopt it, a Treasury grant of one-half of
-the modest expenditure involved. The need at the moment is to create
-among the local councillors and their electors a body of opinion
-which will secure the adoption of this scheme and its administration
-on effective lines. Because I believe it will conduce to that end, I
-commend this book the more readily.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- PREFACE BY THE RIGHT HON. HERBERT SAMUEL, M.P. V
-
- INTRODUCTION 1
- LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN 18
- METHOD OF INQUIRY 191
- OCCUPATIONS OF HUSBANDS 192
- FIGURES BEARING ON INFANT MORTALITY 194
- LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD MEMORANDUM, JULY, 1914 196
- SUMMARY OF THE NOTIFICATION OF BIRTHS (EXTENSION) ACT, 1915 198
- LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD CIRCULAR, JULY, 1915 200
- ADMINISTRATIVE POWERS OF LOCAL AUTHORITIES 207
- NATIONAL SCHEME PROPOSED BY THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD 209
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND FACSIMILES
-
-
- PAGE
- A GUILD CONGRESS _Frontispiece_
- FACSIMILE OF LETTER 24 51
- A FAMILY OF ELEVEN CHILDREN _Facing_ 58
- FACSIMILE OF LETTER 36 63
- FACSIMILE OF LETTER 106 139
- A FAMILY OF FOUR OUT OF FIFTEEN CHILDREN _Facing_ 110
- BRADFORD MUNICIPAL INFANT HOSPITAL _Facing_ 190
-
-
-
-
-MATERNITY
-
-LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-The whole point of this book lies in the letters which it contains; and
-it might therefore have seemed advisable to leave the reader untroubled
-by an introduction to gather that point from the letters themselves.
-The material is, however, in form and in subject of so unusual a kind
-that it has been thought necessary to explain something of its origin
-and its authors, and even to touch upon some of the problems which the
-letters so vividly show to exist. The letters are written by married
-women of the working-class, all of whom are or have been officials
-of the Women’s Co-operative Guild. The Guild is a self-governing
-organisation within the Co-operative Movement, and deals with subjects
-which affect the Co-operative Movement and the position of married
-women in the home and the state. It might justly claim to speak with
-greater authority than any other body for the voteless and voiceless
-millions of married working-women of England, for it has a membership
-of nearly 32,000, distributed in 611 branches over the whole country.
-
-The Guild has for several years given special attention to the subject
-of “The National Care of Maternity.” Before the Insurance Bill was
-introduced, the Guild asked for the inclusion of Maternity benefit,
-and when the Amending Bill was before the House in 1913, an agitation
-by the Guild secured the benefit as the mother’s own property. Later on
-it placed a scheme for the national care of Maternity before the Local
-Government Board, which issued a Circular on July 30, 1914, largely
-embodying the various suggestions of the Guild. In the course of this
-work it was considered advisable to obtain information from the members
-themselves of the conditions under which they had brought children into
-the world. These letters are the result. The barest indication of the
-information wanted was given, and the only questions used were those on
-p. 191, as it was thought that it would be more valuable to allow the
-women to tell their own story in their own way.
-
-We claim for these letters that for the first time are presented in
-them the real problems of Maternity seen through the women’s own
-account of their lives. If the writers are uneducated in the ordinary
-sense of school and university, a long schooling in life and suffering
-has given them a peculiar simplicity and dignity of language in place
-of the more usual literary style. The letters are left exactly as
-written by the women, the only alterations made being in the spelling,
-in the addition of punctuation, and in the omission of a few medical
-details. All names and places have also been omitted in order to
-prevent identification.
-
-The women are the wives of men who earn their daily bread by manual
-labour. The husband’s trades cover over one hundred different
-occupations, and their rates of wages vary from 11s. to £5. The letters
-show how often the nominal wages are reduced by periods of short time
-and unemployment, such periods constantly coinciding with childbirth.
-It should also be remembered that a wife does not usually receive the
-whole of the weekly wage for her family expenditure.
-
-The earnings and conditions of life of these men are certainly above
-rather than below the level of their class. It is true on the whole
-to say that the Co-operative Movement is largely composed of the
-better-paid manual workers, and there is no doubt that the woman who is
-secretary of a Guild branch lives in better conditions than the average
-working woman. If the conditions of their lives are as described in
-these letters, the suffering and waste of life, the overwork and
-poverty, must be tenfold and twentyfold where wages are less and
-employment more precarious. That the women themselves are well aware
-of this is shown by the occurrence in the letters of such sentences as
-“I was more fortunately placed than most women,” or “I have not had to
-go through so much pain and suffering as many poor mothers have to go
-through.”
-
-These letters then give for the first time in their own words the
-working woman’s view of her life in relation to maternity. Now, what
-is the general impression that the reader gets of the life at such
-times of these more fortunate working-class mothers? It is on the
-whole an impression of perpetual overwork, illness, and suffering.
-The stories and records of 400 lives have been received, taken at
-random out of the million similar lives lived in our cities. In this
-book 160 letters have been published, and the unpublished letters
-describe similar experiences. The evidence of such witnesses cannot
-be impugned; it is that to bear children under such conditions is to
-bear an intolerable burden of suffering. The cry of a woman in travail
-has become a commonplace of literature, and the notion that pain and
-motherhood are inevitably connected has become so fixed that the world
-is shocked if a woman does not consider the pain as much a privilege
-as the motherhood. And this attitude of the world towards the pain of
-travail has been extended to all the sufferings attending motherhood.
-These letters show that this is the view of women themselves, for which
-doctors have been largely responsible. It is hardly too much to say
-that the ordinary professional attitude might have been summed up in
-the saying, “You’ll be worse before you’re better.” It would be foolish
-to cry aloud against the inevitable minimum of maternal suffering. And
-it is to be noted that there is no foolish note of self-pity in these
-letters. The brave words, combined with a stoic resignation to fate,
-the invincible optimism shown in such letters as Nos. 33 and 47, are
-characteristic of the spirit of them all. But if it be folly to kick
-against Nature’s pricks, what is more foolish is the facile fatalism
-with which we resign ourselves and other people to unnecessary and
-useless suffering. And a very short consideration of the suffering
-disclosed in these letters will show that it is both unnecessary and
-useless.
-
-The roots of the evil lie in the conditions of life which our
-industrial system forces upon the wage-earners. It is useful to
-consider the different conditions under which the middle-class and
-the working-class woman becomes a mother. The middle-class wife
-from the first moment is within reach of medical advice which can
-alleviate distressing illness and confinements and often prevent future
-ill-health or death. During the months of pregnancy she is not called
-upon to work; she is well fed; she is able to take the necessary rest
-and exercise. At the time of the birth she will have the constant
-attendance of doctor and nurse, and she will remain in bed until she is
-well enough to get up. For a woman of the middle class to be deprived
-of any one of these things would be considered an outrage. Now, a
-working-class woman is habitually deprived of them all. She is lucky
-if her husband hands her over regularly each week 25s. with which to
-provide a house, food, and clothing, for the whole family. It has to be
-remembered that the ordinary family wage leaves nothing over for the
-additional outlay upon maternity. This ought to amount to £5 if the
-expenses are properly met. Too poor to obtain medical advice during
-the months of pregnancy, she “learns by experience and ignorance,”
-comforting herself with the belief that however ill she be it is only
-“natural.” Meanwhile she has to scrape and save to put by money for the
-inevitable expenses that lie before her. She often goes out to char
-or sits at her sewing machine, to scrape together a few shillings.
-She puts by in money-boxes; she lays in little stores of tea, soap,
-oatmeal and other dry goods. At a time when she ought to be well fed
-she stints herself in order to save; for in a working-class home if
-there is saving to be done, it is not the husband and children, but the
-mother who makes her meal off the scraps which remain over, or “plays
-with meat-less bones.” One woman writes: “I can assure you I have told
-my husband many times that I had had my dinner before he came in, so as
-there should be plenty to go round for the children and himself, but he
-found me out somehow, so that was stopped.” Another woman says: “Many a
-time I have had bread and dripping for my dinner before my husband came
-home, and said I had my dinner, as I would not wait.”
-
-If the mother is not working long hours in a factory, she is working
-even longer hours in her own home.
-
-Writers on infant mortality and the decline of the birth-rate never
-tire of justly pointing to the evils which come from the strain
-of manual labour in factories for expectant mothers. Very little
-is ever said about the same evils which come from the incessant
-drudgery of domestic labour. People forget that the unpaid work of the
-working-woman at the stove, at scrubbing and cleaning, at the washtub,
-in lifting and carrying heavy weights, is just as severe manual labour
-as many industrial operations in factories. It is this labour which the
-mother performs often up to the very day on which the child is born,
-and she will be at it again perhaps six or eight days afterwards. The
-Factory Acts make it an offence for an employer knowingly to employ
-a woman within four weeks after confinement. “In Switzerland a total
-absence from employment in factories of women during eight weeks before
-and after childbirth must be observed, and on their return to work
-proof must be tendered of an absence since the birth of the child of
-at least six weeks.” In Germany four weeks’ absence is compulsory,
-and “must be extended to six weeks unless a medical certificate is
-furnished approving of employment at the end of four weeks.”
-
-We propose to deal now shortly with the causes of those conditions,
-then with the results, and finally with the methods of cure and
-prevention of the resulting evils. The main causes seem to be three:
-
- (1) Inadequate wages.
-
- (2) Lack of knowledge regarding maternity and of skilled advice and
- treatment.
-
- (3) The personal relation of husband and wife.
-
-We have already dealt to some extent with the first cause. Thirty
-shillings a week for a manual worker is reckoned to be “good wages,”
-and there are, of course, thousands of men earning far less than that.
-Now, what most people do not realise is that 30s. a week is itself a
-wage utterly inadequate for rearing a large or even small family. It
-is inadequate because the whole burden is placed upon the woman who
-has to bring up a family on 30s., and that burden is excessive. She can
-only do it at all by incessant labour which inevitably cuts her off
-from every higher human activity except one. That one which is left to
-her is maternal affection, and the wonder is that even that endures as
-it does the strain of poverty, overwork, and illness.
-
-The second cause, the lack of knowledge on the part of the women,
-receives remarkable testimony in these letters. Again and again the
-writers come back to this subject. They are convinced of the evils that
-resulted to themselves and their children from their own ignorance of
-the functions and duties of motherhood. And there can be no doubt that
-they are right. Much of the suffering entailed in maternity, much of
-the damage to the life and health of women and children, would be got
-rid of if women married with some knowledge of what lay before them,
-and if they could obtain medical advice and supervision during the time
-of pregnancy and motherhood. It is not the women’s fault that they are
-ignorant, for the possibilities of knowledge have not been within their
-reach.
-
-The personal relation of husband and wife is a subject as difficult
-as it is delicate. Reading these letters one is often struck by
-the fact that that relation remains so good under the most adverse
-circumstances. But despite the extraordinary loyalty of the writers,
-there is clearly a consciousness among them that the position of a
-woman not only impairs the value of that relationship, but is directly
-responsible for some of the evils we are considering. In plain
-language, both in law and in popular morality, the wife is still the
-inferior in the family to the husband. She is first without economic
-independence, and the law therefore gives the man, whether he be
-good or bad, a terrible power over her. Partly for this reason, and
-partly because all sorts of old half-civilised beliefs still cling to
-the flimsy skirts of our civilisation, the beginning and end of the
-working woman’s life and duty is still regarded by many as the care of
-the household, the satisfaction of man’s desires, and the bearing of
-children. We do not say that this is the case in every working-class
-home, or that there are not hundreds of husbands who take a higher view
-of married life and practise it. What we do say is that these views
-are widely held, often unconsciously, and are taken advantage of by
-hundreds of men who are neither good men nor good husbands and that
-even where there is no deliberate evil or viciousness, these views are
-responsible for the overwork and physical suffering among women and for
-that excessive child-bearing, of which more will be said later.
-
-The effects of the conditions we have described and of the causes
-which produce them can be conveniently grouped under three heads.
-They concern, first the woman herself, secondly the children borne
-by her, thirdly the children that remain unborn of her. So far we
-have deliberately insisted only upon the evil effects upon the women
-themselves, and it still remains to insist upon them. The disastrous
-results of maternal ill-health and overwork upon the children cannot
-be exaggerated, but in the contemplation of them, people are too apt
-to forget that the mother herself is an individual with the right to
-“equality of opportunity,” which is the right as a human being to be
-given the opportunity of understanding and enjoying those things which
-alone make life tolerable to humanity.
-
-It was perhaps inevitable that the mother should have been publicly
-overlooked, for the isolation of women in married life has, up to now,
-prevented any common expression of their needs. They have been hidden
-behind the curtain which falls after marriage, the curtain which women
-are now themselves raising.
-
-The general effect upon women is the useless suffering inflicted upon
-them, and one of the chief causes of this is undoubtedly excessive
-childbearing. This evil is directly due to those semi-civilised notions
-which were touched upon above, and though, as we shall see when we
-deal with the decline of the birth-rate, nature is taking her own way
-of reacting against it, it still exists. We would draw attention to
-the conditions disclosed in such letters as 1, 20, 36, and 71. In the
-first case we find a woman married at nineteen having 11 children and
-2 miscarriages in 20 years, her husband’s wages being 20s. a week. In
-the second case there are 5 children and one miscarriage in 9 years;
-in the third 5 children and 5 miscarriages in 12-1/2 years; and in
-the fourth 9 children and 1 miscarriage in 24 years. These cases
-have been taken more or less at random, and nothing could be more
-significant than the bare fact that out of 386 women who have written
-these letters, 348 have had 1,396 live children, 83 still-births,
-and 218 miscarriages. These figures speak for themselves: the mere
-physical strain of pregnancy and childbirth succeeding each other with
-scarcely an interval for ten or twenty years renders a healthy bodily
-and intellectual life impossible. And when the additional strain of
-insufficient means and incessant labour are added, the suffering which
-becomes the daily concomitant of life is unimaginable to those who are
-born in the more fortunate classes of society.
-
-If any further evidence is wanted of the direct effect of such
-conditions upon the health of women, we would draw attention to the
-number of miscarriages and still-births. It is probable that not all
-the writers have included miscarriages; but even as it is the number
-of miscarriages is 15·4 per cent. of the live births, while the
-number of still-births is 5·9 per cent. Taken together, these figures
-show a pre-natal death-rate of 21·3 per 100 live births, as against a
-national infant death-rate of 10·9. According to some medical writers
-the frequency of abortions “is believed to be about 20 or 25 per
-cent. of all pregnancies”; while Dr. Amand Routh estimates that the
-number of deaths during pregnancy probably equals the number of deaths
-in the first year after birth. The following letters are a pathetic
-endorsement of the view that fatigue, strain, and domestic conditions
-are responsible for large numbers of miscarriages, and point to the
-urgent need of pre-natal care.
-
-We have now come by a logical sequence from a consideration of the
-effect of the conditions of women’s lives upon themselves to the
-further effect upon the life and death of their offspring. We have, in
-fact, travelled the same road as, but in the opposite direction from,
-those who in the last ten years have conducted the campaign against
-Infant Mortality. It was about ten or twelve years ago that many people
-were suddenly horrified to learn that out of every 1,000 children born
-in England and Wales, about 150 died before they have lived twelve
-months. A vigorous campaign against Infant Mortality by means largely
-of what is called Infant Welfare work followed. Government departments
-and private persons and organisations have co-operated with such
-success that the death-rate of infants under one year of age per 1,000
-births has fallen from 145 in 1904 to 109 in 1913. But the point which,
-for our present purpose, is most illuminating is to note the course
-which that campaign has pursued and is pursuing. It has become more
-and more clear that if you wish to guard the health of the infant,
-you must go back from it to the mother; it is the circumstances
-of the mother--her health, her knowledge, her education, and her
-habits--before the child is born no less than at the time of and after
-birth, that again and again determine whether the child is to have
-health or disease, to live or to die. In fact, from whatever point you
-regard the question, the words of the writer of letter 63 are true: We
-shall not get “a race in the future worthy of England until the nation
-wakes up to the needs of the mothers of that future race.”
-
-Infant mortality in the first year of life is still appallingly
-high, and there is good reason for believing--though the fact cannot
-be absolutely proved--that this high rate is very largely due to
-the circumstances in which the great mass of working-class women
-are obliged to bear children. As is well known, it is in the first
-month after birth that the death-rate is highest, and it is this
-rate which reformers have been least successful in reducing. Now, if
-the causes of deaths of infants in the first four weeks of life are
-examined, an enormous proportion are due to “immaturity.” “It needs
-no argument,” says Dr. A. K. Chalmers, “to show that until we have a
-clearer conception of the causes which lead to death from immaturity,
-we cannot but fail to make any considerable impression on the volume
-of deaths which occur during this period of infant life.” But as a
-matter of fact there is high authority for debiting the greater number
-of these deaths from immaturity to the physical health and condition
-of the mother. “It is evident,” writes Sir George Newman, “that if
-infants die within a few days or hours of birth, or even if dying
-later show unmistakable signs of being unequal to the calls of bare
-physical existence, that there must be something more than external
-conditions or food or management which is working to their hurt. The
-explanation is clearly to be found in ante-natal conditions.” Dr. Noel
-Paton considers that the “malnutrition of the mother helps to explain
-the very high infant mortality among the very poor. The infant starts
-life at a low level, and readily succumbs to the hardships to which
-it is too often subjected.” Dr. Ashby writes: “My own experience in
-the out-patient room entirely confirms the opinion that nutrition of
-the mother has a very important bearing on the nutrition of the fœtus,
-and that the statement that the percentage of unhealthy births among
-the poor is small is not justified by facts. We constantly see fully
-developed infants a day or two old ... clearly ill-fitted, as the event
-proves, to withstand the conditions of external existence.... There
-is no question of syphilis; they are the children of poor mothers who
-have lived hard lives of wear and tear during pregnancy, are themselves
-badly nourished and weakly, and have felt the pinch of poverty, though
-often perhaps poverty of the secondary sort.”
-
-No better comment upon, or illustration of, these opinions of experts
-could be found than the facts contained in these letters. You can
-read in them the little details of existence which made the writers
-“mothers who have lived hard lives of wear and tear during pregnancy,”
-and watching those details you can see how the everyday working of
-the machine, which we call industry and society, leads to suffering,
-and wastes and destroys human life as soon as it is born. The results
-which can already be shown of care in the pre-natal period, bear out
-the contention that the suffering and loss of life which exists is
-unnecessary. The Women’s Municipal League in Boston, U.S.A., has had
-1,512 women in five years (1910-1914) under its care. Amongst these
-women there have been no miscarriages in the last three and a half
-years; there were 60 cases of threatened eclampsia in the first year,
-there were only 2 in the last year; and the total number of infant
-deaths under one month was 2 per cent., while Boston’s rate was 4·3 per
-cent. The Johns Hopkins Hospital, U.S.A., obtained similar results, and
-in the Glasgow Maternity hospital more exact methods have reduced the
-infant mortality and morbidity.
-
-If the problems raised by these letters throw light upon the terrible
-waste of women’s health and infant life, they no less certainly throw
-light upon another phenomenon of modern society--the decline of the
-birth-rate.
-
-One of the most remarkable and important signs of change in the
-habits and aspirations of society, has been the sudden decline in the
-birth-rate which, noticeable in many countries, began in this country
-about forty years ago, and has continued steadily down to the present
-time. In every locality and class the number of children born yearly to
-married women is declining, but the fall is not the same everywhere;
-in the industrial population it is greater among the better-class
-and better-paid workers, and it is distinctly greatest among textile
-workers where wages are comparatively high and a large proportion
-of women work in factories. Now, it is absolutely certain that this
-decline is mainly due to the deliberate limitation of the family. There
-is, of course, a wide divergence of opinion as to the result of this
-conscious check upon the growth of population; some regard it as the
-clearest solution of the inextricable tangle in which the industrial
-system has enmeshed humanity, others see in it the suicide of a nation
-and the doom of a race. But people are so anxious to dispute about
-the good and evil of its effect that they often fail to see that for
-society itself the important good and evil lie in the conditions which
-cause the phenomenon. For the State it may be vital to know the result
-of men and women refusing to give her citizens; but it is still more
-vital for her to recognize the conditions within her which are leading
-men and women to this refusal.
-
-These letters give the skeletons of individuals’ lives, and individual
-thoughts and feelings; but in those facts and thoughts and feelings one
-can see clearly the general mould of life and the sweep of the current
-of general opinion which is among the working classes, resulting in
-the refusal to have children. There is a kind of strike against large
-families, and it is not, among the workers, a selfish strike. The
-motives of this strike are admirably given in the following words
-from Letter No. 71, the whole of which is very illuminating on this
-point: “All the beautiful in motherhood is very nice if one has plenty
-to bring up a family on, but what real mother is going to bring a
-life into the world to be pushed into the drudgery of the world at
-the earliest possible moment?...” The fact that the decline in the
-birth-rate is greatest among the better-paid wage-earners is often said
-to prove that a growing love of ease and luxury is causing a declining
-birth-rate. The words “ease and luxury” are grotesque when applied
-to the lives of manual wage-earners. The fact is that the industrial
-worker took the first seventy years of last century to learn that
-the conditions such as described in these letters make a human and
-a humane life impossible alike for the mother and children of large
-families. This consciousness has spread slowly and surely during the
-last forty years, and, as is natural, it has spread most amongst the
-more educated and intelligent workers and those whose wages have given
-them at least the opportunity of realising that there are other things
-in life besides poverty and work. The numbers of such men and women
-will continue to grow who refuse to have children except under two
-conditions. Those conditions are that society shall pay its debt to the
-manual worker in such a way that his children can be born into a home
-where there is something better than bare existence, and that the woman
-has the means and the leisure to live a life of her own without which
-she is unfit to give life to her children and to direct it during their
-most impressionable years.
-
-It is impossible to leave this question without touching upon one point
-which crops up occasionally in these letters. Opinions may differ as to
-the good or evil of the general limitation of families, but there can
-only be agreement upon the evil which results from the use of drugs to
-procure abortion. There are many facts which go to prove that the habit
-of taking such drugs has spread to an alarming extent in many places
-among working women. Several of these letters confirm that conclusion.
-The practice is ruinous to the health of women, is more often than not
-useless for procuring the object desired, and probably accounts for the
-fact that many children are weakly and diseased from birth. But here
-again the cause of the evil lies in the conditions which produce it.
-Where maternity is only followed by an addition to the daily life of
-suffering, want, overwork, and poverty, people will continue to adopt
-even the most dangerous, uncertain, and disastrous methods of avoiding
-it.
-
-This introduction has been mainly concerned with pointing out certain
-evils deeply seated in national life. These evils have their origin
-in social conditions, and they touch life at so many points that they
-must, if allowed to work unchecked, modify the whole future of the
-race and state. There is no sign that society, if left to itself, will
-secrete some antitoxin to purge its own blood. The industrial and
-capitalist system tends to become continually more industrial and
-capitalistic; the gulf between the rich and poor, the fortunate and the
-unfortunate widens; ideals become higher and broader while the means
-to satisfy them are narrowed in the possession of a narrow class; only
-discontent seems to rise while the birth-rate falls. Society cannot
-cure itself, and the last hope, therefore, is for the State to attempt
-a cure.
-
-The State has first to realise that if it wants citizens, and healthy
-citizens, it must make it possible for men and women to have families
-while living a full life themselves and giving a full life to their
-children. At the present moment this is not possible from top to bottom
-of the working class, unless the economic position of the working-class
-family be improved. The first requisite is, then, the improvement of
-the economic position of the family.
-
-But it is impossible to treat here the broad question of how this can
-be attained; it is only possible to deal with the points in which the
-State can to-day take immediate steps to improve the economic position
-of the working-class family as regards maternity, and bring specialised
-knowledge, adequate rest, nourishment and care, medical supervision and
-treatment, within reach. And though the story told in these letters,
-in the statistics of infant mortality, in the figures of a declining
-birth-rate, be dark, a really bright sign for the future is that the
-women so vitally concerned have themselves become aware of the evil
-and are eagerly demanding that the State shall adopt those measures
-which will most surely mitigate or remove it. The Women’s Co-operative
-Guild have brought out a scheme which would greatly enlarge the scope
-of State action, precisely in those ways in which it has already
-proved itself most beneficial. This scheme, which has already to a
-large extent received the blessing of the Government Department most
-nearly concerned--the Local Government Board--is given in detail on p.
-196. Meanwhile, up and down the country the Guild and other women’s
-organisations are pressing Public Health Committees to adopt the
-measures recommended. The presence of women on Town and County Councils
-is another hopeful sign, and it is greatly to be desired that the
-numbers of working-women councillors will increase. Dr. Newsholme says:
-“Women could help forward the care of maternity and infants by getting
-themselves voted on to Local Authorities, and by bringing pertinacious
-pressure to bear on members of Local Authorities.”
-
-It should be noted that the essence of the Guild scheme is that
-municipal, not philanthropic, action is wanted. It is not charity,
-but the united action of the community of citizens which will remove
-a widespread social evil. The community is performing a duty, not
-bestowing a charity, in providing itself with the bare necessities for
-tolerable existence. That is why the end at which the Guild aims is
-that the mothers of the country shall find themselves as free to use
-a Municipal Maternity Centre as they are to use a Council School or a
-Public Library.
-
-The following words of the Chairman of the Bradford Health Committee,
-spoken at the opening of the Municipal Maternity Home on March 15,
-1915, show that the needs expressed in these letters are beginning
-to be met by the methods desired by the writers: “We stand on the
-threshold of an age which is to herald the recognition of the mother
-and her child, to give public health work that human touch it has
-hitherto lacked, and to modify those glaring inequalities in social
-life and conditions which are destructive alike of infancy and the
-ideals of Christian citizenship.”
-
-
-
-
-LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN.
-
-
-1. TWENTY YEARS OF CHILD-BEARING.
-
-I shall be very pleased if this letter will be any help to you.
-Personally I am quite in sympathy with the new Maternity Scheme. I
-do feel I cannot express my feelings enough by letter to say what a
-great help it would have been to me, for no one but a mother knows the
-struggle and hardships we working women have to go through. I do hope
-I shall never see the young women of to-day have to go through what I
-did. I am a mother of eleven children--six girls and five boys. I was
-only nineteen years old when my first baby was born. My husband was one
-of the best and a good father. His earnings was £1 a week; every penny
-was given to me, and after paying house rent, firing, and light, and
-clubs, that left me 11s. to keep the house going on; and as my little
-ones began to come, they wanted providing for and saving up to pay a
-nurse, and instead of getting nourishment for myself which we need
-at those times, I was obliged to go without. So I had no strength to
-stand against it, and instead of being able to rest in bed afterwards,
-I was glad to get up and get about again before I was able, because I
-could not afford to pay a woman to look after me. I kept on like that
-till the sixth little one was expected, and then I had all the other
-little ones to see after. The oldest one was only ten years old, so
-you see they all wanted a mother’s care. About two months before my
-confinement the two youngest fell ill with measles, so I was obliged
-to nurse them, and the strain on my nerves brought on brain-fever. All
-that the doctor could do for me was to place ice-bags on my head. Oh,
-the misery I endured! My poor old mother did what she could for me, and
-she was seventy years old, and I could not afford to pay a woman to see
-after my home and little ones; but the Lord spared me to get over my
-trouble, but I was ill for weeks and was obliged to work before I was
-able. Then in another eighteen months I was expecting another. After
-that confinement, being so weak, I took a chill, and was laid up for
-six months, and neighbours came in and done what they could for me.
-Then there was my home and little ones and husband to look after, as he
-was obliged to work. It was the worry that kept me from getting better;
-if I could have had someone to look after me I should not have been so
-ill. After this I had a miscarriage and another babe in one year and
-four months. I got on fairly well with the next one, and then the next
-one, which was the eighth, I had two down with measles, one two years
-old with his collar-bone out, and a little girl thirteen with her arm
-broke. That was at the same time as I was expecting my eighth little
-one, and my dear husband worried out of life, as you see with all this
-trouble I was only having the £1 a week and everything to get out of
-it. What a blessing it would have been if this Maternity Scheme was
-in go then! It would have saved me a lot of illness and worry, for my
-life was a complete misery. For twenty years I was nursing or expecting
-babies. No doubt there are others fixed the same way as I have been.
-This is only a short account of how I suffered; I could fill sheets of
-paper with what I have gone through at confinements and before, and
-there are others, no doubt, have felt the pinch as well as myself. If
-there is anything else you would like to know and I could tell you, I
-should be glad, for the benefit of my sisters.
-
- _Wages 17s. to 25s.; eleven children, two miscarriages._
-
-
-2. “OUT OF BED ON THE THIRD DAY.”
-
-I received your paper on Maternity Scheme, and I can assure you it
-brought back to me many painful hours of what I have passed through in
-twenty-one years of married life. For one thing, I have had a delicate
-husband for fifteen years, and I have had nine children, seven born
-in nine years. I have only one now; some of the others have died from
-weakness from birth. I only had a small wage, as my husband was then
-a railway porter. His earnings were 18s. one week and 16s. the next,
-and I can say truthfully my children have died from my worrying how to
-make two ends meet and also insufficient food. For many of my children
-I have not been able to pay a nurse to look after me, and I have got
-out of bed on the third day to make my own gruel and fainted away. My
-little girl which is just fourteen years old, from the first month of
-pregnancy until my nine months were up I attended the hospital and
-had a hospital nurse in to confine me.... A woman with little wage
-has to go without a great deal at those times, as we must give our
-husbands sufficient food or we should have them home and not able to
-work; therefore we have to go without to make ends meet. Before my
-confinements and after I have always suffered a great deal with bearing
-down, and doctors have told me it is weakness, not having enough _good_
-food to keep my health during such times. My little girl I have was
-under the doctor for seven months, being a weak child born, and I for
-one think that if I had a little help from someone I should have had
-my children by my side to-day. It has only been through weakness they
-have passed away. It is with great pleasure I write this letter to you.
-I could say a deal more on sufferings of women if I saw you.
-
- _Wages 16s. to 18s.; nine children, one still-birth, one miscarriage._
-
-
-3. HOSPITALS--A CRYING NEED.
-
-A neighbour of mine called in the doctor, who after examining her said
-she must be got into a Lying-In Hospital at once, as she was in such a
-critical condition. She needed to be under medical care all the time;
-the doctor expects when the birth takes place there will be twins. The
-woman was taken by cab several miles, and after being there two days
-was sent home, as the birth was not expected till March, and this was
-about the middle of February; but she was to be taken back by February
-27, as she is in such a state that the children will have to be removed
-before they attain their full size. A few days after she was home, she
-was so ill that her doctor got a cab and sent her to another hospital,
-as he said if anything occurred when he was not able to get to her, her
-life would be lost. She must be where there were doctors in constant
-attendance.
-
-After putting her through an examination and bullying her for going
-there, she was informed they had no maternity ward, and sent her home
-again, and all the time she was in the greatest of pain and vomiting
-blood; she is now at home, and will have to be taken to the first
-hospital at the end of the week, if nothing happens before.
-
-Now for her circumstances. Her husband has worked for his present
-employer for thirteen years, and earns the magnificent sum of 23s. per
-week. The conveying of her to hospitals and back the two times has cost
-25s., and the husband had to lose a day and a half. When the foreman
-asked the master to allow the man to have his pay for the lost time
-owing to the expense he had had, he replied: “He will get 30s. when
-the job comes off; let him pay it out of that.” This man is a Church
-warden and a prominent Church worker and Christian! The husband’s
-fellow-workers who earn no more than him, and some of them less, have
-had what they call a whip round, and have managed to raise 19s. for him.
-
-Our District Nurse goes in each morning and does what she can for her,
-and one morning she asked how she had got ruptured; and she said she
-was not sure, but she thought it was when she was at the factory. And
-it transpired that her eldest boy is very bright, and he managed to
-win a scholarship, but his mother said she could not manage to get the
-clothes for him that he ought to have at such a school, and so she got
-work at the factory to try and clothe him better. She was only there
-two months when she was taken ill and had to leave. (What mothers put
-up with for their children!) She has been paying 3d. a week into a Sick
-Loan, and Dividing Society, in connection with a Church, but she can
-have no help from it, as her illness is through pregnancy.
-
-
-4. “ALL DAY WASHING AND IRONING.”
-
-In answer to your letter, in my opinion the cause of women suffering
-from misplacements and various other inward complaints, is having to
-work during pregnancy, and I am the mother of three children. When the
-youngest was coming my husband was out of employment, so I had to go
-out to work myself, standing all day washing and ironing. This caused
-me much suffering from varicose veins, also caused the child to wedge
-in some way, which nearly cost both our lives. The doctor said it was
-the standing and the weight of the child. I have not been able to carry
-a child the full time since then, and my periods stopped altogether at
-thirty-four. Then I have a niece of twenty-five, who is at present in
-hospital undergoing a serious operation through getting up too soon
-after her confinement. Once we can make men and women understand that
-a woman requires rest when bearing children, we shall not have so many
-of our sisters suffering and dying through operations, or, on the other
-hand, dragging out a miserable existence.
-
-My husband’s wages was 19s. 10d. He was compelled to lose time in wet
-or frosty weather, and I was very lucky to get my share, 18s., four
-weeks in succession.
-
- _Wages 19s. 10d.; three children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-5. A HALF-STARVED PREGNANCY.
-
-My experience during and after my second pregnancy is only one example
-of what thousands of married working women have to endure. My husband
-has always been a very delicate man, and was ill most of the time I
-carried both my children. He had been out of employment eight months
-out of the nine I carried my first child.... As a last resource was
-glad to go to work on the railway for the magnificent wage of 17s. a
-week, and had to walk nearly six miles night and morning or pay 5d. a
-day for train fare. Our rent was 7s. 6d. a week and clubs to be paid.
-By the time my second child was born my husband’s wages had increased
-to £1 1s. a week for seventy-two hours. By that time hard work and
-worry and insufficient food had told on my once robust constitution,
-with the result that I nearly lost my life through want of nourishment,
-and did after nine months of suffering lose my child. No one but
-mothers who have gone through the ordeal of pregnancy half starved,
-to finally bring a child into the world to live a living death for
-nine months, can understand what it means.... It was the Women’s
-Co-operative Guild which saved me from despair.
-
-The first confinement I managed to get through very well, having some
-money left from what I had saved before marriage. But how I managed
-to get through my second confinement I cannot tell anyone. I had to
-work at laundry work from morning to night, nurse a sick husband,
-and take care of my child three and a half years old. In addition
-I had to provide for my coming confinement, which meant that I had
-to do without common necessaries to provide doctor’s fees, which so
-undermined my health that when my baby was born I nearly lost my life,
-the doctor said through want of nourishment. I had suffered intensely
-with neuralgia, and when I inquired among my neighbours if there was
-anything I could take to relieve the pain, I was told that whatever I
-took would do no good; it was quite usual for people to suffer from
-neuralgia, and I should not get rid of it till my baby was born.
-
-I had to depend on my neighbours for what help they could give during
-labour and the lying-in period. They did their best, but from the
-second day I had to have my other child with me, undress him and see
-to all his wants, and was often left six hours without a bite of food,
-the fire out and no light, the time January, and snow had lain on the
-ground two weeks.
-
-When I got up after ten days my life was a perfect burden to me. I lost
-my milk and ultimately lost my baby. My interest in life seemed lost. I
-was nervous and hysterical; when I walked along the streets I felt that
-the houses were falling on me, so I took to staying at home, which of
-course added to the trouble.
-
-Now, is it possible under such circumstances for women to take care of
-themselves, during pregnancy, confinement, and after? Can we any longer
-wonder why so many married working women are in the lunatic asylums
-to-day? Can we wonder that so many women take drugs, hoping to get rid
-of the expected child, when they know so little regarding their own
-bodies, and have to work so hard to keep or help to keep the children
-they have already got? If only the State would do something that would
-give _all_ working mothers the assurance that during pregnancy, where
-needed, means would be provided whereby they could get an all-important
-rest before confinement, and that proper attention should be provided
-during and after so long as necessary. It would make all the difference
-between a safe and speedy confinement, a better offspring, therefore
-a better asset of the State, and a broken-down motherhood, and a race
-of future parents who start in life very often with a constitution
-enfeebled through the mother having to undergo privation, as well as
-the mental and physical strain that childbirth entails.
-
- _Wages 17s. to £1 1s.; two children._
-
-
-6. HEALTHY AND STRONG.
-
-During pregnancy I always looked to my diet, and as my husband never
-got more than 24s. 6d. per week, I had not much to throw away on
-luxuries. I had plain food, such as oatmeal and bacon, and meat, plenty
-of bread and good butter. I may say that during pregnancy and during
-suckling my appetite was always better, and I ate more and enjoyed my
-food better than at any other time. I always did my own housework and
-my own washing, and I never had a doctor all the time I was having
-children. I have had six, one dead.
-
-During my labour I was never bad more than about three or four hours.
-I felt I could get out of bed the first day, and I never had the
-doctor, only an old midwife.
-
-And though I say it myself, nobody had bonnier or healthier children
-than I had, with fair skins and red cheeks.
-
-I must say that I am a staunch teetotaller, and have been all my life.
-I think that drink has a lot to do with some women’s sufferings.
-
-I had one child born without a midwife at all, before we had time to
-fetch her, and I did as well as at any other time.
-
-We lived under the colliery, and our rent was only 3s. 6d. a week.
-We got our coal at a lower price, about 1s. a week. During part of
-the time we had a lodger, who paid us 11s., which helped up a bit.
-But you must know we had to be very careful. But, taking all into
-consideration, we were very comfortably off. We had not many doctors’
-bills, as our children were all very healthy, and I don’t think I have
-spent a pound on doctoring for myself since I was a baby, for which I
-am very thankful.
-
- _Wages 18s. to 24s. 6d.; six children._
-
-
-7. “SHE IS REAL ILL.”
-
-I have a sister-in-law who has five children, and from the first month
-of pregnancy she is real ill, the sickness (as she herself puts it)
-strains her all to pieces, after which she is in a state of collapse.
-It is painful to be with her, the faintness and sickness continue,
-right up till the eighth month. It is not safe for her to go any
-distance by herself, as it comes on at any time, and her legs are
-blue-black until after her baby is born. All her children are living;
-her confinements are normal. She is a very plucky woman. Of course,
-she has to do everything herself; she could not afford to have anyone
-in to help her, and in that state she has to do all her own washing,
-cleaning, etc. She has been to the doctor during these bad times, but
-he does not seem able to relieve her, only tells her to rest her legs
-all she can, which of course is one of the things with a family around
-you the mother cannot do. Her husband was only getting 15s. at the time
-she was having her first three children. Now he is getting £1 per week.
-He works for the Rural District Council.
-
- _Wages 15s.; five children._
-
-
-8. MEN NEED EDUCATION.
-
-My own experience in child-bearing was rather abnormal because I had
-them late in life. Consequently, I suffered more than usual because
-the bones were set and do not easily adapt themselves to changed
-conditions. Extreme sickness from first to last, and during last months
-much pain and much discomfort. My two first were lost from malnutrition
-because I could not retain my food. In loss of strength the miscarriage
-cost me most, and because of the falling of the womb--a trouble which
-was not cured till I had a living child. I was not ignorant, and took
-every care, so that I can conceive any mother’s life being a dreadful
-thing if she was neglected under such circumstances.
-
-My husband’s wages was very unsettled, never exceeded 30s., and was
-often below the sum. I earned a little all the time by sewing. Did all
-housework, washing, baking, and made all our clothes. But no amount
-of State help can help the suffering of mothers until men are taught
-many things in regard to the right use of the organs of reproduction,
-and until he realises that the wife’s body belongs to herself, and
-until the marriage relations takes a higher sense of morality and
-bare justice. And what I imply not only exists in the lower strata of
-society, but is just as prevalent in the higher. So it’s men who need
-to be educated most. The sacred office of parenthood has not yet dawned
-on the majority. Very much injury and suffering comes to the mother and
-child through the father’s ignorance and interference. Pain of body
-and mind, which leaves its mark in many ways on the child. No animal
-will submit to this: why should the woman? Why, simply because of the
-Marriage Laws of the woman belonging to the man, to have and to own,
-etc.
-
- _Wages 30s.; three children, two miscarriages._
-
-
-9. BAD CONFINEMENTS.
-
-I shall only be too glad to assist you in giving my experience. In the
-first place, I have had eight children; seven is now living. I was
-twenty-three when I was married. My first pregnancy I suffered with my
-leg swollen and veins ready to burst. At my confinement the baby was
-hung with navel cord twice round the neck and once round the shoulder,
-owing to lifting and reaching, which caused me hours of suffering, and
-it caused my womb to come down, and I have had to wear something to
-hold it up until these late years. I am now fifty-eight; my husband has
-been dead seven years. I was left to fight life’s battles alone. As my
-family increased I had to have my legs bandaged. I never felt a woman
-during pregnancy; as I got nearer I felt worse. At my confinements the
-greatest trouble was the flooding after the baby was born, and the
-afterbirth grown to my side. When that was taken away the body had to
-be syringed to stop mortification. I have had the doctor’s arm in my
-body, and felt his fingers tearing the afterbirth from my side. While
-I am writing, I almost fancy I am talking to you. I hope I have not
-tired you with my letter.
-
- _Wages £1 to £2; eight children, two miscarriages._
-
-
-10. “I AM A RUINED WOMAN.”
-
-I have been a martyr to suffering through having children, owing to
-the fact that I could not retain my food. I was always sick, troubled
-with nausea and vomiting, which kept me very weak; my constitution was
-brought that low, that after having three children born living I was
-unable to go the full length of pregnancy. The last still-born child
-I had, during pregnancy I was dropsical all the time I was carrying,
-and I had to have two doctors to chloroform me before the child could
-be born. It had taken all the water from me; it was impossible for it
-to be born until they had lanced the child to let the water out of
-it. I had to be fed every hour day and night. Besides two still-born
-children, I have had two miscarriages. The last miscarriage I had I
-lost that much blood it completely drained me. I was three whole months
-and was unable to sleep; I could not even sleep one half-hour. I had
-lost my sleep completely; my hair come off and left bald patches about
-my head. The doctor told me if I had not had the presence of mind to
-lay me flat on my bed when the miscarriage took place I should have
-bled to death. Having all this to go through, it brought on falling of
-the womb, and now that I am able to do for my family and attend to my
-household duties, I have to wear a body-belt, a kind that is worn after
-appendicitis. I am a ruined woman through having children. All the
-times that I was pregnant I could not bear my husband to smoke one pipe
-of tobacco. I have sent you the main ailments I have had to endure, but
-there are a hundred and one little items that have crept in between
-through being brought so weak. I have been subject to other ailments
-besides, such as influenza, and rheumatic fever, and catarrh of the
-bowels.
-
-When I was married, my husband was a weaver; at that time his highest
-wages were £1 per week. We paid 2s. 6d. rent, so that did not leave
-much for food, fire, and clothing. My first-born was one year all but
-two days when the second was born. When the last-named was three months
-old, my husband went on strike for more wages; he was out eleven weeks,
-and not a penny coming in. At the end of that period, there being both
-men and women at the same job, the masters were so obstinate they
-had to go in at the women’s price. After the strike there was a turn
-of bad trade, and he was on short time for seven years; his average
-wages during that period was 14s. per week. If I had not been a good
-needlewoman and a capable manager it would have been worse.
-
- _Wages £1 to 14s.; three children, two still-births, two miscarriages._
-
-
-11. “I WAS AWFULLY POOR.”
-
-My first girl was born before I attained my twentieth year, and I had
-a stepmother who had had no children of her own, so I was not able to
-get any knowledge from her; and even if she had known anything I don’t
-suppose she would have dreamt of telling me about these things which
-were supposed to exist, but must not be talked about. About a month
-before the baby was born I remember asking my aunt where the baby would
-come from. She was astounded, and did not make me much wiser. I don’t
-know whether my ignorance had anything to do with the struggle I had to
-bring the baby into the world, but the doctor said that my youth had,
-for I was not properly developed. Instruments had to be used, and I
-heard the doctor say he could not tell whether my life could be saved
-or not, for he said there is not room here for a bird to pass. All the
-time I thought that this was the way all babies were born.
-
-At the commencement of all my pregnancies I suffered terribly from
-toothache, and for this reason I think all married child-bearing women
-should have their teeth attended to, for days and nights of suffering
-of this kind must have a bad effect on both the mother and child. I
-also at times suffered torments from cramp in the legs and vomiting,
-particularly during the first three months. I hardly think the cramp
-can be avoided, but if prospective mothers would consult their doctors
-about the inability to retain food, I fancy that might be remedied.
-At the commencement of my second pregnancy I was very ill indeed.
-I could retain no food, not even water, and I was constipated for
-thirteen days, and I suffered from jaundice. This had its effect on
-the baby, for he was quite yellow at birth, and the midwife having
-lodgers to attend to, left him unwashed for an hour after birth. She
-never troubled to get his lungs inflated, and he was two days without
-crying. I had no doctor. I was awfully poor, so that I had to wash the
-baby’s clothes in my bedroom at the fortnight’s end; but had I had any
-knowledge like I possess now, I should have insisted at the very least
-on the woman seeing my child’s lungs were properly filled. When we are
-poor, though, we cannot say what _must_ be done; we have to suffer and
-keep quiet. The boy was always weakly, and could not walk when my third
-baby was born. He had fits from twelve to fourteen, but except for a
-rather “loose” frame, seems otherwise quite healthy now.
-
-My third child, a girl, was born in a two-roomed “nearly underground”
-dwelling. We had two beds in the living-room, and the little scullery
-was very damp. Had it not been for my neighbours, I should have had
-no attendance after the confinement, and no fire often, for it was
-during one of the coal strikes. My fourth child, a boy, was born under
-better housing conditions, but not much better as regards money; and
-during the carrying of all my children, except the first, I have had
-insufficient food and too much work. This is just an outline. Did I
-give it all, it would fill a book, as the saying goes.
-
-In spite of all, I don’t really believe that the children (with the
-exception of the oldest boy) have suffered much, only they might have
-been so much stronger, bigger, and better if I had been able to have
-better food and more rest.
-
-Cleanliness has made rapid strides since my confinements; for never
-once can I remember having anything but face, neck, and hands washed
-until I could do things myself, and it was thought certain death to
-change the underclothes under a week.
-
-For a whole week we were obliged to lie on clothes stiff and stained,
-and the stench under the clothes was abominable, and added to this we
-were commanded to keep the babies under the clothes.
-
-I often wonder how the poor little mites managed to live, and perhaps
-they never would have done but for our adoration, because this constant
-admiration of our treasures did give them whiffs of fresh air very
-often.
-
-My husband’s lowest wage was 10s., the highest about £1 only, which was
-reached by overtime. His mother and my own parents generally provided
-me with clothing, most of which was cast-offs.
-
- _Wages 10s. to £1; four children._
-
-
-12. “I DRAGGED ABOUT IN MISERY.”
-
-It is lack of knowledge that often brings unnecessary suffering. I know
-it from experience. In my early motherhood I took for granted that
-women had to suffer at these times, and it was best to be brave and
-not make a fuss. Once when things were not brisk in the labour world,
-I would do my house-cleaning all myself, for naturally at these times
-you like to feel everything is in order everywhere when the strange
-woman comes in to take charge. I was in a very weak state through worry
-and the difficulty of meeting the demands. I had not seen a doctor,
-for I was thinking of having a midwife I had heard of. I dragged about
-in misery and in great pain. A friend called in one morning after I
-had got the children off to school, and I suppose I looked very ill.
-She said: “Have you engaged a doctor?” I said: “No, there is plenty of
-time; I was only six months, and surely I shall have a change soon.” I
-could not lay, sit, or stand in ease, and my legs were so bad. However,
-she went away, saying nothing to me, and brought her doctor. He was
-amazed at my condition, ordered me to bed, said my confinement was
-near, and the child was in a critical condition. He sent for a midwife,
-and they were with me from eleven o’clock till three o’clock. He said
-the child was dead, and in such an awkward position that it nearly
-cost my life to bring it. I had a very long illness follow on (it
-would have been a lovely child full time). The child had been killed
-through shock, and already showed signs of mortification. I was in a
-poor state of health, and struggled against my strength, looking after
-the children’s welfare and neglecting myself. In trying to lift the
-washing-tub it slipped, and that was the shock; and instead of resting
-and having advice (which I felt I could not afford), I persevered, and
-that was the result. Now, if there had been such a thing as a Maternity
-Centre where I could have sent for someone, or could have attended
-without that feeling of expense, I could have been relieved of all that
-suffering.
-
-Another experience I had some nine years after the previous. I was
-pregnant, work had been very scarce, and I was in a very weak state. My
-husband had been at work three weeks when he happened an accident. He
-had fallen from a high scaffold. The Clerk of the Works came to tell
-me they had taken him to the hospital, and I had better go at once and
-take someone with me. Of course, I thought the worst had happened. (He
-did not know my condition.) I was between three and four months, and
-this shock caused a miscarriage. I had a midwife, who, no doubt, was
-all right when things were straightforward. I got about again, but was
-very weak and ill. He was in hospital six weeks. I took in needlework.
-I got very weak yet very stout. I thought it was through sitting so
-much at the machine. I worked and starved myself to make sick pay, 12s.
-per week, go as far as possible. I got so weak, and fainted several
-times after heavy days at the machine. I was taken very ill one night,
-and my daughter went for the doctor. He said: “We must have her in
-bed,” and sent for a neighbour. It was a confinement of a seven-months
-babe. When he told me it was childbirth, I said it was impossible, for
-I had miscarried about four months previous. However, it was true. I
-had been carrying twins--a most peculiar case--during that four months.
-My system was being drained, and the worry and anxiety had effect on
-the child. It was weak and did not move much. I had a bad time, but
-the child lived for nine months, but a very delicate child. Now, if I
-had been able to have a qualified midwife when I had the miscarriage,
-we should have known there was another child, and if I could have been
-medically treated, all that suffering could have been prevented, and I
-might have had a strong child.
-
-But apart from all that, I do not know which is the
-worst--child-bearing with anxiety and strain of mind and body to
-make ends meet, with the thought of another one to share the already
-small allowance, or getting through the confinement fairly well, and
-getting about household duties too soon, and bringing on other ailments
-which make life and everything a burden. I could forgive a woman in
-such a state giving herself and the children a drug which would end
-everything. I was an invalid for six years through getting about too
-soon and causing womb displacement.
-
- _Wages £2 2s.; eight children, one still-born, four miscarriages._
-
-
-13. “VERY FORTUNATE.”
-
-I think I have been very fortunate. I have had two children, both
-girls; one will be sixteen in April, the other will be ten in August,
-so you see there is six years and four months (and not even a
-miscarriage) between them. I have always had the best of health, never
-had a doctor until my second baby was born.... When I was married I was
-three months short of twenty-one.... Trade was very bad at the time.
-I worked in the mill up to six weeks from the event; we had a home to
-make--that is why, as I thought every bit would help. Sometimes we did
-not make 10s. between us. I had a midwife, and I went on very well; in
-fact, I asked what I had to stay in bed for. The second day I got up,
-the fifth day I went out, the seventh baby got on all right, and I went
-back to work at eight weeks’ end. I gave her the breast till she was
-twelve months old. When weaning her, I put plasters on my breasts,
-which irritated the skin so much that they brought on inflammation. I
-suffered awful, as I did not like to tell anybody. It went almost round
-my body. Then I told mother. When she saw the state I was in she went
-nearly frantic; she made me go to the doctor, and one box of salve
-put me right. That is about the worst I suffered with her. I did not
-even have morning sickness, which I have often heard women speak about
-during pregnancy, with either of my children. When I was pregnant the
-second time, I heard that the midwife I had the first time had started
-drinking, so I was afraid to have her. I had a doctor, and it was well
-I had, as I did not go on as well as I did the first time. I was in
-bed a fortnight. I was well looked after, for I have one of the best
-of husbands and a good mother. I might say I have wanted for nothing.
-I have two fine girls.
-
- _Wages 7s. to 26s.; two children._
-
-
-14. INFLAMMATION.
-
-When my boy was coming, for three months I could not dress myself
-properly; I could not get a pair of gloves or boots on, as I was so
-swollen--I suppose with water. I did not get any advice, as I thought
-I must just put up with it. After he was born, I could not pass my
-water for a week--it had to be taken from me. Then I had inflammation
-of the bladder, and finally inflammation of the kidneys, besides other
-complications. My doctor, who was an old man, had to leave me in charge
-of his son for a few days, and once, while talking about my illness, he
-said it was a blessing I had had the inflammation of the kidneys, as
-it had disclosed the fact that there was albumen in the water of some
-standing. I told him how I had been held during pregnancy, and he said
-I ought to have been to his father at that time, and he would have been
-able to do me some good, but, like the majority of women, I thought it
-was one of the ills I _had_ to bear.
-
-The next case is of a young married woman with her first baby. She took
-ill at the eight months, and had a very bad time, falling out of one
-fit into another, and at last, after her baby was born, she lay two
-days quite unconscious--in fact, they never expected she would recover.
-She had two doctors, and they gave her every attention, and then when
-she was getting better her own particular doctor told her that if she
-had only consulted him beforehand he could have saved her a lot of
-pain, which she had to put up with. He said it was some kidney trouble
-which had been the reason of all she had suffered. In both her case and
-mine we could have had advice, as far as the expense was concerned, but
-it was sheer _ignorance, and the idea that we must put up with it till
-the nine months were over_.
-
- _Wages £2; two children._
-
-
-15. “OH, THE HORRORS WE SUFFER!”
-
-From the time I married till just previous to the birth of my third
-child, my husband earned 28s. per week; then followed two years’
-shortness of work. When my fourth was born, we had no food or anything
-to eat, until my husband went to a storekeeper and told him how we were
-placed, and he trusted us, and said we ought to have asked him before.
-And we all had dinner off oatmeal gruel made with tinned milk. The past
-struggle left its mark on the physique of my children. One has since
-died of heart disease, aged ten years; another of phthisis, sixteen
-years; my youngest has swollen glands, and not at all robust, though
-not born in poverty, aged fifteen years....
-
-I have not been the worst-placed woman by a long way, my husband
-generally having 30s. per week, but I could not afford help during
-pregnancy, and I suffer from valvular disease of the heart, which
-(doctors say) was caused of extreme attacks of hæmorrhage and shortness
-of breath, leaving me a complete wreck at those times. My home was very
-dirty, the children got ragged, meals worse than usual, and each doctor
-I consulted said I was not fit to do my work, and I had not to bother.
-I was told not to worry at all, or I should be worse than I was. No one
-who has not been placed in a similar position can realise how horrible
-it is to be so placed. I have resorted to drugs, trying to prevent or
-bring about a slip. I believe I and others have caused bad health to
-ourselves and our children. But what has one to do?
-
-I hope this communication will not offend in any way. But after the
-birth of my first baby I suffered from falling womb, and the torture of
-that was especially cruel when at closet, in more than I can describe;
-and quite by accident I learnt that other mothers I met were not
-suffering the same. My baby was ten months old when I told the doctor,
-who said I ought to have told him before, and he soon put me right. But
-doctors who attended me never told me anything concerning my babies or
-myself. My husband was easeful about attention to himself, and always
-willing to help, even after working from 6 a.m. in the morning. I often
-pitied him; he was never impatient. I have seen women similarly placed,
-and their husbands throw their dinner in the fire. I have been told
-I ought to do as well as his mother, and I wish I could have done.
-Oh, the horrors we suffer when men and women are ignorant! Some have
-severe attacks of hæmorrhage caused by sexual intercourse soon after
-birth....
-
- _Wages 30s.; eight children, two still-born, three miscarriages._
-
-
-16. “A NIGHTMARE YET.”
-
-The first feeling of a young mother (to be) (unless she has been very
-intelligently trained or is very ignorant) is one of fear for herself
-when she finds out her condition. As time goes on she will probably
-lose this fear in the feeling she is to have something all her very
-own, but in some instances the dread grows, and in a sense fills her
-whole being. This must of necessity weaken her bodily and mentally,
-and, of course, makes her time of trial harder to bear.
-
-I remember over my first baby, although I felt delighted to think
-I was to be a mother, I had a very nervous fear that my baby would
-prove weakly because I had suffered for so many years from chronic
-bronchitis. I believe this dread had a very bad effect on my nervous
-system, with the result that when I got within a fortnight of full
-term my baby was born very weakly, and I had a severe labour lasting
-two nights and two days. (This was twenty-three years ago.) No effort
-was made to obtain help for me, although my mother at that time was
-starting to practise as a midwife, and had all a mother’s fears for her
-daughter in her first labour. At that time it was much more usual to
-trust to Providence, and if a woman died it only proved her weakness
-and unfitness for motherhood. My baby only lived seven months. In spite
-of all this trouble, I was very glad when a year later I found I was
-to become a mother again. I was still weak, and this baby was born
-at eight months, very tiny but not weakly. I again had a slow time,
-lasting two days and one night, but not so severe as the first. I had
-what is known as “white-leg” during the lying-in period. This is
-usually due to a septic condition, and may be induced by uncleanliness
-or careless handling during the first stage of labour; again, a chill
-will produce this state, and this was the cause in my case, owing to
-getting out of bed on the second day rather than call mother upstairs
-when I needed her. My last baby was born at a time when we were really
-badly off. My husband was out of work during the greater part of the
-time, and I was not only obliged to work myself, but often went short
-of food and warm clothing when I was most in need of it. The effect
-on my health was, of course, bad, but the baby was a fine healthy boy
-weighing over 12 pounds. Bad as was the effect on my bodily health,
-the mental effect was worse. I nearly lost hope and faith in everyone.
-I felt that even the baby could not make up for the terrible strain I
-had undergone, and at that time I could fully enter into the feelings
-of those women who take drugs to prevent birth. I know I ought to have
-been more strong-minded, but anyway, I got through all right after all,
-and, strange to say, I got up feeling better and more hopeful than I
-had felt for years. During this pregnancy I never dared to allow myself
-to think of the time when the baby would be born; first, because I knew
-the pain would be so bad, and then because I realised that I would not
-be able to work when I got near the end and for some time afterwards. I
-left off a month before and did not start again for four months after
-the birth. I don’t know now _how_ I got through, and it is a nightmare
-to me yet. (I may say here that although we were so poor we stuck to
-the Store all through, and this was a great help.) I believe if I had
-felt quite comfortable as to the position of my other children during
-the time when I would be laid up, my sufferings would not have been so
-great, or my dread of the labour.
-
- _Wages 25s.; three children._
-
-
-17. LACK OF FOOD AND BAD HOUSING.
-
-I think a great deal of suffering is caused to the mother and child
-during pregnancy by lack of nourishment and rest, combined with bad
-housing arrangements. The majority of working women before marriage
-have been used to standing a great deal at their work, bringing about
-much suffering which does not tell seriously until after marriage,
-particularly during pregnancy. A very common complaint is falling of
-the womb. If women could be taught to sit down more when they were
-doing little jobs, that they very often stand to do now, I believe it
-would be a great help to them physically. The majority of working women
-do not get sufficient nourishment during pregnancy. If there is other
-children the mother generally takes what is left. I believe this tells
-very greatly at the time of confinement. I well remember the prostrate
-condition I have been in on several occasions owing to lack of
-nourishment and attention at the time. I found I could not get anybody
-to come into my house and do the work unless I could pay them 10s. per
-week; in consequence I had to take pot-luck. My last confinement I was
-nearly twelve months before I was able to do my duties in the home,
-which meant a great deal of suffering to my children, as they were
-not kept clean. This caused me a great deal of trouble and anxiety.
-I believe all this tells on the mother’s health and also the baby’s
-which she is nursing. I have known women, who have had the opportunity
-and good sense, to get all the nourishment and rest during pregnancy,
-even at the expense of something going short in the home; at time of
-confinement they have got over it quite easily, and made very little
-difference to them a few hours afterwards.
-
-I believe the bad housing arrangements have a very depressing effect on
-mothers during pregnancy. I know of streets of houses where there are
-large factories built, taking the whole of the daylight away from the
-kitchen, where the woman spends the best part of her life. On top of
-this you get the continual grinding of machinery all day. Knowing that
-it is mostly women and girls who are working in these factories gives
-you the feeling that their bodies are going round with the machinery.
-The mother wonders what she has to live for; if there is another baby
-coming she hopes it will be dead when it is born. The result is she
-begins to take drugs. I need hardly tell you the pain and suffering she
-goes through if the baby survives, or the shock it is to the mother
-when she is told there is something wrong with the baby. She feels she
-is to blame if she has done this without her husband knowing, and she
-is living in dread of him. All this tells on the woman physically and
-mentally; can you wonder at women turning to drink? If the child lives
-to grow up, you find it hysterical and with very irritable, nasty ways
-when in the company of other children. When you see all this it is like
-a sting at your heart when you know the cause of it all and no remedy.
-
- _Wages 28s.; six children._
-
-
-18. ASTONISHING HEALTH.
-
-Although I have had eight children and one miscarriage, I am afraid my
-experiences would not help you in the least, as I am supposed to be
-one of those women who can stand anything. During my pregnancy I have
-always been able to do my own work.
-
-With the boys labour has only lasted twenty minutes, girls a little
-longer. I have never needed a doctor’s help, and it has always been
-over before he came. I have never had an after-pain in my life, so the
-doctors don’t know what I am made of. I always had to get up and do my
-own work at three weeks’ end. I work all day long at housework until
-six or seven, and I then take up all voluntary work I can for the sake
-of the Labour Cause. I am sorry and yet glad that my lot has not been
-so bad as others. My idea is that everything depends on how a woman
-lives, and how healthy she was born. No corsets and plenty of fruit,
-also a boy’s healthy sports when she is young. I had the advantage of
-never having to work before I was married, and never have wanted for
-money, so when the struggle came I had a strong constitution to battle
-with it all.
-
- _Wages 30s. to 35s., and upwards; eight children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-19. “KEPT ALL TO MYSELF.”
-
-I was a very strong woman before my baby was born. I was a weaver. I
-worked up to five weeks before the baby was born. I had a good appetite
-all the nine months and did not ail anything. But when baby was born
-he was a miserable little thing. Now that I am older I can see things
-different, and I say that if I had not have worked so hard during
-the nine months, my baby would have been better. When a baby is born
-delicate they are a great care for a good many years.
-
-I may say here that I did not want any more. I never knew what it was
-to ail anything all my life before, but I could not say that after. I
-lost 2 stone in weight in a very short time after. Of course, I can see
-now I was a good bit to blame, because I thought I was only like other
-women would be, and kept all to myself. I was so strong before he was
-born, that I was ashamed to own up to it that I felt so weak. It was
-more weakness than anything else that I suffered from. They used to
-tell me that I would perhaps be better if I had another, but I said
-I never would go through it again to feel as bad again. I may say in
-conclusion, if ever my son takes a wife, I will do all in my power to
-help her not to suffer as I did.
-
- _Wages 20s.; one child._
-
-
-20. STEAD’S PENNY POETS.
-
-I was married at twenty-eight in utter ignorance of the things that
-most vitally affect a wife and mother. My mother, a dear, pious soul,
-thought ignorance was innocence, and the only thing I remember her
-saying on the subject of childbirth was, “God never sends a babe
-without bread to feed it.” Dame Experience long ago knocked the bottom
-out of that argument for me. My husband was a man earning 32s. a
-week--a conscientious, good man, but utterly undomesticated. A year
-after our marriage the first baby was born, naturally and with little
-pain or trouble. I had every care, and motherhood stirred the depths
-of my nature. The rapture of a babe in arms drawing nourishment from
-me crowned me with glory and sanctity and honour. Alas! the doctor
-who attended me suffered from eczema of a very bad type in his hands.
-The disease attacked me, and in twenty-four hours I was covered from
-head to foot ... finally leaving me partially and sometimes totally
-crippled in my hands. Fifteen months later a second baby came--a dear
-little girl, and again I was in a fairly good condition physically
-and financially, but had incurred heavy doctor’s bills and attendance
-bills, due to my incapacity for work owing to eczema. Both the children
-were delicate, and dietary expenses ran high. Believing that true
-thrift is wise expenditure, we spent our all trying to build up for
-them sound, healthy bodies, and was ill-prepared financially and
-physically to meet the birth of a third baby sixteen months later.
-Motherhood ceased to be a crown of glory, and became a fearsome
-thing to be shunned and feared. The only way to meet our increased
-expenditure was by dropping an endowment policy, and losing all
-our little, hard-earned savings. I confess without shame that when
-well-meaning friends said: “You cannot afford another baby; take this
-drug,” I took their strong concoctions to purge me of the little life
-that might be mine. They failed, as such things generally do, and the
-third baby came. Many a time I have sat in daddy’s big chair, a baby
-two and a half years old at my back, one sixteen months and one one
-month on my knees, and cried for very weariness and hopelessness. I
-fed them all as long as I could, but I was too harassed, domestic
-duties too heavy, and the income too limited to furnish me with a
-rich nourishing milk.... Nine months later I was again pregnant, and
-the second child fell ill. “She cannot live,” the doctors said, but I
-loved.... She is still delicate, but bright and intelligent. I watched
-by her couch three weeks, snatching her sleeping moments to fulfil the
-household task. The strain was fearful, and one night I felt I must
-sleep or die--I didn’t much care which; and I lay down by her side, and
-slept, and slept, and slept, forgetful of temperatures, nourishment or
-anything else.... A miscarriage followed in consequence of the strain,
-and doctor’s bills grew like mushrooms. The physical pain from the
-eczema, and working with raw and bleeding hands, threatened me with
-madness. I dare not tell a soul. I dare not even face it for some time,
-and then I knew I must fight this battle or go under. Care and rest
-would have cured me, but I was too proud for charity, and no other help
-was available. You may say mine is an isolated case. It is not. The
-sympathy born of suffering brings many mothers to me, just that they
-may find a listening ear. I find this mental state is common, and the
-root cause is lack of rest and economic strain--economic strain being
-the greatest factor for ill of the two.
-
-Working-class women have grown more refined; they desire better homes,
-better clothes for themselves and their children, and are far more
-self-respecting and less humble than their predecessors. But the strain
-to keep up to anything like a decent standard of housing, clothing,
-diet, and general appearance, is enough to upset the mental balance of
-a Chancellor of the Exchequer. How much more so a struggling pregnant
-mother! Preventives are largely used. Race suicide, if you will, is the
-policy of the mothers of the future. Who shall blame us?
-
-Two years later a fourth baby came. Varicose veins developed. I thought
-they were a necessary complement to childbirth. He was a giant of a boy
-and heavy to carry, and I just dragged about the housework, washing and
-cleaning until the time of his birth; but I looked forward to that nine
-days in bed longingly; to be still and rest was a luxury of luxuries.
-Economics became a greater strain than ever now that I had four
-children to care for. Dimly conscious of the evils of sweating, instead
-of buying cheap ready-made clothes, I fashioned all their little
-garments and became a sweated worker myself. The utter monotony of
-life, the lack of tone and culture, the drudgery and gradual lowering
-of the standard of living consequent upon the rising cost of living,
-and increased responsibilities, was converting me into a soulless
-drudge and nagging scold. I felt the comradeship between myself and
-husband was breaking up. He could not enter into my domestic, I would
-not enter into his intellectual pursuits, and again I had to fight
-or go under. I could give no time to mental culture or reading and I
-bought Stead’s penny editions of literary masters, and used to put them
-on a shelf in front of me washing-day, fastened back their pages with a
-clothes-peg, and learned pages of Whittier, Lowell, and Longfellow, as
-I mechanically rubbed the dirty clothes, and thus wrought my education.
-This served a useful purpose; my children used to be sent off to sleep
-by reciting what I had learnt during the day. My mental outlook was
-widened, and once again I stood a comrade and helpmeet by my husband’s
-side, and my children all have a love for good literature.
-
-Three years later a fifth baby came. I was ill and tired, but my
-husband fell ill a month prior to his birth, and I was up day and
-night. Our doctor was, and is, one of the kindest men I have ever met.
-I said: “Doctor, I cannot afford you for myself, but will you come if
-I need?” “I hope you won’t need me, but I’ll come.” I dare not let my
-husband in his precarious condition hear a cry of pain from me, and
-travail pain cannot always be stifled; and here again the doctor helped
-me by giving me a sleeping draught to administer him as soon as I felt
-the pangs of childbirth. Hence he slept in one room while I travailed
-in the other, and brought forth the loveliest boy that ever gladdened a
-mother’s heart. So here I am a woman of forty-one years, blessed with a
-lovely family of healthy children, faced with a big deficit, varicose
-veins, and an occasional loss of the use of my hands. I want nice
-things, but I must pay that debt I owe. I would like nice clothes (I’ve
-had three new dresses in fourteen years), but I must not have them yet.
-I’d like to develop mentally, but I must stifle that part of my nature
-until I have made good the ills of the past, and I am doing it slowly
-and surely, and my heart grows lighter, and will grow lighter still
-when I know that the burden is lifted from the mothers of our race.
-
- _Wages 32s. to 40s.; five children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-21. HOW A WOMAN MAY SUFFER.
-
-I cannot tell you all my sufferings during the time of motherhood. I
-thought, like hundreds of women do to-day, that it was only natural,
-and you had to bear it. I was left an orphan, and having no mother to
-tell me anything, I was quite unprepared for marriage and what was
-expected of me.
-
-My husband being some years my senior, I found he had not a bit of
-control over his passions, and expected me to do what he had been in
-the habit of paying women to do.
-
-I had three children and one miscarriage within three years. This left
-me very weak and suffering from very bad legs. I had to work very hard
-all the time I was pregnant.
-
-My next child only lived a few hours. After the confinement I was very
-ill, and under the care of a doctor for some time. I had inflammation
-in the varicose veins; the doctor told me I should always lay with my
-legs above my head. He told my husband I must not do any work for some
-time. I had either to wear a bandage or an elastic stocking to keep my
-legs so that I might get about at all. I am still suffering from the
-varicose veins now, although my youngest child is fourteen; at times
-I am obliged to keep my legs bandaged up. With each child I had they
-seemed to get worse, and me having them so quickly never allowed my
-legs to get into their normal condition before I was pregnant again. I
-do wish there could be some limit to the time when a woman is expected
-to have a child. I often think women are really worse off than beasts.
-During the time of pregnancy, the male beast keeps entirely from the
-female: not so with the woman; she is at the prey of a man just the
-same as though she was not pregnant. Practically within a few days of
-the birth, and as soon as the birth is over, she is tortured again. If
-the woman does not feel well she must not say so, as a man has such a
-lot of ways of punishing a woman if she does not give in to him....
-
- _Wages 30s. average; seven children, two miscarriages._
-
-
-22. “GOT ON SPLENDIDLY.”
-
-I have only had one child and one miscarriage, but I can assure you I
-had such good nursing that I got on splendidly. Of course, I was not
-allowed to get up before the tenth day, and I do not think that anyone
-ought to do so, even if they can. I think if everyone at those times
-had great care and good nursing for a month, there is no reason why
-they should not get on as well as I did.
-
- _One child, one miscarriage._
-
-
-23. “ONE OF THE FORTUNATE.”
-
-I must be one of the fortunate ones. I have always had fairly good
-health during pregnancy, and good times at confinements and getting up.
-I had never had anything to do with children before marriage, and I owe
-my good health to being well nourished and looked after by my mother
-when I was a growing girl. I think if the young girls of to-day are
-properly cared for, it will make all the difference to the mothers of
-the future, and save much suffering during pregnancy and after.
-
- _Wages 26s. to 30s.; three children, two miscarriages._
-
-
-24. UTTERLY OVERDONE.
-
-Sometimes we think that our own life does not seem to be of any
-importance, and our troubles are what should be, specially before the
-Maternity Benefit. When I was married, I had to leave my own town to go
-out into the world, as it were, and when I had to have my first baby, I
-knew absolutely nothing, not even how they were born. I had many a time
-thought how cruel (not wilfully, perhaps) my mother was not to tell
-me all about the subject when I left home. Although I was twenty-five
-years of age when married, I had never been where a baby was born. When
-my baby was born I had been in my labour for thirty-six hours, and did
-not know what was the matter with me, and when it was born it was as
-black as a coal and took the doctor a long while to get life into it.
-It was only a seven-months baby, and I feel quite sure if I had been
-told anything about pregnancy it would not have happened. I carried a
-heavy piece of oilcloth, which brought on my labour. Anyway, the boy
-lived, but it cannot be expected that he can be as robust as if he had
-been a nine months baby, but he is healthy, but not extra strong.
-
-When he was six years old, I had my fifth baby, and had also a
-miscarriage, and then I went on strike. My life was not worth living
-at this rate, as my husband was only a working man, out of work when
-wet or bad weather, and also in times of depression. I had all my
-own household work to do, washing, mending, making clothes, baking,
-cooking, and everything else.
-
-In those six years I never knew what it was to have a proper night’s
-sleep, for if I had not a baby on the breast I was pregnant, and how
-could you expect children to be healthy, as I always seemed to be
-tired. If I sat down, I very often fell asleep through the day.
-
-I knew very little about feeding children; when they cried, I gave them
-the breast. If I had known then what I know now, perhaps my children
-would have been living. I was ignorant, and had to suffer severely for
-it, for it nearly cost me my life, and also those of my children. I
-very often ponder over this part of my life. I must not say anything
-about my mother now, because she is dead, but I cannot help thinking
-what might have been if she had told me.
-
- _Five children, one miscarriage._
-
-[Illustration: FACSIMILE OF EXTRACT FROM LETTER 24.]
-
-
-25. THREE CHILDREN IN THREE YEARS.
-
-I was married young. My first three children were born in three years.
-My husband’s wages at that time was 27s. a week. My husband works in
-a boot and shoe factory. In the winter-time they did not make many
-full weeks. There were clubs to pay and holidays to provide for. The
-consequence was my third child was not born strong. She had a cough
-as soon as she was born. It was a struggle to put enough by to have
-a nurse in for a fortnight. I have had to get about to do my own
-housework long enough before I was fit to do it. My last two children
-have been stronger because I have been able to get better support. My
-husband was working for Co-operative firms.
-
-When we know what the working women have to go through, you need not
-wonder at them trying to curtail the family. Though the wages have gone
-up, it is quite as difficult, for the prices of commodities have gone
-up too. I do feel that something should be done to help our women,
-so that they can take better care of themselves during the time of
-pregnancy. But when they only have the same amount of money coming in,
-how are they going to do it? For it takes them all their time to keep
-going on. A mother never thinks of herself. She is always trying to
-make her family comfortable. A good many of them get about too quick
-after confinement, and it is making invalids of a good many. I am very
-sorry I am not in active service for the Guild. I cannot tell you how
-much I love the work.
-
- _Wages 16s. to 27s.; six children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-26. “SUCH IS THE LIFE OF POOR WOMEN.”
-
-One of the difficulties I experienced during pregnancy was saving the
-doctor’s fee out of the small wage, which was only just enough each
-week for ordinary expenses. Thanks to the Maternity Benefit, a woman
-now knows she is provided for at the time.
-
-I have had six children, all living, and what a terrible time it is,
-to be sure, especially during the last two months--only just enough to
-live on and another coming. The mental strain in addition to bodily
-labour must surely affect the child. I think a woman in that state
-should have all the rest that is possible. I did fairly well for a
-working man’s wife, but the recollection is anything but pleasant.
-Fancy bending over a washing-tub, doing the family washing perhaps an
-hour or two before baby is born. I think a woman in that condition
-should be considered unable to do heavy work for quite six weeks
-previous to the birth of her child.
-
-Like other wage-paid workers, my husband’s wages fluctuated. The
-unsteadiness of the wages of a labourer is a matter of concern, and
-working a full week he would scarcely receive a real living wage.
-During the time of bringing my children up, the highest wage I received
-in any one week was 30s., and the lowest--well, I had so many that I
-really do not know how I got through. A week’s holiday[A] meant no
-wage at the week-end. And if the machinery broke down, or there were
-strikes or lock-outs, it stopped for six clear days, the sum of 10s.,
-and 1s. for each child, would be paid. The same rate would be paid for
-out of work. My husband was seldom out of work, but, as I have stated,
-his wage was subject to fluctuation. I think the lowest (not to mention
-holidays of a week duration, when perhaps I had saved the Dividend to
-tide the week over) was 4s. 6d.
-
-I shall have to tell you of a case near my home. The woman, I believe,
-is in her last month. I met her on her way home carrying a baby of two
-years (her second). She had been out to wash, as she said every copper
-helped (her husband is a labourer). She said: “I have to go out as long
-as I am able to help, to clean or wash; you see, they will not let me
-work in the factory.” When questioned about the baby she was carrying,
-her answer was that she took him with her, and he just sits on a chair
-until she has done. The child in question is rickety. He cannot stand
-yet. Such is the life of poor women. I have known many such.
-
-[A] _I.e._, an enforced holiday.
-
-
-27. WORKED UP TO THE LAST.
-
-I will just give you a little of my confinements. I had been married
-eighteen months when I had my first baby, when I had a trying time,
-being only an eight-months baby. My water broke five weeks before,
-and caused what the doctor calls “dry labour.” He only lived twelve
-hours. The second came three years and nine months afterwards. I had
-a straight labour, but I flooded afterwards, and if the doctor had
-not been there I should have lost my life; it caused me three months’
-doctoring afterwards. The third one, which came two years and one month
-after, I had a fairly good labour. Over this one my sufferings were
-mostly before it came. I had varicose veins in the right leg right
-away in the abdomen, and the irritation was most distressing; I used
-to walk the bedroom most nights during the last month. The fourth came
-two years and three months after the third, and the doctor put me an
-elastic band on my leg, and of course I did not suffer so much over
-that one. I could have told at the meeting, where Mrs. D. was talking,
-about babies’ eyes, for this one’s eyes after a few days began as if
-they had got cold in them, and the doctor told me then many people took
-it for cold, but if neglected it was most serious. I am pleased to say
-I have had no trouble, for he is a fine young fellow now.
-
-Between the fourth and fifth I was four years and eleven months, and
-then the sixth I went five years and eleven months, and was forty-two
-when I had him. Of course, I think I am suffering now for some of it,
-as I have always had to do my own work up to the last, and have had a
-lot of sickness with my husband and my second boy; till he was eleven
-years old I scarce ever had the doctor out of the house. I must say
-that I have had a good husband to help me through, but I do hope we get
-the £7 10s., and then there will be a many who will not suffer as many
-poor women have done in the past. At the time I had my children, and
-weighing all things together, I don’t think my husband’s wages averaged
-no more than 28s. a week, lowest 12s. and 15s. I should like to tell
-you, besides children we had my husband’s mother to keep, and allowed
-her 2s. 6d. a week besides keeping her. He has never been a strong man
-either, and many a time had him at home six or seven weeks at a time. I
-feel that when I go to conferences and meetings that I wish I had been
-a co-operator years ago, for since I have been a Guild worker I feel
-the years have been wasted, but I am trying to do my best now in my
-little way. Wishing you every success in the campaign we are fighting.
-
- _Wages average 28s.; six children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-28. HEAVY EXPENSE OF CHILDBIRTH.
-
-My experiences as a young woman were very difficult, for I was the
-first child, and had never been brought up with young babies, or
-afterwards been where they were. My mother dying when I was three years
-old, I had no one to turn to for advice. I had spent all my youth in
-the country, and came as a stranger into a strange place, knowing no
-one but the man I married. My first child was a very delicate child,
-but I have often thought since that perhaps I had not done all things
-that were wise, but that would be for want of knowledge. I think a
-mother is a peculiarity during pregnancy, for I myself never seemed to
-want anything I had cooked myself, and if I went to any other house I
-could have eaten the poorest of foods. Then one must not go and buy
-what we may fancy, as that is an extra expense to the home; and knowing
-there is an additional expense coming, we have to be very careful. I
-have not had the Maternity Benefit yet, but that is only a trifle to
-the large expense that is incurred, when you have paid £1 1s. for your
-doctor, your nurse 10s. per week, a washerwoman 2s. per day (you cannot
-get a nurse here under, and if she does the washing she will charge
-12s. per week). Then, you never find anyone that makes the money go as
-far as you do yourself, so that when you get up, instead of having the
-best of support, and very little to do, you have to begin to get pulled
-round again, and start and do the household work before you are strong
-enough, with an extra one added. Naturally the child either cannot be
-nursed by the mother at all, or only partly. The child suffers as well
-as the mother.
-
-If it could be made possible, I really think mothers should have
-practically nothing to do with heavy work three months before
-childbirth and three months after--that is, if life is to be made
-worth living. But at present we have to clean down thoroughly ready
-for the event, till I have found myself wondering if death would not
-be a release. What with worry and feeling bad, I am never surprised
-at hearing of an expectant mother committing suicide. If she has two
-or three tiny children, she never has a minute’s rest, if she is an
-energetic housewife.
-
-I think I won’t write any more, or you will be thinking I am rather a
-depressing character, but I shall be glad if anything I have said is
-any use to others as a benefit in future time.
-
- _Wages 20s. to 45s.; five children._
-
-
-29. “I AM NEARLY USED UP.”
-
-Through my married life I have had a good, kind partner, which means
-so much to the wife, and who always provided me with a doctor and a
-good nurse for my confinements, which goes without saying that the
-mother and child have a much better chance than other neglected ones.
-The first five were born with fifteen months between; then there was a
-wait of eight years for the sixth, and three years for the seventh. I
-have always worked hard both before and after childbirth. Give a woman
-a quiet home and an easy conscience and good plain food, and I see no
-reason why both mother and child should not do well. Personally, I
-don’t know what I should have done if it had not been for my good old
-nurse, my dear mother having passed away some years before; but by
-the grace of God and plenty of common sense, I have brought all my
-children through so far. I was married in 1884, and knew practically
-nothing about a child’s entry into the world. I do think there should
-be somewhere where intending brides could get information that would
-in some way prepare them for what may take place--those who have no
-mothers, I mean. But so much depends on the woman herself, whether she
-is going to make the best of things. Personally, I found it was no
-good worrying, although I found it much harder than most. I never knew
-what it was to have a day at the seaside for twenty years. I am not
-grumbling, only now I am nearly used up. If only the Maternity Benefit
-had been given when I and many others needed it, I cannot help thinking
-I could have done much better. My husband is a bricklayer, and you may
-guess it was a bit of a struggle with my little family.
-
- _Seven children._
-
-[Illustration: ELEVEN CHILDREN BORN, ALL LIVING. FATHER A FISH-HAWKER.
-
-This family is not connected with the Women’s Co-operative Guild.
-
-(_Reproduced by kind permission of the Medical Officer of Health for
-Liverpool._)]
-
-
-30. “MOTHER LAST.”
-
-When we were first married my husband’s wages was £1 a week. I have had
-seven children; one died at birth, one at one year old, and five are
-living. Each was about two years and three months old when the other
-was born. I had one miscarriage, which left me very ill for a long
-time. I found that the money was so little to do on that I must work
-as well to pay my way and clothe my children. My husband neither drank
-or smoked, but when rent, coals, gas, and food is taken out, what was
-left for other things? I had boarders, and was standing on my legs so
-much that after the birth of my last child a marble leg set in. I went
-under an operation, but my leg is still very bad. A mother wants good
-food before the birth as well as after, but how can it be done out of
-so little money? If father takes his food it must be as good as can
-be got; then the children come next and mother last.
-
- _Wages 20s.; seven children._
-
-
-31. LITTLE TO TELL.
-
-Why is it these things have never been thought of before? Is it
-ignorance, or is it that people are got used to the idea that we have
-to expect all sorts of illnesses when a woman gets pregnant, and we
-have just to put up with it and do the best we can? Personally, I
-have very little to tell of my own experiences, although I have four
-children--two boys and two girls, the eldest fifteen years and the
-youngest six years. Compared with some working mothers, I have gone
-through those trying periods fairly well. Also my confinements have on
-the whole been good. My husband’s occupation is a carpenter and joiner,
-and he gets the trade union rate of wages of the district.
-
- _Wages, trade union rate; four children._
-
-
-32. RESTRICTION ADVOCATED.
-
-I feel that I must write and explain why I advocate educating women to
-the idea that they should not bring children into the world without
-the means to provide for them. I know it is a most delicate subject,
-and very great care must be used in introducing it, but still, a word
-spoken sometimes does good. Someone has said that most of the trouble
-with delicate children were caused by women trying to destroy life
-in the early days of pregnancy. I do not, of course, recommend that
-sort of thing. It is absolutely wrong. But it is terrible to see how
-women suffer, even those that are in better conditions of life. I
-will quote one or two personal experiences. My grandmother had over
-twenty children; only eight lived to about fourteen years, only two
-to a good old age. A cousin (a beautiful girl) had seven children in
-about seven years; the first five died in birth, the sixth lived, and
-the seventh died and the mother also. What a wasted life! Another had
-seven children; dreadful confinements, two or three miscarriages, an
-operation for trouble in connection with same. Three children died and
-the mother also quite young. There are cases all round us much worse.
-You find in the majority of cases that in large families a certain
-number die and the others have less strength. Of course, there are
-exceptions. The trouble is that it takes so very long in England for
-things to be changed, and you are told to mind your own business and
-let people do as they like; but I am pleased to see that many men and
-women are getting wiser, to the benefit of the wives and families for
-whom the poor husband has to provide.
-
-
-33. “ALMOST A WRECK.”
-
-I was married at the age of twenty-two (barely twenty-two years), and
-by the time I had reached my thirty-second birthday was the mother
-of seven children, and I am sure you will pardon me if I take the
-credit for bringing up such a family without the loss of even one,
-seeing that it entailed such a great amount of suffering to myself on
-account of having to nurse them through all illness, and in addition
-(after sitting up many nights in succession) being compelled to do all
-household duties.
-
-During pregnancy I suffered much. When at the end of ten years I was
-almost a mental and physical wreck, I determined that this state of
-things should not go on any longer, and if there was no natural means
-of prevention, then, of course, artificial means must be employed,
-which were successful, and am happy to say that from that time I have
-been able to take pretty good care of myself, but often shudder to
-think what might have been the result if things had been allowed to
-go on as they were. Two days after childbirth I invariably sat up in
-bed knitting stockings and doing general repairs for my family. My
-husband at that time was earning 30s. per week, and out of that amount
-claimed 6s. 6d. as pocket-money, and when I tell you that through all
-my difficulties there were no debts contracted on my part, you will be
-able to form some idea of what women are, in some cases, called upon to
-endure.
-
- _Wages 26s. to 30s.; seven children._
-
-
-34. DELICATE CHILDREN.
-
-I had my three children in two years and five months, and all the
-time I carried I had violent sickness, night and day, under a doctor
-practically the whole time, who, of course, were unable to prevent
-my suffering. The result was my babies were delicate; the last one
-suffered with gastritis the whole of its short life--four years and
-ten months--which ended in peritonitis and abdominal tuberculosis. I
-have the eldest one still, but he is very delicate and unable to attend
-school.
-
- _Wages 21s. to 27s.; three children._
-
-
-35. CONTINUAL PREGNANCY FOR FIFTEEN YEARS.
-
-I can speak from experience. For fifteen years I was in a very poor
-state of health owing to continual pregnancy. As soon as I was over
-one trouble, it was all started over again. In one instance, I was
-unable to go further than the top of the street the whole time owing
-to bladder trouble, constant flow of water. With one, my leg was so
-terribly bad I had constantly to sit down in the road when out, and
-stand with my leg on a chair to do my washing. I have had four children
-and _ten_ miscarriages, three before the first child, each of them
-between three and four months. No cause but weakness, and, I’m afraid,
-ignorance and neglect. I was in a very critical state for years; my
-sufferings were very great from acute weakness. I now see a great deal
-of this agony ought never to have been, with proper attention. It is
-good to see some of our women waking up to this fact. It is help and
-attention during pregnancy that is wanted, and I hope my own dear
-daughter, if she ever marries, will be one to benefit with others, by
-our experience. I do hope this letter is something of what you are
-wishing for, hoping for good results of our Guild work in this matter.
-
- _Wages 25s.; four children, ten miscarriages._
-
-
-36. MANY MISCARRIAGES.
-
-My experience during wifehood has been that so long as husband and
-children could have necessities the mother could manage somehow.
-
-It is my silver-wedding day to-morrow, and you will see something
-of what it has meant to me. I was married young; my husband is five
-years older. I had my first three children before I was twenty-four,
-nursing them all. Then I had three miscarriages in the next eight
-years. I had two more children later, in one and a half years. Since
-then, eleven years ago, I have had a misplaced womb, and have had two
-more miscarriages since, one being of twins five months, and one three
-months.
-
-I believe it was having children too fast that weakened my inside and
-brought on miscarriages.
-
-When I heard Mrs. H. say at our Conference she always had £5 provided
-for confinement, I felt that she had indeed been a lucky woman. I have
-never yet been in that position, and it is because a woman has not
-enough money to pay for things being done for her until she is strong
-enough to do them for herself, that causes so much suffering.
-
-My husband’s wages was 30s. a week when he made a full week, but
-unfortunately his trade was very uncertain. In ten years we had moved
-four different times--twice to A, back again to B, and then to C which
-accounts a great deal for us being short, as we had to pay our own
-expenses each time, and of course you will understand what it means
-to a mother when she is left behind. The husband must be found his
-board-money and pocket-money, even if she goes short of necessaries.
-
- _Wages 30s.; five children, five miscarriages._
-
-[Illustration: FACSIMILE OF EXTRACT FROM LETTER 36.]
-
-
-37. AGAINST LARGE FAMILIES.
-
-May I say, first of all, that lack of knowledge means, in nearly every
-case, much unnecessary suffering. I was married at twenty-one, and
-have had three children--two boys and one girl. Eldest thirty in May,
-youngest twenty-five. No miscarriages. I might say that I was very
-ignorant when I was married; my mother did not consider it at all
-proper to talk about such things. There is too much mock modesty in
-the world and too little time given to the things that matter. Knowing
-how ignorant I was on matters of motherhood, my husband bought a book
-for me called “Advice to a Wife,” by Dr. Henry Pye Chavasse. It is a
-beautifully written book and would be a gift of untold value to any
-girl about to marry. There is also a sequel entitled “Advice to a
-Mother”--it has saved me pounds of expense--price 2s. 6d., by the same
-author. Yet, on the other hand, with all this knowledge, I had a very
-dreadful time with my first child--in fact, I nearly lost my life and
-reason too, and have never really enjoyed good health since. I was
-fully six months before I could look after my baby. This was one of
-my greatest disappointments. I was obliged to put my little one out
-to nurse, although I had an ample supply of milk. My second and third
-confinements were very bad, but I was able to get about at the end of
-the month. It is always a mystery how some poor mothers get about so
-soon, but of course some women are much stronger than others. Here let
-me add that through getting about too soon a great deal of suffering
-is stored up for later years. My old doctor once said to me that if
-women would only realise that a certain amount of rest was absolutely
-necessary after confinement, it would add several years to their life.
-I cannot speak too strongly about the evils of miscarriages. One
-miscarriage brought about unlawfully ruins a woman’s constitution more
-than half a dozen children. I have suffered from varicose veins since
-my first child was born, and during pregnancy.
-
-My husband’s wages during child-bearing period have been never more
-than 24s.; being a piece-worker, _has_ been as low as 9s. The wages
-I received when my last child was born (the same week, I mean) were
-11s. I was glad to avail myself of a free doctor from the hospital.
-I may say I had a black doctor, and was never better attended in my
-life. I do not believe in large families. It does not give either the
-mother or the children a chance. Here again, I think, much education
-is needed. Fathers ought to control their bodies for the sake of the
-mother and child. I could quote several instances where a mother’s
-life has become intolerable through the husband’s lack of control. I do
-trust that the new Maternity Scheme will soon be a fact. I feel that,
-when put into working order, thousands of poor mothers will be saved
-unnecessary suffering.
-
- _Wages 9s. to 24s.; three children._
-
-
-38. “OTHER CHILDREN WITH MEASLES.”
-
-I think the earlier stages of pregnancy are the worst, but a woman
-needs most attention when she gets up. I have had to nurse my other
-children with measles when my baby was only four days old. I could
-never employ a proper nurse. I had six children when my husband was
-getting £1 a week. I am so glad to see the improvements in the lot of
-women to-day, but in some ways it is worse now to bring up a family. I
-am so glad to see anything being done to help the mother.
-
- _Wages £1 and upwards; eight children._
-
-
-39. BENEFIT FROM HEARTS OF OAK.
-
-I am afraid I have not much to tell from my experience. I have always
-been able to look after myself, with the help of a good husband. I have
-had nine children; eight are living.
-
-When I tell you my husband is a member of the Hearts of Oak Benefit
-Society, you will know I have benefited by it.[B]
-
- _Nine children._
-
-[B] The Hearts of Oak gives a benefit of 30s. at child-birth.
-
-
-40. NEGLECT BY DOCTORS.
-
-I might say that I have had two children. The first one was still-born,
-but it was owing to the doctor not paying proper attention to me, as,
-when he came, he said he would not be needed until the morning after.
-However, I got to be worse, and he was fetched again, but refused to
-come, so we had to get a midwife, and she said if I had had proper
-attention the child would have been born then. Consequently, the child
-was suffocated in the birth. When all was over, my husband went to tell
-him, and he said he was very glad, as he wanted his rest. Then when I
-was going to have my second, I ordered another doctor, and when he was
-wanted, he was drinking, and sent another midwife; so you see I have
-not had it all straightforward. But when I was carrying them, I can say
-that I was very well during the time of pregnancy, only for sickness in
-the morning and after food, until about seven months gone, when I was
-all right.
-
- _Wages 21s. to 23s.; two children._
-
-
-41. OVER-CHILD-BEARING.
-
-My feelings during pregnancy were just like those of Mary in Hall Caine
-(“The Woman Thou Gavest Me”). My mind was full of love and my time of
-preparation for the coming life within me. I worked very hard during
-the time of six children, knitting stockings and making clothes for
-those I already had, so my little one could be well nursed. Three are
-suffering from consumption, and one from curvature. When I had had
-six I never murmured, never once said I had enough, and did not want
-more, but after the birth of my last one I changed, because I could
-not nurse it and never carried it about. I do not blame my husband for
-this birth. He had waited patiently for ten months because I was ill,
-and thinking the time was safe, I submitted as a duty, knowing there
-is much unfaithfulness on the part of the husband where families are
-limited.
-
-What is necessary for mothers is State aid for every child she gives
-birth to. If this is necessary for the aged, it is more so for the
-mother with the children.
-
-It is quite time this question of maternity was taken up, and we
-must let the men know we are human beings with ideals, and aspire to
-something higher than to be mere objects on which they can satisfy
-themselves. Near my home are two sisters with ten months and eight days
-between their ages. Two doors from my own are four sisters, all living,
-and they all came in two years and fifteen days--the second born eleven
-months after the first, and thirteen months after twins came, and since
-then three more have been added to their number. None of them are old
-enough to work, and you will understand the position of the parents,
-who are good, deserving, well-meaning people, when the father, being
-out of work through the war (painter), has had to go labouring.
-
- _Wages 30s.; seven children, two miscarriages._
-
-
-42. “CONSTANT CARE AND HELP.”
-
-I take a strong personal interest in the matter, and will state a case
-that came under my notice, where a poor but respectable mother was
-practically ill the whole time of pregnancy, gave birth to a healthy
-baby, herself left very weak, and a month later taken to hospital,
-as a last resource, from no particular disease whatever. The doctors
-themselves could not give it a name. I myself should say that all
-her strength and vitality went to the nourishment of the baby, and
-she herself was left with scarce enough to live at all. I did all I
-could. She had another little one, one year and ten months old, at the
-time. I had him most of the time before her last illness, and entirely
-during the time she was in hospital (about three months, I think).
-This happened last year. The baby is now thirteen months old, and a
-fine, healthy child. The mother is still weak and ailing at times,
-certainly not fit to attend properly to her home duties and two small
-children. She had, previously to the two living, two other children,
-both still-born. In fact, I think both were dead some days previous to
-birth. This was before I knew her. I am confident, if more help had
-been forthcoming before and after confinement, she would and could have
-been saved much suffering.
-
-My own personal experience is small, having had only three and a half
-years of married life. My one confinement and its results was enough
-almost for a lifetime. I was not well for many days together the
-whole time of pregnancy, suffering from sickness, faints, and severe
-headaches the whole time. A long and severe confinement followed, and
-a tedious recovery, and I can honestly say that, though it is over two
-years ago, I can feel the effects of it still, though up till marriage
-I did not know what illness was. My age was twenty-eight when baby was
-born. Had I been a poor mother, struggling along on a bare living wage
-as many are, I do not think I should have been alive now. But constant
-care and a good, kind husband, and help with the heavy housework when
-necessary (though I did practically all the work from day to day
-myself), gave me a far better chance of life and recovery than many,
-many of our poorer, though equally respectable members have. For they
-have neither time nor the means, many of them, to take the necessary
-care of themselves that they should do.
-
- _One child._
-
-
-43. BAD EXPERIENCES.
-
-When I was married, I left my home and went to a distant town, out
-of reach of my mother and all my friends, and in due time I became
-pregnant, and as time rolled on, I began to feel the symptom which I
-thought was right to feel and bear.
-
-Now, in a strange town, and no particular friends, and, shall I say,
-mock modest, I was almost afraid to go to a doctor for advice, in case
-he would think I was a coward, and did not try to bear what I thought
-was right. At last, I ordered the doctor and midwife, then I awaited
-the arrival of the baby. The time came. I was in labour thirty-six
-hours, and after all that suffering had to be delivered by instruments,
-and was ruptured too badly to have anything done to help me. I am
-suffering from the ill-effects to-day. This is thirty-one years ago.
-
-I had two children after that, but all the time I was carrying them
-I was quite unable to get about. When the last baby was about to
-arrive, the last month I was not able to go upstairs, unless I got up
-backwards, and to come down I had to slip from step to step. Going back
-to the first birth, I was unable to sit down for three months. If I
-wanted to rest, I had to lie down.
-
-Now, after that experience, my feeling is that if it were possible to
-get Maternity Centres or schools for expectant mothers, it would be a
-godsend to many a woman; and also to get some little help in nourishing
-the body, such as a small quantity of fresh milk. I hope I have
-enlightened you in some little way; if I have, it is worth the time I
-have spent in writing.
-
- _Wages 26s. to 28s.; three children._
-
-
-44. “AN INDOMITABLE WILL.”
-
-My health during pregnancy was very good. I took no intoxicants, good,
-simple food, and through adverse circumstances worked hard in my own
-home.
-
-I was married in 1887. My husband had just left the Army; he got work
-as a porter in a bedding warehouse. This firm failed, and he and the
-book-keeper joined forces and began in the bedding trade in a small
-way, and we were married. I went every day except Saturday to the shop
-to cut out and sew. My husband’s wages were £1 per week; we did our
-own housework at night, and I baked and ironed on Saturday morning.
-When my boy was born, twelve months after marriage, my husband’s wages
-were 25s.; of course, I could earn nothing. In another twelve months
-my second baby (a girl) was born. We removed to ----, where rents were
-cheap, and I was a stranger. I took in plain sewing and washing, and
-cut up my clothes for my babies. I had a good stock of clothes, I may
-say.
-
-About this time we were involved in a lawsuit which was quite
-unnecessary, and our income was reduced to 19s. 6d. per week. I still
-took what work I could get, minded a child whose mother worked in the
-mill, etc. I had no assistance from my own family, as I was too proud
-to let them know. This lasted three years, when we had a change for the
-better. The cost of this lawsuit I mentioned was, to us, £55 12s. 4d. I
-then had another daughter, and three years later another girl. I could
-then obtain one dozen pounds of sugar for 1s. 9d., now it is 4s., and
-this applies to many things. When my last baby was born my housekeeping
-money was £2 10s.
-
-The first six years of my married life was one perpetual struggle,
-often wanting necessaries, but God’s hand has been over it all, and
-I thank Him to-day for the faith and perseverance with which I was
-enabled to go through this struggle.
-
-Our circumstances are improved, and my three daughters are all
-teachers--one certificated, and one college-trained, the youngest a
-student teacher, entering College in September next. Two of my girls
-are accomplished musicians, and can do anything menial or otherwise in
-a home. I think if the mothers of to-day were not so idle it would be
-better for them; also, if they would make their own food, and not buy
-ready-made food, we should have a better class of children and healthy
-mothers. I am fifty-three next month, do my own washing, baking, and
-cleaning with a little help from my girls. My house has nine rooms
-and three cellars. I still make time to do my secretarial duties, and
-take a great interest therein. I was an extremely delicate girl, and
-suffered from heart disease as a child, but my doctor says I have a
-most indomitable will. Lest you should think I am of a boasting nature,
-I beg to submit that God has been very merciful and kind to me.
-
- _Wages £1 to over £2 10s.; four children._
-
-
-45. “MOCK MODESTY.”
-
-I had no mother to talk to me, or for me to ask questions, and both my
-husband and myself being of a reserved nature, I suffered, perhaps,
-more than I need have done. I needed chloroform and instruments in
-each case, and after the birth of my second child, I was a cripple
-for nearly twelve months, but having a good husband, I tried to bear
-patiently. I cannot say much else, except that now I can call it mock
-modesty on my part.
-
- _Wages 28s. to 36s.; three children, one still-born._
-
-
-46. A HEALTHY MILL-WORKER.
-
-I myself have had five children, all living. I had the five in seven
-years and two months, so you see for yourself I had them all very
-little, and no Maternity benefit to help me, and only a small wage
-coming in--say 25s. a week--so I had to go back to the mill when fit
-for work, to help to keep home right, which I don’t think did me or
-the children any harm, for I have not paid 10s. to a doctor in all the
-bringing up of the five children, nor for myself. No still-born nor any
-miscarriages.
-
- _Wages 25s.; five children._
-
-
-47. “I THINK A LOT.”
-
-Oh, for the time when the Maternity Scheme becomes law, and the Divorce
-Reform. No one will welcome it more than I, for the sake of those who
-have not got true companionship in life. I am afraid I cannot tell you
-much about myself during pregnancy, as I have only had one child and no
-miscarriage. Perhaps my husband and myself have taken a different view
-from most people. You see, we both belong to a large family of brothers
-and sisters, and both had a drunken father, who did not care for their
-wife and offspring as much as the beast of the field.
-
-My mother, whom I loved with all my heart, brought fifteen little lives
-into the world; twelve are still living. I remember many a time she
-has gone without food before and after confinement, and without fire
-in winter. I have gone round the house many a time to try and find a
-few rags to sell for food. I have seen my father strike my mother just
-before confinement, and known her be up again at four days’ end to look
-after us. You see, my mother had no education, and had been brought up
-to obey her husband. But, poor dear, she left the cares of this world
-some years ago now, at the age of fifty-nine. My father has always been
-in business for himself, and used to have plenty of money, but spent
-it on himself, and is still living at the age of seventy-four. When I
-got married to the man I loved, and who loves me, he said I should
-never suffer as our dear mothers had done, and that we would only have
-what little lives we could make happy, and give a chance in life. My
-son will be eighteen years of age in June, and is still at Technical
-College, for which he won a scholarship. I get no grant-in-aid, and my
-husband is only a working man, so I go out to work for two hours every
-morning to help to keep him, as he is a good lad.
-
-Please excuse my ramble, as I only wish I was better educated. I think
-a lot, but cannot express it, as I had to leave school at the age of
-ten years, to go into farm service. I have found the Guild a great help.
-
- _Wages 26s.; one child._
-
-
-48. “A TIME OF HORROR.”
-
-My two last babies came to me in troublous times, the boy, four years
-since, when my husband (through being too prosperous and false friends)
-gave way to drink, although he never tried to strike me, or any of the
-outward cruelty that I know many wives have to contend with; but it was
-so different to what I had been used to, and three months before the
-baby came, I was practically an invalid. Up till dinner I could manage
-to get about, but after dinner I had to lie or sit as best I could. I
-could not get on nine in men’s shoes, my feet swelled up so, and every
-night my hands were in agonies; the only relief I got was when I used
-to hammer them on the wall, to try and take the awful dumb pain out of
-them. Then when I started in labour, I was in it from eleven o’clock on
-the night of Thursday, the 17th of February till Saturday, the 19th, at
-10 a.m. The waters broke at eleven o’clock on Thursday night, and baby
-came at ten o’clock on Saturday. The doctor had to put it back, as it
-was not coming naturally. Of course, I had chloroform; indeed, I had
-it with all my seven children, except two, as I have always such long
-and terrible labours, although I am a big woman--5 feet 8 inches, and
-I weigh over 13-1/2 stone. I flooded with two. By the way, I am never
-able to get up under three weeks after confinement, as I always start
-to flood directly I make any movement, and I have to keep my nurse
-from five to seven weeks after. I always have terribly sore breasts,
-although the doctor treats them three months beforehand, but it makes
-no difference. My last confinement was worst, as I found, five months
-before baby was born, that my husband was having an immoral going-on.
-The shock was so great, I could not speak when first I heard it. A
-cold shiver went over me, and my body seemed to go together in a hard
-lump. I was never right after, till she came. Indeed, I was never right
-till my operation last October. I always had a weary bearing-down pain
-in my body all the time I was carrying babies, and suffer a great
-deal in my back. I never had morning sickness with any of them, and
-not one varicose vein, I am so thankful to say. And yet I know many
-women who can go right up to a few hours before, and then tell me they
-think nothing about it, while to me it is like a time of horror from
-beginning to end. I suppose we are differently made, somehow.
-
-My husband earned 6d. an hour, and some of the summer months he worked
-overtime at the same rate of wages. What he earned overtime we always
-put in the Post Office, and what else we could spare towards the long
-winter months, as many times we started short time in August, which did
-not bring in very much. Then we were very lucky if we were getting 10s.
-a week at Christmas-time, but it used to be oftener _nothing_ for weeks
-before Christmas. But we never went into debt. What we could not pay
-for we did without, and I can assure you I have told my husband many
-times that I had had my dinner before he came in, so as there should be
-plenty to go round for the children and himself, but he found me out
-somehow, and so that was stopped, although I had been many times only
-half filled, and I am glad to say during the worst of the pinch time I
-was not pregnant.
-
- _Seven children and three miscarriages._
-
-
-49. VERY HARD TIMES.
-
-I seem to have had a very hard time all through. Well, my first baby
-was born twenty-three years last February, and my husband was working
-just about one or two days in a week at 3s. 4d. a day. My second baby
-was born sixteen months after, being still-born. My husband was out
-of work for three months then. I did nothing but cry. I could not get
-what I ought to have. The doctor wanted to know if I had been in any
-trouble. My mother told him how long we had been out of work, and I
-had cried a good deal. The doctor said that would be the cause of my
-baby being dead. When I got better, I went to work (and to tell you
-the truth, I have worked hard ever since). Twelve months after that I
-had another baby. I was very ill. When I got better, I took in plain
-sewing; then two years after I had another baby, but my husband was in
-better employment, earning 18s. per week, and I thought I was a lady.
-But it was not for long. My husband’s work finished, and we moved to
-----, where I had fresh troubles, my next baby being dead born, and
-my next only lived five months. When I was laid up again we were very
-hard up. I had to let the young person who looked after me go before
-her time was up. After I paid her and my rent and coals we had no
-dinner the Sunday, simply because we could not afford any. I always
-tried to get on and keep us all respectable, but it was hard work. I
-also managed to get the doctor paid before I wanted him again. Two
-and a half years after I had another baby, and she has taken more to
-rear her than all the rest; she cannot go to school. She takes such a
-lot of fits, both night and day. My next baby was born about eighteen
-months after, and when she was five I had the misfortune to go to bed
-again; I had a very bad time, although it was my tenth child. I was
-chloroformed, and the baby lived half an hour. I am sure you will be
-tired reading all my troubles, but I assure you I had to work hard in
-my home and out of it to keep us all together. I used to buy extra
-every week, it did not matter how small, so that I could be better
-able to pay for someone to look after me. I have a good husband, and
-he helps me all he can. Three of my daughters is under the doctor now,
-and I am of the candid opinion it is through me working so hard and
-not getting plenty of food and attention during that period. I hope I
-have not wearied you. I many a time feel I could write a book of my
-troubles; I seem to have had so many. When we look back, we wonder
-however we have got along, but every cloud has a silver lining, and I
-am looking forward to see my children better provided than I have been.
-With all good wishes for a brighter future.
-
- _Wages 18s. to 22s.; eight children, two still-births._
-
-
-50. A FARM-WORKER’S WIFE.
-
-I have had four children; the oldest is now twenty-three, the next
-twenty-two, the next twenty-one, and the youngest fourteen. I might say
-that at the time my three eldest were born, my husband was working on
-a farm, and earning 18s. a week. When the last was born he had moved
-into rather better work, and earned 25s. a week. You may be sure after
-I had paid 3s. for a small cottage of two rooms and scullery, I had not
-much to spare, and of course doctors had to be paid. As for nursing,
-well, I did not get much of it, and I feel very deeply always the
-need of good nursing at these times. For years I suffered from what I
-feel was the want of proper nursing and nourishment. In fact I wonder
-sometimes even now if I have ever really got over it. When I think of
-it I feel I would do anything to support any measure that would help
-to secure that our daughters now shall not suffer as their mothers did
-before them.
-
- _Wages 18s. to 25s.; four children._
-
-
-51. SHUN PATENT FOODS.
-
-As you will see (from my having lost six children in succession before
-I reared one), I was very unfortunate in my early married life, and
-at one time thought I was not going to rear any children. Congenital
-weakness may have had something to do with the failure to rear, through
-falling down a flight of stairs as a girl and dislocating my neck. This
-fall would have cost me my life but for the presence of mind of a young
-woman who picked me up. Using her hands and knees, she pulled my neck
-in, and undoubtedly saved my life. The doctor said I would suffer as a
-woman, for every organ internally was put out of place. My first set
-of children were weakly, and being unable to nurse them, I resorted to
-patent foods, which I am now firmly convinced did harm and not good,
-and in my opinion contributed to the convulsions. I found later that
-weakened milk, afterwards strengthened as the baby got older, was the
-best and safest food for infants brought up by hand. Undoubtedly the
-remaining ones progressed all right, and are sound and healthy. The
-fact that one girl put ten and a half years’ perfect attendance in at
-an elementary school speaks well for the change. The one I lost at
-seven weeks was easily accounted for, from the fact that at the time
-of birth I was suffering from the bloody flux, a very severe form of
-dysentery. In fact, the doctor said that if I had had Asiatic cholera I
-could not have been worse. You will readily see that that child had a
-very poor start in life, and waned away from birth. As a result of my
-experience, my advice is that mothers unable to suckle their children
-should shun all patent foods, rusks, etc., as they would shun the devil
-himself, for an infant will have to be born with a digestion like a
-horse if it is to digest solid food in the early stages. Thousands of
-infants are killed with mistaken kindness, and I am convinced that milk
-and milk only--human, if possible, and animal, if human fails--in a
-diluted state, is the only safe food for infants. I sincerely hope you
-will sound a note of warning against patent foods that cake to a solid
-lump in the infant’s stomach, the result being convulsions and death.
-This is my sincere belief resulting from bitter experience.
-
- _Wages 24s. to 30s.; ten children._
-
-
-52. “GET VERY LITTLE PITY.”
-
-I am the mother of a large family, but I am glad to say they are fast
-growing up, as their ages range from twenty-eight down to five years,
-so that I feel I can speak from experience, if anyone can. I must say
-that although it is a time that women suffer terribly, yet it is a time
-when they get very little pity, as it is looked upon as quite a natural
-state of things. I have myself got up in the morning, unable to partake
-of any breakfast, and tried to get about my work, and had to sit down
-in every chair I have got to with my brush in my hand. Then after
-confinement, as soon as I could sit up in bed, having such a large
-family, I have had to sit with my needle in my hand. But all this does
-no good, but only tends to keep a woman’s health down. When I had my
-first miscarriage--it happened in October--and I crawled about all the
-winter, and well on into the next summer, like a person in consumption;
-in fact, it was generally thought that I was. And, of course, all those
-months we were obliged to have a woman in, as I could do nothing. So I
-think if anything could be done to lessen the sufferings of the coming
-generations, I for one should be in great favour of it, as of course,
-if it is too late for me to benefit by it, I have daughters growing up,
-and sons’ wives to think of. Suffering as I have done, it is really a
-time when extra funds are needed, so that one could pay a little to
-have anything done, instead of having to do it themselves.
-
- _Wages 17s. 8d.; nine children, six miscarriages._
-
-
-53. WORK IN THE MILL.
-
-When I have been pregnant I have suffered very much with bad legs. You
-see, I had to go to work in the mill, and so I had not the chance to
-give them the rest they needed. I think it is a great hardship for a
-woman to have to do so. However, when I have got over the confinement,
-I seemed to pull up after my first baby. But after my second one was
-born I was in bed nearly a month, and my husband (who, thank God, is
-one of the best) had to lift me in and out of bed, and put my legs
-on a level with my body while he made my bed. After the third I was
-something the same, only not quite so bad.
-
-My babies have been very strong and healthy, though they have not
-always had the best of health since. But I have tried to do my duty to
-them as well as I could.
-
-I might say that I think ignorance has more to do with suffering than
-anything, and I think if our Guilds would get the doctors to lecture to
-them on this subject it might help our members, and also other people,
-to take more care of themselves.
-
- _Three children._
-
-
-54. IN FAVOUR OF BREAST-FEEDING.
-
-I have not had children as fast as some, for which I am thankful, not
-because I do not love them, but because if I had more I do not think I
-could have done my duty to them under the circumstances. I may say I
-have had a very good partner in life, and that has made it better for
-me. But seeing my husband is only a weaver, I have not had a lot of
-money to go on with. I have been compelled to go out to work. I have
-worked when I have been pregnant, but I have always given up when I
-have been about six months, and then I have done all my own work up
-to the very last, and I can tell you it has been very hard work. Then
-when it has been over I have had to begin to do my housework at the
-fortnight end, and I think that is too soon, but what can women do when
-they have not the means to do it with? Of course, I am not half so
-bad as some. I have never carried a baby out to nurse. I have always
-managed to stop at home one year and get them walking. But I think if
-we as women had our right, we should not have to work at all during
-pregnancy, because I think that both the mother and baby would be
-better. I never knew so many bottle-fed babies as there is now. Nearly
-all the young married women cannot give breast. How is it? Now, I think
-because they work so hard before, do not get enough rest, therefore
-have no milk. And, then, some will not begin with their own milk,
-because they know they have to go out to work. Hence the baby has to
-suffer. Mother’s milk is the best food for baby. I heard a young mother
-with her first baby say the other day her husband’s mother had told her
-not to bother with her breasts, it made a young woman look old giving
-her baby breast. What a mother! I think it is one of the grandest
-sights to see. So you see we have a lot of educating to do yet when we
-hear such things as these.
-
- _Wages 16s. to 30s.; four children._
-
-
-55. MIXED EXPERIENCES.
-
-I have three girls. Over my first child the only ailments I had were
-sickness during the first five months, and at childbirth I had a very
-good time. And over the second a much similar time, with the exception
-of colds in my face. Over my third baby I had a much harder time, as
-during the whole of the nine months I was unable to do anything, as I
-had such terrible pains in my back and legs--could not bear to be on my
-feet for more than a few minutes at a time.
-
-During all this illness of mine I had my husband at home ill sixteen
-weeks, which of course made it worse for me, as the extra worry went
-against me; and then at the same time I had an abscess in my breast,
-which I can assure you was most painful, as I can tell you I had my
-hands pretty well full at that time.
-
- _Wages 14s. to £2; three children._
-
-
-56. TWELVE CHILDREN.
-
-I have had a large family (twelve) and a miscarriage. I had a hard
-struggle at the beginning, my husband not being in very good work. But
-for the last five children I was able to pay for someone to wash, and
-that made a lot of difference.
-
-But as far as the confinement went, I always had pretty fair times, and
-got up fairly well.
-
-I have had two bad attacks of the heart since I had the last child,
-which is six years old, and the doctor told me it was with having so
-many children, and so quick. But I am getting better. And the doctor
-said I should get better if nothing else happened.
-
- _Wages £1; twelve children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-57. DREADFUL SUFFERINGS.
-
-In my case all my pregnancy times have been rather bad. Had I been less
-fortunate in finding a good husband, and one who was able to keep at
-home, one thinks, I should never have been living to-day. I have cost
-pounds and pounds besides the care and anxiety in bringing my two into
-the world. My first was a miscarriage owing to a fall while hanging a
-picture. Was in bed over a fortnight, and almost drained bloodless.
-My second, a fine bouncing girl--unfortunately too fine. I had to be
-stitched twice, the first at confinement, the second three weeks later,
-caused by the agony of a gathered breast. I was eight weeks ill at
-that time. My third, I could scarcely walk about for six weeks before
-confinement owing to strain on weak parts, and only short of eighteen
-months of previous confinement. I had to be stitched again, but managed
-to ward off the breast trouble to a great extent; incapable for five
-weeks. My last was the worst; we had removed away to a strange place,
-and I happened to get a woman who did not know her work. I was very
-ill at the time, but everything was favourable until the third day
-I developed childbed fever. I went blind, sometimes unconscious, my
-breasts in slings, so large I could not see over the top, inflammation
-of the bowels, and blood-poisoning; I was almost beyond hope, and was
-seriously ill three weeks. Then took a turn for the better. We had to
-get a thoroughly efficient person in, the cost of which was £1 per
-week for seven weeks, and, God bless her, she deserved every farthing
-she got, although it was hard. We had to pay again for other housework
-to be done. I feel I owe much of my recovery to her. My husband was
-seriously reduced in means, but he would have sold anything to do good.
-When I got sufficiently well I had to go to hospital; was a patient
-there a month, was fetched home, carried to bed, and stayed there six
-weeks, owing to abscesses from the stitching being delayed so long and
-bad condition of my system. I am not a strong person now, but I am
-now in my forty-sixth year, and seem to be improving in a good many
-respects.
-
-The highest wage my husband earned was 45s., the lowest, and at the
-worst time, being £1--just the amount the nurse required, besides all
-else--washing, cooking food, and everything a home needs.
-
- _Wages 20s. to 45s.; three children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-58. INEFFICIENT DOCTOR.
-
-My first baby was born fifteen months after marriage. During the first
-four or five months I suffered very much from sickness, not morning
-sickness only, but many times during the whole day, and nearly all the
-way through severe toothache.... As a result of inattention by the
-doctor attending me I was badly torn during the birth, and after three
-days my husband dismissed him and called in another doctor, who said
-though this could not always be avoided it might have been in my case.
-I ought to have been stitched at the time, instead of which it was done
-four days after.
-
-It was four years and six months later when my second baby came. I was
-much better during pregnancy--occasional morning sickness. There was
-the fear all through of the tear reopening, but with having a good
-period between the births the parts were strong enough to resist, and
-all went well. Six years afterwards, I had a miscarriage about three
-months. Don’t know how to account for it, excepting that there is so
-little rest in the married working woman’s life. From early morning
-until late at night she is on her feet. I was more fortunately placed
-than most women; I was able to go to bed and be attended to, and to
-stay there until I was better.
-
-Four years after my third baby was born (still-born). This was the
-worst time I had, the sickness being most distressing, so bad that
-could not describe it, and one was always afraid of a miscarriage owing
-to everything being forced down through straining. At these times it
-was impossible to hold one’s water. At seven months, as a result of
-this bearing-down, I had a flooding bout, and was in bed several days.
-I had no labour pains, though weak and poorly, and so did not send for
-the doctor. I know now that I ought to have done so at once, as my life
-was in danger. However, I got up again and did my ordinary duties until
-the day of the birth, which was harder than usual, as a live baby helps
-in its own way. The baby had gradually died after the flooding, and had
-been dead more than a week at birth. I was in a very low condition for
-the first three days, the doctor being uncertain how things would go.
-There is always the danger of blood-poisoning, and it takes one much
-longer to get their health back in cases of this kind. Where there is
-a large family or a thoughtless husband the woman pays with her life.
-
- _Wages 25s. to £2; two children, one still-birth, one miscarriage._
-
-
-59. HOUSEHOLD HELP NEEDED.
-
-I may say that during pregnancy I suffered considerably the whole time
-from sickness and severe pains. This was not due to any traceable
-cause, as I took every precaution to see that I did not exert myself
-and do harm. I did all my own work all the while. I had little
-appetite, and was not able to sleep well. During confinement I had a
-very hard time, and was a long time in recovering, and have always,
-since my first child, suffered from falling of the womb, although I had
-a doctor and midwife in the house three weeks. It is owing to working
-women having to take on household duties too soon after confinement
-that is responsible for the greatest part of the sufferings which we
-are subject to. What is really wanted is a supply of real good midwives
-who could be got for a month to see to all requirements of the patient
-and the home while the woman has a fair chance of recovering. It is the
-system of midwives attending too many cases at the same time that is
-responsible for a lot of the trouble, as the woman gets neglected and
-are forced to get about before they are fit.
-
- _Wages 30s. to 35s.; three children, one still-born._
-
-
-60. MISCARRIAGES.
-
-After my first little one I went out too soon, with the result that I
-got cold in the ovaries, which caused me the most acute pain, and for
-quite a month every few steps I walked I would sit down. I have had
-several miscarriages--one caused through carelessness in jumping up
-to take some clothes off the line when it commenced to rain, instead
-of getting a chair to stand on, another through taking some pills
-which were delivered as samples at the door, and a third through a
-fright by a cow whilst on holidays. So you will see I realise to the
-full the care and thought a woman requires. I may say that to me the
-after-effects of the miscarriages have been worse than confinements,
-for it takes months to get over the weakness.
-
- _Wages 26s. to 30s.; two children, three miscarriages._
-
-
-61. A VERY SAD CASE.
-
-The man and woman I know, who are very steady people, have six
-children. The three elder ones are quite normal. After the birth of
-the third the father had a very serious illness--double pneumonia
-followed by typhoid fever--and for weeks he lay at death’s door. The
-expense of all this so reduced them that they had to sell the best of
-their furniture to pay doctor’s bills, over £20, and to keep going
-until he could start work again. Then the doctor said he must not go
-back to his work as a mason, and he had to take a job at labouring
-work. This and short time brought his income down to 14s. per week,
-and to make ends meet the wife had to go out cleaning. She had been
-parlourmaid. She continued to do so until near the birth of her fourth
-child, who was very delicate and suffered from abscesses. The mother
-told me she did not know how to get sufficient food for them. When her
-fifth child was born she had a bad time and the child appeared very
-backward, but it was not until it was two years old that they knew its
-brain was affected. He is in his sixth year, and can only say a few
-words, and has never come downstairs, always had to be carried, and
-at times is violent; if thwarted in what he wants to do will go into
-violent tempers and throw anything he may have in his hand. He will
-also put a rope round the neck of the younger child to play horses,
-and has no control over bowels. A sad case indeed. The youngest child
-is in his fourth year, and can only walk two or three yards without
-help. He cannot say a word yet. I am beginning to be afraid he may be
-dumb. Both his hands are deformed, and he has no control over bowels,
-and has been ruptured from birth. Doctors say they cannot perform any
-operation until he is stronger. When the mother asked the doctor how
-it was her children were so delicate, he turned to her and said in the
-kindest possible manner, “Ask the mother,” showing that it was due, in
-his opinion, to the weak state she was in previous to their birth. I do
-not think the two youngest will ever be able to work for themselves.
-The mother looks almost distracted at times. I have known her from
-girlhood, and pity her most sincerely.
-
- _Six children._
-
-
-62. STATE MATERNITY HOMES WANTED.
-
-My husband is a non-smoker and total abstainer, so you will know no
-money was spent in waste. But I feel sure my first baby was still-born
-through hard work and lifting. The money brought in not being
-sufficient to keep us all, I went out to work, and looked after my
-husband and step-children as well.
-
-I feel sure it is not so much lack of knowledge as lack of means that
-entails so much suffering. I endured agonies when carrying my second
-child, through bad varicose veins in legs and body, but of course
-still had to plod on and look after the rest. I had knowledge of what
-to eat to produce milk, etc., but could only confine myself to cocoa
-and oatmeal, which I often felt sick at the sight of, but could afford
-nothing else, as I made these things for the rest of the family also.
-I at the second confinement produced a fine boy, 9-1/2 pounds in
-weight. He is now eight, and is still a very fine boy. The medical
-officer, when examining him, passed a very pointed remark, saying:
-“He is, of course, an only child,” and I often feel thankful he is.
-We live in quite a poor house, 7s. 6d. weekly rent, but to do justice
-to my grown-up step-children, so that they may live up to standard
-required of by their work, I cannot afford to have any more children,
-also I cannot face the awful agonies a woman has to go through in
-looking after a family (there are five of us in the home now) whilst
-child-bearing. When I had my boy I had to do the family washing in the
-third week after confinement. As to taking care, no working woman can
-do that unless absolutely obliged to. The best thing that could happen
-would be a system of State Maternity Homes, where working women could
-go for a reasonable fee and be confined, and stay for convalescence
-(not a workhouse system). There is no peace for the wife at home. She
-is still the head and chancellor of the exchequer. If she were confined
-on Friday, she would still have to plan and lay out the Saturday money,
-and if it did not stretch far enough, she would be the one to go short
-or do the worrying. I am sure if we, as a Guild, could bring this
-about, a lot of women’s worry would be over. At the same time it would
-be a recognition of the importance of our women as race-bearers, and
-lift her to a higher plane than at present.
-
-My husband’s highest wages during the time you ask were 36s., lowest
-24s., but in his trade wet weather and frosty weather means no work,
-and in addition no pay during slack times.
-
-There is one thing--as to mechanical prevention of family. I know it is
-a delicate subject, but it is an urgent one, as it is due to low-paid
-wages and the unearthly struggle to live respectably. All the beautiful
-in motherhood is very nice if one has plenty to bring up a family on,
-but what real mother is going to bring a life into the world to be
-pushed into the drudgery of the world at the earliest possible moment
-because of the strain on the family exchequer.
-
-I was much struck with the remarks of “Kitchener’s” boys who have
-been billeted on me, about my boy. He is only nine, and they said
-he was as big as the general run of lads in the North when they are
-thirteen--“But then, ma, you’ve only one to keep which is different to
-seven or eight.”
-
-There is nothing that is done can ever be too much if we are to have
-going a race in the future worthy of England, but it will not be until
-the nation wakes up to the needs of the mothers of that future race.
-
- _Wages 24s. to 36s.; one child, one still-birth, one miscarriage._
-
-
-63. “A MISERABLE EXPERIENCE.”
-
-I am really not a delicate woman, but having a large family, and so
-fast, pulled me down very much. I used to suffer very much with bad
-legs; and my husband was laid out of work most winters, so I had a
-great deal of poverty to deal with.
-
-Nearly all my children were delicate, and being badly off, very often
-I could not get or do what I would like to for them. I lost four out
-of the ten, and had a very great difficulty in rearing some of the
-others. They were nearly all two years before they ran; my eldest girl
-was three years before she ran; I never thought she could live, but,
-thank God, she has lived, and is nearly twenty-two. If something could
-be done for poor women with large families, I think it would be a good
-thing; for a woman’s life is not much when she is in poverty and got
-sickly children, and never knows what an hour’s liberty is. It is keep
-on work with no rest days, and not much nights very often. Of course,
-during pregnancy one never feels well, what with one thing and the
-other. That was my experience; and after confinement I used to be so
-weak, and by the time I began to regain my strength a little I was in
-trouble again. So you can’t wonder poor delicate women break down and
-very often die. It would be good if something could be done for them,
-so as to give them a change and a little rest. And when you have got an
-unkind husband it is a terrible life. I very often think that is why
-my poor children have to suffer so much now they are grown up, as they
-are not any of them strong, and very often ailing with one thing or
-the other. You may depend on it there is a good many women got unkind
-husbands that make it a great deal worse for women.
-
-My husband used to lose his work through drink. I couldn’t tell you
-exactly what my wages were, but I feel almost sure, to take the years
-through, they never amounted to £1 a week. I was in hopes, as soon
-as my boys started work, I should have got on better, but the more I
-got off my boys the less I got off my husband, for mine has been a
-miserable experience.
-
-For a good many years I kept account of what he gave me, and to take
-the year through it used to amount to about 15s. a week.
-
- _Wages unknown, wife’s allowance 15s. to £1; ten children, two
- miscarriages._
-
-
-64. “BEST OF TIMES ARE BAD.”
-
-I have been most fortunate, and have had very good times, so they tell
-me, but the best of times are bad enough. I have had four healthy
-children, and had them all before I was twenty-seven years of age.
-
- _Wages 26s.; four children._
-
-
-65. EVERY ATTENTION.
-
-During the whole time I was pregnant I had every care and attention,
-and a good doctor and nurse at my confinement.
-
- _Wages 25s.; one child._
-
-
-66. VERY GOOD HEALTH.
-
-I am by nature very active, and during pregnancy had very good health,
-and was able to look after my home and family up to the time of
-confinement. My confinements have not been what would be called bad
-times.
-
- _Wages 30s. to 36s.; four children._
-
-
-67. “A STEADY AND REGULAR INCOME.”
-
-Having fairly good health, my experiences were only the perfectly
-natural ones, though at the time I thought it was hard to bear. I was
-fortunate enough to have a steady and regular income, and consequently
-put myself in my doctor’s hands at the earliest possible moment, and
-had all the care and nursing that is every woman’s right to have.
-
- _Two children._
-
-
-68. “READ, STUDIED, AND TOOK CARE.”
-
-I am not, nor have ever been, a very robust woman, so naturally felt
-the strain of pregnancy perhaps more than some women feel it, but
-coming away from home as I did, over two hundred miles, when I was
-married, when I found out my condition, I put myself in the hands of a
-good doctor, and that helped me a good deal.
-
-With neither of my children was I troubled with sickness, but was
-troubled a great deal with inflammation and heartburn, with which I had
-to be very careful, and it prevented me getting about much, especially
-the last three months. I had splendid times at confinement, but have
-not been able to nurse either of my children. I tried for four months
-with the last one, but the baby did not get on, and myself came down
-very low. I was obliged to resort to artificial feeding, and the baby
-never looked back after. I do not think any of my troubles came at
-these times through ignorance. I am one that has always taken great
-interest in these subjects, and read and studied all I could about
-them, and naturally took great care of myself at these times. But
-having at all times weak digestive organs, the extra strain on them
-during pregnancy brought forth the troubles I had to fight with both
-before and after confinement.
-
-I do not think any women expect to go through these times without
-some small amount of--shall I say?--trouble, for which she is fully
-recompensed when she can take her dear child in her arms.
-
- _Wages 45s. to 47s.; two children._
-
-
-69. PREVENTIVES.
-
-I was married before I was twenty, and eleven months afterwards my
-first baby was born. During pregnancy I suffered dreadfully from
-nervousness, very bad legs, occasional neuralgia, and the usual
-miserable sickness. Indeed, before baby came I felt very bad indeed.
-
-I had a stiff but quite straightforward confinement. My husband worked
-on the water, and only came home once a week, or how I could have shown
-a cheerful face every day, and got through my work, I don’t know.
-
-For some months after baby was born I was weak and ill. I nursed her
-myself, and when she was a year old, I weaned her. When she was a
-year and nine months old, my second baby was born. I had been through
-the usual sickness, bad legs, neuralgia, etc., but I had a good
-confinement. I hoped to get up well; but I can assure you I had the
-most miserable six months of my life. No physical pain, but extreme
-weakness, frightened of my own shadow, faintings, feelings that I
-would die. Indeed, I was almost tired of life. I had continually to go
-to bed, my head felt a tremendous size, and I felt as though I were
-floating away.
-
-When this baby was two years and three months old, my first boy was
-born; I had had a miserable nine months, legs worse than ever, bad
-cough, sickness, etc., but a good time.
-
-After this, I said to a friend one day, “If only I could feel that this
-was my last, I would be quite happy.” “Well,” she said, “why don’t you
-make it your last?” and she gave me advice.
-
-As a result of this knowledge, I had no more babies for four and a half
-years. In carrying this one, I certainly had the bad legs, which I am
-likely to keep, but my general health and nerves were much better. My
-health improved, and people said I looked years younger, and I found
-life a happy place. I sometimes think that the Great Almighty has heard
-the poor woman in travail, and shows her a way of rest. I had a fight
-with my conscience before using a preventative. But I have no qualms
-now. I feel I have better health to serve my husband and children, and
-more advantages to give them; while if another comes along, we will
-hail it with pleasure, as we did our last, instead of looking on it as
-a burden.
-
-I do think that a great deal of misery is caused by taking drugs. The
-poor woman feels she will do anything to keep herself “all right.” If
-only she and her husband also could be taught how to prevent, much good
-might be done.
-
-I had never resorted to drugs; I was just a simple girl, and my young
-husband was as simple as myself.
-
-I often feel, too, how hard it is that when a woman is carrying and
-needs extra nourishment and rest she has to stint herself, to provide
-for the expensive time coming, or try and add to her household linen by
-taking in work, or taking lodgers or boarders.
-
- _Wages 30s. to 35s.; four children._
-
-
-70. THE TEACHING OF EXPERIENCE.
-
-I am in fairly comfortable circumstances for a working-class woman, and
-have a good, considerate husband. I have had six children. You will see
-by the enclosed particulars that there is not much difference between
-the ages of my first three children--as a matter of fact, not nearly
-enough--and this through ignorance. At the birth of my second child
-“flooding” occurred, leaving me very anæmic as a consequence. I could
-not nurse the child, and was an out-patient at the hospital for five
-months.
-
-Then I became pregnant with third child, and at the seventh month a
-miscarriage was threatened, but was averted for a few weeks, when the
-baby was born an eight-months child. It was a delicate child, and
-required a great deal of care and attention; although ailing myself for
-months, I managed to rear him to a fairly healthy child, but, oh, it
-was such a strain!
-
-I am so glad the Guild is taking up the question of Maternity, and also
-“Moral Hygiene,” as I feel sure if only young people were advised, both
-before and after marriage--a great deal of suffering caused to mother
-and child might be avoided.
-
-My husband and I are quite determined not to allow any of our children
-to marry without first explaining to them the great responsibilities of
-creating a new life that is to be pure and healthy.
-
- _Wages 30s.; six children._
-
-
-71. “BUT IT IS TOO LATE.”
-
-I am sending you my experiences as near as I can. I was married at
-twenty-one years. I am now forty-five. I have had no children this last
-eight years. I can safely say I am suffering now for my ignorance in my
-young days, during pregnancy and confinement. It was after my second
-baby was born; I was living a piece away from my mother. I could not
-afford to pay someone to look after the house and me, and pay a midwife
-too, so my mother came and did what she could for me in the morning,
-and then left me till my husband came from work. Of course, I got up
-sooner than I should have done. It was in January, and snow was about.
-I went in the back place, and started to put things right, when I had a
-cold shake, and I was put to bed. It stopped all the courses, and I was
-many weeks before I was right. Since then I have suffered with varicose
-veins in my legs before and after confinement.
-
-I have been in bed four and five weeks, the longest nine weeks, with
-my legs, after baby was born. At the present time of writing I am in
-bed now, and have been nearly three weeks with the same thing. Now the
-change has come. It is three years since I had an attack.
-
-I think I was getting about 26s. off my husband.
-
-Thank God, my husband has been very good in all my sickness. If he
-had not, I could not have lived through it. I feel sure I should not
-be suffering now, if I could have had money to pay to be looked after
-then. Of course, I am better off now, but it is too late.
-
- _Wife’s allowance 26s.; nine children and one miscarriage._
-
-
-72. LOSS OF STRENGTH.
-
-I was married at the age of nineteen years. My boy was born when I
-was twenty-one years. Although during pregnancy I realised I was to
-become a mother, I had never been taught what I should do or should
-not do during that time. One of my sufferings during pregnancy was due
-to over-sensitiveness. I have thought, especially since hearing Mrs.
-----’s address on “Moral Hygiene,” what a comfort and help it would
-have been to me, had the above subject been taught when we were young
-by school-teachers, or had our mothers realised the need of explaining
-nature as a necessary form of education. I do hope that the community
-will soon realise how necessary it is for boys and girls to have
-knowledge of this important subject.
-
-When I was confined, the doctor and monthly nurse were both with me.
-A few hours after the birth of my boy, when the nurse brought me some
-gruel, I sat up in bed to eat, but was soon told to lie down again. I
-do not know whether it was due to that act of ignorance, but I suffered
-with my back for a long time. My boy when born was a big and lovely
-baby; he is now eleven years old, a picture of health, standing 5 feet
-and 1/2 inch in his stockings.
-
-I felt very well while lying in bed after my boy was born. It was when
-I got up and dressed the tenth day I realised my weakness. I was glad
-to lie on my back in less than an hour after.
-
-My husband had been out of work for six weeks during the time of
-pregnancy, and again another six weeks when baby was four and a half
-months old. I have mentioned the above fact, for I am sure it was
-partly due to that that I did not regain my strength for years after.
-I fed the baby on the breast for thirteen months. By that time I felt
-so low that it was an effort to walk upstairs, and was glad to sit on
-the top stair to pull myself together; so I went on until I got really
-ill. I was under the doctor’s care for three months. Meanwhile I had
-had several attacks of inflammation inwardly, but the last attack was
-so severe I myself was frightened. The doctor then told me it would be
-some time before I regained my strength. I certainly gained strength
-after that illness; part of it, I feel, was due to rest.
-
- _Wages 21s. to 31s. 6d.; one child._
-
-
-73. SUFFERING AND HARD WORK.
-
-During the early stages of pregnancy, with first baby, I was very
-much subject to a fainting condition, which I was informed was a
-perfectly natural condition during such a period, and could not be
-avoided. Whether such be the case or not, I cannot say. Otherwise my
-health generally was very good, being at that particular time blessed
-with an excellent robust constitution. My first baby was one year and
-eleven months old when the second one arrived. During the first four
-months of pregnancy with second child, except suffering violently from
-morning sickness (another thing I am told cannot be dispensed with),
-I maintained my usual state of health. After four months had elapsed
-a pain developed in my right side (I can compare it only to a gnawing
-toothache), which caused me a great deal of annoyance through the day,
-and most restless nights. This continued until my baby was born. I
-recovered splendidly from my confinement, but owing to circumstances
-had to be about performing household duties much earlier than I ought
-to have been. My third baby was born two years and eight months after
-second one. Whilst carrying this baby, from very early stage, I was
-distracted with an almost unbearable itching in the exterior part
-of the abdomen. In fact, I thought I should have gone mad with it,
-and had I then had the means at my disposal to consult my medical
-adviser (but 2s. 6d. was a great consideration to me at that time, for
-one visit, out of a small income), I could have been spared a great
-amount of agony.... During pregnancy with my third and fourth babies,
-I had to contend with the pain in my side, as with the second one. I
-attribute this pain to having to carry one child about so much whilst
-in a state of pregnancy with another, and not being able to employ
-anyone to assist me in the more laborious duties, such as washing,
-scrubbing, etc., to give me the necessary rest which my condition
-demanded. When my third baby arrived, I regret to say it was disfigured
-with a hare-lip, from which cause it could not take its food properly,
-which caused it to cry almost incessantly, and after a trying period
-of eleven weeks, she, poor little mite, succumbed. Owing to the worry
-connected with this misfortune, also having to be up again too soon
-after confinement, and for want of rest, I felt my health giving
-way, and being in a weak condition, I became an easy prey to sexual
-intercourse, and thus once more I became a mother in fourteen months.
-My health was very moderate whilst in pregnancy with my fourth and
-last baby, now seven years of age, which I attribute solely to having
-children too quickly in succession, and in not procuring, as I said
-before, the necessary rest and nourishment which is essential to a
-mother at these periods.
-
-Since the birth of my last child I have suffered from a falling womb,
-which my doctor informs me has been caused by getting out of bed too
-soon after confinements, which was due entirely to not having the
-wherewithal to provide for adequate attention.
-
-I feel very keen concerning this problem, and do hope something will be
-done in the very near future to alleviate the unnecessary suffering of
-working mothers.
-
-During the time I was having my children, my husband’s average weekly
-earnings were 25s. When working overtime he may have earned 30s. or
-even 32s., but on the other hand, when on short time or holidays (which
-are equivalent to short time--no work, no pay), I have known him to
-receive as low as 15s. or 12s. To give you an instance. Christmas week
-of last year his wages amounted to 12s., and New Year week this year,
-10s. My husband, along with myself, considered his wages were not
-adequate to maintain a family, provide proper attention, etc., during
-confinement, and solely for this reason we do not feel justified in
-having any more children if it can possibly be avoided. I love children
-dearly, another reason why I do not wish to create them to be badly
-fed, clothed badly, uneducated, etc., on a mere pittance. I could say
-much more, but my sincere desire is that a better time is dawning for
-working-class mothers and their babies.
-
- _Wages 15s. to 32s.; four children._
-
-
-74. “HEAVY WASH-DAYS.”
-
-I think a great deal of suffering might be spared especially over the
-first child, if the mother could only have had a little more knowledge
-how to go on, _re_ the suffering. I have been prostrated for days with
-violent sickness and pain in the head. The case of miscarriage was a
-very bad one, resulting in having to attend the hospital nearly two
-years. The doctor says the miscarriage was caused by heavy wash-days,
-one of the things I think the expectant mother ought not to have to do;
-but it is one of the most important things in the home. I think if the
-mother could only be allowed to take care of herself the first three
-months of the time, many both deformed and deficient children might
-be avoided. I do not mean for a mother to lead an idle life for three
-months, because exercise is most necessary in a proper way; but such
-work as washing, paper-hanging, whitewashing, and hanging clothes up to
-dry, is the work that has serious results with the mother. My results
-after confinement can, I think, be traced to the lack of good nursing
-and good support--in such cases when one neighbour will nurse another
-one, having had no experience herself.
-
- _Wages 28s. 3d. to 37s. 6d.; five children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-75. BAD EFFECTS OF HARD WORK.
-
-I think your Maternity Scheme just splendid. You will see by
-accompanying form I have lost two of my four babies, and had a
-miscarriage. If I had taken more care before birth, I quite believe
-those children would have lived.
-
-I have always had good health, and quite able to do my work up to the
-last, but I think now it is quite wrong for the mother to try to do
-_hard_ work a month or six weeks before or after. That means she wants
-three months real care.
-
-In my case before those two were born, I had to work harder than usual,
-and the consequences were they were born delicate.
-
-My two children that I have reared are strong and healthy, and I had
-no troubles or worries or hard work before they were born. I could also
-take things easy until they were six weeks old.
-
-There is one other point; the mother who works and worries generally
-loses the milk which is so necessary for the baby. If only mothers
-could take it easy during that time, I am certain we could rear a much
-better race. I often feel I shall be able to help my own daughter,
-should she need it, for the mothers of the past were ignorant.
-
- _Wages 26s. to 32s.; four children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-76. AMONGST STRANGERS.
-
-I think many of us have suffered (and do so now) through lack of care
-during pregnancy, especially over a first child. If something could be
-done to help the expectant mother to understand how best to care for
-herself, then much suffering would be saved afterwards.
-
-I went to live many miles away from my home and friends when I married,
-amongst strangers, and was too shy to ask anyone what I should or
-should not do (when I knew I should become a mother), and was so ill,
-tired, and depressed that I felt I did not want to do anything. A
-dear old woman, one of the neighbours, came to me one day, and asked
-me if I had been to a doctor; I said “No; I was going to speak to one
-nearer the time.” She said, “My dear girl, go to him now. Tell him
-how you are. I am sure he will be able to give you something to ease
-that excessive sickness, etc., and advise you how best to take care of
-yourself.”
-
-I did not go to him for some time, but eventually did so, and felt much
-better for his advice and care during that trying time.
-
-I had rather hard times at the birth of my little ones, and can quite
-realise that it is most necessary that a woman should have the greatest
-care and attention possible. Still, I feel that if more could be done
-to teach them how to care for their own health before the birth of the
-little ones we should have healthier and stronger children. How it
-can be done without hurting the mothers’ feelings is a very difficult
-problem, but I suffered so much before my first baby was born that
-perhaps I feel most strongly on the need of our sisters knowing how
-best to care for themselves. I am so glad the Maternity Scheme is being
-taken up so much more by Health Committees now since the Guild have
-worked for it.
-
- _Wages 25s. to 30s.; three children, one still-birth, one miscarriage._
-
-
-77. CARE AND ATTENTION.
-
-I am afraid the information I can give you about myself is not much,
-as I have been able to have the care and attention not attainable for
-many working-women. My first baby was still-born. This was really
-brought about by ignorance during pregnancy in trying to open a very
-stiff window, causing a strain, and also causing the cord to become
-twisted round the baby’s neck. Fortunately, I was able at once to
-receive medical attention, and when the child was born I had to have
-two doctors and nurse, chloroform, etc. Doctors both say I should have
-lost my life also if I had not had the attention I was able to have.
-The other two children were born under quite normal conditions--the
-symptoms of sickness, cholic pains, etc.--but I am glad to say I have
-never suffered from varicose veins, perhaps due to the fact that I have
-always been able to take rest during pregnancy.
-
-My mother had thirteen children, and, as far as I can gather, suffered
-terribly at these times, because when a woman brings up ten children
-to full age she has not much time to rest. I may say one of hers was
-still-born, the other two dying, one at the age of nine months from
-vaccination, the other at three years and a half from concussion of the
-brain.
-
-Mother died at the age of fifty-two years from Bright’s disease,
-brought on, I believe, from excessive child-bearing, and the doctor
-said every organ in her body was completely worn out. My mother had,
-perhaps, the care most women would not get, as my father was always in
-a good position earning a good salary--I may say £150 a year at that
-time. But with all those advantages, she could not have the care she
-ought, or the rest, and, of course, no trained nurses, as we have at
-the present time.
-
-I often wonder when I read of the deaths of women, at from forty years
-of age upward, if, when they should be having the best of their lives,
-that their early deaths are due to lack of care and rest during the
-times they are having their babies.
-
-
-78. WEAKNESS FOLLOWING PREGNANCY.
-
-I suffered very much in pregnancy, was violently sick quite a dozen
-times a day every day for the first six months, with occasional
-fainting attacks. I was better towards the end, but had bad nights, so
-had to rest a lot in the day. The baby was born all right, and I got
-on well, but was weak. When she was twelve months old (I nursed her
-myself) I had a goitre in my neck, which lasted two years. At one time
-I was very ill in hospital seven weeks, and away in country six. The
-doctor said it was weakness following pregnancy that caused it. I was
-not able to do my home duties, and if I had been a woman who had to go
-out to work--well, I could not have done so for nearly all the three
-years. My husband did not want any more children, as I suffered so much
-with the first. He is eleven years now, and I am very well.
-
- _Wages 30s.; one child._
-
-
-79. FREQUENT PREGNANCIES.
-
-During pregnancy I was fairly well in health, but during my
-confinements I was very ill. I never had a natural birth.... I think
-what caused my miscarriages was with having children so quickly, and
-having to work rather hard at the same time.
-
- _Wife’s allowance 24s.; five children and three miscarriages._
-
-
-80. HUSBAND ON SHORT TIME.
-
-During pregnancy with my first child, after about three months, I
-started with inflammation of the bladder. I happened to be with my
-mother at the time, but had it been otherwise I could not have got
-anyone to look after me, as my husband was only working two and three
-days a week. Of course, my friends would have looked after me, but
-everyone is not so fortunate as that. I would have freely died, the
-pain was so severe. And whatever maternity benefit a wife and mother
-receives, she gets nothing more than she deserves, and I believe they
-will get the money as easy as they get the old age pensions, and they
-will have less to waste.
-
- _Wages 17s. 6d. to £2; three children._
-
-
-81. CONVULSIONS.
-
-I very nearly lost my life over my first confinement, through being
-ignorant of how to take care of myself beforehand. I had lived about
-eighty miles away from home for some years, and was away from my
-mother at the time, also too shy and reticent to ever mention my
-condition to neighbours. I had always been strong and healthy, and
-never took medicine or aperients in any shape or form, in fact, never
-thought about it, and acted just the same when pregnant, although
-dreadfully constipated all the time. I thought it was a result of my
-condition. At confinement, after twenty-four hours’ pain and suffering
-I was seized with convulsions just as the baby was at the point of
-being born, and knew no more for about twelve hours. Another doctor
-was fetched, and the child was got away somehow, also my friends
-telegraphed for, as they expected me to die. However, that did not
-happen. But the doctors said it was the only case of convulsions at
-confinement that they had ever heard of the patient living after, and
-they blamed it to the clogged condition of the bowels. I was quite
-normal over the second confinement. There may perhaps not be much in
-this, except, perhaps, if I had known a bit more about such things, it
-would have been a lot better for me. My girl is nineteen now.
-
-It seems almost incredible that I was so ignorant, but I had lived
-quietly a long time with a strictly particular widow lady, and had
-hardly ever heard such things discussed.
-
- _Wages 10s. to 30s.; two children._
-
-
-82. “EVERY CARE ON EVERY OCCASION.”
-
-I have eight children and one miscarriage from ptomaine poisoning. And
-never can I say I have not had every care on every occasion. My husband
-from the first saw that I had the necessary requirements. During the
-pregnancy of the last four I suffered from varicose veins, and there
-were days when I could not get about so well, but on the whole I am
-pleased to say I have always been able to do ordinary housework, with,
-of course, rests between.
-
-After confinement, I always had the month out before commencing my
-house work, but I took the management of my baby as soon as possible,
-say from two weeks old.
-
-I have all my children, never buried any.
-
- _Wages £2 to £3; eight children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-83. A WAGE-EARNING MOTHER.
-
-I myself had some very hard times, as I had to go out to work in the
-mill. I was a weaver, and we had a lot of lifting to do. My first baby
-was born before its time, from me lifting my piece off the loom on to
-my shoulder, as two of us had them to lift, and then carry them from
-the shed across the yard to be weighed. If I had been able to take care
-of myself I should not have had to suffer as I did for seven weeks
-before that baby was born and for three months after; and then there
-was the baby suffering as well, as he was a weak little thing for a
-long time, and cost pounds that could have been saved had I been able
-to stay at home and look after myself. But I could not do so, as my
-husband was short of work; and when I had my second baby I had to work
-all through again, as my husband was short of work and ill at the time.
-So there was another poorly baby. While I was carrying this one he only
-worked three months out of the nine. I could not get any support at
-all then. I had to go out to work again at the month-end, and put the
-baby out to nurse. I had to get up by four in the morning, and get my
-baby out of bed, wash and dress it, and then leave home by five, as I
-had half an hour walk to take my baby to my mother’s, and then go to my
-work and stand all day till half-past five at night, and then the walk
-home again with my baby. I had to do this with three of them. I think
-you will understand I have had my share; and all my children have had
-to be brought with instruments. I have had six living children and one
-miscarriage. I lost two from injury at birth; and when I had the last,
-the doctor told me he did not know how I had kept one, the times that
-I had had, and the way they had to use the baby before birth. And now
-I am suffering myself, all from not being able to take care of myself
-during pregnancy. My baby that I lost died from hæmorrhage when he was
-eight days old; then the second, when she was four months old, died
-from an injury to the spine, both done at birth. I think it would have
-been a good thing for me if all these reforms had been in force, as I
-should have both been better in health and saved a lot of suffering to
-myself and my children.
-
-It was from no fault of my husband that I had to suffer: it was from
-shortness of work. I know I should have had the best of everything if
-he had been able to get it for me. He had 28s. a week and all holidays
-off. Then there was out of work, many a time playing for six weeks at
-a time.
-
- _Wages 28s.; six children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-84. “TWO CHILDREN UNDER THE YEAR.”
-
-I have had seven children, and three have died. I certainly have had
-very hard, long labours, but I don’t know that it could have been
-avoided; the doctor always said it was in my favour--I am not very
-strong. But I think what I suffered during my pregnancy most women have
-to suffer. Although my husband and myself were very ignorant on such
-matters when we were married, or some of it might have been avoided.
-That is why I am so pleased it is being made a public question, so
-that the people will be more enlightened on the subject.
-
-You will see I had my first two children under the year, all due to
-ignorance. It nearly sent me in a decline. My husband and myself were
-very young, and no one had ever talked to me. I am pleased it is
-different nowadays. I had a daughter married a year last Christmas;
-her husband and her is as pure yet as the day they married. She is
-twenty-seven, and her husband thirty years old. They are as happy as
-two children. They are both well read, and understand things better
-than I did when I married. They are passionately fond of children, and
-will go in for one presently.
-
-It is my three last babies I have buried. The doctor says I must not
-have any more; it will be fatal to me if I do.
-
- _Wages 22s. to 26s.; seven children._
-
-
-85. EFFECTS OF WORRY.
-
-Having suffered with rheumatic fever at the age of five, through going
-to live in a new damp house, perhaps explains the reason I suffered
-more than most women during pregnancy and confinement, as I was left
-with a weak heart all my life. I may also say I have had the same
-fever three times altogether. I married most happily, and my first
-miscarriage occurred when I had been married two years, through lack
-of strength, as I was anæmic. Two years afterwards my little girl was
-born, strong and healthy, although for nine months I was unable to walk
-or do my housework, and she has thrived up to the present age of six
-years. I never recovered my usual health, as I could not afford to rest
-after my confinement, as I had to work to help pay the debt incurred
-through my long illness. After one year I was again pregnant, and as I
-had overworked myself I was again too weak to carry; and thus occurred
-the second miscarriage, due entirely to having no rest. I suffered two
-months with hæmorrhage that threatened to end my life, but I revived
-and continued in a weakly state for three years, being just able to do
-my housework, when my little son was born, strong and healthy, weighing
-at birth 12 pounds, and has remained healthy up to two years, the
-present time; and I have fed both children by breast up to two years
-each, without the aid of stout or intoxicants, milk being my chief
-diet. Thus you will see that I have had two miscarriages and two lovely
-babies. If you can understand this jumble of events, you will notice
-that while I was worried by circumstances I could not bear children,
-while during both times when I was obliged to rest I was successful,
-showing that homes of rest for women in pregnancy and confinement would
-result in a great saving of life, and also result in children being
-healthy born. Also, the grant advocated would relieve the mother of the
-necessity to overwork herself.
-
-In reference to my husband’s earnings, during the time they varied from
-16s. 6d. to 25s. per week. But of course I never received more than the
-small amount in the winter, and the largest amount in the summer, for
-housekeeping, as my husband had to lose short time in winter.
-
- _Wages 16s. 6d. to 25s.; two children, two miscarriages._
-
-[Illustration: FIFTEEN CHILDREN, FOUR LIVING. FATHER AN IRON MOULDER.
-
-The family is not connected with the Women’s Co-operative Guild.
-
-(_Reproduced by kind permission of the Medical Officer of Health for
-Liverpool._)]
-
-
-86. “NOT MUCH STRENGTH LEFT.”
-
-I am afraid I cannot tell you very much, because I worked too hard to
-think about how we lived. When my second baby came, I did not know how
-I was going to keep it. When the last one came, I had to do my own
-washing and baking before the week-end. Before three weeks I had to
-go out working, washing, and cleaning, and so lost my milk and began
-with the bottle. Twice I worked to within two or three days of my
-confinement. I was a particularly strong woman when I married. There is
-not much strength left. But, thanks be to God, I have not lost one. I
-have two girls and three boys, every one strong and healthy.
-
-The firm my husband worked for failed; then for the most times he did
-not work; but I can truly say that for the most part of twenty-five
-years 17s. per week was the most I received from him.
-
- _Wife’s allowance 17s.; five children._
-
-
-87. STRUGGLES OF A MINER’S WIFE.
-
-I dare say I could write a book on my early struggles with my seven
-children, and a miner’s home to contend with; and many a week my
-husband has not had a penny of wage to bring home, besides the
-experience of three big strikes and many small ones.
-
-I may say we were married nineteen years before we lost one, and then I
-lost my baby first, a grand little girl of two. Then, a year and a half
-after, I lost a fine lad of fourteen in the fever hospital, of scarlet
-fever and diphtheria. Two years after that we lost a girl of twelve
-from tubercular disease of the kidneys from cow’s milk. The doctor was
-treating her for eight years for Bright’s disease of the kidneys. I
-brought them up breast-fed, so she must have contracted it after she
-was weaned. Such a clever child she was. So you will see we have had
-our troubles.
-
-I may say I had very good times at confinements, except the first
-and the last. The youngest was born feet first, which was an awful
-experience, and her heart was nearly stopped beating; so I think that
-left her heart weak, and she cut her teeth with bronchitis. I used to
-get up always by the ninth day until the last. I was between forty-one
-and forty-two when she was born, so had to rest a bit longer, but had
-to see to household duties as soon as possible.
-
-I am firmly of opinion that if the State wants strong, healthy, useful
-citizens, they should provide the mothers in the homes with sufficient
-wages where the husband’s wage is inadequate. Nor should married women
-be allowed to work outside the homes for some stated period before and
-after childbirth. The men should demand a decent living wage to provide
-for them at home.
-
- _Seven children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-88. “DID NOT LIKE TO SAY ANYTHING.”
-
-I can safely say that had there been a centre to which I could have
-gone before my first boy was born I should have been saved the terrible
-torture I suffered both before and after confinement. I was very
-ignorant before marriage, and went away among strangers; and when I
-became pregnant I did not like to say anything to a strange doctor, and
-I had no lady friends whom I felt I could confide in. So I went about
-with an ulcerated stomach, sick after every attempt to take food; and
-when my baby came, I nearly lost my life. He was also very delicate for
-five years after birth, wholly due, I am convinced, to the state I was
-in whilst pregnant.
-
-With the other two boys, I have always had to get about too soon. The
-month I have always had to have a woman in the house, during which time
-I have been absolutely helpless, being a terrific expense.
-
-The doctor has ordered me to lie down for two hours each day, but that
-is absolutely impossible for a working man’s wife when she has two
-or three children around her, meals to provide, and the washing and
-cleaning, etc., to do in the home.
-
-I speak from my own experience, and I know that there are thousands of
-women who are a million times worse off than I am, for I have the best
-husband in the world; but his nor any other working man’s wages won’t
-pay for help in the home at a cost of at least 12s. a week and food. On
-the very day my first baby was born my husband was thrown out of work.
-This was kept from my knowledge for five weeks, and I am sure you will
-guess all the scheming he used to keep me in ignorance. He had his club
-money for the period he was out of employment, which amounted to 9s. a
-week.
-
- _Wages 25s. to 30s.; three children._
-
-
-89. A BRUTAL HUSBAND.
-
-I have just heard of the following case: A poor woman, only
-twenty-eight years of age, was confined last Wednesday with her seventh
-child, all living. She has been allowed to live until this affair is
-over in a deplorable cottage that is condemned. She has been living
-quite near for about four months, but I and my neighbours have never
-seen her nor the two youngest children, aged two and a half years
-and fifteen months, and we are now told they have no clothes to come
-out in. These two children were born in the workhouse infirmary. We
-hear that the father, a hay-carter, only did six weeks’ work in a
-twelvemonth. He must be a most brutal man. He was fighting the poor
-wife only a fortnight ago, as if she were another man. The poor thing
-lies there with only an old sheet and quilt for covering, and a poor
-woman who is attending to the other children has taken the blanket
-from her own baby to lend her. The very night the baby was born the
-midwife had to send for a policeman, the husband was carrying on in
-such a dreadful manner, and was worse afterwards, because they would
-not let him have the Insurance paper that had just been filled in by
-the midwife for the Insurance.
-
-
-90. “I OVERDID MYSELF.”
-
-Judging from my own experience, a fair amount of knowledge at the
-commencement of pregnancy would do a lot of good. One may have a good
-mother who would be willing to give needed information, but to people
-like myself your mother is the last person you would talk to about
-yourself or your state. Although mother nursed me with my first child,
-I never said one word to her about it coming, except the bare date I
-expected. I felt I couldn’t, and outside people only tell you what
-garments you need, and just the barest information. I have learned the
-most useful things since my children have grown up. The youngest is
-nine. The idea that you impress the child all through the time with
-your own habits and ways, or that its health is to a great extent
-hindered or helped by your own well-being, was quite unknown to me.
-
-At the time I fell with my second child we were in very bad
-circumstances, and feeding my first with a bottle, I stinted myself
-all I could to give him plenty; and having moved from one house to
-another two months before the second one was born, I overdid myself,
-with the result that I was bad for a week before he was born; and
-then, the birth being such a long time about, a clot of blood got down
-into my ankle, and before I got far over the confinement I was laid up
-with a bad leg, which the doctor said was due to the child being so
-long coming into the world. I should say I had a midwife this time,
-as I could not afford the doctor’s fee. Had the midwife called in the
-doctor, as she should have done, I might have been saved a lot, for my
-back has never been right since. Whenever I get very tired or not very
-well, I always feel it in the place where he seemed fixed. So I feel
-that if young mothers knew more of the need for care of themselves, and
-what should be done for them at the time of childbirth, much suffering
-could be saved.
-
- _Wages 18s. to 32s.; three children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-91. “BETTER TO HAVE A SMALL FAMILY.”
-
-I have only had the three children, and have been married thirty-two
-years. In the first place, I was only twenty years old when I had my
-first baby, and must confess that I suffered a great deal through
-ignorance, but am pleased to say that I always had all that was really
-necessary, as regards doctors and nursing. I may say that my husband
-and myself were quite agreed on the point of restricting our family to
-our means. If we had not done so, I could not possibly have reared my
-eldest girl. I was able to have good medical advice and give her plenty
-of attention day and night.
-
-I may say that I have disgusted some of our Guild members by advocating
-restrictions. I think that it is better to have a small family and give
-them good food and everything hygienic than to let them take “pot-luck.”
-
- _Wages £2 to £3; three children._
-
-
-92. IGNORANCE.
-
-I feel very keenly myself on the ignorance of young girls getting
-married and having babies, because I am quite sure some of my
-sufferings and the death of my babies need not have been.
-
-When my first baby was brought into the world, within a few days of my
-twenty-first birthday, after three days’ labour and agony, the baby was
-nearly dead. I can hear now the slaps from that doctor on the child
-to bring life into him, and my own cry of “Let it die; do not beat it
-so.” He lived, a lovely boy but a cripple, for nine and a half months,
-admitted by the doctor to be through the long hours of labour.
-
-A strong point has always been mine that doctors do not give sufficient
-advice to young mothers. I had to go through the same suffering with
-my second child, born an epileptic, living three months. My next
-three girls are alive to-day, spared, I honestly believe, through
-my own experience, and the fact of having more humane doctors with
-instruments. My last baby was literally torn from me. The doctor told
-my husband he could not save both. They dare not chloroform me, and
-so I had to bear it. The doctor said I must never have another child.
-I never have, but why should I have suffered? My first doctor could
-have said that I was not fitted. I had a good husband, a fairly good
-income, but when I think of poor women with probably indifferent or bad
-husbands, how do they live? If our scheme could be brought forward,
-what a help to know that a woman after a bad time could have a longer
-rest! Oh, the feeling of knowing that the nurse has gone, and you
-must wash and dress your own baby! Whereas if the mother could be
-helped--and the money could do this--how nice she would feel, as she
-could rest with her little one, after having made it comfortable, by
-having some help with the housework!
-
-We want all our mothers to teach their daughters, not to keep
-everything from them, as it was kept from me. If we can only get
-expecting mothers to attend maternity homes--to see they get a good
-nurse, not a tippler: they should be banished from the profession....
-I thank God that a band of good women are working on the maternity
-scheme for women.
-
- _Wages 32s.; five children._
-
-
-93. OUT-OF-DOOR EXERCISE EVERY DAY.
-
-I had a very natural confinement with both, and a short, sharp time of
-labour with the first, rather more lingering with the second. My first
-was what they call a dry labour, and a very sick one--the worst the
-doctor had had--and it was very exhausting to me. The best times are
-bad enough, but I was told by the nurse that mine were good times. With
-the first she stayed a month, and the second three weeks, being called
-to another case. I think I was very fortunate in having a good mother,
-who always taught us from childhood how to live to be healthy, and both
-my sister and I had natural confinements through following her advice
-when young; that is what makes me so keen on “Moral Hygiene.” Young
-women do not take care or have proper exercise enough. Ordinary work
-does not do the harm. I did all my housework and the washing right up
-to the time of confinement both times, but I did not whitewash or do
-papering, as I know some do, and then wonder why they miscarry. Another
-one I know of insisted on the doctor giving chloroform, as she was sure
-she would never get through it without. Of course, I am very active,
-while some are indolent, and that has a great deal to do with it; and I
-made a practice of getting outdoor exercise every day, if not too far
-towards the end of the time, and at great inconvenience, as with the
-boy I had piles very bad, and often had to stop a moment or two before
-I could go on, but of course it was at night when I went out. I also
-had heartburn with both a short time, and a bad attack of indigestion,
-which I never suffer from at other times, but which the doctor soon
-relieved.
-
- _Two children._
-
-
-94. “GIVEN ANYTHING TO HAVE A GOOD SLEEP.”
-
-There is a great deal of unnecessary suffering entailed on the woman
-during pregnancy by lack of not knowing what to do, or how to do it,
-such as having all her own washing and work to do, especially in the
-latter stages. When a man is only bringing home about £1 a week, and
-has two or three children, it is impossible for the mother to get
-proper help or even food. I think it would be a very good thing if
-something could be done to lighten that burden. I am not speaking
-as one that does not know. I have had it to do myself, in my early
-married life, but, thank God, my lot is changed now. I have had eleven
-children, two still-born, and one miscarriage, so have gone through
-it. I also think we should try and do something for the mothers after
-childbed, as many have to be about so soon after, and no doubt that
-tends to weakening the mother, so that she cannot give her child
-proper support, and cannot recover her own strength. I do not think
-any woman ought to attempt anything like hard work until she has had
-at least a month’s good nursing and support after confinement, but it
-is impossible to do it on a man’s pay at £1 or 25s. per week. I have
-always felt if I could only have another week or so of rest I should
-feel a different woman, and I am sure most of my poor sisters feel the
-same. I also think that if children were naturally fed it would be all
-the better for them. When I was pregnant I would have given anything to
-have had a good sleep during the day. I used to think it was idleness,
-and try to shake it off, but I do not think so now, and would give
-every poor woman all the rest she really needed.
-
- _Wages about £1; nine children, two still-born, one miscarriage._
-
-
-95. “HUSBAND WHO WAS NURSE AND MOTHER.”
-
-I was brought up in the country with a cat and a dog for playmates, so
-when I went among other young people, I was very shy, and never made
-girl friends. That may account for my ignorance in the things that
-mattered at the time of my marriage, at the age of twenty-one and a
-half. My husband was just as ignorant, and we had to pay very dearly
-for our ignorance. I was married about eight weeks when I became ill;
-I went to the doctor and took a lot of physic, but was no better, then
-I would not have any more from the doctor, and tried to doctor myself,
-but I was very ill the whole of the seven and a half months that I
-was pregnant. The birth was a forced one. I was taken very ill, and
-knowing baby should not come for six weeks longer, I was bearing the
-pain as well as I could, just cheering myself that it would be less
-to go through when the time came, when my husband came in and would
-insist on getting a doctor. We tried a new one this time, who lived
-quite near. He had just left the infirmary, and we had heard he was
-very clever in maternity. When he saw me and questioned me, he sent for
-the nurse. The rest of that night is too terrible to go through even
-now after twenty-eight years. Suffice it to say that next morning there
-was a poor little baby boy with a very large swollen head dreadfully
-cut, and a young mother dreadfully cut also. One would have thought
-the trouble was over now--anyhow, we thought so, but we found it had
-only begun. A week or two after the pains began. I thought it was all
-right, that I had not got quite well. At last I had to go to the doctor
-again. He told me I was going on all right. At the end of six weeks
-the nurse called. I told her just how I felt, and that the doctor said
-it was through the bad confinement I had gone through. She told me to
-tell him to come and examine me thoroughly, that there was something
-growing there. He came, and when my husband saw him afterwards, he
-said, “Oh, there is really nothing. There is a little hardness there,
-that is all. Your wife is very nervous.” My husband told him that I
-was anything except nervous. However, I went on for eighteen months,
-never knowing what moment those terrible pains were going to take me.
-Many times it was in the street. I was in bed about eight months out
-of the eighteen. Then came a very terrible time, and my husband called
-another doctor in, and I was ordered into the B. Infirmary at once. I
-got better. I was home three months, when I was carried in again. They
-said it was ovarian trouble. They wanted to operate. My husband asked
-them how long I might live as I was. They said I might live for years,
-but I would always be subject to these attacks. He told them he would
-rather keep me as I was than risk an operation. On inquiring the cause
-of the trouble, I was told by the nurse it was confinement. I went on
-in much the same way until my boy was ten years old. Then I had to be
-operated on. It was a case of life or death then. But if I went into
-the Infirmary I could not choose my doctor, so Dr. ---- offered to do
-the operation free, but I would have to go into a private hospital,
-which meant a good deal to us, who hardly knew which way to turn for an
-extra shilling then. However, my husband insisted that Dr. ---- was to
-do the operation, and by letting everything else go he managed to get
-the money together by the time I came out, which was three weeks at
-£3 3s. per week and £1 7s. 6d. for the second nurse. The trouble was a
-multiple tumour; it had grown round about the intestines. They had to
-tear the one from the other. After leaving the hospital I was in bed
-for three months, but it was a complete cure, though no one except my
-husband expected me to get over it. Dr. ---- told me I could not have
-gone through a more serious operation unless I had had my head taken
-off, and then there was no hope at all.
-
-Now I maintain that if we had understood things relating to married
-life, all this could have been saved. I would not have starved myself
-and child before birth for one thing, and I would have been more
-careful on washing days not to lift tubs or jump to reach lines,
-neither would I have cleaned windows and a hundred and one other things
-that a pregnant woman should not do, and, above all, we would not have
-had an inexperienced doctor.
-
-I must just tell you that my husband has always been husband, nurse,
-and mother. The pain was never quite so bad when he was near, and no
-one ever made my bed like him.
-
-Our income, until baby was six months old, was £1 6s. per week. Then
-my husband got out of employment--was out four months. He took up an
-agency, and did a very little with it, but with that little and about
-£2 12s. 6d. we had managed to save, and pawning, we got through without
-going into debt until he got another job. This lasted about eighteen
-months, averaging about 30s. per week. Then for about twenty months he
-averaged about 10s. per week. Our home went then a thing at a time,
-but we got through at the expense of our insides and outsides, without
-help or debt, except doctor’s bills. Then we came to this town on £1
-7s.; after a few years £1 9s. The rise came just two years before I
-underwent the operation. We had our home to get out of that, and had to
-get it on the hire system (or borrow from friends, and we both objected
-to borrowing). Some people say drink is the cause of poverty, but I
-think you will agree with me when I say we had not enough to drink.
-Our rent would work out at about 6s. per week. I think this is what
-you want. Of course, things are very much better with us now, and have
-been for the last twelve years, both in health and finance. I just want
-to add that although the first half of my married life was so hard and
-painful, I would not have missed one bit of it, because it has all
-helped to make me understand things that matter from a practical point
-of view. If there is anything more I can help in I shall be pleased to
-do so.
-
- _Wages 26s. to 30s.; one child._
-
-
-96. INJURY AT CONFINEMENT.
-
-I rather shrink from talking about myself on the subject, but if my
-remarks would help any young mother, I don’t so much mind. My husband’s
-average wage was about 24s. a week.... I helped in the work, as his
-earnings were not nearly enough as the children came. I had four
-children at intervals of about two years, whom I was able to nurse,
-but although I had no illness during pregnancy, with my fifth baby I
-had a very long illness through the doctor hurrying the birth, instead
-of giving nature a chance, and he was rough in handling me. Now, the
-result was a three months’ illness, and my baby had to be brought up by
-bottle.
-
-What was still more serious, I was so injured that for nearly ten years
-I was an invalid. During that period I had two premature confinements,
-and several slight miscarriages. Then I got a little stronger, and
-finally my sixth baby was born without the help of a doctor, because I
-was so afraid of a repetition of what I had suffered. I am glad to say
-I gradually recovered, although all my friends thought I would never
-get well.
-
-I think every expectant mother should have a duly qualified nurse to
-attend her. I had several miscarriages. There is a better chance now
-than when I was having my family. Good nursing is necessary. I rejoice
-to know that the Guild is pressing forward on this matter.
-
- _Wages about 24s.; six children, one still-born, several miscarriages._
-
-
-97. CHILDLESS.
-
-I have had four children, and all were born one year and a half after
-each other. My two eldest died in one week from whooping-cough, age
-five and three. Two of my children were still-born. I was very young at
-the time, and only wish this Maternity Scheme had come out years ago. I
-have a good husband, but we are childless, I am sorry to say. I am on
-many committees, and take a great interest where children are concerned.
-
- _Wages 18s. to 27s.; two children, two still-births, one miscarriage._
-
-
-98. “I SIMPLY STRUGGLED ON.”
-
-I have had two children. I never was so well in my life as I was during
-pregnancy over my first. A bearing-down caused hæmorrhoids. However, I
-was not troubled greatly with them then. My second child was born one
-year and seven months afterwards. Now all the time during pregnancy
-over him I was thoroughly ill. My work was a trouble, and altogether
-I _was_ ill. But as pregnancy is never thought a sufficient cause for
-even having a holiday, I simply struggled on for fear of being held up
-to ridicule. You see, I was only twenty-two years old then, and thought
-that the only way to do was to show a brave front, even though I felt
-almost too ill to do anything. Well, I had to have chloroform, and
-again I had to have instruments; and my children would never be born
-naturally, for my womb is in the wrong place, the doctor says. I had
-also a trained nurse who despaired again of my life.
-
-I was in bed one month for maternity and was unable to do my work even
-when I did get up. I could not mother either of my children, for I
-never had any milk. That was a grief to me. I had hæmorrhoids again
-through bearing down, brought on through pregnancy, and from these I
-suffered for three years and doctored for them. Then I had an operation
-and had them removed. I have not had more children, neither do I want
-them, as the doctor fears my life will pay the forfeit. I had a serious
-operation for tumour in the womb four years ago, and have been much
-better in health ever since.
-
- _Two children._
-
-
-99. STORY OF A CONFINEMENT.
-
-My first child was born ten months after my marriage. My husband’s age
-at marriage was twenty-eight years, and my own age twenty-five years,
-and we are both Londoners, residing all our life in the city of London,
-until my first-born attained the age of eleven months.
-
-My children have been born quite healthy, and the doctors have said
-fine babies. But I am pleased to say I am a mother who has had no
-terrible sufferings to relate as to the sufferings of a long period
-of labour. Two hours and a half has been the time from the very first
-stage of labour, until the appearance into this world of each of my
-children. And I would say, personally, women were never created to
-suffer as many a one does. I made this remark to my first nurse, and
-she said, “You are right.” I had been told such experiences by women
-who had had families. It is nature, and nature does or should do its
-own work, she said. Take, for instance, the apple. When it is fully
-ripe, it falls from the tree. So the child, when the time has arrived
-for its appearance, I say it should come as naturally, not to look upon
-the little creature distorted and bruised through having to be brought
-into the world.
-
-My strong conviction is, as soon as a woman feels the slightest
-pain she should have immediate attention. You are strong at the
-commencement, and able to give the help in bringing your baby, but
-if allowed to go on for hours your strength is exhausted, you have
-lost that power and vitality which you require, that after hours of
-suffering artificial means have to be resorted to.
-
-My second child was born at N----. The doctor did his own work and the
-nurse’s too, arriving and leaving the house in half an hour, my mother
-just taking the baby until the nurse had time to get in the room.
-
-Now, by my third child I will try to show where I think much is at
-fault by not having immediate attention. My little daughter was born in
-D----. My husband had at four o’clock to fetch the doctor and nurse (a
-qualified midwife) nearly two miles away; no other reliable nearer.
-
-They resided a stone’s-throw from each other. But on bringing the
-nurse and explaining while she dressed she was to call the doctor, she
-would not hear of it, and fairly repudiated the idea of such a quick
-confinement, sarcastically saying, never in her experience. Well, the
-doctor was not informed. Previously on engaging them I made it quite
-clear how my boys had been born--so quickly. In D----, I may say in
-passing, indiarubber gloves are worn by the nurse on receiving the
-child, and like all rubber things in these cases have to be boiled
-before using. Nurse arrived. Every single thing was ready for her.
-There was a bright fire, and every possible article to lay her hands
-on, baby’s clothes on the horse airing and warming.
-
-She looked at me in my agony, and said: “Oh, not likely to come off
-yet, ma” (to my mother), and sent the old soul out for a saucepan to
-boil the new gloves in. Well, it went on for a time, until I felt my
-pains were leaving me, and I would not trouble any longer; I was tired.
-But I thought, no. Why should I suffer? I called to my husband, and
-he came to the bedroom door, and I said: “Fetch the doctor, I want
-attention.” He went. The nurse said: “Well, I know you have the whole
-day to go by the look of things. Doctor will be very cross. He is very
-busy, and does not like being brought out of bed. He knows everything
-is right when I am on the case.” I felt another little pain, and I made
-another effort, my breath almost gone. I called to her, boiling her
-gloves: “If you do not leave those blessed things, the child will be
-here.” She flew to me, laughing at an unnecessary fuss, but my child
-was entering the world, two minutes after my husband had left the
-house, but, being certified, she did the doctor’s work. But she could
-not get the afterbirth, and pushed and fairly punched my stomach most
-unmercifully to get it, and I said: “Well, nurse, I really cannot stand
-this any longer. My two previous doctors had said, never be in a hurry
-for this. Let nature have its course; it will come in time. The doctor
-will be here soon, and he will soon get it.” The doctor had heard and
-come in, and told the nurse to see to the baby, who was bitterly cold,
-and he would see to me. In a very few minutes I was quite comfortable.
-
-The doctor was very cross at not having been notified by the nurse
-that she was on her way to me, knowing the statement I had given when
-engaging them.
-
-If there is truth in it or not, I was told later that if all was over
-and done with before the arrival of the doctor, the nurse was given
-something out of the fee.
-
-I might say, having my mother with me, I only required the nurse night
-and morning, and this nurse only went out like that, because she had
-so many cases she preferred them so. But it happened I did not see her
-one evening during the time, and on the third day she did not put in an
-appearance at all, and on the Sunday, two o’clock; other days the times
-ranged from twelve till three o’clock when she came.
-
-My confinements have been splendid ones, but for all that I feel it is
-almost, if not quite, three months before a mother feels her strength
-the same as before. What women feel like who have to turn out shortly
-after to work hard, I would not like to imagine.
-
-I personally have always felt, besides not having the usual amount
-of strength, I have been very forgetful; for instance, I would go to
-the cupboard and quite forget what I had gone for, and have to stand
-and think for a little time, and then very likely not know. During
-pregnancy, my health was always very good, and I was able to do all
-household duties and washing right up to the time of my confinement.
-But towards evening I would be tired all over, and be thankful to go to
-bed. But I usually took a glass of hot milk at bedtime. I found it not
-only soothed the nerves, but induced sleep. I took a dose of castor oil
-once a fortnight.
-
-I have nursed all my children for ten months, not allowing a particle
-of any kind to pass their lips in the way of foods but my own milk
-until nine months old, and then gradually weaned them off.
-
-I have stated above feelings to show what a woman feels who does not
-endure great sufferings in childbirth.
-
-My strong conviction is that unless there is anything wrong internally,
-and a woman takes a bit of care as to what she eats and drinks during
-pregnancy, and has, as I say, immediate attention, much suffering would
-be alleviated.
-
-I am the average working man’s wife, who spends most of her time
-looking to the needs of an old mother, husband, children, and home,
-cutting and contriving to make the weekly income go as far as one
-possibly can, attending the Guild as quite a change, and seeking to
-obtain as much knowledge of the Women’s Movement on to Progress; and
-where, here and there, I may be able to pass an opinion, I do; and try
-to live, that when I have passed away the world will be none the worse
-for my being in it.
-
- _Wages £1 15s. to £2 5s.; three children._
-
-
-100. A WRECK AT THIRTY.
-
-I had seven children and one miscarriage in ten years and three months.
-This left me at the age of thirty a complete wreck. My great difficulty
-was during pregnancy, suffering very severely from sickness, so much
-so, indeed, that on two occasions I was under the doctor the whole of
-the time. The doctor gave me his services free.
-
-I tremble even now to think what my life would have been but for his
-kindness to me. I could not have paid for a doctor, as wages were only
-£36 a year, and I had to pay £10 a year rent out of that. When I look
-back upon those days I wonder how we did live.
-
-My last child was born a delicate, weak child, who suffered from
-malnutrition until she was eleven months old, and at her birth the
-doctor told me I should never have another strong and healthy baby,
-and that women should only have a child every three years, and rest at
-least a month after confinement. He knew I could not give myself the
-rest I needed, for I could not afford to pay anyone to look after my
-home and children. I had to rely upon some child of thirteen who was
-able to leave school, and whose parents were glad of the 2s. 6d. a
-week I could ill afford to pay. I have been forced on many occasions
-to do things no woman lying-in should have done. I have left my bed
-on the tenth day, and have had to do the family washing as early as a
-fortnight.
-
-I do feel most strongly that women should be able to get advice and
-help during pregnancy. Our children are a valuable asset to the nation,
-and the health of the woman who is doing her duty in rearing the future
-race should have a claim upon the national purse. Ample provision
-should be made so that she could give of her best.
-
- _Wages 10s. to 14s. and husband’s food; seven children and one
- miscarriage._
-
-
-101. TWO CHILDREN IN EIGHTEEN MONTHS.
-
-I have only had two children. I was married at the age of twenty-three.
-My husband was twenty-five. I had been married just eleven months when
-my first baby was born. Now, as soon as ever I knew I was pregnant, I
-set about (with the help of a considerate and helpful husband) taking
-the greatest care of myself for the sake of the babe unborn, in such
-things as diet, exercise, fresh air, etc. I did no very heavy work. My
-husband and I did the washing in the evening, he did all the dollying
-and wringing, and helped me in many ways. The result was I had a fine
-and healthy baby, and during pregnancy I was so well myself, and I
-had everything a working man’s wife could have to make things as easy
-as possible. I had no worry of any kind, and that I consider a great
-comfort to a woman.
-
-At my confinement I had a doctor and a nurse, and if I had not had what
-I believe is called a dry labour, I should have had the easiest of
-times (and they are bad enough), but the water broke at 6 a.m., and my
-baby was not born till 4.30 p.m.
-
-My baby was never the slightest trouble. I had been in the nursery
-before I was married, both as nurse and nursery governess, so my baby
-had all the care and attention I had been taught to bestow on babies.
-I was sorry to find, when my baby was a year old, that I was again
-pregnant. I had breast-fed my baby up till then, for she had cut no
-teeth till she was eleven months old, although she was strong and well
-and running about at nine months old; of course, I weaned her at once.
-We were very disappointed to find I was going to have another baby so
-soon after the first. We had not intended this to happen. However,
-I made the best of it, and had a son when the daughter was eighteen
-months old. I was not so well carrying the second baby, and he was as
-great a handful when a baby as my first baby was no trouble, and by the
-time he was six months old I was very weak and ill. I think having the
-two children so quickly, and nursing my first baby so long, had been a
-great strain. The second child was not so strong a baby as the first.
-He suffered from teething eczema, and I lost a great deal of rest. My
-second confinement was fairly good, although I had thought the baby
-was coming two or three times before he came, labour pains came on
-and went away; and when my boy was born the doctor said if he had been
-another half-hour in the birth, he would have been dead. I should have
-sent for a doctor a week previously, but not knowing the exact time
-to expect my baby, I did not want to send for the doctor until it was
-really necessary.
-
-I never had any more children. I was ill and weak for a long time while
-having to nurse my second baby, and having them so quickly. How women,
-and poor women, can have children year after year, is a marvel to me.
-I know of cases here close to where I live, where a consumptive mother
-is having babies nearly every year. To me it seems terrible, bringing
-such children into the world, a burden to their parents, to themselves,
-and to the nation, for they are only wrecks, and fill our hospitals,
-mental deficiency schools, and prisons. But the cases are so common.
-Where they are poorest, where they have not enough to live on and keep
-their present family decently, they still have more children.
-
-I am sure there is great need for thought and care being given to
-the mother previous to childbirth and afterwards, and I do feel that
-a scheme as is suggested is a good one, and that the public health
-authority should deal with all maternity cases. It would mean untold
-happiness to the coming generations. It will be grand to get a
-maternity benefit such as you suggest, and it is most necessary. We
-have some women in the Guild who feel we should be more independent
-than take such sums as maternity benefit. They do not realise that we
-pay rates and taxes just as property owners do, though indirectly.
-
-How some of our poorest women exist year after year, bearing all, I
-cannot understand. For, if having two children, as I did, in eighteen
-months wrecked my health, which it did for a long time--and only
-through having one of the best of husbands was I helped to pull
-through--I wonder what so many other less fortunate women suffer. It is
-just slavery and drudgery.
-
- _Wages 28s.; two children._
-
-
-102. NEED FOR NOURISHMENT AFTER CONFINEMENT.
-
-For what I can see of others, I came off fairly well; but, in the first
-instance, my first child was a girl. I was very well during pregnancy,
-but being such a strong child the doctor told me to give it the bottle;
-but, on the other hand, the nurse persuaded me to keep it to the
-breast. The result was as soon as I got about, by keeping the child to
-the breast, I had two gathered breasts. I had the two breasts in slings
-till they broke. The next two being boys--two years between--I was
-right well during pregnancy. But as soon as a mother is able to get up
-and have to work, that is the time her health fails her, for she finds
-she has to feed the rest of her little family, and goes without her own
-food, and then, through lack of nourishment, often mothers have to go
-to their bed again.
-
-In the first place, when we were married my husband was a fireman. We
-ran along smoothly, and up to the time my first and second child was
-born his standing wage was 30s. a week and overtime. The time went
-on, and in two years the second was born. Now, just before it came it
-was my husband’s turn to go to pass for engine driver. The result was
-he failed to pass the eyesight test. It was a great shock to us both,
-more so to my husband. It was then the dots they had to count at a
-distance. They then reduced him to 21s. a week to work in the shed, so
-we thought it was cruel to run the risk of more family on such a wage.
-To keep my home up and keep the children respectable I had to take in
-two young men lodgers, which we have done till I started the children
-to business. Of course, I take it you don’t want to know the ups and
-downs of life between these times. I must say I have had the best of
-husbands, or else I should not have been alive now.
-
-If there could be such a thing as a Maternity Club started it would
-be a benefit to all married women, because the majority of us have to
-screw and save for confinement, where we ought to be able to have good
-food and more nourishing food while we are carrying the child, but
-often have to go with less.
-
- _Wages 21s. to 30s.; three children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-103. HER “LOT.”
-
-Your letter to hand reminding me of my promise to let you have a few
-details of my neighbour’s life. At first she hesitated about telling
-anything, as she said it was all past and done with, and at times felt
-ashamed at having had thirteen children, especially to a man like her
-husband (who is a drunkard). She looks back on her past life at the
-age of forty-eight with different feelings to what she had at thirty.
-Then she thought it was her “lot,” as she terms it, to have so many
-children, and so many sickly ones, but now she feels she has been to
-blame for many things--for instance, for the number of children she
-has had; for the dulness and lack of energy in two of them; for the
-feeble-mindedness in a third; deafness and sore eyes in a fourth.
-She blames the conditions under which she bore those children during
-pregnancy. She was married at nineteen, and a mother before she was
-twenty, with no knowledge whatever of the duties of motherhood. Her
-first five children came in rapid succession. While she was pregnant
-of her sixth child her husband fell out of work, and was out of work
-six months. During this time they had 10s. a week to live on (from the
-husband’s trade union). She went out washing and cleaning-up to the
-last week of her confinement. While cleaning windows at one of the
-houses she slipped and fell, hurting her side. Three days later the
-child was born, apparently all right, but as time went on the mother
-noticed there was something wrong, but nobody seemed to know what. This
-child did not cut its teeth till two years old, nor walk without help
-till it was seven, and now, at the age of eighteen, you can hardly
-make out a word he says. He is not exactly an imbecile, but he is
-feeble-minded, and all this could have been avoided could the mother
-have had proper nourishment during pregnancy, and less work. The mother
-had to work hard all day, and got little rest at night, as the fifth
-child was weakly and ailing, and the neighbour who looked after the
-child during the day used to put gin in its milk to stop its crying,
-which it did till the effects of the gin had passed off. The poor
-mother, not knowing that gin was given to the child, would often, after
-a hard day’s work, spend most of the night pacing the bedroom floor,
-trying to soothe the fretful child, and often had to go downstairs
-because the crying disturbed her husband. It was not until her sixth
-child came, the feeble-minded one, that the neighbour admitted giving
-it gin. Consequently the lad has grown up dull, never made any headway
-at school. He is a labourer, and twenty years of age, and will never
-be anything else but a labourer, because, as his mother says, he has
-no “head-piece,” and cannot do a simple sum in arithmetic to save his
-life. The mother firmly believes her children would have been as bright
-as anybody’s could she have had proper nourishment during pregnancy,
-and herself cared for them after they were born. Her girl of sixteen
-is deaf in one ear, and has weak eyes, the after-effects of measles
-when a child. The mother nursed this child a fortnight, then was
-obliged to leave her with a neighbour while she went out to work. The
-neighbour neglected the child in letting her run out too soon, etc.,
-and as there were no school clinics when her children went to school,
-some of them are suffering to-day from diseases which might have been
-cured, could they have had attention at the proper time. Now that they
-are grown up they seem fairly healthy, though undersized, but when one
-considers their childhood, the want of sufficient food, lack of fresh
-air (the younger ones always slept four in bed, two at the top and two
-at the bottom), one wonders they are as healthy as they appear to be.
-They seem to be fairly good workers, but not one good scholar among
-them. And to add to the above discomforts, they had a drunken, brutal
-father. He was never a real father, a surly, gloomy man, never a kind
-word for his children, and not one of them remembers a caress from him.
-I can quite understand the woman being ashamed of bearing thirteen
-children to a man like him, and having to rear them in surroundings and
-conditions which she has reared hers. It takes it out of the mother
-mentally and physically.
-
- _Wages 16s. to 30s.; thirteen children._
-
-
-104. NEED OF REST.
-
-I am perfectly well aware of the urgent necessity of both mother and
-child receiving proper nourishment and attention. With regard to
-myself, the one great drawback to me was the fact that I was not able
-to suckle any of my children, owing to my breasts not being properly
-developed, so that the child could not draw the nipple. In consequence
-of this my children had to be fed by the bottle, although I am pleased
-to say they have thriven and are quite healthy children. Also, prior
-to confinement, I suffered very much with varicose veins, and felt
-the need of not being able to have rest, as I had got to be about my
-work. Also, after confinement, I have been about again in a fortnight,
-which I should not advise young mothers now to do. I may say that I do
-think that getting up so soon is the cause of all the misplacements
-that we hear so much about. However, I am pleased to tell you that
-I am fortunate in having a considerate husband, which of course is
-something to be thankful for. My heart aches when I think of women who
-have brutes to contend with. In my opinion, women should have every
-kindness shown to them during pregnancy; also means to obtain advice
-and everything to insure that the unborn child shall have a good start
-from birth.
-
- _Wages 28s. to 40s.; three children._
-
-
-105. “NEVER LOST A MOMENT’S SLEEP.”
-
-I am a very busy body, and have not been blessed with a great deal of
-this world’s goods, having had an ailing husband, whom I lost when the
-youngest was not two years old. But at those times mentioned in your
-circular I always enjoyed good health. No sickness, as so many women
-have; of course, days when not feeling quite well. But I do think
-many women do not give themselves a chance. They seem to give way too
-much to feelings, and lie about instead of interesting themselves in
-their work and always keeping hands and minds employed. I had heavy
-labour times, but did not keep to my bed any longer than I could
-help, generally feeling able to be up after the fourth day for a
-little while; then each day a little longer. I often think lying in
-bed weakens very much, and if able to rise, it is much better to do
-so, both for baby and self. Of course, not to work as though you had
-not been through a trying time, and needed to be careful, but at the
-end of ten days I was always able to do my own work all right, at the
-same time being able to take good plain food, and making an abundance
-of milk for the baby. They were such well fed, fat, healthy, happy,
-contented children, and I never lost a moment’s sleep in my life with
-them. I never used myself to take stout and beer to make milk, as
-many of the mothers in the North believe in. In the North here, the
-working class mothers have to work very hard, and they all seem (or
-in a general way) not to make a trouble of child-bearing. They do not
-coddle themselves, but just work a not-up-to-the-mark feeling off,
-which is certainly by far the best way. And about the care of baby,
-cleanliness is the first care. Then mother’s milk if possible, and with
-perseverance, most mothers could manage to diet themselves to make
-plenty of milk, but the bottle is the laziest way. Then, of course,
-baby can be left in another’s care, whereas if on the breast, you
-must take baby with you. I have never had an afterpain after any of
-them, and soon pulled up again. Once the instruments were used after
-a weary wait, but I think the women who work have the easiest time.
-With my last baby I had what made me think of labour pains, every night
-for a fortnight, and when she came I had only about three pains, and
-she was born before I could rap for help, and no pain whatever. Do
-you not think I have been one of the lucky ones? But really many in
-this condition are like children. They do not want overmuch sympathy
-or they reckon themselves martyrs straight away, instead of bracing
-themselves to go through a time of weariness. I have not come across
-in my experience any who have suffered so acutely, unless in one case,
-where two of her babies grew to her womb, and had to be brought away
-by force. Another woman had a big, broad-shouldered husband, and was
-herself a very small woman, and it was a case of force every time,
-and she has had fourteen children, and the same to go through every
-time, but was able to be up soon, as she soon mended and regained her
-strength.
-
- _Two children._
-
-
-106. “I WAS LOCKED UP IN A MORNING.”
-
-I have been a very healthy woman, and pregnancy never upset me very
-much, but I think if the Maternity Scheme had been in force when I was
-having children it would have been a great benefit to me. Being very
-poor, I had to get up on the third day, three or four times, not being
-able to pay for someone to look after me. My first baby I was locked
-up in a morning at half-past four, food put so that I could reach it
-until my husband came home at four in the afternoon, to help myself
-with everything with regard to the baby. My second was just the same.
-After that we removed a bit nearer the works, and I did better. We
-were a very comfortable lot of neighbours, and we always did for one
-another. I don’t say that it was not very hard, because it was, and a
-little money help would have been a great boon to some of us more than
-others. With regard to wages, it is rather a sore point. My husband has
-earned a very good wage nearly all our married life, but he is a born
-gambler. I never had £1 a week, and a great many times I had nothing,
-so that when my children began to work, it took years to pay for what
-they had to have to be brought up. I have had ten children; nine alive
-at the present time; six married; three have received the Maternity
-Benefit and have found it a great help, and feel that it is a credit to
-everyone who helped to bring so great a scheme about for the benefit of
-the working man’s wife.
-
- _Wife’s allowance less than £1; ten children, one still-birth._
-
-[Illustration: FACSIMILE OF EXTRACT FROM LETTER 106.]
-
-
-107. “FELT LIKE GIVING IN ALTOGETHER.”
-
-I have had two children. I might say I felt better during pregnancy
-with the first one than I had ever felt in my life, but I had a very
-bad time at the birth with instruments, and after three years, when
-I had the second one, I never felt well, and did not seem to have
-strength enough to drag through day after day. But I, like a good many
-more, could not afford to go to the doctor; and with the second baby I
-had to have instruments again to bring the baby into the world, after
-which for about eight months I never seemed to regain my strength, and
-life was a weary existence. Also, I am sorry to say, I had not one
-of the most careful of husbands, and have always had to make my own
-provision for the time on £1 a week, and very often nothing, as at that
-time he would think nothing of staying out all night, and gambling
-away all his week’s earnings. I have always struggled and managed
-to keep his club paid, so that I had the 30s. from the club to pay
-the nurse and doctor. For the rest, I have happened to have two good
-sisters near to me, who always did whatever they could for me, but as
-to nourishment, I have never been able to get much of that, and have
-always thought that was what kept me back. I have fortunately been
-very handy with my needle, and have been able to earn a good bit at
-times by taking in needlework, or I don’t know whatever I should have
-done. But I am pleased to say, that since I had a breakdown last year,
-about this time, and was sent away for one month through our Guild
-Convalescent Fund, my husband has been very much better. I think he had
-time to find he missed me. Of one thing I am quite sure. I have had as
-big a struggle as a good many of my womenfolk, but where some have no
-friends and no talent for earning, I have been more fortunate in being
-able to do so. I may tell you that when I joined the Guild, nearly five
-years ago, I had very nearly lost all my spirit, and felt like giving
-in altogether, but the Guild has done a lot for me in that sense, as I
-have felt that I must go on doing my duty, and fighting for the right,
-although sometimes it is very hard. Still, I have always the Guild to
-look forward to, and have found amongst our members some real good
-friends, and I shall never forget the great benefit I have felt from
-the thorough rest and change of the month at the Rest Home. I feel a
-different woman. Although I am not over-strong, still, I have regained
-my strength, and a little more energy. I had one miscarriage five years
-ago, at ten weeks, and my husband was out of work, so I did not have
-any doctor, but had to keep about and do the best I could, taking just
-whatever rest I could get. I was months and months getting strong again.
-
- _Wages 24s. to 26s.; two children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-108. EXTRA WELL.
-
-As regards myself during pregnancy, I have always been extra well,
-which I daresay is due to the fact of having been in a position to be
-able to have all that is required--rest and help in the home, and
-good nourishing food. Others who are not in the same position have my
-heartfelt sympathy.
-
- _Four children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-109. WORK IN A BRICKYARD.
-
-I am very pleased to say that, having one of the best of husbands,
-I suffered nothing during pregnancy, only ailments of my own caused
-through my mother having to work in the brickyard during her pregnancy
-with me. That, I am sorry to say, is the cause of my own and sister’s
-illness--working hard, knocked about, and poorly fed, a good mother,
-but a rogue of a father; and that thing will go on until women give up
-hard work during pregnancy.
-
-
-110. HUSBAND WITH TYPHOID FEVER.
-
-During the first three months of pregnancy with my first baby I
-suffered fearfully with my head. Then, as time went on, I gradually
-got better, and able to do my work, and felt quite strong until about
-the sixth month. Then water began to trouble me; my feet and legs were
-very much swollen, so much that I could not get any boots on, and
-had to remain indoors the rest of the time. On the day of the birth
-I commenced with pains at six o’clock in the morning, and I went on
-all day, until a quarter to seven at night, and I was getting so weak
-that the doctor asked me if he might use the instruments. I was glad
-to have them, but they gave me a fine putting up. The doctor said that
-my baby could not have been born without them. No doubt it relieved
-me at the time, but I suffered afterwards, as I was all torn with the
-instruments, and had to be stitched. I was so weak afterwards that I
-could not get up on to my elbows, and it took me a considerable time to
-get my strength up again. At the same time my husband was in bed with
-an attack of typhoid fever. We had no hospital in our district then. My
-doctor was very much afraid that I would contract the disease, but I am
-thankful to say that I escaped. With my second boy I was in good health
-all the time, and had a quick birth, and without instruments. That
-was two years and two months after. About four years after the birth
-of my second boy I had a miscarriage, which I reckon are worse than
-having a baby, as they nearly drain your system and you suffer severe
-pain, and it makes you very weak. I always blamed the miscarriage for
-an attack of nervous debility I had. I first commenced to lose flesh,
-then my nerves were affected, and I got so weak that I used to faint
-away several times in the day. My doctor ordered me away for a change,
-and to get into company, as I was getting so low, but it took me a long
-time to pick up. About nine years after the birth of my second boy I
-had a girl, which I am pleased to say put new life into me; it seemed
-to renew my whole system. She is now eleven years old, and quite strong
-and healthy.
-
- _Wages 27s. 6d. to 42s.; three children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-111. “TOO EXHAUSTED TO EAT.”
-
-I have been one of the more fortunate women; being fairly strong, my
-sufferings have not been so heavy as a lot of poor women. At the same
-time, I was often so poorly that if I had had means to get a little
-help at times it would have been a blessing. My husband has never
-earned more than from 23s. to 25s. a week, and many a time I have had
-to go without many a thing that would have done me good. When I was
-expecting my last baby, I think it was with going such a long time,
-and the others, some of them at work, and coming in to meals. I know I
-used to get the dinner cooked and struggle through the serving, then I
-was done, and was obliged to lie down a bit, often without my dinner,
-as I was too exhausted to eat, and the pleasure of the rest was partly
-spoiled by the thought of the dinner-table still laid. A bit of help
-then would have been a boon. But having a good husband smoothed many
-things over. But this shows that many a woman is unable to do her work,
-and if the husband is a thoughtless man, or even a bad one, her lot is
-a hard one indeed. Then, after confinement, women should not be obliged
-to work, in my opinion, for three weeks, but most working women have
-to do. I never could possibly keep a woman more than a fortnight--and
-the struggle during pregnancy of saving up 30s., which was the sum we
-always aimed for, and it was a big job. Some weeks I have had to be
-content with putting 3d. away, with the hope of 9d. next week to make
-it into a shilling. To my mind, this is one of the hardest tasks a
-working woman has.
-
- _Wages 18s. to 25s.; seven children._
-
-
-112. THIRTEEN BIRTHS AND FOUR MISCARRIAGES.
-
-I am afraid many mothers, like myself, will find it almost impossible
-to explain our sufferings. During pregnancy we do not all suffer alike,
-but to me it was nine months of misery. But I had to work all the time.
-My husband’s wages were only £1 a week, and he had to lose all wet
-weather. With my fourth child he was out of work twelve weeks in the
-bitter winter. I worked as dressmaker with a machine nearly night and
-day, and when the baby was brought into the world with instruments, I
-nearly lost my life, and could not be moved for nearly a fortnight. My
-ninth son, I was working at a lady’s house when near my confinement,
-and in putting down a carpet I hurt myself very much, and was very ill
-until my baby was born, and then he was born a cripple--would have
-always walked on his ankles, with the soles of his feet together. But
-I used to take him to the hospital for a long time, and he is able to
-get his own living now. So you will see it takes all energy and hope
-and joy out of a woman’s life, when they have to work the whole time
-through no fault of their own or their husbands, but just to keep the
-home together.
-
- _Wages £1; twelve children, one still-birth, four miscarriages._
-
-
-113. AN AGRICULTURAL LABOURER’S DAUGHTER.
-
-I have only had one child, a daughter, who is now six years. I had been
-married eight years when she was born, but have had no miscarriages. I
-was very well when I was pregnant. The mothers in the Guild were most
-kind in advising me during pregnancy, at the time and after. I weaned
-her at nine months, and she is one of the bonniest girls one can see.
-
-My husband, _when in work_, earns a good wage. It has been his
-experience to be out of work many times, for varying lengths of
-time--once for fourteen weeks--that soon after our child was born.
-
-In an agricultural district, large families and small wages
-predominate. I am the second child of a family of twelve, and as my
-father’s earnings were very small it always meant my mother working
-too--hop-tying, gathering fruit, harvesting, and even picking stones
-off fields. As soon as each of us was old enough we had to work very
-hard; at ten and eleven years of age I worked in the fields, and
-did shaving poles, etc. My mother had to pay 9d. and 11d. per week
-school money, out of her little, for us, and I am thankful to her for
-educating us as she did, never keeping us away to mind babies, as a
-great many did in those days. I am nearly thirty-nine now, and free
-education had not come in then.
-
- _Wages 24s. to 40s.; one child._
-
-
-114. “NO REST FOR MOTHERS, NIGHT OR DAY.”
-
-I remember it was a very big struggle to get all that was quite
-necessary for ourselves and the expected baby. Although my experience
-was far before thousands of others--should I say, women, when I was
-only just turned eighteen?
-
-In the first place, I felt a doctor would be too expensive, so only had
-a midwife. Things were not just right with baby, so I had to call in
-a doctor and pay £1 5s. My nurse I only engaged for a fortnight, then
-thought I could manage, but I took cold, and had a most awful gathered
-breast, and had to go back to bed again for another week or two. When
-my baby was five months old I began to turn against my food; was
-nursing baby at the time, so did not think for one moment I could be
-pregnant again, but it was so. When the second one came, the first was
-unable to walk, I can assure you. You need not wonder at women doing
-all they can to prevent having big families, for there is certainly no
-rest for mothers night or day.
-
-I can tell you I saw but very little pleasure the first part of my
-married life. I married in 1884. I had two children, lost one, and
-lost my husband by consumption in June, 1887. He needed the best
-of everything. It used to cost nearly 5s. per week for one sort of
-medicine he felt did him good, so you see there was very little to do
-with. I was only twenty-two when he died. I believe now, when I think
-about it, my baby could have been spared had I had more experience;
-although I did my best and was a good mother, as far as lay in my
-power, but there was no one to advise me. So you can imagine ours was
-one continual struggle from beginning to end, and then not so bad as
-many others. When I look back on that time I feel very sad. I believe
-my husband was in receipt of £1 5s. per week, but I am not quite
-sure; he was a policeman, so it was regular, and of course not many
-clothes to buy. Living in a village, our rent was small. This will, I
-am afraid, be little to assist you, but it is all I can tell you. It
-would not be possible to tell you all one feels with one baby and the
-expected one, and all work to do. No one could imagine who has never
-been through it.
-
- _Wages 25s.; two children._
-
-
-115. PROPER CARE.
-
-With regard to myself, fortunately I have always had the proper care,
-with the result that I had normal times.
-
-My first child (a boy) died when he was eight months old. My health
-broke down, and he had to be taken from the breast, no food agreed with
-him, convulsions set in, and my loved one died. I was three years,
-then had another (a girl). Two years and nine months after that I
-had another girl. Both these are now fine young women. The proposed
-scheme to “link up the State with the home and the municipality under
-one authority” is just what is wanted in all towns and cities. Much
-suffering would be saved and many lives spared.
-
-From the advice that mothers have been able to get at the “Baby
-Welcome” here, many babies’ lives have been saved. But this is
-voluntary, and a fortnight ago a week was set apart to go from house to
-house for subscriptions in every district, as the work could not go on
-without funds.
-
- _Wages 27s. 6d. to 35s.; three children._
-
-
-116. EIGHT MISCARRIAGES.
-
-I have not had any children to bring up, but I have had the misfortune
-to have had eight miscarriages, the last one as far back as 1898, when
-I had to go to the infirmary for an operation, and I have not had any
-since. But you must understand they have not been brought on by neglect
-or ill use, but by my having a severe attack of influenza in 1891
-before I was married, which left me with weakness of the womb. I had to
-be attended by the doctor every time.
-
- _No child, eight miscarriages._
-
-
-117. NEED FOR MUNICIPAL MIDWIVES.
-
-I have had two average children--one a boy aged nine years, the other
-a girl aged four years. As regards pregnancy, I had general good
-health--though I felt rather faint at times in the first and second
-month--up to the seventh month, and then I used to feel rather bad
-some days--cramp in my legs, etc. I have been able to keep my house
-going up to the time of confinement (my husband being a mechanic, I
-had to do the housework and washing and cooking). I must tell you I am
-a teetotaler, and during pregnancy I used every morning to take fine
-groats with plenty of milk. I still took them every morning and evening
-after my babies were born, and I had sufficient milk for them until I
-weaned them, starting from ten months and finishing them altogether at
-one year. Neither of them had any fits or convulsions, my boy’s first
-illness being at the age of five and half years, and my little girl
-has not had an illness yet. At the present time they are both well in
-health. I think I should dearly like to see State maternity nurses, for
-this way there is the greatest difficulty in securing a nurse. I know
-from one or two of my friends and from my own experience we were all
-greatly worried at not being able to secure good nurses. As you are
-aware, many of them drink, and others don’t care to come when there
-are other children to look after. I had a doctor, and had to pay 14s.
-a week for a nurse. I think expectant mothers should not be allowed to
-work in factories, etc., when they are pregnant, for you want as much
-fresh air as possible.
-
-Taking an average year, with all holidays, I think my husband’s wages
-would amount to 35s. weekly. He is in the black line and a Socialist,
-and we both cannot think how working people, especially Co-operators,
-can be otherwise.
-
- _Wages 35s.; two children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-118. EASY CIRCUMSTANCES.
-
-As you will see on the attached form, I am not able, as a mother, to
-give my experience of suffering during pregnancy or after childbirth. I
-was able to have good attention both before and after the birth of my
-boy, so that any special information other than the ordinary childbirth
-pains I cannot give.
-
-I suppose my experience will go to prove that proper attention to
-health, such as you wish expectant mothers to have, would do away with
-a good deal of the suffering and pain connected with maternity. The
-opinion of myself and my husband is that none but skilled doctors and
-nurses should attend at childbirth. I have known many cases in our
-district where the ordinary midwife has had mothers in pain for hours,
-only to send for a doctor in the end.
-
- _One child._
-
-
-119. NOTHING UNUSUAL.
-
-Nothing unnatural or unusual seemed to happen in my case.
-
- _Wages 35s. to £2 5s.; three children._
-
-
-120. SOCK-MAKING AT TWOPENCE A PAIR.
-
-I will give you the following concerning my married life. First let
-me tell you I was in the place I was married from just five years as
-children’s maid. I was twenty-five, my husband twenty-six the day we
-married. Many, including my relatives, thought I ought to have married
-better. I had been engaged previously, but he turned out to be not the
-God-fearing man I thought. Then our married gardener asked me to tea,
-and I met my husband that is now, a true follower of Christ. And I must
-tell you, the two years we courted we only missed Church twice. I soon
-saw he had won my heart, but his wages was then poor, but I remembered
-my dear mother’s words--money does not bring happiness; and so we
-were married against the wishes of my friends, and took two rooms and
-furnished them. But, oh! I soon found out how hard it was to keep our
-little home on 24s. a week, 7s. for our two rooms. Then I got a night
-now and again waiting at table with the lady I had lived with and her
-friends. How I pleaded to be kept all right, as I could not see our
-way clear to have a baby in the home, and I would not, could not, let
-any of our friends know the hard struggle I had. I have a dear, loving
-husband, who agreed we would like a baby, but had no means of providing
-for it. I must tell you I had bad health (bloodlessness) before I was
-married, which cost me a lot of money. Then when we had been married
-two years I found I was in a certain condition. I hid my condition, and
-went still waiting at table, until after a big dinner I fainted, and
-had to own I was so. Then came the shortage of money. I began to stint
-myself in order to provide for my little one. Many a time I have had
-bread and dripping for my dinner before my husband came home, and said
-I had my dinner, as I would not wait. Then I was ill, and had to have
-the doctor. He said I was run down, and away went some of the little
-store I had been able to get together. I would not let my friends know
-how we stood, remembering what they said before I was married. Then
-came headache after headache, as I worried to know wherever was all
-the money to come from to provide the funds for doctor and nurse. My
-sister, who was very proud, and unmarried, engaged me a nurse at 14s.
-a week for three weeks. She thought she was helping me by seeing that
-I had a good nurse, but this only added to my worry. Then my husband,
-thinking to help me get the money, had a knitting machine on the hire
-system, and made socks and stockings. I had to sew up the toes and
-press them into shape. I could not get them right for a long time, and
-this added another worry, as we had to pay each month for the machine,
-which was a failure. I worked hard at them right up to the time my boy
-was born. Oh, my poor head, how it ached, as I tried and tried to do
-them right; and we only got 2d. a pair for making them, and my husband
-used to walk to the city to the shop with them. (They found the wool.)
-I had a very bad confinement, and the baby was almost gone when it
-came into the world. I had no strength to go through. The doctor would
-not allow me to see anyone for nine days. This was twelve years ago.
-My boy, although fat, suffers so much with his head. He had a brain
-and nerve breakdown two years ago, and was ill eleven months. One day
-the doctor said: “How were you when you carried this child?” Painful
-though it was, I told him all. “Ah,” he said, “now we know the cause
-of all this trouble.” I have suffered with my head ever since. His
-heart also is slightly affected. If only I could have gone to someone
-who would have understood, not my relatives, and got some nourishment.
-All this that he now suffers, I am sure, is the result of my having to
-work and worry so much while I was carrying. I might say the nurse was
-very extravagant, and the second week I lay so ill I missed a photo
-machine my husband had, and learnt--oh, it is almost too painful to
-write--that he had pawned it for 7s. 6d. to help get me nourishment.
-He said: “Never again will you go through this. You are too dear to
-me.” Well, six years ago, my boy being six years old, my husband had
-got on, and his wages increased. We had a little girl, which we had
-always longed for, only to lose it as soon as it came into the world,
-for I have no strength in my inside (the doctor said) to bring a child
-into the world. All this weakness, you see, the result of the first
-confinement. Of course, now, the doctor says it would not be safe for
-me to have another child. I have a dear loving husband who does all in
-his power to keep me right. But it is hard to think if I had another it
-would go or be delicate. Now is there not great need for a place where
-a young mother could go and get advice and, if necessary, nourishment?
-I was one who thought I could do a lot on a little a week, and when I
-found out my mistake would do anything rather than let my friends know
-their words had come true. I remember when carrying my baby to have to
-wait for a loaf of bread until my husband came home at five with his
-money, as I always paid down for all we had. I must tell you we have
-been married fifteen years and are _very, very_ happy.
-
- _Wages 24s.; one child, one still-birth._
-
-
-121. NATURAL TIMES.
-
-During these times I have been well looked after, and had quite natural
-times.
-
- _Wages 23s. to 45s.; three children._
-
-
-122. IRONING AND KNEADING IN BED.
-
-I was married one year and five months before my first boy was born.
-I nearly lost my life. I was in labour from 1 o’clock in the morning
-until 7.5 at night. Then the doctor used instruments. He stated I had
-worked too hard, and not rested sufficiently, but I could not afford a
-girl. My husband then was only getting £1 1s. per week, and 5s. rent
-had to be paid out of it. The second baby came fifteen months after....
-I had no milk for either. I was in labour with the second from Monday
-dinner-time until Tuesday night. Then the doctor gave me an injection
-of warm water; as I was torn so badly before, he did not want to use
-the instruments. Two years after I had a miscarriage.... I then had
-to lie in bed for a whole month. I kept a small girl, and I used to
-do my own ironing and knead my bread in bed unknown to the doctor. I
-had a bed put down in the small parlour to save the girl and children
-running upstairs. I feel sure that if I had had a maternity benefit
-then to help me, I should not be suffering now inwardly. No mother
-can stay in bed very comfortably knowing things are going on anyhow
-while she is in bed. Then, again, during the time she is carrying the
-child, her mind is troubled, and she becomes fretful, hence a fretful,
-delicate child. The mother, when funds are low, goes without much food,
-pleading headache, etc., so as to try and blind her husband. I think
-an expectant mother should rest at least half an hour every day, and
-especially towards the last should have no heavy work to do, such as
-washing and ironing. The extra weight she is carrying naturally throws
-the humours into her legs, the veins standing out like thick cords,
-and at night she cannot sleep for cramps and aches. The child is the
-asset of the nation, and the mother the backbone. Therefore, I think
-the nation should help to feed and keep that mother, and so help to
-strengthen the nation by her giving birth to strong boys and girls.
-She does not require weaklings, and insufficient food and overwork and
-worry is the root of this weakness, both in the case of mother and
-child. I only hope that sick visitors should see that it is the mothers
-that are getting the benefit of the maternity benefit, and not the
-husband, and often the landlord.
-
- _Wages 20s. to 23s.; two children._
-
-
-123. TEA AND SUGAR PUT AWAY.
-
-My experience of child-bearing has been very painful, owing to an
-inward growth. Each confinement was a very critical time--in fact, with
-the last one I nearly lost my life, and was told by my doctor never
-to run the risk again. Fortunately for us all, I have a thoughtful
-husband, or, of course, it would have made the home very unhappy.
-During the time of pregnancy I used to put a little away every week,
-perhaps one week tea, another sugar, and so on, as my husband’s wages
-were small, and I could not go out to work, not being strong. I am sure
-the 30s. the mothers get now would have been a great boon in my case.
-It would have saved a lot of worry as to ways and means. No one knows
-what it means to a mother at such times, what contrivances she has to
-make things eke out. I think myself half the suffering in after-life is
-brought about by worrying to make ends meet at such times. In my own
-case, how much I have to be thankful for with a good, steady husband!
-I honestly think no woman should have less than £1 per week for
-housekeeping purposes, and how many thousands have far less! I should
-like to see all workers receiving a living wage, as then I think most
-of the trouble would be met.
-
- _Wages 20s. to 30s.; three children._
-
-
-124. SIX TO FEED ON SIXTEEN SHILLINGS.
-
-I have only had four children, but I am pleased to say I have had what
-we call comfortable times. But I must tell you, since I had my second
-one, my husband has only earned 16s. a week. I have had a very hard
-struggle to get through, but, thank the Lord, I have done it. If the
-Maternity Benefit had been in force, then it would have made it much
-better. I think the scheme is a beautiful thing, and I think the women
-should have it. But we have not all got the same kind of husbands.
-Mine is a very good husband. I was very queer after my last was born,
-but what could you wonder at--that money to keep six of us? But we are
-getting over the hardest place, I hope. My eldest is thirteen.
-
- _Wages 16s. to 22s.; four children._
-
-
-125. “WORKED TOO HARD AS A GIRL.”
-
-I have been married seventeen years, and have had four children. My
-first, a boy, was born two years after marriage. The second was twin
-boys, born two years and six months after the first. One of these was
-still-born. During the whole time of second pregnancy I was very ill
-and unable either to work or walk about without great pain, the result
-of trying to do just the necessary housework. At my confinement, the
-after-birth came first, then the still-birth, and the living child came
-last. This was very dangerous to me, and I was unable to leave my bed
-for three weeks, and I was at least three months before I was in my
-usual health. My third child was born nine years after second (a girl)
-the after-birth again coming first, the baby being born nine hours
-after. She lived six hours, and was convulsed from birth. The doctor’s
-opinion was that I had worked too hard as a girl lifting heavy weights,
-therefore weakening the whole system. It is high time that something
-was done by the Government to lessen the sufferings of mothers, which
-has always been hidden as something not to be talked about.
-
- _Wages 36s.; three children, one still-birth._
-
-
-126. A STRONG WOMAN.
-
-I have not a word to say against any of my child-bearing or pregnancy
-times, as I have been a strong woman, and have a very good husband. But
-I always provide for such times. I always had a doctor and midwife, and
-someone to look after my home, and always stop in bed a long time. I
-have not had any use for instruments or chloroform. But one thing, I am
-a life abstainer, and my mother before me, and my husband is also, and
-I think this has a great deal to do with the difficulties of pregnancy.
-I have always been able to do my home duties, with the exception of
-washing, and I have not always done that. I was twenty-two years when
-my first baby was born. My youngest is now eleven years, and I am in
-my fifty-second year, and am enjoying splendid health, and am a busy
-woman.
-
- _Wages 24s. to 40s.; seven children._
-
-
-127. WINE LODGES SHOULD BE CLOSED.
-
-I have not had or gone through so much pain and suffering as many poor
-mothers have to go through.
-
-It was during pregnancy I did suffer through my own ignorance. I had
-a most devoted mother, and was carefully brought up, but on this
-subject she failed. I was the youngest of three girls, and not even my
-sisters, who were both married before me, did I ever hear any mention
-of this.... I was in my twenty-fourth year, so I was not too young to
-be instructed. It would have been very much better for my health if I
-had received some knowledge of this. I feel so glad you have given me
-this opportunity to just say something on the subject. I have recently
-visited one of our prisons, and find that the greatest number of women
-and girls who have fallen through drink have commenced to form this
-habit with it being given to them when young girls, and again when
-they become mothers. Of course, we know it is a weakness, but when a
-mother, nurse, or doctor could just as well give them many things which
-would do far more good for them, and save them from this. If we could
-only rise up in a body, we Guildwomen, and close the wine lodges, we
-could save our young women! It is there where the White Slave traffic
-often starts, and these women will tell you. I could give you several
-accounts of these poor downcast creatures, but I am afraid I would be
-going away from the subject you are anxious to gain all information.
-I was in Mrs. R.’s Home for Infants yesterday, and I saw there quite
-enough to know what kind of mothers and fathers those babies must
-belong to. They do not get enough food or rest before these mites
-come into the world. If we could have afternoon classes for our young
-married women, and give them good instruction and knowledge for them
-to be able to be quite prepared to carry out when the time comes! We
-have had in our Guild this session some splendid evening lectures from
-doctors and nurses; but when I call round before we have these lectures
-and ask the young mothers to come to the meetings, they are busy with
-the home duties or children, so I think afternoon classes for a short
-time would do a great amount of good.
-
- _Wages 45s. 6d. to 60s.; one child._
-
-
-128. “OFTEN WENT SHORT OF FOOD.”
-
-It is so long ago since I had all these babies, that I almost forget,
-but I was married young, and was always delicate on the chest, as I am
-still. I had children very fast, seven one after another, not more than
-a year and nine months between them, and in one case only one year and
-two months. Then I lost a sweet little girl, aged four years and eight
-months. She was ill a fortnight, and I nursed her night and day. I was
-so done up with attending her and the grief, that I had a dreadful
-miscarriage which nearly cost me my life. I had to work very hard to
-do everything for my little family, and after that I never had any
-more children to live. I either miscarried, or they were still-born. I
-have had two miscarriages in a year, one in January and one in August.
-My husband’s standing wage was 28s., but he made a little overtime
-sometimes, which I always tried to put by for doctor and nurse. The
-doctor’s fee was £1 1s., and I had no nurse under 1s. a day--viz.,
-7s. or 8s. per week, and their food, etc. I looked after my husband
-and children well, but I often went short of food myself, although my
-husband did not know it. He used to think my appetite was bad, and that
-I could not eat. I never worried him. He was steady, and gave me all he
-could. You may guess I was always scheming and planning to make ends
-meet, which was not good for me or the unborn baby. But I always tried
-to keep a bright face, and made the best of things, and all my doctors
-have called me plucky. I wish I had had the 30s. the mothers have now;
-it would have taken a load off anyhow....
-
- _Wages 28s.; seven children, three still-births, four miscarriages._
-
-
-129. AN AGRICULTURAL LABOURER’S WIFE.
-
-I was married twenty-five years ago. My husband is an agricultural
-labourer, and was then earning 10s. per week, an extra shilling because
-he was the milkman, and went twice on Sundays. Could you afford more
-children on that? _NO._ His wages are now 15s. per week, but we are now
-forty-seven years old. I wish I could have had 30s. In my case it was
-one year’s illness, nine months before and three months after. With my
-last I had dropsy, and was quite unable to walk for three months before
-baby was born. There was no money coming in, only barely enough to get
-bread and a small piece of butter or dripping for the four of us. You
-will perhaps understand we did not want any more family. We could not
-afford it. We love children, both of us, and often say we wish we had
-a larger grown-up family now we are getting into years. Our silver
-wedding is next Christmas.
-
-I am by trade a leather-glove maker, my earnings helped to keep the
-home. The labourer of to-day is not so well off as we were, although
-they now get 16s., as food is so much dearer.
-
-With all good wishes for our nation’s welfare.
-
- _Wages 10s. to 15s.; three children._
-
-
-130. TEN SHILLINGS COMING IN FOR TWELVE WEEKS.
-
-After my first-born, everything went on all right, but after my second,
-I was very ill with my breasts, but, of course, I put that down to my
-husband’s lack of work. He was thrown out for twelve weeks just as baby
-was born, and, of course, it was a dreadful worry to me. Fancy 10s.
-coming in for twelve weeks, 5s. 9d. for rent out of it, and a new baby.
-I am not the only one, but I felt I could never have any more, as much
-as I love children, and now, after eleven years, the thought of it
-makes me feel ill. During the time of pregnancy I suffered dreadfully,
-and my heart goes out to all my poorer sisters, and if there is
-anything I can do to help in any way, I am at your service. Of course,
-I am far from strong, but as long as I can, I am quite willing to help.
-
- _Wages 34s. to 38s.; two children._
-
-
-131. CONSOLED HERSELF WITH AN ORPHAN BOY.
-
-I have been married thirteen years and have no children. I have had
-seven miscarriages, all under six months. My own opinion is that the
-first was brought on by an unqualified midwife that I had to call in
-to see me at a moment’s notice, for instead of letting me lie quiet,
-she acted with me as though it was a full-time child. And all the
-other miscarriages have followed as the result of the first. My mother
-is a qualified midwife, but was too far away at the time. I have
-suffered untold agonies through these miscarriages. My health is all
-undermined. The doctor has told me that I would probably give birth to
-a full-time child, but I should have to stay in bed for the first six
-months. I am glad our Guild is taking up these things, for the woman’s
-sake, for there is many a childless woman to-day through neglect. I
-have consoled myself by adopting an orphan boy, who is the sunshine of
-my life.
-
- _Wages 23s. to 28s.; no child, seven miscarriages._
-
-
-132. “THE TERRIBLE SUFFERING I ENDURED.”
-
-The first part of my life I spent in a screw factory from six in
-the morning till five at night; and after tea used to do my washing
-and cleaning. I only left two weeks and three weeks before my first
-children were born. After that I took in lodgers and washing, and
-always worked up till an hour or so before baby was born. The results
-are that three of my girls suffer with their insides. None are able to
-have a baby. One dear boy was born ruptured on account of my previous
-hard work. Two of my lads, one married is a chronic sufferer, and
-has three children; another, the one that was ruptured, has outgrown
-that, but he is far from a robust lad. I can only look back now on
-the terrible suffering I endured, that tells a tale now upon my
-health. I could never afford a nurse, and so was a day or two after my
-confinements obliged to sit up and wash and dress the others.
-
-My husband’s wages varied owing to either hot weather or some of the
-other men not working. I have known him come home with £3 or £4, and I
-have seen him come home with _nothing_; and when earning good money, as
-much as 30s. has been paid away in drink. I had three little ones in
-two years and five months, and he was out of work two years, and during
-that time I took in washing and sewing, and have not been near a bed
-for night after night. I was either at my sewing-machine or ironing
-after the little ones had gone to bed. After being confined five days
-I have had to do all for my little ones. I worked sometimes up till
-a few moments before they were born. I do hope I have not done wrong
-in relating so much of my past, and that it may be of some use in the
-furthering of our scheme.
-
- _Wages £3 or £4 to nothing; ten children, two miscarriages._
-
-
-133. MATERNITY BENEFIT “INTENDED FOR THEMSELVES.”
-
-I was married when nineteen years of age, and my first baby was born
-just nine months after, and that was before I was twenty. My second was
-born two years afterwards, and, owing to ignorance, I got up too soon
-after confinement, and it has left me with a weakness that I suffer
-from now. I think that a woman is anxious to get about too soon, but
-now that the Maternity Benefit provides for proper nursing, women
-should be made to understand that the money is intended for themselves.
-It is more knowledge and help that women need.
-
-I hope that you will get a great amount of information on this
-important subject.
-
- _Wages 20s. and house; two children._
-
-
-134. AN AWFUL STRUGGLE.
-
-First child, very sick early period, and when labour set in kept it to
-myself; baby born before doctor arrived. Got on well.
-
-Second, through reaching high shelf, child had to be turned, causing
-good deal of suffering. Child died at three months, undergoing
-operation for nerves. Doctor said caused by rick or strain at birth.
-Miscarriage caused by fright. Did not understand it; got up next day,
-went about usual duties.
-
-Third child, usual symptoms. Fourth ditto. Second miscarriage, hard
-work and lifting bath of water, being very weak. Doctor said would
-have been twins. Fifth child born on stairs, no ill-effects. Third
-miscarriage, very ill. Sixth child very ill, caused by lifting out of
-bed sick child. The bladder obstructing the way, and child could not
-be born only by replacing it. Labour lasting from Thursday morn until
-Saturday noon. Seventh and eighth child quite natural.
-
-When we were married, thirty-one years ago, my husband was a framework
-knitter. Having learnt his trade thoroughly, he was capable of earning
-from £2 to £3 weekly, but we had only been married a fortnight when,
-through the introduction of machinery, he was out of work. In less
-than two years his earnings was 11s. to 16s. weekly. Our rent was 5s.
-3d., but I let the two front rooms. The third year he was out twelve
-weeks, only earning 2s. 6d. the whole time. No one would employ him; he
-looked pale, and his hands, owing to using silk and cotton, were soft
-and clean. One man told him he was not the sort of man for field-work.
-However, he got a job as rural postman, earning 15s. a week, leaving
-home 5 a.m., returning 7 p.m. In order to supplement his earnings, he
-hired a room and mended boots, but some people did not pay him, and he
-had to give it up. Then a manufacturer found he could still do with a
-little hand-work, but alas! things were no better; some weeks he earned
-20s., some weeks less.
-
-There were five of us to keep, so I got some work from the factory,
-and if I worked hard I could sometimes earn 8s. I would rise at 6
-a.m., get my housework done by 10 a.m., sending the two little ones to
-school, and, except for meals or attending to my little ones, worked
-till 12 p.m. I was then within a few weeks’ birth of my little one,
-but--oh, how can I tell you!--one night on looking up from my work, my
-husband was looking ghastly. But that looking up saved my life; he told
-me after he was anticipating taking my life and my little ones’ and his
-own. But he feared his courage would fail him before he finished. I
-reached my Bible from the shelf (it was my custom to read every night)
-and went to bed. But think of it!--a kinder, better man it would be
-difficult to find.
-
-When I could not get shirt-finishing, I used to seam hose--2-3/4d. for
-twelve pairs--and when my baby was born I had 5s.; I gave it to the
-midwife. My husband had influenza, and we were both in bed ill. He had
-earned 8s., and I gave that to nurse and dismissed her. The ninth day I
-was downstairs doing some washing--sitting, of course--and I sent for
-some work, but could not do much, my eyes were so weak. I never thought
-to appeal to our friends to help us, but I wrote and told of the birth
-and said work was very bad.
-
-A builder wanted a handyman, and sent for my husband, and gave him
-work--20s. a week. My husband was so handy he kept him on as carpenter,
-and he attended continuation classes with our elder son, and from that
-he went to the Technical Institute, and about eight years after we came
-to ----, he had learned the second trade of carpenter, and gets the
-rate because he is trade unionist, and has been ever since he started
-as carpenter. It was he who tried to instil co-operative principles
-into me, but I think it was the “divi” had the greatest influence, and
-the rest I learnt in the Guild room; and I say, God speed co-operation,
-the greatest blessing possible for the people. We seldom ever refer
-to our dark days, we are so happy now with our children. The baby No.
-8--it was all right. I could draw a £2 divi--the most I ever had for
-confinement.
-
- _Wages 11s. to £1; eight children, three miscarriages._
-
-
-135. RAG-SORTING.
-
-Her husband was a bricklayer’s labourer, and the woman did rag-sorting
-to help with the living, and used to wheel sacks full of rags on a
-sack-barrow to the warehouse. The wonder to me was that the babies
-were born alive, though it was never stated that it was through this
-that the children died soon after. My own impression was that it had
-something to do with it. As a mother myself I would not have dared to
-have attempted to do what that poor woman had to do, and I am thankful
-to know that something is being done to try and alleviate these poor
-women. As a Bible woman who visits in and out of the homes of the poor,
-my heart aches as I see how some of these poor women have to work
-during pregnancy, and how little comfort they have at the time, and how
-soon they have to begin work again, before they are fit, and I believe
-many poor women suffer for life through having to get about too soon.
-
- _Wages 23s._
-
-
-136. “I WONDER HOW I LIVED.”
-
-I do not know that my experience of child-bearing has differed much
-from the women of my class. I was a factory girl, and an only child. I
-was married at twenty, and the mother of three children by the time I
-was twenty-three. I was totally ignorant of the needs of my children or
-how to look after myself as I should do, and now I look back, I wonder
-how I muddled through, for that is really what it was, a muddle all the
-time, and it was more by fortune than wit that I have reared my first
-two children to maturity.
-
-When I look back to that first three years of my married life, I wonder
-how I lived through it. I was weak and ill, could not suckle my second
-baby. And then a third baby coming along made my life a continual
-drudgery, and to crown my misfortune my husband fell out of work, and
-I had to do shirt work at home in order to keep a roof over our heads.
-My third baby was very tiny and thin when born. I put this down to the
-worry and the shortness of food which I had to put up with, and though
-he lived till he was three years old and died from diphtheria. It was a
-happy release to me, as he was an epileptic, and I thanked God, much as
-I loved him, that he was taken from this life, where even sound people
-have a difficulty to exist.
-
-I do not think I was very different in my pregnancies to others. I
-always prepared myself to die, and I think this awful depression
-is common to most at this time. And when bothered by several other
-children, and not knowing how to make ends meet, death in some cases
-would be welcome if it were not the dread of the children. “How would
-they get on without their mother?”
-
-My husband was fortunate enough, just after the loss of my third child,
-to get regular work, and I never bore another child under such awful
-conditions. But I believe that I felt the effects of it in all my other
-pregnancies.
-
-After the first three living children, I had three still-born children.
-I was six months advanced when I fell downstairs over a stair-rod,
-which killed the child, which was born after forty-eight hours’ labour,
-and perhaps it seems wicked to you, but I was glad, because it left my
-hands free for a time to look after the other two, for I was fearfully
-weak and ill. After a lapse of two years I had another seven-months
-baby born dead, and again, after another two years, a five-months
-still-born child, all three still-born children being boys. I had a
-miscarriage after this of two months, and when I was thirty-five years
-old had my last baby, who is now living, nine years old.
-
-I do hope you will not feel that this letter is morbid, and that I
-delight in writing horrors, for I do not, and had you not asked for
-information I should never have written this all down. It is strictly
-true, and when I look back to my early married life I could cry for the
-girl who endured so much for life that was wasted. I am fairly healthy
-now myself and have much to thank God for--a loving helpmeet and
-dutiful children--so please do not think I am miserable, for I am not,
-for I believe--in fact, I know--that there is a brighter day dawning
-for the mother and child of the future.
-
- _Wages 21s. to 30s.; four children, three still-births, one
- miscarriage._
-
-
-137. FIVE STILL-BIRTHS.
-
-Mine is rather an exceptional case. Through being left without a mother
-when a baby--father was a very large farmer and girls were expected to
-do men’s work--I, at the age of sixteen, lifted weights that deformed
-the pelvis bones, therefore making confinement a very difficult case.
-I have five fine healthy girls, but the boys have all had to have the
-skull-bones taken away to get them past the pelvis. Always a case for
-two or three doctors, so you will know I have suffered something. I
-wish more could be done to train young girls to be more careful. Over
-my first baby I was eleven months before I could walk again. A woman
-ought, in my opinion, to be treated more or less as an invalid during
-pregnancy. I suffered most with sickness and swollen legs, terrible
-bad carryings. You cannot follow up with work as you ought to do.
-I suffered with a terrible bearing-down pain all through carrying.
-I often wonder how some poor women do that have such very fast
-confinements every twelve months and no care at all bestowed on them.
-
- _Wages 20s. to 22s. 6d.; five children and five still-births._
-
-
-138. A WEAVER.
-
-My first baby was born before I was twenty. I was a weaver, and worked
-hard until after the eighth month. I had a very hard labour, and cannot
-tell you very much, as I was unconscious before the baby was born. The
-first thing I knew was my mother standing over me trying to keep me
-awake. The doctor said I was not to go to sleep for two hours, or I
-should not waken again. The child was a big boy, and was crushed with
-being born and obstruction. Then inflammation took place, and he only
-lived four days. I was soon downstairs again and at work. I was seven
-years before I had another--a girl; then I had another boy. The two
-are now grown up, and I have said good-bye to weaving. I hope my two
-children will have a better time than I have had.
-
- _Wages 19s. to 23s.; three children._
-
-
-139. DRUGS.
-
-I know personally of many mothers who have had very dreadful times
-of sickness all through the time, and others who have not been able
-to have the necessary food to strengthen them--some through having
-bad or careless husbands, others through shortness of work; and, I
-am sorry to say, those who have felt they would not carry children,
-some because of bad husbands, others because they felt they could not
-properly feed and clothe those they had. There are three who lost
-their lives, and another who has already had seven. These all took
-some kind of drug, and of course did the work they wanted it to do.
-The doctor felt sorry for this woman and could not blame her. She has
-had difficulty in rearing these seven. When she was able to get out, I
-saw her and talked seriously to her, but she said: “Mrs. ----, I will
-not have any more by him, and I should not have cared if I had died.”
-She loved her children, and has had months of sleepless nights with
-each of the seven. It seems to me, had Government awakened to its duty
-years ago, seeing to it that the mothers and children should have what
-was necessary, mothers would not have minded having the children, had
-they known each little one would be provided for. We should now have a
-stronger and healthier race of men and women. One does not wonder at
-the sickly boys and girls one meets in the streets, especially when one
-knows under what circumstances they were born, and how and what their
-mothers had to bear before they came.
-
-
-140. GOT UP THE FIFTH DAY.
-
-I feel that we women ought to discuss this question, because working
-women often suffer terribly at these times with having to get up soon
-after confinement: I myself being a great sufferer with bad legs
-through getting up on the fifth day, although I had a doctor and
-midwife to attend me. But I lived in a place where the women and girls
-went to work in the mills, and could not get a woman to stay in the
-home, and I was often left without for many hours. When the midwife
-came, she advised me to have a bottle of stout and biscuits beside the
-bed; but I refused, because I had never taken stout, and I thought no
-food better than that. And I have trouble to this day with my legs.
-Although well cared for during the last two confinements, it has never
-remedied the unfortunate position of the first confinement.
-
- _Wages 30s.; three children._
-
-
-141. A FAMILY OF FIFTEEN.
-
-I have had a very large family (fifteen). Out of all these confinements
-I have only had my husband in work at the time twice. Several times he
-was sick, and other times it was hard winters, and as he was in the
-building trade, he could not work if very frosty or very wet, so you
-will see that I have known what it was to be often very short. With
-this result, that when my sixth child was born, my health failed, which
-would not have been the case if I had not had to go short. I also had
-so much worry, and was unable at the time of carrying the child to have
-any help, however poorly I felt. For a number of years I was in a very
-weak state of health, which the doctor said was the result of not being
-properly looked after.
-
- _Wages 24s. and upwards; fifteen children._
-
-
-142. “MUCH DEPENDS ON THE HUSBAND.”
-
-I had my children several years apart. I must say that I was much
-better in health during pregnancy, and up to the time of the birth of
-the child was able to do most of my work. Kneeling, I found, was the
-worst thing, which I was careful to avoid, but a certain amount of
-exercise did me good. But it was after confinement that I had to be
-very careful. I could never sit up in bed for a fortnight, and it was
-a month or five weeks before I could come downstairs. That was the
-time I wanted all the nourishment I could get. Of course, there is a
-difference amongst women, as I know of some that suffer for months
-before with dropsy and various other things, then as a rule they are
-much better afterwards. Much depends on what kind of a husband the
-wife has. Worry must be a great drawback to a woman in that state. I
-am thankful to say my experience has not been a bad one, as all my
-children were healthy and strong. A woman cannot possibly get on if she
-has a bad, worrying husband. I think that makes a lot of difference.
-
- _Wages 36s.; four children._
-
-
-143. PROBLEM OF HOUSEWORK.
-
-I am bound to say that I have never had bad times, neither before nor
-after birth. Of course, I have tried to obey the laws of Nature, taking
-plenty of exercise, good plain food, avoiding constipation--all three
-very essential things in such cases. Also, I have had home comforts, a
-husband who has studied me in every respect during the time. Some women
-are dreadfully sick all the way through, which is much against both
-the child and herself. I am never sick from beginning to end. The most
-difficult thing at the time is securing a woman who is able and willing
-to do housework, and look after the woman at the same time; that to
-me is one of the greatest problems in the Maternity Scheme to-day. If
-something could be done to organise such women, then it would mean
-much. A midwife simply goes and washes the baby and sees to the mother
-once a day for a week, but when the mother gets up, she often has more
-loss, and therefore feels her weakness.
-
- _Wife’s allowance 18s. to 30s.; six children, one still-born._
-
-P.S.--I could give you many very wretched cases, as I am on the Guild
-of Help Committee, also the N.S.P.C.C., so come across a lot of sad
-cases--in fact, I have a case on my list just now where the woman has
-had thirteen children under fourteen years. Twelve are living, the last
-two being born this week. I visited her before the children were born,
-to see if she was having sufficient food for herself and family, as
-her husband was unable to work, suffering from nystagmus. She said she
-had only been able to eat dry toast for weeks, her throat and chest
-were so bad. The woman at this time is very ill, and has two babies to
-consider. Her husband has done nothing for ten weeks. These are the
-cases we want to fight for.
-
-
-144. BAD MEDICAL ATTENDANCE.
-
-I have had three children. There was one year between the first
-and second, two years between the second and third. I have had no
-miscarriage, and no still-births. But I have been very ill at times
-ever since my children were born. I can assure you that some doctors
-are very neglectful at these times. This you will see when I tell you
-about myself at these times. My first child was a boy, and I nearly
-lost my life because the doctor did not bring his bag containing the
-necessary instruments for use at these times, and his home was five
-miles away. So I can assure you I was nearly gone when the child was
-born. Then, when I had the second one--which was a girl--the very same
-doctor (there was only one doctor within miles then) came nearly
-drunk, and I had a frightful time. What is called the after-birth had
-grown to my side, and he never got it all away. I had milk fever first,
-and then childbed fever. I lost all reason, never knew a soul for just
-three months. Then I had to go under an operation to have the substance
-got away, which left me in a very bad way, the child being eight months
-old when I was able to get up. And, still worse, I had nearly the same
-thing to go through over the third, through not being able to get a
-doctor, and had a midwife who was not very experienced. I had to be
-taken to the hospital, and the doctors told me there I should never
-have any more children through the way I had been treated at the last
-childbirth, and I was very pleased to hear it, I can assure you, after
-what I had gone through. My youngest child is just twenty years old,
-and I have never had any since, but I love children, and I think they
-are a blessing to every good mother. I know I shall have to suffer
-while I live through being neglected at childbirth. The Maternity
-Benefit would have been a godsend to me while I was having children.
-
- _Wages 14s. to 20s.; three children._
-
-
-145. ILLNESS COSTING NEARLY £20.
-
-I have only had one child, a girl, and I had a most fearful time, which
-nearly cost me my life. I got up and tried to get about, as I had only
-engaged my nurse for three weeks, and I thought I must try, as time was
-going on, and I was in agonies all the time. The doctor had left me,
-and the nurse I had assured me it would pass off as I got stronger,
-and instead I grew worse and worse, until my husband would call in the
-doctor again. I had a fearful time. The womb had got twisted, and
-was lying on the back passage, and inflammation set in. It was worse
-than a confinement. What I went through! I was in bed ten weeks, and
-it was more than three months before I could even lift my baby or do
-anything. I had to be sat with day and night, and have nourishment
-every fifteen minutes. The woman I had to nurse me, who was recommended
-to me by the doctor, swarmed me with vermin, and there I was helpless.
-Only my husband and a neighbour to attend to my head, until the doctor
-sent the district nurse, and she saved my life. She was so good, and
-kind, and clever, one of Queen Alexandra’s Nurses she was. I am so glad
-the Certificated Midwives are doing such grand work. We have one here
-in the town, and I may say she has all the cases now, and is always
-very busy, and is so good, and clean, and careful in the home. What
-we working women want to-day is a friend in the time of need, not a
-nuisance, the same as I had. It cost me nearly £20, my illness. Had it
-not been for our little nest-egg invested in our Co-operative Society,
-where should I have been? What a blessing this Maternity Benefit is! I
-trust I shall never require it.
-
- _Wages 27s.; one child._
-
-
-146. SPECIALIST’S ADVICE NEEDED.
-
-My case was rather an extraordinary one, and emphasises that the
-National Care of Maternity ought to be brought into force at once.
-Through no fault of my own, I suffered from St. Vitus’s dance, caused
-through pregnancy, and was under three local doctors, and also engaged
-a trained nurse, but at the last moment they decided I must go into
-hospital, as my case was so bad. The physician said that in a case
-like mine local doctors were not worth six a penny, and if I had gone
-to hospital at the commencement, I would never have got to the state
-in which I unfortunately was. The local doctors told me I could not
-be cured until the child was born, but the physician in hospital said
-it was ridiculous. If I had gone four months earlier, I could have
-been cured, and come home for the child to be born. I had no mother to
-give me advice, and the same makes me very strongly in favour of Moral
-Hygiene being taught in schools, so as not to leave girls ignorant of
-the functions of pregnancy and motherhood. Cases like mine should be
-brought to light in order that some poor souls in the future will be
-saved from going through the same as I did.
-
- _Wages 27s. 6d.; one child._
-
-
-147. A SMALL PRIVATE INCOME.
-
-I really did not suffer much during that time, and always had good
-confinements. I am one of the few working men’s wives who have a small
-private income, so I am thankful to say I have never felt the pinch.
-
-
-148. “NINE MONTHS OF MISERY.”
-
-I wish to give you a little on the sufferings of mothers in pregnancy.
-I myself might say it is a matter of nine months misery for me while I
-am in that condition. I might say I was married twelve months when I
-had my first--a little girl--and four years after we got a little boy,
-a fine child, born. But I had contracted a severe chill, and it was
-all on my chest; and having baby on the breast, it drew the cold from
-me, and with that took ill of catarrh of the stomach, and died at four
-months. Being in a weak state myself, I again found myself pregnant;
-but at the eight months the child was born dead, it being the second
-boy. Two years after I had another girl, but it was when work was
-slack, and my husband could get very little work, and it became so bad
-that we had to sell part of our home to keep ourselves, and the time I
-should have had extras and somebody in to look after me this was out of
-the question. Now, two years after, again I had another girl (my last,
-I hope). I might say that, although sick and ill all the time I was
-pregnant, I soon got over it when the time was up. I have known some
-poor souls go days and weeks in their labour, and then have to have
-instruments and chloroform, and after nearly coming to death’s door
-have had to be stitched and syringed and doctored for months.
-
- _Wages 20s. to 22s. 6d.; five children, one still-born._
-
-
-149. EVERY HELP.
-
-I have been in the fortunate position of being able to have every help
-at those times, added to which my youngest child is turned twenty-six
-years, and time has obliterated much that I suffered at those times. My
-husband was earning 9d. an hour. We afterwards started in business for
-ourselves.
-
- _Two children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-150. “SHOULD NEVER HAVE HAD CHILDREN.”
-
-I have not got one healthy child among my five, not because I did
-not get well looked after, but they are suffering through the past
-generation. My first child is now a man of twenty-seven, married, but
-has had a paralysed arm from two years old (a milder form of which was
-a family trouble). The second one died. My third, a daughter, is almost
-an invalid, through nerves, and has developed a state of “catalepsy”
-whenever she is overdone. She was trained to be a shorthand typist,
-but is unable to follow out same, as it excites her nerves. She is
-now a waitress, half time, and teaches music, to enable her to keep
-herself. The fourth suffers from congenital heart, and is always ailing
-more or less. She is a dressmaker. The fifth is now nine years old, and
-suffers from malnutrition, and is always ailing, but a clever child
-for her years. We have always been able to provide everything required
-to keep them in good health. But in the light of the knowledge I have
-got since I was able to grasp what things are, I have often said I was
-one of the women who should never have had children, as from a girl I
-was always ill, right through my married life till now. I have done
-child-bearing, and am now in better health than I can remember. I was
-married when I was twenty.
-
- _Wages 35s. to 45s.; five children._
-
-
-151. SYSTEMATIC PREPARATION.
-
-I am glad you are trying to emphasise the need for _knowledge_ on
-the part of the mother, as my own experience has proved that, given
-knowledge as to health and the care of the body generally before
-childbirth, much of the evil which now accompanies this perfectly
-natural thing might be avoided. In my own case, having always suffered
-considerably at every monthly period, and not being of a particularly
-robust type, I made up my mind to go into training before bringing
-children into the world, in order not to have to pass out at the same
-time, and leave them to the tender mercies of others. Accordingly, I
-adopted a vigorous system in order to harden the body, and soften the
-hip and abdomen muscles, etc. This consisted of cold sponge baths,
-followed by certain exercises while lying flat on a mattress. Then a
-rubbing of the body in sweet oil. The whole was done in ten or fifteen
-minutes every morning. Vegetarian diet was strictly adhered to, as
-this produces a cleaner, healthier child. My nurse, who laughed at all
-my “fads,” remarked on the fact that the child had not the grease,
-etc., on it at birth which most babies have. A month before the time
-of birth, I left off all bone-making food such as bread, so that the
-birth should be easier, through the absence of very hard bones in the
-child. As I did not do my own housework, for exercise I walked twelve
-miles every day in rain, snow, etc. The baby was born in January, and
-the day before I took a ten-mile walk, had my cold bath, etc., and that
-day fortnight was out walking again, testifying plainly to the fact
-that a little care and attention and knowledge will work wonders, and
-the birth was a perfectly natural one.
-
-Women make a great mistake in feeding overmuch at this time, and
-bringing fat big babies into the world. Mine were designedly small,
-but they made up for it after birth, and will compare favourably with
-any now. From the first month after birth they had cold baths, sun
-baths, wore one garment, only wear two coverings even in winter, sleep
-winter and summer in the open, never wear hats or stockings. Shoes are
-only worn occasionally, as they are barefooted in house and school.
-The eldest is in her tenth year, and neither have had anything but
-whooping-cough and measles when there was an epidemic of these, and
-they had them lightly.
-
-Women should be taught to give up corsets, which, besides all the
-other evils laid to their charge, damage the nipples. I nursed both my
-children, and my doctor remarked on the splendid nipples I had for the
-purpose. This was due to the absence of corsets, and to washing them
-every morning in cold water, and then rubbing the breasts with oil. I
-have seen women with scarcely any nipples trying to feed babies, and
-have pitied both.
-
- _Wages of husband and wife £3 10s. to £4; two children._
-
-
-152. “HAD TO GO OUT TO CLEAN AND PAPER.”
-
-My husband’s wages have been as high as £5 a week and as low as 7s. in
-the winter, as they cannot work either in the rain, frost, or snow.
-So it means saving in summer to tide over winter. My hardest time of
-child-bearing was when my last one was born, it being the sixth child,
-all living. My husband had been out of work for eighteen weeks when
-there was such depression. I had to go out to clean and paper when I
-was six months pregnant, and I am suffering with varicose veins to-day
-as the result.
-
-In reference to myself during pregnancy and confinements, I suffered
-mostly with morning sickness, swollen, aching legs, and a dragging at
-the left side, which has always resulted in the after-birth growing to
-my side, and has brought on a flooding before it could be removed, but
-in all my confinements I have had a qualified doctor, or I am afraid my
-life would have been lost.
-
- _Wages 7s. to £5; six children._
-
-
-153. “A TROUBLESOME LIFE.”
-
-When I was married some forty to forty-five years ago, there was no
-consideration as to the future conditions of wifehood and motherhood.
-
-In business myself, after the death of my dear father, I married a
-business man, widower with four children. I told him when I married I
-would not come into the business; however, he gave me no rest until I
-came back. I had to care for an invalid mother, that was why I longed
-for a home again. I soon found out what a mistake I had made. I had
-my children fast. One year and five months between, and one year and
-seven months, and much about the same with five children. My husband
-was exacting as regards his children, but careless of me. I had a very
-happy childhood; my father was a good man, my mother a gentle creature.
-I lost her, and then nervous debility set in through overstrain and
-persecution. I lost a little girl from consumption of the bowels. I
-was then a wreck. I began to recover for my children’s sake, but I
-separated from my husband, and took my four children with me, and began
-to make a living for myself. He provided 5s. a week for each child
-whilst he remained in England. He went abroad, made money, left me to
-struggle, and when he died, left me nothing; the money was willed to
-each of his and my children. By that time there were only two of mine
-left out of five, and four of his who received their full share. I have
-had a troublesome life.
-
- _In business; five children._
-
-
-154. CASES OF LABOURERS’ WIVES.
-
-(_a_) Husband, labourer, but when at work spends most of his earnings
-in drink. Now four children under six years. The last one born died,
-aged five months, of consumption. Mother consumptive. I should say all
-the children are consumptive. Mother is, and I should say always has
-been, in a starved condition. A woman that would give the food to the
-children and starve herself, having always practically two babies in
-arms, and unable to go out to work, if she could obtain it, to bring
-a little money in the home. It would also be wrong to give her work,
-even her home duties being too much for her strength. No help wanted
-for the man in this case. He’s too artful to starve, but wicked enough
-to live to continue a cause for anxiety. Nothing but food or death of
-husband or wife will alter this case. A sad case; a hard problem to
-solve.
-
-(_b_) Husband, builder’s labourer. Wife employed at laundry. Five
-children under eleven years of age. Husband out of work ten weeks
-previous to wife’s confinement. During the time the home depending
-solely upon the wife’s earnings. Wife, owing to lack of nourishment,
-in a very low, weak condition, and suffering much from varicose veins.
-Fourteen days prior to birth of child, being practically unable to
-stand, gave up her duties at laundry. The following day a vein burst; a
-very serious case. None of the previous children are very strong; but
-what about the last one, with the mother practically starved prior to
-its birth?
-
-(_c_) A very similar case. Husband a labourer; work uncertain. All
-money he earned goes into the home. Eight children under eleven years.
-Woman always much underfed, owing to insufficient money coming into the
-home. She is never well.
-
-
-155. FORTY-SEVEN NIECES AND NEPHEWS.
-
-I may say that I have been fortunate in being able to have good care
-and a good doctor. Had I not been able to have it, I should have
-certainly lost my life when my still-born child was born. I was very
-ill for six weeks after, and I know what an expensive time it was. When
-I tell you that I am aunt to forty-seven nieces and nephews, all of the
-poor working class, you will understand that I have seen something of
-the struggle with poverty at such times, some having to get out and
-attend to the home before the child was eight days old. Knowing all
-this, I am out to help do all I can to hasten the day when every man,
-woman, and child shall have all the good things of life which is theirs
-by right.
-
- _Wages average £1; three children, one still-born._
-
-
-156. “A LAW TO STAY IN BED TEN DAYS.”
-
-I think there is a good deal of room for improving a mother’s condition
-during pregnancy and after childbirth. I myself have had nothing to
-complain of, only ignorance in things which made me suffer more than
-I had any need to while I was carrying my children, being young and
-away from all my friends; and my mother, being one of the “old school,”
-thought it wrong to talk to her girls of such things, and it always
-made us feel shy of asking her anything. But my youngest is now in his
-twelfth year. But I must say I have got a good husband, and we made
-that condition years ago, that as the boy grew up he would enlighten
-him, and I was to do the same by our girl, who is now fourteen years
-old. And one thing I think should be imposed on mothers is to have a
-doctor at confinements, and not to trust to midwives. I have seen a
-lot of neglect here with different people I have been with at those
-times. Certainly the midwife washes the mother after the birth of the
-child, but not again is the mother washed until she can do it herself.
-I think, myself, if there could be a law to make every mother have a
-doctor, and to stay in bed for at least ten days, and to be treated as
-an invalid for another fourteen days, it would save a lot of suffering.
-The women would get stronger, and not so liable to have children so
-quickly. A case in point only two doors away from me; the mother was
-confined on the 21st; on the 26th she was getting about her work as
-usual. Would a doctor have allowed that? The person is only about
-twenty-three years of age, and her last baby is only thirteen months
-old. Another case I was called in to some years ago. I did not know the
-person, only by sight. Her husband came and called me in the middle of
-the night. When I got there the child was born. No preparation had been
-made for either mother or child. From what I gathered, both parents had
-gone to bed drunk overnight. Isn’t it awful, a woman getting in that
-state, knowing at any time she might give birth to an innocent little
-baby? It was not poverty that had brought them to that state, as the
-man’s earnings were £2 a week, but all the man and woman had thought of
-was drink.
-
- _Wages 36s. to £1; two children._
-
-
-157. “THOUGHT WE MUST PUT UP WITH IT.”
-
-I must say I have been more fortunate than some of our dear sisters.
-My husband always saw that I was attended to and did not want for
-anything. I had very bad times before and after, and was obliged to
-have help in for several months, and after each turn it left me with
-something or other. Once I lost the use of one of my hands, and the
-doctor said it would never get better, but however, I went to another
-doctor, and he cured me in a few weeks. He said it was the nerves. Our
-savings in the Stores have been a blessing to us, and helped us over
-the stile more than once. I often wondered how women could go out to
-work at those times, when I could not do my own. I firmly believe that
-if we could get better medical advice beforehand, there would not be
-so much suffering, and no doubt if I could have got better advice, it
-would have been better for me. But, of course, I thought we must put
-up with it, and they would only laugh at me. But however, times have
-altered, but too late for me.
-
- _Wages 20s. and upwards; seven children, one miscarriage._
-
-
-158. STRIKES, OUT-OF-WORK, SHORT TIME.
-
-I have had nine children. I was two years between my first three
-babies. I suffered least from these three, but for about six weeks
-before birth, and six after, I could scarcely get about--pains all
-over, with a very bad back, and very much swollen legs and feet. Being
-a little, light-made woman, my confinements were very severe.
-
-My fourth baby died when six weeks old--a cross-birth. Was much torn
-in consequence, so had to be stitched a good deal; was bad, and could
-scarcely get about at two months after. Neither before for weeks, nor
-after, could I have offered to have washed, baked, or done any work
-of any moment. Every confinement after this I got worse and worse.
-The same thing happened. Very sick for three or four months before
-confinement, pains all over, very bad back, legs and feet very much
-swollen; could not lie in bed long at a time, could get very little
-rest or sleep; impossible to wash, bake, or do much housework. But
-had a very good husband, who helped me all he could, and some sisters
-who came in turn and did as much as they could in my home for me. My
-husband’s wages were very small at times, sometimes only 18s. a week,
-other times £1 a week, and up to 30s. In my husband’s trade wages is
-very much up and down. Then we had a strike of eleven weeks, then short
-time for five months, then out of work fifteen weeks; and when one of
-my children was born three weeks, then over two years working four days
-per week. So you see there was not much money to get nourishment with.
-That all happened during the time I was having my children, so of
-course I was pretty put to sometimes. I could not have afforded to get
-anyone in the house if I had had to pay them all the time that I needed
-them, but had to prepare for a nurse each time, as I had to have one
-for a month at least, and after that month my sisters help. We had to
-do the best we could.
-
-My last two confinements I was not able to come downstairs for about
-three and four months--no strength to walk, no appetite, and with being
-so much torn had then to come downstairs for a long time on my hips
-(slide down, as it were). When able to get about, could scarcely walk
-owing to my condition.
-
- _Wages 18s. to 30s.; nine children._
-
-
-159. REST AND GOOD FOOD.
-
-I have been one of those fortunate individuals who, during pregnancy,
-have very good health. My greatest suffering was caused by varicose
-veins, which, of course, are very painful at such times.
-
-I was blessed with a good mother, who gave me good advice on the
-necessity of taking care of myself during this period, and having also
-the best of attention at confinement, and plenty of rest and good food,
-neither of these being lacking. I can only imagine a woman’s feelings
-under different conditions.
-
-My confinements (five) were, however, hard, bad times, brought about by
-some obstruction. This I have always put down to the fact that at the
-age of thirteen I began to learn dressmaking, which entailed sitting
-long hours at a stretch, at a time when the bones were in rather a soft
-state. A midwife whom I had engaged as nurse during my last confinement
-quite agreed that this was most likely. I could not say whether this is
-common among dressmakers or not.
-
-After confinement always seemed to me to be one’s weak time, and
-especially with nursing mothers with fine, healthy babies. I nursed
-four, the last being still-born, and always found that about three
-months after their birth my strength failed, and doctor’s advice had to
-be sought, when with tonics he managed to bring me right.
-
-You see my experience will not be of much use to you, but this is
-exactly how I have felt during these times; in fact, during pregnancy
-it was much harder for me to be still than to work hard physical work.
-
- _Wages just under £2; four children, one still-born._
-
-
-160. “EIGHT TO KEEP ON ELEVEN SHILLINGS AND THREEPENCE.”
-
-In the first place, being short of money is one cause of suffering. I
-am the mother of five children, three girls and two boys. I have not
-had a doctor to any of my confinements, but nearly lost my life and
-child’s through the first one. The midwife was a qualified woman, but
-addicted to drink (which I found out afterwards). I was confined on a
-Thursday at 2.30 p.m., after many hours of suffering, and she never
-came near me again until late on Saturday night. Fancy me! Oh, the
-horror of it makes me shiver when I think about it. We were almost
-strangers where we were living. I had my mother staying with me, but
-the night before baby was born, she chopped the end of her finger
-right off, which made her feel very bad. She was in pain herself, and
-I was ignorant of the danger I was in, not being properly attended to.
-Mother was afraid of blood-poisoning. My husband was working nights at
-the time. We, like many more, had not got a very good start. He fell
-out of work about two months after we were married, and was out for
-a long time. I had to go to my home and he his, for from the first
-months of pregnancy I suffered greatly. When he started and worked
-again, I had to part with my machine (which I had paid for before I was
-married) to pay for rent; it was hard lines. Then he got work back,
-so we had to move back again--another expense. So you will see we had
-our trouble when baby was born. I had hardly got enough of anything,
-let alone doctor’s money. I paid the nurse 7s. 6d. I had only been
-confined barely three weeks when my husband was out of work again. The
-first Saturday night I went out shopping after baby was born, I had
-1s. 7-1/2d. to get meat, grocery, and all else to live on till some
-kind friend came along, which was my mother, her home being near. She
-brought me a little rent, and a few shillings to carry us on for a week
-or two. I was afraid to spend any till my husband got work, which was
-after many tramps from place to place. I managed to get some work to
-do, but caught a cold and chill, which caused me to have a gathered
-breast, which nearly killed me. I did not know my own for days. They
-took me over from ---- to ----, and thought I should die on the way
-there. My father soon had a doctor to see me. He told them it would be
-a struggle to pull me through, but after a time I gained strength to
-go back to ----, and as my husband had got work again, he needed me
-at home. Then after a year and ten months, my baby girl was born. I
-should tell you I was twenty-eight years old when I was married, and
-I had been married eleven months when my first baby was born, and I
-can truthfully say I was ignorant of anything concerning married life
-or motherhood when I was married. In fact, when the midwife came to
-me when I was in such pain, I had not the slightest idea where or how
-the child would come into the world. And another thing, I was not even
-told what to expect when I was leaving girlhood--I mean the monthly
-courses. I often wonder I got along as well as I have. I will say here
-that I do not intend my daughters to be so innocent of natural courses.
-I feel it is unkind of parents to leave girls to find these things out.
-It causes unnecessary suffering. I often wonder, when I hear some of
-our women grumbling about the trouble and bother of signing and getting
-the papers filled in for the 30s., how they would have been in my
-place, and how thankful I should have been for it.
-
-When my girlie was eighteen months, I had a baby boy. I did think I had
-a handful; they seemed three babies. A friend of mine had the little
-girl till I got up again, which was generally ten days. Oh, what rest
-is there for a woman when money is so scarce? They say, “Don’t worry.”
-Well, what can you do? Well, I got over No. 3 fairly well, as I had a
-young woman to look after me for _one_ week. I forgot to tell you, the
-day after No. 2 was born, my husband was sent away to work, so I did
-not see him again till she was ten days old, and I had to borrow money
-to get along with till he did come back. When No. 4 was born, I had
-a trying time. Six weeks before she was born, my three children were
-down with scarlet fever; two had it very badly, but the one only very
-slightly; they came downstairs on the Sunday for the first time. Then
-my baby was born the following Tuesday. The children were not allowed
-to see me, but the father had to look after them a good deal, as I had
-his young sister to look after me. I got up on the tenth day, and then
-my husband had the fever. We were both ill in bed together. Then I had
-another gathered breast. The doctor lanced it, and it ran for fourteen
-weeks after. Then I had a whitlow on my right thumb. During the time
-my husband was ill, my young sister, though she was married, came to
-help to look after us all. I only had 11s. 3d. a week to keep eight of
-us on; can you wonder a woman’s strength gives way? I must also say my
-husband was not in a doctor’s club, so we had a bill to pay for him. I
-and the children are in a friendly sisters’ club, but the doctor does
-not attend confinements; that is a separate item. So you see I have
-known a bit of trouble. When No. 5 was born my oldest girl and boy
-had to look after me. The other two were sent away, one to ----, the
-other to ----. I had 26s. a week to keep and clothe, pay rent, fire and
-light, and clubs for seven of us, till my oldest started work.
-
-I think if I had been able to have a doctor at the first I might not
-have suffered as I have, and do at present, as I had occasion to
-be examined once, and my doctor told me I had been neglected at my
-confinement. Oh, I do feel sometimes, if I could only tell some of the
-young girls things they ought to know, how much better some might be;
-but we have got such a class to deal with. The young girls who have
-babies, they only laugh at us if we say anything. I do feel one cannot
-be too careful about one’s thoughts and actions during pregnancy;
-therefore, if one has not enough to live on, and get necessary life
-comforts, it naturally tells on the child and mother’s life, as
-child-bearing is such a strain, especially when they come so close to
-one another. What can a woman do but worry, when she knows there is so
-little to live on. I hope you do not think ill of my husband through me
-complaining. He has given me all the money he earned, and I have done
-my best--at least, I think so. I have had to fare hard and work hard; I
-don’t know what the reward will be. ---- is not like a town. There is
-nothing here but the pits for the boys, and the girls have to go away
-from home to earn a living.
-
-I think if it had not been for the Women’s Guild I should have been in
-the asylum. It has helped me along. I was the first member made after
-the Committee was formed. I was secretary for over four years. Home
-duties were the cause of my resigning, but I never miss a meeting. I
-have only missed four times since I joined. I would not miss my Guild
-for anything but illness. I am pleased we are to have Moral Hygiene
-Classes. We are having a speaker on the subject a fortnight to-morrow.
-
-I hope I have not taken too much of your valuable time in reading this.
-I am suffering to-day through my first being not properly attended
-to--at least, I think so; but that was because I had no means of paying
-a doctor, as they expect their fee, whether anything else is paid or
-not. I thank Lloyd George for maternity benefit, but I do wish the wife
-and mother could have been insured. Who works harder than us mothers? I
-often say we work twenty out of twenty-four hours very often. Some days
-I don’t sit down hardly to snatch a mouthful of food. There seems no
-time for women, but the men make time. If we did, we should have to be
-a day behind, and we don’t get much Sunday rest. I am forty-eight now,
-so I hope I’ll have no more.
-
- _Wages 17s. to 25s.; five children._
-
-[Illustration: BRADFORD MUNICIPAL INFANT HOSPITAL.
-
-(_Reproduced by kind permission of the Bradford Health Committee._)]
-
-
-
-
-METHOD OF INQUIRY
-
-
-The following questions, with a short letter, were sent to about 600
-members who were, or had been, officials of the Women’s Co-operative
-Guild, of whose family histories nothing was previously known. The
-letter asked these members to bring out in their replies what they
-“have felt about the difficulty of taking care, the ignorance that has
-prevailed on the conditions of pregnancy, and how these conditions
-result in lack of health and energy, meaning that a woman cannot do
-justice to herself or give her best to her husband and children.”
-
-The questions asked were:
-
-1. How many children have you had?
-
-2. How soon after each other were they born?
-
-3. Did any die under five years old, and if so, at what ages and from
-what causes?
-
-4. Were any still-born, and if so how many?
-
-5. Have you had any miscarriages, and if so how many?
-
-Replies were received from 386 Guild members, covering 400 cases, a few
-of which were not those of members of the Guild.
-
-A second letter was sent later, asking for particulars of wages and the
-occupation of the husband. The wages given at the end of the letters
-represent as far as possible the actual amount received, not the rate
-of wages.
-
-Of these letters, 160 are published. The remainder describe similar
-conditions.
-
-Out of the total number of the cases, at least two-thirds indicate
-conditions of maternity which are not normal and healthy.
-
-
-OCCUPATIONS OF HUSBANDS
-
- Agricultural labourer.
- Asylum attendant.
-
- Baker.
- Blacksmith.
- Boat-builder.
- Boiler-maker.
- Boot operative.
- Blast-furnace man.
- Brass finisher.
- Bricklayer.
- Brush finisher.
-
- Cabinet-maker.
- Carpenter and joiner.
- Carpet weaver.
- Cartwright.
- Carriage-maker.
- Chef.
- Civil servant.
- Clerk.
- Cloth puller.
- Coachman.
- Colliery workers:
- Banksman.
- Coal-tipper.
- Engineer.
- Joiner.
- Machine clerk.
- Miner.
- Official.
- Cooper.
- Cotton-spinner.
- Cycle-maker.
-
- Diamond worker.
- Dyeing and cleaning worker.
-
- Electrician.
- Electro-plate worker.
- Engineer.
- Engineer’s fitter.
- Engine-fitter.
-
- Foundry worker.
- Framework-knitter.
-
- Gardener.
-
- Insurance agent.
- Iron-miner.
- Iron-moulder.
- Iron worker.
-
- Jewel-case maker.
-
- Labourer.
- Laundry manager.
- Leather worker.
- Lift-man.
- Lithographer.
- Loom-mender.
-
- Machine-fitter.
- Motor mechanic.
- Municipal fireman.
-
- Naval artificer.
- Naval schoolmaster.
- Naval seaman.
- Navvy.
- Nurseryman.
-
- Painter.
- Paperhanger.
- Plasterer.
- Plumber.
- Plumber’s labourer.
- Policeman.
- Postal employé.
- Potter.
- Printer.
-
- Quarryman.
-
- Railway workers:
- Engine-driver.
- Porter.
- Signalman.
- Telegraph clerk.
- Road foreman.
- Rope-maker.
-
- Sailor.
- Scientific instrument-maker.
- Screw-maker.
- Shaper.
- Sheet-metal worker.
- Shipwright.
- Shipyard-plater.
- Shop assistant.
- Shopkeeper.
- Silk worker.
- Silversmith.
- Stoker.
- Stonemason.
- Stonemason’s labourer.
-
- Tailor.
- Tape-sizer.
- Teacher.
- Telegraph labourer.
- Timberyard worker.
- Tin-box maker.
- Tinplate worker.
- Tool-maker.
-
- Waggon-builder.
- Warehouseman.
- Watchmaker.
- Weaver.
- Whitesmith.
- Wood-cutting machinist.
- Wood-turner.
-
-
-
-
-FIGURES BEARING ON INFANT MORTALITY
-
-
-_Still-births and Miscarriages._
-
-In collecting the letters, the object was not to obtain accurate
-statistics, but a general picture of the conditions of life during
-the period of maternity. It is, however, possible to give fairly
-accurate figures showing the proportions of the number of still-births,
-miscarriages, and deaths from pre-natal causes and injuries at birth,
-to the number of live births.
-
-Of the 400 cases, 26 were childless, and 26 did not give definite
-figures. The number of families to which the following figures refer is
-therefore 348.
-
- Total number of live births, 1,396.
-
- Number of miscarriages, 218 (15·6 per 100 live births).
-
- Number of still-births, 83 (5·9 per 100 live births).
-
- Total of still-births and miscarriages, 301 (21·5 per 100 live
- births).
-
-Of the 348 mothers, 148 (42·4 per cent.) had still-births or
-miscarriages. Twenty-two had both still-births and miscarriages,
-37 had still-births, 89 had miscarriages. Of the 111 women who had
-miscarriages (including 22 who had still-births also)--
-
- 2 women had 10 miscarriages each.
- 1 woman had 8 miscarriages.
- 1 woman had 7 miscarriages.
- 3 women had 6 miscarriages each.
- 2 women had 5 miscarriages each.
- 6 women had 4 miscarriages each.
- 9 women had 3 miscarriages each.
- 17 women had 2 miscarriages each.
- 70 women had 1 miscarriage each.
-
-Of the 52 women who had still-births (including 22 who had miscarriages
-also)--
-
- 1 woman had 5 still-births.
- 1 woman had 4 still-births.
- 3 women had 3 still-births each.
- 9 women had 2 still-births each.
- 45 women had 1 still-birth each.
-
-_Infant Deaths._
-
- Total number of live births, 1,396.
-
- Total number of deaths under 1 year, 122 (8·7 per 100 live births).
-
-Of the 122 deaths, 26 took place in the first week of life, 12 between
-the first week and first month, and 23 later, owing to ante-natal
-causes or injury at birth.
-
-Thus, 50 per cent. of the deaths occurred either within the first month
-or from ante-natal or natal causes after the first month.
-
-Of the 348 mothers, 86 (24·7 per cent.) lost children in the first year
-of life.
-
-
-
-
-LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD MEMORANDUM
-
-MATERNITY AND CHILD WELFARE
-
-
-A complete scheme would comprise the following elements, each of
-which will, in this connection, be organised in its direct bearing on
-infantile health:
-
-1. Arrangements for the local supervision of Midwives.
-
-2. Arrangements for--
-
- { (1) An ante-natal clinic for expectant mothers.
- { (2) The home visiting of expectant mothers.
- _Ante-Natal._ { (3) A maternity hospital or beds at a hospital,
- { in which complicated cases of pregnancy
- { can receive treatment.
-
-3. Arrangements for--
-
- { (1) Such assistance as may be needed to ensure
- { the mother having skilled and prompt attendance
- { during confinement at home.
- _Natal._ { (2) The confinement of sick women, including
- { women having contracted pelvis or suffering
- { from any other condition involving danger
- { to the mother or infant, at a hospital.
-
-4. Arrangements for--
-
- { (1) The treatment in a hospital of complications
- { arising after parturition, whether in the
- { mother or in the infant.
- { (2) The provision of systematic advice and treatment
- { for infants at a baby clinic or infant
- { dispensary.
- _Post-Natal._ {(3) The continuance of these clinics and dispensaries,
- { so as to be available for children
- { up to the age when they are entered on a
- { school register--_i.e._, the register of a public
- { elementary school, nursery school, crèche,
- { day nursery, school for mothers or other
- { school.
- { (4) The systematic home visitation of infants
- { and of children not on a school register as
- { above defined.
-
-
-LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD, WHITEHALL, S.W.
-
-_July, 1914._
-
-
-
-
-SUMMARY OF THE NOTIFICATION OF BIRTHS (EXTENSION) ACT, 1915
-
-
-The main provisions of the Act having reference to England and Wales
-are:
-
-1. That the notification of births and still-births is made compulsory
-in all cases.
-
-2. That the powers of Sanitary Authorities for dealing with maternity
-and infancy are extended to County Councils.
-
-3. That a Committee or Committees may be set up for exercising these
-powers, which must include women and may include other than members of
-the Authority.
-
-The clause referring to this committee reads as follows: “Any such
-powers may be exercised in such manner as the Authority direct by a
-committee or committees, which shall include women, and may comprise,
-if it is thought fit, persons who are not members of the Authority.
-Any such committee may be empowered by the Authority by which it is
-appointed to incur expenses up to a limit for the time being fixed by
-the Authority, and, if so empowered, shall report any expenditure by
-them to the Authority in such manner and at such times as the Authority
-may direct. A committee appointed for the purposes of this section
-shall hold office for such period, not exceeding three years, as the
-Authority by which it is appointed may determine.”
-
-As regards Scotland and Ireland, the powers conferred are considerably
-larger, as the Local Authority “within the meaning of the principal
-Act may make such arrangements as they think fit, and as may be
-sanctioned by the Local Government Board for Scotland (or Ireland), for
-attending to the health of expectant mothers and nursing mothers, and
-of children under five years of age within the meaning of Section 7 of
-the Education (Scotland) Act, 1908.”
-
-The clause as regards administration by committees including women
-applies also to Scotland and Ireland.
-
-
-
-
-NOTIFICATION OF BIRTHS (EXTENSION) ACT, 1915
-
- LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD,
- WHITEHALL, S.W.
- _July 29, 1915._
-
-SIR,
-
-I am directed by the Local Government Board to bring to the notice of
-the Council the provisions of the Notification of Births (Extension)
-Act, 1915, which has recently been passed.
-
-The objects of this Act are to make universal throughout the country
-the system of the Notification of Births Act, 1907, under which early
-information concerning all births is required to be given to the
-medical officer of health, and also to enable local authorities to make
-arrangements for the care of mothers, including expectant mothers, and
-young children.
-
-At a time like the present the urgent need for taking all possible
-steps to secure the health of mothers and children and to diminish
-ante-natal and post-natal infant mortality is obvious, and the Board
-are confident that they can rely upon local authorities making the
-fullest use of the powers conferred on them.
-
-
-_Notification of Births Act, 1907, to extend to every District._
-
-The Act provides that on and after the first of September next the
-Notification of Births Act, 1907, described as the principal Act, shall
-extend to and take effect in every area in which it is not already in
-force.
-
-In the case of a county district the principal Act will come into
-operation as if it had been adopted by the Council of the urban or
-rural district.
-
-The principal Act provides that in the case of every child born within
-the district it is the duty of the father of the child, if he is
-actually residing in the house where the birth takes place at the time
-of its occurrence, and of any person in attendance upon the mother at
-the time of, or within six hours after, the birth, to give notice in
-writing of the birth to the medical officer of health of the district.
-This notice must be given in the case of every child which has issued
-forth from its mother after the expiration of the twenty-eighth week of
-pregnancy whether alive or dead.
-
-The notice is to be given by prepaid letter or postcard addressed to
-the medical officer of health, giving the necessary information of
-the birth within thirty-six hours after the birth, or by delivering a
-written notice of the birth at the office or residence of the medical
-officer within the same time. The local authority is required to supply
-without charge addressed and stamped postcards containing the form of
-notice to any medical practitioner or midwife residing or practising in
-their area who applies for the same.
-
-The Act also provides for penalties for failure to notify a birth in
-accordance with the Act.
-
-It will be the duty of every local authority in whose area the
-principal Act comes into force by virtue of the new Act to bring
-the provisions of the principal Act to the attention of all medical
-practitioners and midwives practising in the area [Section 1 (3)].
-
-The Board wish especially to call attention to Section 1 (2) of the new
-Act, under which the medical officer of a county district, for which
-the principal Act had not previously been adopted, will be required
-to send duplicates of any notices of birth he receives to the county
-medical officer of health as soon as may be after they are received.
-The early receipt of these duplicate notices is important, particularly
-in facilitating the inspection of midwives, and the Board trust that
-arrangements will be made under which the duplicates are as a matter of
-routine immediately transmitted to the county medical officer.
-
-
-_Administrative Arrangements under the Act._
-
-Section 2 of the Act provides that for the purpose of following up the
-information obtained under the powers of the principal Act and for
-facilitating arrangements for the care of expectant mothers, nursing
-mothers and young children, all the powers of the Public Health Acts
-may be exercised. These powers will be available not only to all
-sanitary authorities, but also to all County Councils other than the
-London County Council. In London the powers of the Public Health
-(London) Act, 1891, will be available for work undertaken in regard to
-the care of mothers and young children by Metropolitan Borough Councils.
-
-It will be seen, therefore, that the Act definitely contemplates that
-the powers of sanitary authorities will be used to promote the care of
-mothers and young children.
-
-The Board are anxious to insist on the importance of linking up this
-work with the other medical and sanitary services provided by local
-authorities under the Public Health and other Acts. They have already
-in their circular letter of the 30th July, 1914, on the subject of
-Maternity and Infant Welfare, indicated generally the scope of the work
-which they consider should be undertaken, and an additional copy of
-that letter is enclosed.
-
-As indicated above, the Act contemplates that arrangements for
-attending to mothers and young children may be made either by County
-Councils or by sanitary authorities. The Board recognise that the
-organisation must vary to some extent with local conditions, and
-that a considerable degree of elasticity is necessary. They are,
-however, of opinion that it will generally be desirable to formulate
-comprehensive schemes for counties and county boroughs, although in
-some cases portions of the services may be undertaken by the larger
-District Councils with advantage. The councils of counties and county
-boroughs are the local supervising authorities under the Midwives Act,
-1902, and they are also entrusted with the initiation and execution of
-schemes for the treatment of tuberculosis; if the organisation of a
-maternity and infant welfare scheme is also undertaken by them, it will
-be practicable to secure the unification of home visiting for a number
-of different purposes.
-
-In all cases, however, in which a general scheme is organised for the
-county, the work should be carried on in close co-operation with the
-sanitary authority, and any insanitary conditions found by health
-visitors should at once be reported to the sanitary authority. Although
-the Board consider that general schemes should be organised for the
-county as a whole, and that the County Council should, as a general
-rule, provide for health visiting, they are prepared, in suitable
-cases, to recognise the sanitary district as a proper area for a scheme.
-
-
-_Co-operation with Medical Practitioners and Voluntary Agencies._
-
-In the development of general schemes the Board desire that the
-services of hospitals and other efficient voluntary agencies should be
-fully utilised. They are also anxious that the co-operation of medical
-practitioners should be secured. The value of a Maternity Centre
-will be much increased by obtaining the co-operation of the medical
-practitioners in the area to be served by it, and in organising the
-arrangements it is desirable that they should be consulted.
-
-
-_London._
-
-In London the Act contemplates that schemes should be organised by
-the Metropolitan Borough Councils. Many of the services required
-can be provided by the various London hospitals and the numerous
-voluntary agencies now at work, and in some cases the chief need is to
-secure that such services are properly linked up with the work of the
-Borough Council. In other areas existing medical services will require
-supplementing and extending, and it will be for the Borough Councils to
-consider how this can best be done.
-
-
-_Grants in Aid of Local Expenditure._
-
-The Government have agreed to provide, by means of annual grants to be
-distributed by the Board, one-half the cost of the whole or any part
-of schemes for maternity and child welfare approved by the Board. The
-regulations under which these grants will be paid, together with forms
-of application for grants, have already been distributed to local
-authorities. A further copy of the regulations is enclosed.
-
-
-_Interim Schemes._
-
-Many local authorities have already prepared and submitted to the
-Board schemes for Maternity and Infant Welfare, embracing some or all
-of the items included in the Board’s memorandum of 30th July, 1914.
-The initiation of a complete scheme, however, involves time, and the
-Board do not desire that work should be delayed until a complete
-scheme can be formulated. They trust that those local authorities who
-have not already taken steps in this matter will do so before the
-onset of the hot weather, which brings with it special dangers to
-infants and children. The Board are of opinion that the local authority
-should in the first instance carefully consider whether the existing
-arrangements for home visitation are adequate. After the provision of
-health visitors the next step should be to arrange in populous centres
-for a Maternity Centre at which medical advice and treatment may be
-provided for mothers, including expectant mothers, and for children,
-whether ailing or not. Arrangements should also be made for defraying
-in necessitous cases the cost of providing the services of a midwife
-and of a doctor. The Board will be prepared to sanction such provision
-under Section 133 of the Public Health Act, 1875.
-
-
-_Present Need for Maternity and Infant Welfare Work._
-
-The importance of conserving the infant life of the population makes it
-desirable that steps should be taken in the directions indicated even
-at the present time when strict economy is required in the expenditure
-both of public bodies and of private individuals. It is not, however,
-intended that any large outlay should be involved in the provision
-of the services mentioned. No capital expenditure is needed, and the
-maintenance expenditure need not be heavy. The health visitors and many
-of the doctors required to work such a scheme will be women, and no
-labour need be employed which is required for the more direct purposes
-of the war.
-
-
-_Committees._
-
-The Act provides that the powers of a local authority may be exercised
-in such manner as the authority direct by a committee or committees,
-which shall include women, and may comprise, if it is thought fit,
-persons who are not members of the authority.
-
-In any such committee it will be desirable to include working women,
-who might with advantage be representative of women’s organisations.
-Where no local women’s organisation exists, some central organisation
-might possibly assist by suggesting suitable women.
-
-The Board consider that on any committee appointed for the purposes of
-the Act there should be a majority of direct representatives of the
-Council.
-
- I am, Sir,
- Your obedient Servant,
- H. C. MONRO,
- _Secretary_.
-
-
-
-
-ADMINISTRATIVE POWERS OF LOCAL AUTHORITIES
-
-
-The powers of County Councils[C] and Sanitary Authorities--_i.e._,
-County Borough and Borough Councils, Urban and Rural District
-Councils--for maternity and infancy work are derived from the following
-Acts:
-
- 1. Public Health Acts, 1875-1907. 2. Midwives Act, 1902.
- 3. Notification of Births Acts, 1907-1915.[C]
- 4. The Milk and Dairies (Consolidation) Act, 1915. (This Act will not
- come into force till after the war.)
-
-The following Maternity and Infancy work (with the exception of the
-supervision of midwives) may be carried out by special Maternity
-Sub-Committees (which must include women) of the above authorities:--
-
-
-_Notification of Births._[C]
-
-Every birth has to be notified in every area to the Medical Officer
-of Health for that area by the father of the child or the medical
-practitioner or midwife within thirty-six hours of the birth.
-
-
-_Women Sanitary Inspectors and Health Visitors._
-
-Properly trained and qualified women may be appointed to visit the
-homes and give advice on the care of mothers and infants.
-
-[C] See summary of the Notification of Births (Extension) Act, 1915,
-on p. 198.
-
-
-_Maternity Centres._
-
-Skilled advice and minor treatment for the preservation of health may
-be given at Maternity Centres to expectant and nursing mothers and
-children up to school age.
-
-
-_Supervision of Midwives._
-
-County Councils and County Borough Councils alone carry out the
-supervision of midwives, through the Medical Officer of Health, who
-almost invariably has under him a fully qualified woman.
-
-
-_Professional Attendance at Confinements._
-
-A doctor or midwife may be provided to attend necessitous cases. The
-fee of a doctor called in under the Midwives Act may be paid.
-
-
-_Maternity Hospitals for Complicated Cases and Infant Hospitals._
-
-Hospitals may be maintained or beds paid for in existing hospitals or
-wards.
-
-
-_Milk Depots._
-
-After the war, depots may be set up by Sanitary Authorities (only) for
-the sale of milk for infants at cost price. (The Government grant is
-not available for these depots.)
-
-
-GOVERNMENT GRANTS.
-
-Government grants for maternity and child welfare work are now made,
-and half the cost of the whole or any part of schemes, approved by the
-Local Government Board, is now paid.
-
-A sum of £50,000 has been voted this year (1915) for England and Wales,
-and no doubt corresponding sums will be available for Scotland and
-Ireland.
-
-
-
-
-NATIONAL SCHEME
-
-PROPOSED BY THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD
-
-
-To insure effective care of Maternity and Infancy, it would be
-necessary to combine the administration of benefits under the Insurance
-Act with the services organised by the Public Health Authority.
-
-_Maternity and Pregnancy Sickness Benefits._--These should be taken
-out of the Insurance Act, extended to all women (under the income-tax
-limit), and increased in amount. In addition to the 30s. maternity
-benefit, every mother should receive £3 10s. in weekly payments of 10s.
-for three weeks before and four weeks after confinement (or for longer
-periods if she prefers smaller weekly payments). During pregnancy she
-should be entitled to benefit varying according to her condition, from
-2s. 6d. to 7s. 6d. a week, if her health requires it, subject to the
-recommendation of a maternity centre or a doctor.
-
-Public Health Authorities should be empowered to administer these
-benefits through women health officers and maternity centres.
-
-_Notification of Births._--Notification of births and still-births
-is now compulsory throughout the country, and in order to make it
-effective, an adequate number of Health Visitors should be appointed in
-every area.
-
-_Women Health Officers._--The status of Health Visitors should be
-raised, their salaries being increased, and three qualifications being
-required--_i.e._, midwifery, sanitary, and nursing certificates.
-
-_Midwifery and Nursing._--These services should be organised by
-the Public Health Authorities, which already supervise midwives.
-Longer training for midwives should be required, and an adequate
-salary secured to them by the Public Health Authorities. A charge
-of 10s. might be made to mothers employing them, to be remitted if
-the circumstances require it. This is the only method of meeting the
-present shortage of midwives, which is particularly serious in rural
-districts. It is also the only way of securing skilled attention for
-the women at a charge within their reach, and at the same time of
-securing adequate payment for midwives. Municipal midwives could be
-employed with a doctor.
-
-The administration of the Treasury grant for nursing should also be
-placed under the Public Health Authority.
-
-_Maternity and Infant Centres._--These centres should be places where
-expectant and nursing mothers and children up to school age can come
-for advice and treatment, so that they may be kept well and made well.
-Their organisation will depend on local circumstances, but it will be
-found desirable in most cases to open several centres, so that they may
-be near the people’s homes and serve the different classes of women in
-different localities.
-
-Advice to expectant mothers might be given either at local maternity
-centres or at centres at hospitals.
-
-It is important that treatment of a simple nature should be given with
-advice at maternity centres. Nourishment being often the treatment
-mothers most need, provision should be made for dinners for expectant
-and nursing mothers when ordered by the doctor. Simple talks on
-personal hygiene, infants’ clothing, etc., should be arranged, and
-saving-clubs organised.
-
-_Medical Service._--It is desirable to appoint women doctors as
-municipal officers of the centres, but local practitioners may in some
-cases be advantageously worked into a municipal scheme. The provision
-of a doctor called in under the Midwives Act should be part of the
-scheme.
-
-_Maternity Hospitals or Beds._--The dearth of such hospitals for
-abnormal cases is calamitous. The need for their existence is also
-pressing from the point of view of research, and they could be used as
-training schools for doctors and midwives.
-
-_Maternity Homes._--These are required for normal cases. The few
-voluntary homes in existence in England are most valuable, and the
-experience of New Zealand shows that municipal homes could be made
-self-supporting. Private doctors might attend their patients in the
-homes.
-
-_Milk Depots._--The difficulties of securing pure milk make it
-desirable to establish municipal depots for the supply of milk to
-expectant and nursing mothers and children. While every precaution
-should be taken not to undermine the practice of breast-feeding, there
-are cases where specially prescribed bottles would be useful.
-
-_Household Helps._--The need for help in the home before, at, and after
-confinement is urgent, but in order to prevent untrained women doing
-midwifery work, careful supervision and an organised service under the
-public health authority are necessary. The experiments made by relief
-committees show the value of such a service.
-
-_Women as Councillors._--Working women should be elected on to councils
-and serve on public health committees.
-
-_Public Health Maternity Sub-Committees._--These committees should
-be largely composed of representatives of the women concerned.
-Such representation should be secured whenever possible through the
-following industrial women’s organisations: the Women’s Co-operative
-Guild, Women’s Trade Unions, the Women’s Labour League, and the Railway
-Women’s Guild.
-
-Any parts of this scheme not at first taken over by Public Health
-Committees--_e.g._, Dinners, Household Helps--might be organised
-experimentally by the sub-committees with a view to ultimate inclusion
-in a municipal scheme.
-
-_Ministry of Health._--In the future it will probably be advantageous
-to establish a Ministry of Health, with a Maternity and Infant Life
-Department, partly staffed by women.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is essential that Government departments and Public Health
-Committees should be in constant communication with organised
-working-women, and be ready to welcome their co-operation, so that
-their needs and wishes may be freely consulted. It is by a partnership
-between the women who are themselves concerned, the medical profession,
-and the State that the best results of democratic government can be
-secured for the mothers and infants of the country.
-
- * * * * *
-
- To be obtained from the Women’s Co-operative Guild, 28, Church Row,
- Hampstead, London, N.W.:
-
- _The National Care of Maternity_ (leaflets for town and country),
- 1/2d. each, or 3s. a hundred.
-
- _Hints to Expectant Mothers_, by Dr. J. W. Ballantyne, price 1d., or
- 6s. a hundred.
-
- _Household Helps_, 1/2d. each, or 3s. a hundred.
-
-
-BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD, ENGLAND
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-
-The following apparent errors have been corrected:
-
-p. 27 "condiditions" changed to "conditions"
-
-p. 163 "on stairs" changed to "on stairs,"
-
-p. 185 "nine children" changed to "nine children."
-
-p. 197 "infan s" changed to "infants"
-
-p. 210 "etc," changed to "etc.,"
-
-
-Punctuation in the list of Occupations of Husbands has been regularised.
-
-On pages 194 and 195, dittos have been replaced with the relevant words.
-
-
-The following are used inconsistently in the text:
-
-afterbirth and after-birth
-
-afterpain and after-pain
-
-childbearing and child-bearing
-
-childbirth and child-birth
-
-Illustrations have been moved and may not match the locations given in
-the List of Illustrations and Facsimiles.
-
-
-The following possible error has been left as printed:
-
-p. 2 husband’s trades
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Maternity, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Maternity
- Letters from Working-Women
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: The Women's Co-operative Guild
-
-Release Date: September 29, 2015 [EBook #50077]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MATERNITY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-In the html version of this eBook, photographs are linked to larger versions of the illustrations.
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h1 class="break">
-MATERNITY<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN</span>
-</h1>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="p2"><b>ROUND ABOUT A POUND A
-WEEK.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Pember Reeves</span>. 2s. 6d. net.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The best piece of social study published in England
-for many years.”&mdash;<i>Manchester Guardian.</i></p>
-
-<p>“If you would know why men become anarchists,
-why agitators foam at the mouth, and demagogues
-break out into seditious language&mdash;here is a little
-book that will tell you as soberly, as quietly, and as
-convincingly as any book that has yet come from the
-press.”&mdash;Mr. <span class="smcap">Harold Begbie</span> in the <i>Daily Chronicle</i>.</p></div>
-
-
-<p class="p2"><b>THE FEEDING OF SCHOOL
-CHILDREN.</b> By <span class="smcap">M. E. Bulkley</span>, of the
-London School of Economics. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d.
-net.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The first comprehensive description of one of the
-most momentous social experiments of modern times.”&mdash;<i>Economic
-Review.</i></p>
-
-<p>“An admirable statement of the history and present
-position of the problem.”&mdash;<i>New Statesman.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center">
-LONDON: G. BELL AND SONS, LTD.,<br />
-
-<span class="smcap">York House, Portugal Street, Kingsway, W.C.</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">
-<span class="smcap">New York</span>: THE MACMILLAN CO.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Bombay</span>: A. H. WHEELER AND CO.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a id="Frontispiece"></a>
-<a href="images/zill_a002b_h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_a002b.jpg" width="550" height="347" alt="" />
-</a>
-
-<div class="caption"><p>AN ANNUAL CONGRESS OF THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="p2 center">
-<span class="x-large">MATERNITY</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">LETTERS<br />
-FROM WORKING-WOMEN</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">
-COLLECTED BY<br />
-
-<span class="larger">THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD</span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center">
-WITH A PREFACE BY<br />
-
-
-<span class="larger">THE RIGHT HON. HERBERT SAMUEL, M.P.</span><br />
-
-HIS MAJESTY’S POSTMASTER-GENERAL<br />
-LATE PRESIDENT OF THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 94px;">
-<img src="images/zill_a003_colophon.png" width="94" height="120" class="colophon" alt="colophon" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2 center">
-LONDON<br />
-G. BELL AND SONS, LTD.<br />
-1915<br />
-</p>
-
-
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span><br /></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PREFACE<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">BY THE RIGHT HON. HERBERT SAMUEL, M.P.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>These letters give an intimate picture of the difficulties,
-the troubles, often the miseries, sometimes the agonies,
-that afflict many millions of our people, as a consequence
-of normal functions of their lives. An unwise reticence
-has prevented the public mind from realising that
-maternity, among the poorer classes, presents a whole
-series of urgent social problems. These letters give
-the facts. It is the first time, I believe, that the facts
-have been stated, not by medical men or social students,
-but by the sufferers themselves, in their own words.
-The Women’s Co-operative Guild, unresting in their
-efforts for the improvement of the conditions of working
-women, have rendered a most useful service in eliciting
-these letters and in making them public.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to take action to solve the problems
-that here stand revealed, first for the elementary reason
-that a nation ought not to tolerate widespread suffering
-among its members, if there are measures by which
-that suffering can be obviated without indirectly causing
-worse. “Woman,” says Kant, “is an end in herself,
-and not merely a means to an end.” Apart from all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span>
-question of social advantage, her claim for help for her
-own sake, when she needs help to meet the difficulties
-special to herself, is as valid as any other claim&mdash;as the
-claim of the sick man, for his own sake, to be cured, as
-the claim of the child, for his own sake, to be protected
-and to be taught.</p>
-
-<p>Action is necessary also because, for the lack of it,
-the nation is weakened. Numbers are of importance.
-In the competition and conflict of civilisations it is the
-mass of the nations that tells. Again and again in
-history a lofty and brilliant civilisation embodied in
-a small State has been borne under by the weight of
-a larger State of a lower type. The ideas for which
-Britain stands can only prevail so long as they are
-backed by a sufficient mass of numbers. It is not enough
-to make our civilisation good. It must also be made
-strong; and for strength, numbers are not indeed enough
-without other elements, but they are none the less essential.
-Under existing conditions we waste, before birth
-and in infancy, a large part of our possible population.</p>
-
-<p>How quickly some social evils will yield to treatment
-is seen in the fact that in ten years the campaign
-against infant mortality has reduced the death-rate
-among infants under one year of age by nearly a third.
-But it is still very excessive. It is not race or climate
-or the irreducible minimum of physical defect which
-accounts for a large part at least of the present infant
-death-rate. In the same towns, among people of the
-same stock, twice, sometimes three times, as many
-infants, in proportion to the number born, will die in
-the wards where the poorer classes live as die in the wards
-where the well-to-do live. The excess is mainly due
-to ignorance, to malnutrition, to all the noxious influences
-that go with poverty. Not nature, but social<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span>
-conditions, are to blame for the evil. Therefore it is
-remediable.</p>
-
-<p>The time is past when a shallow application of the
-doctrine of evolution led people to acquiesce in a high
-infant death-rate. It was thought that it meant merely
-the killing off of the weak, leading to the survival of the
-fittest, and that the process, cruel in its method, was
-beneficent in its end. There are few now who do not
-see that the high death-rate is due, in large measure,
-to a bad environment; and that by keeping a bad
-environment you produce unfitness. You partly remedy
-the evil, it is true, by destroying a large number of lives
-which have been made unfit to survive; but you leave, as
-a clog on the community, numbers of others not killed
-but weakened. The conditions that kill also maim.</p>
-
-<p>The theory, too, is passing away that the country is
-over-full and that the danger to be feared is not a lack
-of population but its excess. Because many districts
-are overcrowded, it does not follow that these islands
-as a whole are over-populated. So long as food supplies
-can be relied upon from oversea, it is difficult to set
-limits to the numbers that, under sound social conditions,
-this country can maintain.</p>
-
-<p>The conclusion is clear that it is the duty of the
-community, so far as it can, to relieve motherhood of
-its burdens, to spread the knowledge of mothercraft
-that is so often lacking, to make medical aid available
-when it is needed, to watch over the health of the
-infant. And since this is the duty of the community,
-it is also the duty of the State. The infant cannot,
-indeed, be saved by the State. It can only be saved
-by the mother. But the mother can be helped and can
-be taught by the State.</p>
-
-<p>The local health authorities have large powers, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>
-some already are eager to use them. As President of
-the Local Government Board I was able to submit to
-them a comprehensive scheme of assistance to mothers
-in pregnancy, in confinement, and in the care of the
-infants, and to offer, to such as chose to adopt it, a
-Treasury grant of one-half of the modest expenditure
-involved. The need at the moment is to create among
-the local councillors and their electors a body of opinion
-which will secure the adoption of this scheme and its
-administration on effective lines. Because I believe
-it will conduce to that end, I commend this book the
-more readily.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="right small">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td>PREFACE BY THE RIGHT HON. HERBERT SAMUEL, M.P.</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_v">V</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>INTRODUCTION</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>METHOD OF INQUIRY</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>OCCUPATIONS OF HUSBANDS</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>FIGURES BEARING ON INFANT MORTALITY</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD MEMORANDUM, JULY, 1914</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>SUMMARY OF THE NOTIFICATION OF BIRTHS (EXTENSION) ACT, 1915</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD CIRCULAR, JULY, 1915</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>ADMINISTRATIVE POWERS OF LOCAL AUTHORITIES</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>NATIONAL SCHEME PROPOSED BY THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span><br /></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND FACSIMILES</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="right small">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td>A GUILD CONGRESS</td><td class="right"><a href="#Frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>FACSIMILE OF LETTER 24</td><td class="right"><a href="#Facsimile_of_Extract_from_Letter_24">51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>A FAMILY OF ELEVEN CHILDREN</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_58"><i>Facing</i> 58</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>FACSIMILE OF LETTER 36</td><td class="right"><a href="#Facsimile_of_Extract_from_Letter_36">63</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>FACSIMILE OF LETTER 106</td><td class="right"><a href="#Facsimile_of_Extract_from_Letter_106">139</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>A FAMILY OF FOUR OUT OF FIFTEEN CHILDREN</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_110"><i>Facing</i> 110</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>BRADFORD MUNICIPAL INFANT HOSPITAL</td><td class="right"><a href="#Page_190"><i>Facing</i> 190</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span><br /></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="p4 break center">
-<span class="x-large">MATERNITY</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The whole point of this book lies in the letters which it
-contains; and it might therefore have seemed advisable
-to leave the reader untroubled by an introduction to
-gather that point from the letters themselves. The
-material is, however, in form and in subject of so unusual
-a kind that it has been thought necessary to
-explain something of its origin and its authors, and
-even to touch upon some of the problems which the
-letters so vividly show to exist. The letters are written
-by married women of the working-class, all of whom
-are or have been officials of the Women’s Co-operative
-Guild. The Guild is a self-governing organisation
-within the Co-operative Movement, and deals with
-subjects which affect the Co-operative Movement and
-the position of married women in the home and the
-state. It might justly claim to speak with greater
-authority than any other body for the voteless and
-voiceless millions of married working-women of England,
-for it has a membership of nearly 32,000, distributed in
-611 branches over the whole country.</p>
-
-<p>The Guild has for several years given special attention
-to the subject of “The National Care of Maternity.”
-Before the Insurance Bill was introduced, the Guild<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-asked for the inclusion of Maternity benefit, and when
-the Amending Bill was before the House in 1913, an
-agitation by the Guild secured the benefit as the mother’s
-own property. Later on it placed a scheme for the
-national care of Maternity before the Local Government
-Board, which issued a Circular on July 30, 1914,
-largely embodying the various suggestions of the
-Guild. In the course of this work it was considered
-advisable to obtain information from the members
-themselves of the conditions under which they had
-brought children into the world. These letters are
-the result. The barest indication of the information
-wanted was given, and the only questions used were
-those on p. <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, as it was thought that it would
-be more valuable to allow the women to tell their own
-story in their own way.</p>
-
-<p>We claim for these letters that for the first time are
-presented in them the real problems of Maternity seen
-through the women’s own account of their lives. If the
-writers are uneducated in the ordinary sense of school
-and university, a long schooling in life and suffering has
-given them a peculiar simplicity and dignity of language
-in place of the more usual literary style. The letters
-are left exactly as written by the women, the only
-alterations made being in the spelling, in the addition
-of punctuation, and in the omission of a few medical
-details. All names and places have also been omitted
-in order to prevent identification.</p>
-
-<p>The women are the wives of men who earn their daily
-bread by manual labour. The husband’s trades cover
-over one hundred different occupations, and their rates
-of wages vary from 11s. to £5. The letters show how
-often the nominal wages are reduced by periods of short
-time and unemployment, such periods constantly coinciding
-with childbirth. It should also be remembered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-that a wife does not usually receive the whole of the
-weekly wage for her family expenditure.</p>
-
-<p>The earnings and conditions of life of these men are
-certainly above rather than below the level of their
-class. It is true on the whole to say that the Co-operative
-Movement is largely composed of the better-paid
-manual workers, and there is no doubt that the woman
-who is secretary of a Guild branch lives in better
-conditions than the average working woman. If the
-conditions of their lives are as described in these letters,
-the suffering and waste of life, the overwork and poverty,
-must be tenfold and twentyfold where wages are less
-and employment more precarious. That the women
-themselves are well aware of this is shown by the occurrence
-in the letters of such sentences as “I was more
-fortunately placed than most women,” or “I have not
-had to go through so much pain and suffering as many
-poor mothers have to go through.”</p>
-
-<p>These letters then give for the first time in their
-own words the working woman’s view of her life in
-relation to maternity. Now, what is the general impression
-that the reader gets of the life at such times
-of these more fortunate working-class mothers? It
-is on the whole an impression of perpetual overwork,
-illness, and suffering. The stories and records
-of 400 lives have been received, taken at random
-out of the million similar lives lived in our cities.
-In this book 160 letters have been published, and the
-unpublished letters describe similar experiences. The
-evidence of such witnesses cannot be impugned; it is
-that to bear children under such conditions is to bear
-an intolerable burden of suffering. The cry of a
-woman in travail has become a commonplace of literature,
-and the notion that pain and motherhood are
-inevitably connected has become so fixed that the world<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-is shocked if a woman does not consider the pain as
-much a privilege as the motherhood. And this attitude of
-the world towards the pain of travail has been extended
-to all the sufferings attending motherhood. These
-letters show that this is the view of women themselves,
-for which doctors have been largely responsible.
-It is hardly too much to say that the ordinary professional
-attitude might have been summed up in the saying,
-“You’ll be worse before you’re better.” It would
-be foolish to cry aloud against the inevitable minimum
-of maternal suffering. And it is to be noted that there
-is no foolish note of self-pity in these letters. The brave
-words, combined with a stoic resignation to fate, the
-invincible optimism shown in such letters as Nos. <a href="#a33_Almost_a_Wreck">33</a>
-and <a href="#a47_I_Think_a_Lot">47</a>, are characteristic of the spirit of them all. But
-if it be folly to kick against Nature’s pricks, what is
-more foolish is the facile fatalism with which we resign
-ourselves and other people to unnecessary and useless
-suffering. And a very short consideration of the suffering
-disclosed in these letters will show that it is both
-unnecessary and useless.</p>
-
-<p>The roots of the evil lie in the conditions of life which
-our industrial system forces upon the wage-earners. It
-is useful to consider the different conditions under which
-the middle-class and the working-class woman becomes
-a mother. The middle-class wife from the first moment
-is within reach of medical advice which can alleviate distressing
-illness and confinements and often prevent future
-ill-health or death. During the months of pregnancy
-she is not called upon to work; she is well fed; she is
-able to take the necessary rest and exercise. At the
-time of the birth she will have the constant attendance
-of doctor and nurse, and she will remain in bed until she
-is well enough to get up. For a woman of the middle
-class to be deprived of any one of these things would be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-considered an outrage. Now, a working-class woman is
-habitually deprived of them all. She is lucky if her
-husband hands her over regularly each week 25s. with
-which to provide a house, food, and clothing, for the
-whole family. It has to be remembered that the ordinary
-family wage leaves nothing over for the additional outlay
-upon maternity. This ought to amount to £5 if the
-expenses are properly met. Too poor to obtain medical
-advice during the months of pregnancy, she “learns by
-experience and ignorance,” comforting herself with the
-belief that however ill she be it is only “natural.”
-Meanwhile she has to scrape and save to put by money
-for the inevitable expenses that lie before her. She
-often goes out to char or sits at her sewing machine,
-to scrape together a few shillings. She puts by in
-money-boxes; she lays in little stores of tea, soap,
-oatmeal and other dry goods. At a time when she
-ought to be well fed she stints herself in order to save;
-for in a working-class home if there is saving to be
-done, it is not the husband and children, but the mother
-who makes her meal off the scraps which remain over,
-or “plays with meat-less bones.” One woman writes:
-“I can assure you I have told my husband many times
-that I had had my dinner before he came in, so as there
-should be plenty to go round for the children and himself,
-but he found me out somehow, so that was stopped.”
-Another woman says: “Many a time I have had bread
-and dripping for my dinner before my husband came
-home, and said I had my dinner, as I would not wait.”</p>
-
-<p>If the mother is not working long hours in a factory,
-she is working even longer hours in her own home.</p>
-
-<p>Writers on infant mortality and the decline of the
-birth-rate never tire of justly pointing to the evils which
-come from the strain of manual labour in factories for
-expectant mothers. Very little is ever said about the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-same evils which come from the incessant drudgery of
-domestic labour. People forget that the unpaid work
-of the working-woman at the stove, at scrubbing
-and cleaning, at the washtub, in lifting and carrying
-heavy weights, is just as severe manual labour as
-many industrial operations in factories. It is this
-labour which the mother performs often up to the very
-day on which the child is born, and she will be at it again
-perhaps six or eight days afterwards. The Factory
-Acts make it an offence for an employer knowingly to
-employ a woman within four weeks after confinement.
-“In Switzerland a total absence from employment in
-factories of women during eight weeks before and after
-childbirth must be observed, and on their return to work
-proof must be tendered of an absence since the birth of
-the child of at least six weeks.” In Germany four
-weeks’ absence is compulsory, and “must be extended
-to six weeks unless a medical certificate is furnished
-approving of employment at the end of four weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>We propose to deal now shortly with the causes of
-those conditions, then with the results, and finally
-with the methods of cure and prevention of the resulting
-evils. The main causes seem to be three:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>(1) Inadequate wages.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Lack of knowledge regarding maternity and of
-skilled advice and treatment.</p>
-
-<p>(3) The personal relation of husband and wife.</p></div>
-
-<p>We have already dealt to some extent with the first
-cause. Thirty shillings a week for a manual worker
-is reckoned to be “good wages,” and there are, of course,
-thousands of men earning far less than that. Now,
-what most people do not realise is that 30s. a week is
-itself a wage utterly inadequate for rearing a large or even
-small family. It is inadequate because the whole burden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-is placed upon the woman who has to bring up a family
-on 30s., and that burden is excessive. She can only
-do it at all by incessant labour which inevitably cuts
-her off from every higher human activity except one.
-That one which is left to her is maternal affection, and
-the wonder is that even that endures as it does the
-strain of poverty, overwork, and illness.</p>
-
-<p>The second cause, the lack of knowledge on the part
-of the women, receives remarkable testimony in these
-letters. Again and again the writers come back to this
-subject. They are convinced of the evils that resulted
-to themselves and their children from their own ignorance
-of the functions and duties of motherhood. And there
-can be no doubt that they are right. Much of the
-suffering entailed in maternity, much of the damage to
-the life and health of women and children, would be got
-rid of if women married with some knowledge of what
-lay before them, and if they could obtain medical advice
-and supervision during the time of pregnancy and
-motherhood. It is not the women’s fault that they are
-ignorant, for the possibilities of knowledge have not
-been within their reach.</p>
-
-<p>The personal relation of husband and wife is a subject
-as difficult as it is delicate. Reading these letters one
-is often struck by the fact that that relation remains so
-good under the most adverse circumstances. But
-despite the extraordinary loyalty of the writers, there
-is clearly a consciousness among them that the position
-of a woman not only impairs the value of that relationship,
-but is directly responsible for some of the evils we
-are considering. In plain language, both in law and in
-popular morality, the wife is still the inferior in the family
-to the husband. She is first without economic independence,
-and the law therefore gives the man, whether he
-be good or bad, a terrible power over her. Partly for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-this reason, and partly because all sorts of old half-civilised
-beliefs still cling to the flimsy skirts of our
-civilisation, the beginning and end of the working
-woman’s life and duty is still regarded by many as the
-care of the household, the satisfaction of man’s desires,
-and the bearing of children. We do not say that this
-is the case in every working-class home, or that there
-are not hundreds of husbands who take a higher view
-of married life and practise it. What we do say is that
-these views are widely held, often unconsciously, and
-are taken advantage of by hundreds of men who are
-neither good men nor good husbands and that even
-where there is no deliberate evil or viciousness, these
-views are responsible for the overwork and physical
-suffering among women and for that excessive child-bearing,
-of which more will be said later.</p>
-
-<p>The effects of the conditions we have described and
-of the causes which produce them can be conveniently
-grouped under three heads. They concern, first the
-woman herself, secondly the children borne by her, thirdly
-the children that remain unborn of her. So far we have
-deliberately insisted only upon the evil effects upon the
-women themselves, and it still remains to insist upon
-them. The disastrous results of maternal ill-health and
-overwork upon the children cannot be exaggerated,
-but in the contemplation of them, people are too apt to
-forget that the mother herself is an individual with the
-right to “equality of opportunity,” which is the right
-as a human being to be given the opportunity of understanding
-and enjoying those things which alone make
-life tolerable to humanity.</p>
-
-<p>It was perhaps inevitable that the mother should have
-been publicly overlooked, for the isolation of women in
-married life has, up to now, prevented any common expression
-of their needs. They have been hidden behind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-the curtain which falls after marriage, the curtain which
-women are now themselves raising.</p>
-
-<p>The general effect upon women is the useless suffering
-inflicted upon them, and one of the chief causes of this
-is undoubtedly excessive childbearing. This evil is
-directly due to those semi-civilised notions which were
-touched upon above, and though, as we shall see when
-we deal with the decline of the birth-rate, nature
-is taking her own way of reacting against it, it still
-exists. We would draw attention to the conditions
-disclosed in such letters as <a href="#a1_Twenty_Years_of_Child-Bearing">1</a>, <a href="#a20_Steads_Penny_Poets">20</a>, <a href="#a36_Many_Miscarriages">36</a>, and <a href="#a71_But_it_is_too_Late">71</a>. In the
-first case we find a woman married at nineteen having
-11 children and 2 miscarriages in 20 years, her husband’s
-wages being 20s. a week. In the second case there are
-5 children and one miscarriage in 9 years; in the third
-5 children and 5 miscarriages in 12&frac12; years; and in the
-fourth 9 children and 1 miscarriage in 24 years. These
-cases have been taken more or less at random, and
-nothing could be more significant than the bare fact
-that out of 386 women who have written these letters,
-348 have had 1,396 live children, 83 still-births, and
-218 miscarriages. These figures speak for themselves:
-the mere physical strain of pregnancy and childbirth
-succeeding each other with scarcely an interval for ten
-or twenty years renders a healthy bodily and intellectual
-life impossible. And when the additional strain of insufficient
-means and incessant labour are added, the
-suffering which becomes the daily concomitant of life
-is unimaginable to those who are born in the more
-fortunate classes of society.</p>
-
-<p>If any further evidence is wanted of the direct effect
-of such conditions upon the health of women, we would
-draw attention to the number of miscarriages and still-births.
-It is probable that not all the writers have included
-miscarriages; but even as it is the number of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-miscarriages is 15·4 per cent. of the live births, while
-the number of still-births is 5·9 per cent. Taken
-together, these figures show a pre-natal death-rate of
-21·3 per 100 live births, as against a national infant
-death-rate of 10·9. According to some medical writers
-the frequency of abortions “is believed to be about
-20 or 25 per cent. of all pregnancies”; while Dr. Amand
-Routh estimates that the number of deaths during
-pregnancy probably equals the number of deaths in
-the first year after birth. The following letters are a
-pathetic endorsement of the view that fatigue, strain, and
-domestic conditions are responsible for large numbers
-of miscarriages, and point to the urgent need of pre-natal
-care.</p>
-
-<p>We have now come by a logical sequence from a consideration
-of the effect of the conditions of women’s
-lives upon themselves to the further effect upon the life
-and death of their offspring. We have, in fact, travelled
-the same road as, but in the opposite direction from,
-those who in the last ten years have conducted the
-campaign against Infant Mortality. It was about ten
-or twelve years ago that many people were suddenly
-horrified to learn that out of every 1,000 children born
-in England and Wales, about 150 died before they have
-lived twelve months. A vigorous campaign against
-Infant Mortality by means largely of what is called
-Infant Welfare work followed. Government departments
-and private persons and organisations have
-co-operated with such success that the death-rate of
-infants under one year of age per 1,000 births has fallen
-from 145 in 1904 to 109 in 1913. But the point which,
-for our present purpose, is most illuminating is to note
-the course which that campaign has pursued and is
-pursuing. It has become more and more clear that if
-you wish to guard the health of the infant, you must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-go back from it to the mother; it is the circumstances
-of the mother&mdash;her health, her knowledge, her education,
-and her habits&mdash;before the child is born no less than at
-the time of and after birth, that again and again determine
-whether the child is to have health or disease, to
-live or to die. In fact, from whatever point you regard
-the question, the words of the writer of letter <a href="#a63_A_Miserable_Experience">63</a> are
-true: We shall not get “a race in the future worthy of
-England until the nation wakes up to the needs of the
-mothers of that future race.”</p>
-
-<p>Infant mortality in the first year of life is still appallingly
-high, and there is good reason for believing&mdash;though
-the fact cannot be absolutely proved&mdash;that this
-high rate is very largely due to the circumstances in
-which the great mass of working-class women are obliged
-to bear children. As is well known, it is in the first
-month after birth that the death-rate is highest, and
-it is this rate which reformers have been least successful
-in reducing. Now, if the causes of deaths of infants in
-the first four weeks of life are examined, an enormous
-proportion are due to “immaturity.” “It needs no
-argument,” says Dr. A. K. Chalmers, “to show that
-until we have a clearer conception of the causes which
-lead to death from immaturity, we cannot but fail to
-make any considerable impression on the volume of
-deaths which occur during this period of infant life.”
-But as a matter of fact there is high authority for
-debiting the greater number of these deaths from immaturity
-to the physical health and condition of the
-mother. “It is evident,” writes Sir George Newman,
-“that if infants die within a few days or hours of birth,
-or even if dying later show unmistakable signs of being
-unequal to the calls of bare physical existence, that
-there must be something more than external conditions
-or food or management which is working to their hurt.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-The explanation is clearly to be found in ante-natal
-conditions.” Dr. Noel Paton considers that the “malnutrition
-of the mother helps to explain the very high
-infant mortality among the very poor. The infant
-starts life at a low level, and readily succumbs to the
-hardships to which it is too often subjected.” Dr. Ashby
-writes: “My own experience in the out-patient room
-entirely confirms the opinion that nutrition of the
-mother has a very important bearing on the nutrition
-of the fœtus, and that the statement that the percentage
-of unhealthy births among the poor is small is not
-justified by facts. We constantly see fully developed
-infants a day or two old ... clearly ill-fitted, as the event
-proves, to withstand the conditions of external existence....
-There is no question of syphilis; they are
-the children of poor mothers who have lived hard lives
-of wear and tear during pregnancy, are themselves
-badly nourished and weakly, and have felt the pinch
-of poverty, though often perhaps poverty of the
-secondary sort.”</p>
-
-<p>No better comment upon, or illustration of, these
-opinions of experts could be found than the facts contained
-in these letters. You can read in them the little
-details of existence which made the writers “mothers
-who have lived hard lives of wear and tear during
-pregnancy,” and watching those details you can see
-how the everyday working of the machine, which we call
-industry and society, leads to suffering, and wastes and
-destroys human life as soon as it is born. The results
-which can already be shown of care in the pre-natal
-period, bear out the contention that the suffering and
-loss of life which exists is unnecessary. The Women’s
-Municipal League in Boston, U.S.A., has had 1,512
-women in five years (1910&ndash;1914) under its care. Amongst
-these women there have been no miscarriages in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-last three and a half years; there were 60 cases of
-threatened eclampsia in the first year, there were only
-2 in the last year; and the total number of infant
-deaths under one month was 2 per cent., while Boston’s
-rate was 4·3 per cent. The Johns Hopkins Hospital,
-U.S.A., obtained similar results, and in the Glasgow
-Maternity hospital more exact methods have reduced
-the infant mortality and morbidity.</p>
-
-<p>If the problems raised by these letters throw light upon
-the terrible waste of women’s health and infant life, they
-no less certainly throw light upon another phenomenon
-of modern society&mdash;the decline of the birth-rate.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most remarkable and important signs of
-change in the habits and aspirations of society, has been
-the sudden decline in the birth-rate which, noticeable in
-many countries, began in this country about forty years
-ago, and has continued steadily down to the present time.
-In every locality and class the number of children born
-yearly to married women is declining, but the fall is not
-the same everywhere; in the industrial population it is
-greater among the better-class and better-paid workers,
-and it is distinctly greatest among textile workers where
-wages are comparatively high and a large proportion of
-women work in factories. Now, it is absolutely certain
-that this decline is mainly due to the deliberate limitation
-of the family. There is, of course, a wide divergence
-of opinion as to the result of this conscious check upon
-the growth of population; some regard it as the clearest
-solution of the inextricable tangle in which the industrial
-system has enmeshed humanity, others see in it the
-suicide of a nation and the doom of a race. But people
-are so anxious to dispute about the good and evil of its
-effect that they often fail to see that for society itself
-the important good and evil lie in the conditions which
-cause the phenomenon. For the State it may be vital<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-to know the result of men and women refusing to give
-her citizens; but it is still more vital for her to recognize
-the conditions within her which are leading men and
-women to this refusal.</p>
-
-<p>These letters give the skeletons of individuals’ lives,
-and individual thoughts and feelings; but in those facts
-and thoughts and feelings one can see clearly the general
-mould of life and the sweep of the current of general
-opinion which is among the working classes, resulting
-in the refusal to have children. There is a kind of
-strike against large families, and it is not, among the
-workers, a selfish strike. The motives of this strike are
-admirably given in the following words from Letter
-No. <a href="#a71_But_it_is_too_Late">71</a>, the whole of which is very illuminating on this
-point: “All the beautiful in motherhood is very nice if
-one has plenty to bring up a family on, but what real
-mother is going to bring a life into the world to be
-pushed into the drudgery of the world at the earliest
-possible moment?...” The fact that the decline in
-the birth-rate is greatest among the better-paid wage-earners
-is often said to prove that a growing love of
-ease and luxury is causing a declining birth-rate. The
-words “ease and luxury” are grotesque when applied to
-the lives of manual wage-earners. The fact is that the
-industrial worker took the first seventy years of last
-century to learn that the conditions such as described
-in these letters make a human and a humane life impossible
-alike for the mother and children of large families. This
-consciousness has spread slowly and surely during the
-last forty years, and, as is natural, it has spread most
-amongst the more educated and intelligent workers and
-those whose wages have given them at least the opportunity
-of realising that there are other things in life
-besides poverty and work. The numbers of such men and
-women will continue to grow who refuse to have children<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-except under two conditions. Those conditions are that
-society shall pay its debt to the manual worker in such
-a way that his children can be born into a home where
-there is something better than bare existence, and that
-the woman has the means and the leisure to live a life
-of her own without which she is unfit to give life to
-her children and to direct it during their most impressionable
-years.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to leave this question without
-touching upon one point which crops up occasionally
-in these letters. Opinions may differ as to the good
-or evil of the general limitation of families, but there
-can only be agreement upon the evil which results
-from the use of drugs to procure abortion. There
-are many facts which go to prove that the habit of
-taking such drugs has spread to an alarming extent in
-many places among working women. Several of
-these letters confirm that conclusion. The practice
-is ruinous to the health of women, is more often than
-not useless for procuring the object desired, and probably
-accounts for the fact that many children are weakly and
-diseased from birth. But here again the cause of the
-evil lies in the conditions which produce it. Where
-maternity is only followed by an addition to the daily
-life of suffering, want, overwork, and poverty, people
-will continue to adopt even the most dangerous, uncertain,
-and disastrous methods of avoiding it.</p>
-
-<p>This introduction has been mainly concerned with
-pointing out certain evils deeply seated in national life.
-These evils have their origin in social conditions, and
-they touch life at so many points that they must, if
-allowed to work unchecked, modify the whole future of
-the race and state. There is no sign that society, if
-left to itself, will secrete some antitoxin to purge its
-own blood. The industrial and capitalist system tends<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-to become continually more industrial and capitalistic;
-the gulf between the rich and poor, the fortunate and
-the unfortunate widens; ideals become higher and
-broader while the means to satisfy them are narrowed
-in the possession of a narrow class; only discontent
-seems to rise while the birth-rate falls. Society cannot
-cure itself, and the last hope, therefore, is for the State
-to attempt a cure.</p>
-
-<p>The State has first to realise that if it wants citizens,
-and healthy citizens, it must make it possible for men
-and women to have families while living a full life themselves
-and giving a full life to their children. At the
-present moment this is not possible from top to bottom of
-the working class, unless the economic position of the
-working-class family be improved. The first requisite
-is, then, the improvement of the economic position of
-the family.</p>
-
-<p>But it is impossible to treat here the broad question
-of how this can be attained; it is only possible to deal
-with the points in which the State can to-day take immediate
-steps to improve the economic position of the
-working-class family as regards maternity, and bring
-specialised knowledge, adequate rest, nourishment and
-care, medical supervision and treatment, within reach.
-And though the story told in these letters, in the statistics
-of infant mortality, in the figures of a declining
-birth-rate, be dark, a really bright sign for the future is
-that the women so vitally concerned have themselves
-become aware of the evil and are eagerly demanding
-that the State shall adopt those measures which will
-most surely mitigate or remove it. The Women’s
-Co-operative Guild have brought out a scheme which
-would greatly enlarge the scope of State action, precisely
-in those ways in which it has already proved itself most
-beneficial. This scheme, which has already to a large<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-extent received the blessing of the Government Department
-most nearly concerned&mdash;the Local Government
-Board&mdash;is given in detail on p. <a href="#Page_196">196</a>. Meanwhile, up and
-down the country the Guild and other women’s organisations
-are pressing Public Health Committees to adopt
-the measures recommended. The presence of women on
-Town and County Councils is another hopeful sign, and
-it is greatly to be desired that the numbers of working-women
-councillors will increase. Dr. Newsholme says:
-“Women could help forward the care of maternity and
-infants by getting themselves voted on to Local Authorities,
-and by bringing pertinacious pressure to bear on
-members of Local Authorities.”</p>
-
-<p>It should be noted that the essence of the Guild
-scheme is that municipal, not philanthropic, action
-is wanted. It is not charity, but the united action
-of the community of citizens which will remove a widespread
-social evil. The community is performing a
-duty, not bestowing a charity, in providing itself with
-the bare necessities for tolerable existence. That is
-why the end at which the Guild aims is that the mothers
-of the country shall find themselves as free to use a
-Municipal Maternity Centre as they are to use a Council
-School or a Public Library.</p>
-
-<p>The following words of the Chairman of the Bradford
-Health Committee, spoken at the opening of the
-Municipal Maternity Home on March 15, 1915, show
-that the needs expressed in these letters are beginning
-to be met by the methods desired by the writers:
-“We stand on the threshold of an age which is to herald
-the recognition of the mother and her child, to give
-public health work that human touch it has hitherto
-lacked, and to modify those glaring inequalities in social
-life and conditions which are destructive alike of infancy
-and the ideals of Christian citizenship.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LETTERS FROM WORKING-WOMEN.</h2>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak"><a id="a1_Twenty_Years_of_Child-Bearing"></a>1. <span class="smcap">Twenty Years of Child-Bearing.</span></h3>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I shall be very pleased if this letter will be any help
-to you. Personally I am quite in sympathy with the
-new Maternity Scheme. I do feel I cannot express my
-feelings enough by letter to say what a great help it
-would have been to me, for no one but a mother knows
-the struggle and hardships we working women have to
-go through. I do hope I shall never see the young
-women of to-day have to go through what I did. I
-am a mother of eleven children&mdash;six girls and five boys.
-I was only nineteen years old when my first baby was
-born. My husband was one of the best and a good
-father. His earnings was £1 a week; every penny was
-given to me, and after paying house rent, firing, and
-light, and clubs, that left me 11s. to keep the house going
-on; and as my little ones began to come, they wanted
-providing for and saving up to pay a nurse, and instead
-of getting nourishment for myself which we need at
-those times, I was obliged to go without. So I had no
-strength to stand against it, and instead of being able
-to rest in bed afterwards, I was glad to get up and get
-about again before I was able, because I could not afford
-to pay a woman to look after me. I kept on like that
-till the sixth little one was expected, and then I had all
-the other little ones to see after. The oldest one was
-only ten years old, so you see they all wanted a mother’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-care. About two months before my confinement the two
-youngest fell ill with measles, so I was obliged to nurse
-them, and the strain on my nerves brought on brain-fever.
-All that the doctor could do for me was to place ice-bags on
-my head. Oh, the misery I endured! My poor old mother
-did what she could for me, and she was seventy years
-old, and I could not afford to pay a woman to see after
-my home and little ones; but the Lord spared me to get
-over my trouble, but I was ill for weeks and was obliged
-to work before I was able. Then in another eighteen
-months I was expecting another. After that confinement,
-being so weak, I took a chill, and was laid up
-for six months, and neighbours came in and done what
-they could for me. Then there was my home and little
-ones and husband to look after, as he was obliged to
-work. It was the worry that kept me from getting
-better; if I could have had someone to look after me I
-should not have been so ill. After this I had a miscarriage
-and another babe in one year and four months. I got
-on fairly well with the next one, and then the next one,
-which was the eighth, I had two down with measles,
-one two years old with his collar-bone out, and a little
-girl thirteen with her arm broke. That was at the
-same time as I was expecting my eighth little one, and
-my dear husband worried out of life, as you see with
-all this trouble I was only having the £1 a week and
-everything to get out of it. What a blessing it would
-have been if this Maternity Scheme was in go then! It
-would have saved me a lot of illness and worry, for my
-life was a complete misery. For twenty years I was
-nursing or expecting babies. No doubt there are others
-fixed the same way as I have been. This is only a
-short account of how I suffered; I could fill sheets of
-paper with what I have gone through at confinements
-and before, and there are others, no doubt, have felt the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-pinch as well as myself. If there is anything else you
-would like to know and I could tell you, I should be glad,
-for the benefit of my sisters.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 17s. to 25s.; eleven children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">2. “<span class="smcap">Out of Bed on the Third Day.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I received your paper on Maternity Scheme, and I can
-assure you it brought back to me many painful hours of
-what I have passed through in twenty-one years of
-married life. For one thing, I have had a delicate husband
-for fifteen years, and I have had nine children,
-seven born in nine years. I have only one now; some
-of the others have died from weakness from birth. I
-only had a small wage, as my husband was then a railway
-porter. His earnings were 18s. one week and
-16s. the next, and I can say truthfully my children have
-died from my worrying how to make two ends meet
-and also insufficient food. For many of my children I
-have not been able to pay a nurse to look after me, and
-I have got out of bed on the third day to make my own
-gruel and fainted away. My little girl which is just
-fourteen years old, from the first month of pregnancy
-until my nine months were up I attended the hospital
-and had a hospital nurse in to confine me.... A woman
-with little wage has to go without a great deal at those
-times, as we must give our husbands sufficient food or
-we should have them home and not able to work; therefore
-we have to go without to make ends meet. Before
-my confinements and after I have always suffered a great
-deal with bearing down, and doctors have told me it is
-weakness, not having enough <i>good</i> food to keep my health
-during such times. My little girl I have was under the
-doctor for seven months, being a weak child born, and I
-for one think that if I had a little help from someone I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-should have had my children by my side to-day. It has
-only been through weakness they have passed away. It
-is with great pleasure I write this letter to you. I could
-say a deal more on sufferings of women if I saw you.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 16s. to 18s.; nine children, one still-birth, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">3. <span class="smcap">Hospitals&mdash;A Crying Need.</span></h3>
-
-<p>A neighbour of mine called in the doctor, who after
-examining her said she must be got into a Lying-In
-Hospital at once, as she was in such a critical condition.
-She needed to be under medical care all the time; the
-doctor expects when the birth takes place there will
-be twins. The woman was taken by cab several miles,
-and after being there two days was sent home, as the
-birth was not expected till March, and this was about the
-middle of February; but she was to be taken back by
-February 27, as she is in such a state that the children
-will have to be removed before they attain their full
-size. A few days after she was home, she was so ill
-that her doctor got a cab and sent her to another hospital,
-as he said if anything occurred when he was not
-able to get to her, her life would be lost. She must be
-where there were doctors in constant attendance.</p>
-
-<p>After putting her through an examination and bullying
-her for going there, she was informed they had no
-maternity ward, and sent her home again, and all the
-time she was in the greatest of pain and vomiting blood;
-she is now at home, and will have to be taken to the first
-hospital at the end of the week, if nothing happens
-before.</p>
-
-<p>Now for her circumstances. Her husband has worked
-for his present employer for thirteen years, and earns
-the magnificent sum of 23s. per week. The conveying
-of her to hospitals and back the two times has cost 25s.,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-and the husband had to lose a day and a half. When
-the foreman asked the master to allow the man to have
-his pay for the lost time owing to the expense he had had,
-he replied: “He will get 30s. when the job comes off;
-let him pay it out of that.” This man is a Church
-warden and a prominent Church worker and Christian!
-The husband’s fellow-workers who earn no more than
-him, and some of them less, have had what they call a
-whip round, and have managed to raise 19s. for him.</p>
-
-<p>Our District Nurse goes in each morning and does
-what she can for her, and one morning she asked how
-she had got ruptured; and she said she was not sure, but
-she thought it was when she was at the factory. And it
-transpired that her eldest boy is very bright, and he
-managed to win a scholarship, but his mother said she
-could not manage to get the clothes for him that he
-ought to have at such a school, and so she got work at
-the factory to try and clothe him better. She was only
-there two months when she was taken ill and had to
-leave. (What mothers put up with for their children!)
-She has been paying 3d. a week into a Sick Loan, and
-Dividing Society, in connection with a Church, but she
-can have no help from it, as her illness is through pregnancy.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">4. “<span class="smcap">All Day Washing and Ironing.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>In answer to your letter, in my opinion the cause of
-women suffering from misplacements and various other
-inward complaints, is having to work during pregnancy,
-and I am the mother of three children. When the
-youngest was coming my husband was out of employment,
-so I had to go out to work myself, standing all day
-washing and ironing. This caused me much suffering
-from varicose veins, also caused the child to wedge in
-some way, which nearly cost both our lives. The doctor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-said it was the standing and the weight of the child.
-I have not been able to carry a child the full time since
-then, and my periods stopped altogether at thirty-four.
-Then I have a niece of twenty-five, who is at present in
-hospital undergoing a serious operation through getting
-up too soon after her confinement. Once we can make
-men and women understand that a woman requires
-rest when bearing children, we shall not have so many
-of our sisters suffering and dying through operations,
-or, on the other hand, dragging out a miserable existence.</p>
-
-<p>My husband’s wages was 19s. 10d. He was compelled
-to lose time in wet or frosty weather, and I was very
-lucky to get my share, 18s., four weeks in succession.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 19s. 10d.; three children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">5. <span class="smcap">A Half-Starved Pregnancy.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My experience during and after my second pregnancy
-is only one example of what thousands of married working
-women have to endure. My husband has always
-been a very delicate man, and was ill most of the time
-I carried both my children. He had been out of employment
-eight months out of the nine I carried my first
-child.... As a last resource was glad to go to work on
-the railway for the magnificent wage of 17s. a week, and
-had to walk nearly six miles night and morning or pay
-5d. a day for train fare. Our rent was 7s. 6d. a week
-and clubs to be paid. By the time my second child was
-born my husband’s wages had increased to £1 1s. a
-week for seventy-two hours. By that time hard work
-and worry and insufficient food had told on my once
-robust constitution, with the result that I nearly lost
-my life through want of nourishment, and did after
-nine months of suffering lose my child. No one but
-mothers who have gone through the ordeal of pregnancy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-half starved, to finally bring a child into the world to
-live a living death for nine months, can understand what
-it means.... It was the Women’s Co-operative Guild
-which saved me from despair.</p>
-
-<p>The first confinement I managed to get through very
-well, having some money left from what I had saved
-before marriage. But how I managed to get through
-my second confinement I cannot tell anyone. I had to
-work at laundry work from morning to night, nurse a
-sick husband, and take care of my child three and a half
-years old. In addition I had to provide for my coming
-confinement, which meant that I had to do without
-common necessaries to provide doctor’s fees, which so
-undermined my health that when my baby was born I
-nearly lost my life, the doctor said through want of
-nourishment. I had suffered intensely with neuralgia,
-and when I inquired among my neighbours if there was
-anything I could take to relieve the pain, I was told
-that whatever I took would do no good; it was quite
-usual for people to suffer from neuralgia, and I should
-not get rid of it till my baby was born.</p>
-
-<p>I had to depend on my neighbours for what help they
-could give during labour and the lying-in period. They
-did their best, but from the second day I had to have
-my other child with me, undress him and see to all his
-wants, and was often left six hours without a bite of
-food, the fire out and no light, the time January, and
-snow had lain on the ground two weeks.</p>
-
-<p>When I got up after ten days my life was a perfect
-burden to me. I lost my milk and ultimately lost my
-baby. My interest in life seemed lost. I was nervous
-and hysterical; when I walked along the streets I felt
-that the houses were falling on me, so I took to staying
-at home, which of course added to the trouble.</p>
-
-<p>Now, is it possible under such circumstances for women<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-to take care of themselves, during pregnancy, confinement,
-and after? Can we any longer wonder why so
-many married working women are in the lunatic asylums
-to-day? Can we wonder that so many women take
-drugs, hoping to get rid of the expected child, when
-they know so little regarding their own bodies, and
-have to work so hard to keep or help to keep the children
-they have already got? If only the State would do
-something that would give <i>all</i> working mothers the
-assurance that during pregnancy, where needed, means
-would be provided whereby they could get an all-important
-rest before confinement, and that proper attention
-should be provided during and after so long as
-necessary. It would make all the difference between a
-safe and speedy confinement, a better offspring, therefore
-a better asset of the State, and a broken-down
-motherhood, and a race of future parents who start in
-life very often with a constitution enfeebled through
-the mother having to undergo privation, as well as the
-mental and physical strain that childbirth entails.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 17s. to £1 1s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">6. <span class="smcap">Healthy and Strong.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During pregnancy I always looked to my diet, and
-as my husband never got more than 24s. 6d. per week,
-I had not much to throw away on luxuries. I had
-plain food, such as oatmeal and bacon, and meat, plenty
-of bread and good butter. I may say that during
-pregnancy and during suckling my appetite was always
-better, and I ate more and enjoyed my food better than
-at any other time. I always did my own housework
-and my own washing, and I never had a doctor all the
-time I was having children. I have had six, one dead.</p>
-
-<p>During my labour I was never bad more than about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-three or four hours. I felt I could get out of bed the first
-day, and I never had the doctor, only an old midwife.</p>
-
-<p>And though I say it myself, nobody had bonnier or
-healthier children than I had, with fair skins and red
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>I must say that I am a staunch teetotaller, and have
-been all my life. I think that drink has a lot to do
-with some women’s sufferings.</p>
-
-<p>I had one child born without a midwife at all, before
-we had time to fetch her, and I did as well as at any
-other time.</p>
-
-<p>We lived under the colliery, and our rent was only
-3s. 6d. a week. We got our coal at a lower price, about
-1s. a week. During part of the time we had a lodger,
-who paid us 11s., which helped up a bit. But you must
-know we had to be very careful. But, taking all into
-consideration, we were very comfortably off. We had
-not many doctors’ bills, as our children were all very
-healthy, and I don’t think I have spent a pound on
-doctoring for myself since I was a baby, for which I am very
-thankful.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 18s. to 24s. 6d.; six children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">7. “<span class="smcap">She is Real Ill.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have a sister-in-law who has five children, and from
-the first month of pregnancy she is real ill, the sickness
-(as she herself puts it) strains her all to pieces,
-after which she is in a state of collapse. It is painful
-to be with her, the faintness and sickness continue,
-right up till the eighth month. It is not safe for her
-to go any distance by herself, as it comes on at any time,
-and her legs are blue-black until after her baby is born.
-All her children are living; her confinements are normal.
-She is a very plucky woman. Of course, she has to do
-everything herself; she could not afford to have anyone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-in to help her, and in that state she has to do all her own
-washing, cleaning, etc. She has been to the doctor
-during these bad times, but he does not seem able to
-relieve her, only tells her to rest her legs all she can,
-which of course is one of the things with a family around
-you the mother cannot do. Her husband was only
-getting 15s. at the time she was having her first three
-children. Now he is getting £1 per week. He works
-for the Rural District Council.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 15s.; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">8. <span class="smcap">Men Need Education.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My own experience in child-bearing was rather abnormal
-because I had them late in life. Consequently,
-I suffered more than usual because the bones were set
-and do not easily adapt themselves to changed conditions.
-Extreme sickness from first to last, and during
-last months much pain and much discomfort. My two
-first were lost from malnutrition because I could not
-retain my food. In loss of strength the miscarriage
-cost me most, and because of the falling of the womb&mdash;a
-trouble which was not cured till I had a living child.
-I was not ignorant, and took every care, so that I can
-conceive any mother’s life being a dreadful thing if she
-was neglected under such circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>My husband’s wages was very unsettled, never exceeded
-30s., and was often below the sum. I earned
-a little all the time by sewing. Did all housework,
-washing, baking, and made all our clothes. But no
-amount of State help can help the suffering of mothers
-until men are taught many things in regard to the right
-use of the organs of reproduction, and until he realises
-that the wife’s body belongs to herself, and until the
-marriage relations takes a higher sense of morality and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-bare justice. And what I imply not only exists in the
-lower strata of society, but is just as prevalent in the
-higher. So it’s men who need to be educated most.
-The sacred office of parenthood has not yet dawned on
-the majority. Very much injury and suffering comes
-to the mother and child through the father’s ignorance
-and interference. Pain of body and mind, which leaves
-its mark in many ways on the child. No animal will
-submit to this: why should the woman? Why, simply
-because of the Marriage Laws of the woman belonging
-to the man, to have and to own, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s.; three children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">9. <span class="smcap">Bad Confinements.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I shall only be too glad to assist you in giving my
-experience. In the first place, I have had eight children;
-seven is now living. I was twenty-three when I was
-married. My first pregnancy I suffered with my leg
-swollen and veins ready to burst. At my confinement
-the baby was hung with navel cord twice round the
-neck and once round the shoulder, owing to lifting and
-reaching, which caused me hours of suffering, and it
-caused my womb to come down, and I have had to
-wear something to hold it up until these late years.
-I am now fifty-eight; my husband has been dead
-seven years. I was left to fight life’s battles alone. As
-my family increased I had to have my legs bandaged.
-I never felt a woman during pregnancy; as I got nearer
-I felt worse. At my confinements the greatest trouble
-was the flooding after the baby was born, and the afterbirth
-grown to my side. When that was taken away
-the body had to be syringed to stop mortification. I
-have had the doctor’s arm in my body, and felt his
-fingers tearing the afterbirth from my side. While I am<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-writing, I almost fancy I am talking to you. I hope
-I have not tired you with my letter.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £1 to £2; eight children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">10. “<span class="smcap">I am a Ruined Woman.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have been a martyr to suffering through having
-children, owing to the fact that I could not retain my
-food. I was always sick, troubled with nausea and
-vomiting, which kept me very weak; my constitution
-was brought that low, that after having three children
-born living I was unable to go the full length of pregnancy.
-The last still-born child I had, during pregnancy
-I was dropsical all the time I was carrying, and I had to
-have two doctors to chloroform me before the child could
-be born. It had taken all the water from me; it was impossible
-for it to be born until they had lanced the child
-to let the water out of it. I had to be fed every hour day
-and night. Besides two still-born children, I have had
-two miscarriages. The last miscarriage I had I lost that
-much blood it completely drained me. I was three whole
-months and was unable to sleep; I could not even sleep
-one half-hour. I had lost my sleep completely; my hair
-come off and left bald patches about my head. The
-doctor told me if I had not had the presence of mind to
-lay me flat on my bed when the miscarriage took place
-I should have bled to death. Having all this to go
-through, it brought on falling of the womb, and now
-that I am able to do for my family and attend to my
-household duties, I have to wear a body-belt, a kind
-that is worn after appendicitis. I am a ruined woman
-through having children. All the times that I was
-pregnant I could not bear my husband to smoke one
-pipe of tobacco. I have sent you the main ailments
-I have had to endure, but there are a hundred and one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-little items that have crept in between through being
-brought so weak. I have been subject to other ailments
-besides, such as influenza, and rheumatic fever,
-and catarrh of the bowels.</p>
-
-<p>When I was married, my husband was a weaver; at
-that time his highest wages were £1 per week. We
-paid 2s. 6d. rent, so that did not leave much for food,
-fire, and clothing. My first-born was one year all but
-two days when the second was born. When the last-named
-was three months old, my husband went on
-strike for more wages; he was out eleven weeks, and not
-a penny coming in. At the end of that period, there
-being both men and women at the same job, the masters
-were so obstinate they had to go in at the women’s price.
-After the strike there was a turn of bad trade, and he
-was on short time for seven years; his average wages
-during that period was 14s. per week. If I had not
-been a good needlewoman and a capable manager it
-would have been worse.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £1 to 14s.; three children, two still-births, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">11. “<span class="smcap">I was Awfully Poor.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>My first girl was born before I attained my twentieth
-year, and I had a stepmother who had had no children
-of her own, so I was not able to get any knowledge from
-her; and even if she had known anything I don’t suppose
-she would have dreamt of telling me about these things
-which were supposed to exist, but must not be talked
-about. About a month before the baby was born I
-remember asking my aunt where the baby would come
-from. She was astounded, and did not make me much
-wiser. I don’t know whether my ignorance had anything
-to do with the struggle I had to bring the baby into the
-world, but the doctor said that my youth had, for I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-not properly developed. Instruments had to be used,
-and I heard the doctor say he could not tell whether
-my life could be saved or not, for he said there is not
-room here for a bird to pass. All the time I thought
-that this was the way all babies were born.</p>
-
-<p>At the commencement of all my pregnancies I suffered
-terribly from toothache, and for this reason I think
-all married child-bearing women should have their teeth
-attended to, for days and nights of suffering of this
-kind must have a bad effect on both the mother and
-child. I also at times suffered torments from cramp
-in the legs and vomiting, particularly during the first
-three months. I hardly think the cramp can be avoided,
-but if prospective mothers would consult their doctors
-about the inability to retain food, I fancy that might be
-remedied. At the commencement of my second pregnancy
-I was very ill indeed. I could retain no food, not
-even water, and I was constipated for thirteen days,
-and I suffered from jaundice. This had its effect on
-the baby, for he was quite yellow at birth, and the
-midwife having lodgers to attend to, left him unwashed
-for an hour after birth. She never troubled to get his
-lungs inflated, and he was two days without crying.
-I had no doctor. I was awfully poor, so that I had to
-wash the baby’s clothes in my bedroom at the fortnight’s
-end; but had I had any knowledge like I possess
-now, I should have insisted at the very least on the
-woman seeing my child’s lungs were properly filled.
-When we are poor, though, we cannot say what <i>must</i>
-be done; we have to suffer and keep quiet. The boy
-was always weakly, and could not walk when my third
-baby was born. He had fits from twelve to fourteen,
-but except for a rather “loose” frame, seems otherwise
-quite healthy now.</p>
-
-<p>My third child, a girl, was born in a two-roomed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-“nearly underground” dwelling. We had two beds in
-the living-room, and the little scullery was very damp.
-Had it not been for my neighbours, I should have had
-no attendance after the confinement, and no fire often,
-for it was during one of the coal strikes. My fourth
-child, a boy, was born under better housing conditions,
-but not much better as regards money; and during the
-carrying of all my children, except the first, I have had
-insufficient food and too much work. This is just an
-outline. Did I give it all, it would fill a book, as the
-saying goes.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all, I don’t really believe that the children
-(with the exception of the oldest boy) have suffered
-much, only they might have been so much stronger,
-bigger, and better if I had been able to have better food
-and more rest.</p>
-
-<p>Cleanliness has made rapid strides since my confinements;
-for never once can I remember having anything
-but face, neck, and hands washed until I could do things
-myself, and it was thought certain death to change the
-underclothes under a week.</p>
-
-<p>For a whole week we were obliged to lie on clothes
-stiff and stained, and the stench under the clothes was
-abominable, and added to this we were commanded to
-keep the babies under the clothes.</p>
-
-<p>I often wonder how the poor little mites managed to
-live, and perhaps they never would have done but for
-our adoration, because this constant admiration of our
-treasures did give them whiffs of fresh air very often.</p>
-
-<p>My husband’s lowest wage was 10s., the highest
-about £1 only, which was reached by overtime. His
-mother and my own parents generally provided me
-with clothing, most of which was cast-offs.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 10s. to £1; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">12. “<span class="smcap">I Dragged about in Misery.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>It is lack of knowledge that often brings unnecessary
-suffering. I know it from experience. In my early
-motherhood I took for granted that women had to suffer
-at these times, and it was best to be brave and not make
-a fuss. Once when things were not brisk in the labour
-world, I would do my house-cleaning all myself, for
-naturally at these times you like to feel everything is
-in order everywhere when the strange woman comes in
-to take charge. I was in a very weak state through
-worry and the difficulty of meeting the demands. I
-had not seen a doctor, for I was thinking of having a
-midwife I had heard of. I dragged about in misery
-and in great pain. A friend called in one morning after
-I had got the children off to school, and I suppose I looked
-very ill. She said: “Have you engaged a doctor?” I
-said: “No, there is plenty of time; I was only six months,
-and surely I shall have a change soon.” I could not
-lay, sit, or stand in ease, and my legs were so bad. However,
-she went away, saying nothing to me, and brought
-her doctor. He was amazed at my condition, ordered
-me to bed, said my confinement was near, and the child
-was in a critical condition. He sent for a midwife, and
-they were with me from eleven o’clock till three o’clock.
-He said the child was dead, and in such an awkward
-position that it nearly cost my life to bring it. I had
-a very long illness follow on (it would have been a lovely
-child full time). The child had been killed through
-shock, and already showed signs of mortification. I
-was in a poor state of health, and struggled against my
-strength, looking after the children’s welfare and neglecting
-myself. In trying to lift the washing-tub it slipped,
-and that was the shock; and instead of resting and
-having advice (which I felt I could not afford), I perse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>vered,
-and that was the result. Now, if there had been
-such a thing as a Maternity Centre where I could have
-sent for someone, or could have attended without that
-feeling of expense, I could have been relieved of all that
-suffering.</p>
-
-<p>Another experience I had some nine years after the
-previous. I was pregnant, work had been very scarce,
-and I was in a very weak state. My husband had been
-at work three weeks when he happened an accident.
-He had fallen from a high scaffold. The Clerk of
-the Works came to tell me they had taken him to
-the hospital, and I had better go at once and take
-someone with me. Of course, I thought the worst had
-happened. (He did not know my condition.) I was
-between three and four months, and this shock caused
-a miscarriage. I had a midwife, who, no doubt, was
-all right when things were straightforward. I got
-about again, but was very weak and ill. He was in
-hospital six weeks. I took in needlework. I got very
-weak yet very stout. I thought it was through sitting
-so much at the machine. I worked and starved myself
-to make sick pay, 12s. per week, go as far as possible.
-I got so weak, and fainted several times after heavy
-days at the machine. I was taken very ill one night,
-and my daughter went for the doctor. He said: “We
-must have her in bed,” and sent for a neighbour. It
-was a confinement of a seven-months babe. When he
-told me it was childbirth, I said it was impossible, for I
-had miscarried about four months previous. However,
-it was true. I had been carrying twins&mdash;a most peculiar
-case&mdash;during that four months. My system was being
-drained, and the worry and anxiety had effect on the
-child. It was weak and did not move much. I had a
-bad time, but the child lived for nine months, but a
-very delicate child. Now, if I had been able to have a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-qualified midwife when I had the miscarriage, we should
-have known there was another child, and if I could have
-been medically treated, all that suffering could have been
-prevented, and I might have had a strong child.</p>
-
-<p>But apart from all that, I do not know which is the
-worst&mdash;child-bearing with anxiety and strain of mind
-and body to make ends meet, with the thought of
-another one to share the already small allowance, or
-getting through the confinement fairly well, and getting
-about household duties too soon, and bringing on other
-ailments which make life and everything a burden. I
-could forgive a woman in such a state giving herself and
-the children a drug which would end everything. I
-was an invalid for six years through getting about too
-soon and causing womb displacement.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £2 2s.; eight children, one still-born, four miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">13. “<span class="smcap">Very Fortunate.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I think I have been very fortunate. I have had two
-children, both girls; one will be sixteen in April, the
-other will be ten in August, so you see there is six years
-and four months (and not even a miscarriage) between
-them. I have always had the best of health, never had
-a doctor until my second baby was born.... When
-I was married I was three months short of twenty-one....
-Trade was very bad at the time. I
-worked in the mill up to six weeks from the event; we
-had a home to make&mdash;that is why, as I thought every
-bit would help. Sometimes we did not make 10s. between
-us. I had a midwife, and I went on very well;
-in fact, I asked what I had to stay in bed for. The
-second day I got up, the fifth day I went out, the seventh
-baby got on all right, and I went back to work at eight
-weeks’ end. I gave her the breast till she was twelve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-months old. When weaning her, I put plasters on my
-breasts, which irritated the skin so much that they
-brought on inflammation. I suffered awful, as I did
-not like to tell anybody. It went almost round my
-body. Then I told mother. When she saw the state
-I was in she went nearly frantic; she made me go to the
-doctor, and one box of salve put me right. That is
-about the worst I suffered with her. I did not even
-have morning sickness, which I have often heard women
-speak about during pregnancy, with either of my children.
-When I was pregnant the second time, I heard that the
-midwife I had the first time had started drinking, so I
-was afraid to have her. I had a doctor, and it was well
-I had, as I did not go on as well as I did the first time.
-I was in bed a fortnight. I was well looked after, for
-I have one of the best of husbands and a good mother.
-I might say I have wanted for nothing. I have two fine
-girls.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 7s. to 26s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">14. <span class="smcap">Inflammation.</span></h3>
-
-<p>When my boy was coming, for three months I could
-not dress myself properly; I could not get a pair of
-gloves or boots on, as I was so swollen&mdash;I suppose with
-water. I did not get any advice, as I thought I must
-just put up with it. After he was born, I could not
-pass my water for a week&mdash;it had to be taken from me.
-Then I had inflammation of the bladder, and finally
-inflammation of the kidneys, besides other complications.
-My doctor, who was an old man, had to leave
-me in charge of his son for a few days, and once, while
-talking about my illness, he said it was a blessing I had had
-the inflammation of the kidneys, as it had disclosed the
-fact that there was albumen in the water of some stand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>ing.
-I told him how I had been held during pregnancy,
-and he said I ought to have been to his father at that
-time, and he would have been able to do me some good,
-but, like the majority of women, I thought it was one
-of the ills I <i>had</i> to bear.</p>
-
-<p>The next case is of a young married woman with her
-first baby. She took ill at the eight months, and had a
-very bad time, falling out of one fit into another, and
-at last, after her baby was born, she lay two days quite
-unconscious&mdash;in fact, they never expected she would
-recover. She had two doctors, and they gave her every
-attention, and then when she was getting better her
-own particular doctor told her that if she had only consulted
-him beforehand he could have saved her a lot of
-pain, which she had to put up with. He said it was
-some kidney trouble which had been the reason of all
-she had suffered. In both her case and mine we could
-have had advice, as far as the expense was concerned,
-but it was sheer <i>ignorance, and the idea that we must put
-up with it till the nine months were over</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £2; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">15. “<span class="smcap">Oh, the Horrors we Suffer!</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>From the time I married till just previous to the
-birth of my third child, my husband earned 28s. per
-week; then followed two years’ shortness of work. When
-my fourth was born, we had no food or anything to eat,
-until my husband went to a storekeeper and told him
-how we were placed, and he trusted us, and said we ought
-to have asked him before. And we all had dinner off
-oatmeal gruel made with tinned milk. The past struggle
-left its mark on the physique of my children. One has
-since died of heart disease, aged ten years; another of
-phthisis, sixteen years; my youngest has swollen glands,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-and not at all robust, though not born in poverty, aged
-fifteen years....</p>
-
-<p>I have not been the worst-placed woman by a long
-way, my husband generally having 30s. per week, but
-I could not afford help during pregnancy, and I suffer
-from valvular disease of the heart, which (doctors say)
-was caused of extreme attacks of hæmorrhage and shortness
-of breath, leaving me a complete wreck at those
-times. My home was very dirty, the children got
-ragged, meals worse than usual, and each doctor I
-consulted said I was not fit to do my work, and I had
-not to bother. I was told not to worry at all, or I
-should be worse than I was. No one who has not been
-placed in a similar position can realise how horrible it
-is to be so placed. I have resorted to drugs, trying to
-prevent or bring about a slip. I believe I and others
-have caused bad health to ourselves and our children.
-But what has one to do?</p>
-
-<p>I hope this communication will not offend in any way.
-But after the birth of my first baby I suffered from
-falling womb, and the torture of that was especially
-cruel when at closet, in more than I can describe; and
-quite by accident I learnt that other mothers I met
-were not suffering the same. My baby was ten months
-old when I told the doctor, who said I ought to have
-told him before, and he soon put me right. But doctors
-who attended me never told me anything concerning
-my babies or myself. My husband was easeful about
-attention to himself, and always willing to help, even
-after working from 6 a.m. in the morning. I often
-pitied him; he was never impatient. I have seen women
-similarly placed, and their husbands throw their dinner
-in the fire. I have been told I ought to do as well as
-his mother, and I wish I could have done. Oh, the
-horrors we suffer when men and women are ignorant!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-Some have severe attacks of hæmorrhage caused by
-sexual intercourse soon after birth....</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s.; eight children, two still-born, three miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">16. “<span class="smcap">A Nightmare Yet.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>The first feeling of a young mother (to be) (unless
-she has been very intelligently trained or is very ignorant)
-is one of fear for herself when she finds out her condition.
-As time goes on she will probably lose this fear in the
-feeling she is to have something all her very own, but
-in some instances the dread grows, and in a sense fills
-her whole being. This must of necessity weaken her
-bodily and mentally, and, of course, makes her time of
-trial harder to bear.</p>
-
-<p>I remember over my first baby, although I felt delighted
-to think I was to be a mother, I had a very
-nervous fear that my baby would prove weakly because
-I had suffered for so many years from chronic bronchitis.
-I believe this dread had a very bad effect on my nervous
-system, with the result that when I got within a fortnight
-of full term my baby was born very weakly, and
-I had a severe labour lasting two nights and two days.
-(This was twenty-three years ago.) No effort was
-made to obtain help for me, although my mother at
-that time was starting to practise as a midwife, and had
-all a mother’s fears for her daughter in her first labour.
-At that time it was much more usual to trust to Providence,
-and if a woman died it only proved her weakness
-and unfitness for motherhood. My baby only lived seven
-months. In spite of all this trouble, I was very glad
-when a year later I found I was to become a mother again.
-I was still weak, and this baby was born at eight months,
-very tiny but not weakly. I again had a slow time,
-lasting two days and one night, but not so severe as the
-first. I had what is known as “white-leg” during the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-lying-in period. This is usually due to a septic condition,
-and may be induced by uncleanliness or careless
-handling during the first stage of labour; again, a chill
-will produce this state, and this was the cause in my case,
-owing to getting out of bed on the second day rather
-than call mother upstairs when I needed her. My last
-baby was born at a time when we were really badly off.
-My husband was out of work during the greater part of
-the time, and I was not only obliged to work myself,
-but often went short of food and warm clothing when I
-was most in need of it. The effect on my health was, of
-course, bad, but the baby was a fine healthy boy weighing
-over 12 pounds. Bad as was the effect on my bodily
-health, the mental effect was worse. I nearly lost hope
-and faith in everyone. I felt that even the baby could
-not make up for the terrible strain I had undergone,
-and at that time I could fully enter into the feelings of
-those women who take drugs to prevent birth. I know
-I ought to have been more strong-minded, but anyway,
-I got through all right after all, and, strange to say, I got
-up feeling better and more hopeful than I had felt for
-years. During this pregnancy I never dared to allow
-myself to think of the time when the baby would be born;
-first, because I knew the pain would be so bad, and then
-because I realised that I would not be able to work when
-I got near the end and for some time afterwards. I left
-off a month before and did not start again for four months
-after the birth. I don’t know now <i>how</i> I got through,
-and it is a nightmare to me yet. (I may say here that
-although we were so poor we stuck to the Store all
-through, and this was a great help.) I believe if I had
-felt quite comfortable as to the position of my other
-children during the time when I would be laid up, my
-sufferings would not have been so great, or my dread of
-the labour.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">17. <span class="smcap">Lack of Food and Bad Housing.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I think a great deal of suffering is caused to the mother
-and child during pregnancy by lack of nourishment and
-rest, combined with bad housing arrangements. The
-majority of working women before marriage have been
-used to standing a great deal at their work, bringing
-about much suffering which does not tell seriously
-until after marriage, particularly during pregnancy. A
-very common complaint is falling of the womb. If
-women could be taught to sit down more when they
-were doing little jobs, that they very often stand to do
-now, I believe it would be a great help to them physically.
-The majority of working women do not get
-sufficient nourishment during pregnancy. If there is
-other children the mother generally takes what is left.
-I believe this tells very greatly at the time of confinement.
-I well remember the prostrate condition I have
-been in on several occasions owing to lack of nourishment
-and attention at the time. I found I could not
-get anybody to come into my house and do the work
-unless I could pay them 10s. per week; in consequence
-I had to take pot-luck. My last confinement I was
-nearly twelve months before I was able to do my duties
-in the home, which meant a great deal of suffering to
-my children, as they were not kept clean. This caused
-me a great deal of trouble and anxiety. I believe all
-this tells on the mother’s health and also the baby’s
-which she is nursing. I have known women, who have
-had the opportunity and good sense, to get all the
-nourishment and rest during pregnancy, even at the
-expense of something going short in the home; at time
-of confinement they have got over it quite easily, and
-made very little difference to them a few hours afterwards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I believe the bad housing arrangements have a very
-depressing effect on mothers during pregnancy. I know
-of streets of houses where there are large factories built,
-taking the whole of the daylight away from the kitchen,
-where the woman spends the best part of her life. On
-top of this you get the continual grinding of machinery
-all day. Knowing that it is mostly women and girls
-who are working in these factories gives you the feeling
-that their bodies are going round with the machinery.
-The mother wonders what she has to live for; if there
-is another baby coming she hopes it will be dead when
-it is born. The result is she begins to take drugs. I
-need hardly tell you the pain and suffering she goes
-through if the baby survives, or the shock it is to the
-mother when she is told there is something wrong with
-the baby. She feels she is to blame if she has done
-this without her husband knowing, and she is living in
-dread of him. All this tells on the woman physically and
-mentally; can you wonder at women turning to drink?
-If the child lives to grow up, you find it hysterical and
-with very irritable, nasty ways when in the company
-of other children. When you see all this it is like a
-sting at your heart when you know the cause of it all
-and no remedy.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 28s.; six children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">18. <span class="smcap">Astonishing Health.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Although I have had eight children and one miscarriage,
-I am afraid my experiences would not help
-you in the least, as I am supposed to be one of those
-women who can stand anything. During my pregnancy
-I have always been able to do my own work.</p>
-
-<p>With the boys labour has only lasted twenty minutes,
-girls a little longer. I have never needed a doctor’s
-help, and it has always been over before he came. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-have never had an after-pain in my life, so the doctors
-don’t know what I am made of. I always had to get up
-and do my own work at three weeks’ end. I work all day
-long at housework until six or seven, and I then take
-up all voluntary work I can for the sake of the Labour
-Cause. I am sorry and yet glad that my lot has not
-been so bad as others. My idea is that everything
-depends on how a woman lives, and how healthy she
-was born. No corsets and plenty of fruit, also a boy’s
-healthy sports when she is young. I had the advantage
-of never having to work before I was married, and
-never have wanted for money, so when the struggle
-came I had a strong constitution to battle with it all.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s. to 35s., and upwards; eight children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">19. “<span class="smcap">Kept All to Myself.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I was a very strong woman before my baby was born.
-I was a weaver. I worked up to five weeks before the
-baby was born. I had a good appetite all the nine
-months and did not ail anything. But when baby was
-born he was a miserable little thing. Now that I am
-older I can see things different, and I say that if I had
-not have worked so hard during the nine months, my
-baby would have been better. When a baby is born
-delicate they are a great care for a good many years.</p>
-
-<p>I may say here that I did not want any more. I
-never knew what it was to ail anything all my life before,
-but I could not say that after. I lost 2 stone in weight
-in a very short time after. Of course, I can see now
-I was a good bit to blame, because I thought I was
-only like other women would be, and kept all to myself.
-I was so strong before he was born, that I was ashamed
-to own up to it that I felt so weak. It was more weakness
-than anything else that I suffered from. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-used to tell me that I would perhaps be better if I had
-another, but I said I never would go through it again
-to feel as bad again. I may say in conclusion, if ever
-my son takes a wife, I will do all in my power to help
-her not to suffer as I did.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak"><a id="a20_Steads_Penny_Poets"></a>20. <span class="smcap">Stead’s Penny Poets.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was married at twenty-eight in utter ignorance of
-the things that most vitally affect a wife and mother.
-My mother, a dear, pious soul, thought ignorance was
-innocence, and the only thing I remember her saying on
-the subject of childbirth was, “God never sends a babe
-without bread to feed it.” Dame Experience long ago
-knocked the bottom out of that argument for me. My
-husband was a man earning 32s. a week&mdash;a conscientious,
-good man, but utterly undomesticated. A year after
-our marriage the first baby was born, naturally and with
-little pain or trouble. I had every care, and motherhood
-stirred the depths of my nature. The rapture of a babe
-in arms drawing nourishment from me crowned me with
-glory and sanctity and honour. Alas! the doctor who
-attended me suffered from eczema of a very bad type
-in his hands. The disease attacked me, and in twenty-four
-hours I was covered from head to foot ... finally
-leaving me partially and sometimes totally crippled in
-my hands. Fifteen months later a second baby came&mdash;a
-dear little girl, and again I was in a fairly good condition
-physically and financially, but had incurred heavy
-doctor’s bills and attendance bills, due to my incapacity
-for work owing to eczema. Both the children were
-delicate, and dietary expenses ran high. Believing that
-true thrift is wise expenditure, we spent our all trying
-to build up for them sound, healthy bodies, and was ill-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>prepared
-financially and physically to meet the birth
-of a third baby sixteen months later. Motherhood
-ceased to be a crown of glory, and became a fearsome
-thing to be shunned and feared. The only way to meet
-our increased expenditure was by dropping an endowment
-policy, and losing all our little, hard-earned savings. I
-confess without shame that when well-meaning friends
-said: “You cannot afford another baby; take this drug,”
-I took their strong concoctions to purge me of the little
-life that might be mine. They failed, as such things
-generally do, and the third baby came. Many a time
-I have sat in daddy’s big chair, a baby two and a half
-years old at my back, one sixteen months and one one
-month on my knees, and cried for very weariness and
-hopelessness. I fed them all as long as I could, but I
-was too harassed, domestic duties too heavy, and the
-income too limited to furnish me with a rich nourishing
-milk.... Nine months later I was again pregnant,
-and the second child fell ill. “She cannot live,” the
-doctors said, but I loved.... She is still delicate, but
-bright and intelligent. I watched by her couch three
-weeks, snatching her sleeping moments to fulfil the
-household task. The strain was fearful, and one night
-I felt I must sleep or die&mdash;I didn’t much care which;
-and I lay down by her side, and slept, and slept, and slept,
-forgetful of temperatures, nourishment or anything else....
-A miscarriage followed in consequence of the strain,
-and doctor’s bills grew like mushrooms. The physical
-pain from the eczema, and working with raw and bleeding
-hands, threatened me with madness. I dare not
-tell a soul. I dare not even face it for some time, and
-then I knew I must fight this battle or go under. Care
-and rest would have cured me, but I was too proud for
-charity, and no other help was available. You may say
-mine is an isolated case. It is not. The sympathy born<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-of suffering brings many mothers to me, just that they
-may find a listening ear. I find this mental state is common,
-and the root cause is lack of rest and economic
-strain&mdash;economic strain being the greatest factor for ill
-of the two.</p>
-
-<p>Working-class women have grown more refined; they
-desire better homes, better clothes for themselves and
-their children, and are far more self-respecting and less
-humble than their predecessors. But the strain to
-keep up to anything like a decent standard of housing,
-clothing, diet, and general appearance, is enough to upset
-the mental balance of a Chancellor of the Exchequer.
-How much more so a struggling pregnant mother!
-Preventives are largely used. Race suicide, if you will,
-is the policy of the mothers of the future. Who shall
-blame us?</p>
-
-<p>Two years later a fourth baby came. Varicose veins
-developed. I thought they were a necessary complement
-to childbirth. He was a giant of a boy and heavy
-to carry, and I just dragged about the housework, washing
-and cleaning until the time of his birth; but I looked
-forward to that nine days in bed longingly; to be still
-and rest was a luxury of luxuries. Economics became
-a greater strain than ever now that I had four children
-to care for. Dimly conscious of the evils of sweating,
-instead of buying cheap ready-made clothes, I fashioned
-all their little garments and became a sweated worker
-myself. The utter monotony of life, the lack of tone
-and culture, the drudgery and gradual lowering of the
-standard of living consequent upon the rising cost of
-living, and increased responsibilities, was converting
-me into a soulless drudge and nagging scold. I felt
-the comradeship between myself and husband was
-breaking up. He could not enter into my domestic, I
-would not enter into his intellectual pursuits, and again<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-I had to fight or go under. I could give no time to
-mental culture or reading and I bought Stead’s penny
-editions of literary masters, and used to put them on a
-shelf in front of me washing-day, fastened back their
-pages with a clothes-peg, and learned pages of Whittier,
-Lowell, and Longfellow, as I mechanically rubbed the
-dirty clothes, and thus wrought my education. This
-served a useful purpose; my children used to be sent off
-to sleep by reciting what I had learnt during the day.
-My mental outlook was widened, and once again I stood
-a comrade and helpmeet by my husband’s side, and my
-children all have a love for good literature.</p>
-
-<p>Three years later a fifth baby came. I was ill and
-tired, but my husband fell ill a month prior to his birth,
-and I was up day and night. Our doctor was, and is,
-one of the kindest men I have ever met. I said:
-“Doctor, I cannot afford you for myself, but will you
-come if I need?” “I hope you won’t need me, but I’ll
-come.” I dare not let my husband in his precarious
-condition hear a cry of pain from me, and travail pain
-cannot always be stifled; and here again the doctor helped
-me by giving me a sleeping draught to administer him
-as soon as I felt the pangs of childbirth. Hence he slept
-in one room while I travailed in the other, and brought
-forth the loveliest boy that ever gladdened a mother’s
-heart. So here I am a woman of forty-one years, blessed
-with a lovely family of healthy children, faced with a
-big deficit, varicose veins, and an occasional loss of the
-use of my hands. I want nice things, but I must pay
-that debt I owe. I would like nice clothes (I’ve had
-three new dresses in fourteen years), but I must not have
-them yet. I’d like to develop mentally, but I must
-stifle that part of my nature until I have made good the
-ills of the past, and I am doing it slowly and surely, and
-my heart grows lighter, and will grow lighter still when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-I know that the burden is lifted from the mothers of our
-race.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 32s. to 40s.; five children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">21. <span class="smcap">How a Woman may Suffer.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I cannot tell you all my sufferings during the time
-of motherhood. I thought, like hundreds of women do
-to-day, that it was only natural, and you had to bear it.
-I was left an orphan, and having no mother to tell me
-anything, I was quite unprepared for marriage and what
-was expected of me.</p>
-
-<p>My husband being some years my senior, I found he
-had not a bit of control over his passions, and expected
-me to do what he had been in the habit of paying
-women to do.</p>
-
-<p>I had three children and one miscarriage within three
-years. This left me very weak and suffering from very
-bad legs. I had to work very hard all the time I was
-pregnant.</p>
-
-<p>My next child only lived a few hours. After the confinement
-I was very ill, and under the care of a doctor
-for some time. I had inflammation in the varicose
-veins; the doctor told me I should always lay with my
-legs above my head. He told my husband I must not
-do any work for some time. I had either to wear a
-bandage or an elastic stocking to keep my legs so that
-I might get about at all. I am still suffering from the
-varicose veins now, although my youngest child is
-fourteen; at times I am obliged to keep my legs bandaged
-up. With each child I had they seemed to get
-worse, and me having them so quickly never allowed
-my legs to get into their normal condition before I was
-pregnant again. I do wish there could be some limit
-to the time when a woman is expected to have a child.
-I often think women are really worse off than beasts.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-During the time of pregnancy, the male beast keeps
-entirely from the female: not so with the woman; she
-is at the prey of a man just the same as though she
-was not pregnant. Practically within a few days of the
-birth, and as soon as the birth is over, she is tortured
-again. If the woman does not feel well she must not
-say so, as a man has such a lot of ways of punishing a
-woman if she does not give in to him....</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s. average; seven children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">22. “<span class="smcap">Got on Splendidly.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have only had one child and one miscarriage, but I
-can assure you I had such good nursing that I got on
-splendidly. Of course, I was not allowed to get up
-before the tenth day, and I do not think that anyone
-ought to do so, even if they can. I think if everyone
-at those times had great care and good nursing for a
-month, there is no reason why they should not get on
-as well as I did.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>One child, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">23. “<span class="smcap">One of the Fortunate.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I must be one of the fortunate ones. I have always
-had fairly good health during pregnancy, and good
-times at confinements and getting up. I had never
-had anything to do with children before marriage, and
-I owe my good health to being well nourished and
-looked after by my mother when I was a growing girl.
-I think if the young girls of to-day are properly cared
-for, it will make all the difference to the mothers of the
-future, and save much suffering during pregnancy and
-after.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s. to 30s.; three children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">24. <span class="smcap">Utterly Overdone.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Sometimes we think that our own life does not seem
-to be of any importance, and our troubles are what
-should be, specially before the Maternity Benefit. When
-I was married, I had to leave my own town to go out
-into the world, as it were, and when I had to have my
-first baby, I knew absolutely nothing, not even how
-they were born. I had many a time thought how cruel
-(not wilfully, perhaps) my mother was not to tell me all
-about the subject when I left home. Although I was
-twenty-five years of age when married, I had never been
-where a baby was born. When my baby was born I
-had been in my labour for thirty-six hours, and did not
-know what was the matter with me, and when it was
-born it was as black as a coal and took the doctor a long
-while to get life into it. It was only a seven-months
-baby, and I feel quite sure if I had been told anything
-about pregnancy it would not have happened. I carried
-a heavy piece of oilcloth, which brought on my labour.
-Anyway, the boy lived, but it cannot be expected that
-he can be as robust as if he had been a nine months
-baby, but he is healthy, but not extra strong.</p>
-
-<p>When he was six years old, I had my fifth baby, and
-had also a miscarriage, and then I went on strike. My
-life was not worth living at this rate, as my husband
-was only a working man, out of work when wet or bad
-weather, and also in times of depression. I had all my
-own household work to do, washing, mending, making
-clothes, baking, cooking, and everything else.</p>
-
-<p>In those six years I never knew what it was to have
-a proper night’s sleep, for if I had not a baby on the
-breast I was pregnant, and how could you expect
-children to be healthy, as I always seemed to be tired.
-If I sat down, I very often fell asleep through the day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-I knew very little about feeding children; when they
-cried, I gave them the breast. If I had known then what
-I know now, perhaps my children would have been living.
-I was ignorant, and had to suffer severely for it, for it
-nearly cost me my life, and also those of my children.
-I very often ponder over this part of my life. I must
-not say anything about my mother now, because she is
-dead, but I cannot help thinking what might have been
-if she had told me.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Five children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="Facsimile_of_Extract_from_Letter_24"></a>
-<img src="images/zill_t051.jpg" width="600" height="357" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Facsimile of Extract from Letter 24.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">25. <span class="smcap">Three Children in Three Years.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was married young. My first three children were
-born in three years. My husband’s wages at that time
-was 27s. a week. My husband works in a boot and shoe
-factory. In the winter-time they did not make many
-full weeks. There were clubs to pay and holidays to
-provide for. The consequence was my third child was
-not born strong. She had a cough as soon as she was
-born. It was a struggle to put enough by to have a
-nurse in for a fortnight. I have had to get about to do
-my own housework long enough before I was fit to do
-it. My last two children have been stronger because I
-have been able to get better support. My husband was
-working for Co-operative firms.</p>
-
-<p>When we know what the working women have to go
-through, you need not wonder at them trying to curtail
-the family. Though the wages have gone up, it is
-quite as difficult, for the prices of commodities have
-gone up too. I do feel that something should be done
-to help our women, so that they can take better care of
-themselves during the time of pregnancy. But when
-they only have the same amount of money coming in,
-how are they going to do it? For it takes them all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-their time to keep going on. A mother never thinks
-of herself. She is always trying to make her family
-comfortable. A good many of them get about too
-quick after confinement, and it is making invalids of a
-good many. I am very sorry I am not in active service
-for the Guild. I cannot tell you how much I love the
-work.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 16s. to 27s.; six children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">26. “<span class="smcap">Such is the Life of Poor Women.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>One of the difficulties I experienced during pregnancy
-was saving the doctor’s fee out of the small wage, which
-was only just enough each week for ordinary expenses.
-Thanks to the Maternity Benefit, a woman now knows
-she is provided for at the time.</p>
-
-<p>I have had six children, all living, and what a terrible
-time it is, to be sure, especially during the last two
-months&mdash;only just enough to live on and another coming.
-The mental strain in addition to bodily labour must
-surely affect the child. I think a woman in that
-state should have all the rest that is possible. I did
-fairly well for a working man’s wife, but the recollection
-is anything but pleasant. Fancy bending over a washing-tub,
-doing the family washing perhaps an hour or
-two before baby is born. I think a woman in that condition
-should be considered unable to do heavy work
-for quite six weeks previous to the birth of her child.</p>
-
-<p>Like other wage-paid workers, my husband’s wages
-fluctuated. The unsteadiness of the wages of a labourer
-is a matter of concern, and working a full week he would
-scarcely receive a real living wage. During the time
-of bringing my children up, the highest wage I received
-in any one week was 30s., and the lowest&mdash;well, I had
-so many that I really do not know how I got through.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-A week’s holiday<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> meant no wage at the week-end. And
-if the machinery broke down, or there were strikes or
-lock-outs, it stopped for six clear days, the sum of 10s.,
-and 1s. for each child, would be paid. The same rate
-would be paid for out of work. My husband was seldom
-out of work, but, as I have stated, his wage was subject
-to fluctuation. I think the lowest (not to mention
-holidays of a week duration, when perhaps I had
-saved the Dividend to tide the week over) was 4s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>I shall have to tell you of a case near my home. The
-woman, I believe, is in her last month. I met her on
-her way home carrying a baby of two years (her second).
-She had been out to wash, as she said every copper
-helped (her husband is a labourer). She said: “I have
-to go out as long as I am able to help, to clean or wash;
-you see, they will not let me work in the factory.” When
-questioned about the baby she was carrying, her answer
-was that she took him with her, and he just sits on a
-chair until she has done. The child in question is
-rickety. He cannot stand yet. Such is the life of
-poor women. I have known many such.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">27. <span class="smcap">Worked up to the Last.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I will just give you a little of my confinements. I
-had been married eighteen months when I had my first
-baby, when I had a trying time, being only an eight-months
-baby. My water broke five weeks before, and
-caused what the doctor calls “dry labour.” He only
-lived twelve hours. The second came three years and
-nine months afterwards. I had a straight labour, but I
-flooded afterwards, and if the doctor had not been there
-I should have lost my life; it caused me three months’
-doctoring afterwards. The third one, which came two
-years and one month after, I had a fairly good labour.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-Over this one my sufferings were mostly before it came.
-I had varicose veins in the right leg right away in the
-abdomen, and the irritation was most distressing; I
-used to walk the bedroom most nights during the last
-month. The fourth came two years and three months
-after the third, and the doctor put me an elastic band
-on my leg, and of course I did not suffer so much over
-that one. I could have told at the meeting, where
-Mrs. D. was talking, about babies’ eyes, for this one’s
-eyes after a few days began as if they had got cold in
-them, and the doctor told me then many people took
-it for cold, but if neglected it was most serious. I am
-pleased to say I have had no trouble, for he is a fine
-young fellow now.</p>
-
-<p>Between the fourth and fifth I was four years and
-eleven months, and then the sixth I went five years and
-eleven months, and was forty-two when I had him. Of
-course, I think I am suffering now for some of it, as I
-have always had to do my own work up to the last, and
-have had a lot of sickness with my husband and my
-second boy; till he was eleven years old I scarce ever
-had the doctor out of the house. I must say that I
-have had a good husband to help me through, but I
-do hope we get the £7 10s., and then there will be a
-many who will not suffer as many poor women have done
-in the past. At the time I had my children, and weighing
-all things together, I don’t think my husband’s
-wages averaged no more than 28s. a week, lowest 12s.
-and 15s. I should like to tell you, besides children we
-had my husband’s mother to keep, and allowed her
-2s. 6d. a week besides keeping her. He has never been
-a strong man either, and many a time had him at home
-six or seven weeks at a time. I feel that when I go
-to conferences and meetings that I wish I had been a
-co-operator years ago, for since I have been a Guild<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-worker I feel the years have been wasted, but I am
-trying to do my best now in my little way. Wishing
-you every success in the campaign we are fighting.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages average 28s.; six children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">28. <span class="smcap">Heavy Expense of Childbirth.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My experiences as a young woman were very difficult,
-for I was the first child, and had never been brought
-up with young babies, or afterwards been where they
-were. My mother dying when I was three years old,
-I had no one to turn to for advice. I had spent all my
-youth in the country, and came as a stranger into a
-strange place, knowing no one but the man I married.
-My first child was a very delicate child, but I have often
-thought since that perhaps I had not done all things
-that were wise, but that would be for want of knowledge.
-I think a mother is a peculiarity during pregnancy, for
-I myself never seemed to want anything I had cooked
-myself, and if I went to any other house I could have
-eaten the poorest of foods. Then one must not go and
-buy what we may fancy, as that is an extra expense to
-the home; and knowing there is an additional expense
-coming, we have to be very careful. I have not had the
-Maternity Benefit yet, but that is only a trifle to the
-large expense that is incurred, when you have paid
-£1 1s. for your doctor, your nurse 10s. per week, a
-washerwoman 2s. per day (you cannot get a nurse here
-under, and if she does the washing she will charge 12s.
-per week). Then, you never find anyone that makes the
-money go as far as you do yourself, so that when you
-get up, instead of having the best of support, and very
-little to do, you have to begin to get pulled round again,
-and start and do the household work before you are
-strong enough, with an extra one added. Naturally the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-child either cannot be nursed by the mother at all, or
-only partly. The child suffers as well as the mother.</p>
-
-<p>If it could be made possible, I really think mothers
-should have practically nothing to do with heavy work
-three months before childbirth and three months after&mdash;that
-is, if life is to be made worth living. But at present
-we have to clean down thoroughly ready for the event,
-till I have found myself wondering if death would not be
-a release. What with worry and feeling bad, I am never
-surprised at hearing of an expectant mother committing
-suicide. If she has two or three tiny children, she never
-has a minute’s rest, if she is an energetic housewife.</p>
-
-<p>I think I won’t write any more, or you will be thinking
-I am rather a depressing character, but I shall be glad
-if anything I have said is any use to others as a benefit
-in future time.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. to 45s.; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">29. “<span class="smcap">I am Nearly Used Up.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>Through my married life I have had a good, kind
-partner, which means so much to the wife, and who
-always provided me with a doctor and a good nurse
-for my confinements, which goes without saying that
-the mother and child have a much better chance than
-other neglected ones. The first five were born with
-fifteen months between; then there was a wait of eight
-years for the sixth, and three years for the seventh. I
-have always worked hard both before and after childbirth.
-Give a woman a quiet home and an easy conscience
-and good plain food, and I see no reason why
-both mother and child should not do well. Personally,
-I don’t know what I should have done if it had not been
-for my good old nurse, my dear mother having passed
-away some years before; but by the grace of God and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-plenty of common sense, I have brought all my children
-through so far. I was married in 1884, and knew practically
-nothing about a child’s entry into the world. I
-do think there should be somewhere where intending
-brides could get information that would in some way
-prepare them for what may take place&mdash;those who have
-no mothers, I mean. But so much depends on the
-woman herself, whether she is going to make the best
-of things. Personally, I found it was no good worrying,
-although I found it much harder than most. I never
-knew what it was to have a day at the seaside for twenty
-years. I am not grumbling, only now I am nearly used
-up. If only the Maternity Benefit had been given when
-I and many others needed it, I cannot help thinking I
-could have done much better. My husband is a bricklayer,
-and you may guess it was a bit of a struggle with
-my little family.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Seven children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a href="images/zill_t058a_h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t058a.jpg" width="550" height="325" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>ELEVEN CHILDREN BORN, ALL LIVING. FATHER A FISH-HAWKER.</p>
-
-<p>This family is not connected with the Women’s Co-operative Guild.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>Reproduced by kind permission of the Medical Officer of Health for Liverpool.</i>)
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">30. “<span class="smcap">Mother Last.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>When we were first married my husband’s wages was
-£1 a week. I have had seven children; one died at
-birth, one at one year old, and five are living. Each
-was about two years and three months old when the
-other was born. I had one miscarriage, which left me
-very ill for a long time. I found that the money was so
-little to do on that I must work as well to pay my way
-and clothe my children. My husband neither drank or
-smoked, but when rent, coals, gas, and food is taken out,
-what was left for other things? I had boarders, and
-was standing on my legs so much that after the birth of
-my last child a marble leg set in. I went under an
-operation, but my leg is still very bad. A mother wants
-good food before the birth as well as after, but how can
-it be done out of so little money? If father takes his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-food it must be as good as can be got; then the children
-come next and mother last.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s.; seven children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">31. <span class="smcap">Little To Tell.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Why is it these things have never been thought of
-before? Is it ignorance, or is it that people are got
-used to the idea that we have to expect all sorts of
-illnesses when a woman gets pregnant, and we have
-just to put up with it and do the best we can? Personally,
-I have very little to tell of my own experiences,
-although I have four children&mdash;two boys and two girls,
-the eldest fifteen years and the youngest six years.
-Compared with some working mothers, I have gone
-through those trying periods fairly well. Also my confinements
-have on the whole been good. My husband’s
-occupation is a carpenter and joiner, and he gets the
-trade union rate of wages of the district.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages, trade union rate; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">32. <span class="smcap">Restriction Advocated.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I feel that I must write and explain why I advocate
-educating women to the idea that they should not bring
-children into the world without the means to provide
-for them. I know it is a most delicate subject, and very
-great care must be used in introducing it, but still, a
-word spoken sometimes does good. Someone has said
-that most of the trouble with delicate children were
-caused by women trying to destroy life in the early days
-of pregnancy. I do not, of course, recommend that sort
-of thing. It is absolutely wrong. But it is terrible to
-see how women suffer, even those that are in better conditions
-of life. I will quote one or two personal ex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>periences.
-My grandmother had over twenty children;
-only eight lived to about fourteen years, only two to a
-good old age. A cousin (a beautiful girl) had seven
-children in about seven years; the first five died in
-birth, the sixth lived, and the seventh died and the
-mother also. What a wasted life! Another had seven
-children; dreadful confinements, two or three miscarriages,
-an operation for trouble in connection with
-same. Three children died and the mother also quite
-young. There are cases all round us much worse.
-You find in the majority of cases that in large families
-a certain number die and the others have less strength.
-Of course, there are exceptions. The trouble is that it
-takes so very long in England for things to be changed,
-and you are told to mind your own business and let
-people do as they like; but I am pleased to see that
-many men and women are getting wiser, to the benefit
-of the wives and families for whom the poor husband
-has to provide.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak"><a id="a33_Almost_a_Wreck"></a>33. “<span class="smcap">Almost a Wreck.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I was married at the age of twenty-two (barely twenty-two
-years), and by the time I had reached my thirty-second
-birthday was the mother of seven children, and
-I am sure you will pardon me if I take the credit for
-bringing up such a family without the loss of even one,
-seeing that it entailed such a great amount of suffering
-to myself on account of having to nurse them through
-all illness, and in addition (after sitting up many nights
-in succession) being compelled to do all household
-duties.</p>
-
-<p>During pregnancy I suffered much. When at the
-end of ten years I was almost a mental and physical
-wreck, I determined that this state of things should not
-go on any longer, and if there was no natural means of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-prevention, then, of course, artificial means must be
-employed, which were successful, and am happy to say
-that from that time I have been able to take pretty good
-care of myself, but often shudder to think what might
-have been the result if things had been allowed to go on
-as they were. Two days after childbirth I invariably
-sat up in bed knitting stockings and doing general repairs
-for my family. My husband at that time was earning
-30s. per week, and out of that amount claimed 6s. 6d. as
-pocket-money, and when I tell you that through all my
-difficulties there were no debts contracted on my part,
-you will be able to form some idea of what women are, in
-some cases, called upon to endure.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s. to 30s.; seven children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">34. <span class="smcap">Delicate Children.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I had my three children in two years and five months,
-and all the time I carried I had violent sickness, night
-and day, under a doctor practically the whole time, who,
-of course, were unable to prevent my suffering. The
-result was my babies were delicate; the last one suffered
-with gastritis the whole of its short life&mdash;four years and
-ten months&mdash;which ended in peritonitis and abdominal
-tuberculosis. I have the eldest one still, but he is very
-delicate and unable to attend school.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 21s. to 27s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">35. <span class="smcap">Continual Pregnancy for Fifteen Years.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I can speak from experience. For fifteen years I was
-in a very poor state of health owing to continual pregnancy.
-As soon as I was over one trouble, it was all
-started over again. In one instance, I was unable to
-go further than the top of the street the whole time
-owing to bladder trouble, constant flow of water. With<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-one, my leg was so terribly bad I had constantly to sit
-down in the road when out, and stand with my leg on
-a chair to do my washing. I have had four children
-and <i>ten</i> miscarriages, three before the first child, each
-of them between three and four months. No cause but
-weakness, and, I’m afraid, ignorance and neglect. I
-was in a very critical state for years; my sufferings were
-very great from acute weakness. I now see a great
-deal of this agony ought never to have been, with proper
-attention. It is good to see some of our women waking
-up to this fact. It is help and attention during pregnancy
-that is wanted, and I hope my own dear daughter,
-if she ever marries, will be one to benefit with others,
-by our experience. I do hope this letter is something
-of what you are wishing for, hoping for good results of
-our Guild work in this matter.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s.; four children, ten miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak"><a id="a36_Many_Miscarriages"></a>36. <span class="smcap">Many Miscarriages.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My experience during wifehood has been that so long
-as husband and children could have necessities the
-mother could manage somehow.</p>
-
-<p>It is my silver-wedding day to-morrow, and you will
-see something of what it has meant to me. I was
-married young; my husband is five years older. I had
-my first three children before I was twenty-four, nursing
-them all. Then I had three miscarriages in the next
-eight years. I had two more children later, in one and
-a half years. Since then, eleven years ago, I have had a
-misplaced womb, and have had two more miscarriages
-since, one being of twins five months, and one three
-months.</p>
-
-<p>I believe it was having children too fast that weakened
-my inside and brought on miscarriages.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-When I heard Mrs. H. say at our Conference she
-always had £5 provided for confinement, I felt that she
-had indeed been a lucky woman. I have never yet
-been in that position, and it is because a woman has not
-enough money to pay for things being done for her until
-she is strong enough to do them for herself, that causes
-so much suffering.</p>
-
-<p>My husband’s wages was 30s. a week when he made
-a full week, but unfortunately his trade was very uncertain.
-In ten years we had moved four different
-times&mdash;twice to A, back again to B, and then to C
-which accounts a great deal for us being short, as we had
-to pay our own expenses each time, and of course you
-will understand what it means to a mother when she is
-left behind. The husband must be found his board-money
-and pocket-money, even if she goes short of
-necessaries.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s.; five children, five miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="Facsimile_of_Extract_from_Letter_36"></a>
-<img src="images/zill_t063.jpg" width="600" height="646" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Facsimile of Extract from Letter 36.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">37. <span class="smcap">Against Large Families.</span></h3>
-
-<p>May I say, first of all, that lack of knowledge means,
-in nearly every case, much unnecessary suffering. I
-was married at twenty-one, and have had three children&mdash;two
-boys and one girl. Eldest thirty in May, youngest
-twenty-five. No miscarriages. I might say that I was
-very ignorant when I was married; my mother did not
-consider it at all proper to talk about such things. There
-is too much mock modesty in the world and too little
-time given to the things that matter. Knowing how
-ignorant I was on matters of motherhood, my husband
-bought a book for me called “Advice to a Wife,” by
-Dr. Henry Pye Chavasse. It is a beautifully written
-book and would be a gift of untold value to any girl
-about to marry. There is also a sequel entitled “Ad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>vice
-to a Mother”&mdash;it has saved me pounds of expense&mdash;price
-2s. 6d., by the same author. Yet, on the other
-hand, with all this knowledge, I had a very dreadful
-time with my first child&mdash;in fact, I nearly lost my life
-and reason too, and have never really enjoyed good
-health since. I was fully six months before I could
-look after my baby. This was one of my greatest disappointments.
-I was obliged to put my little one out
-to nurse, although I had an ample supply of milk. My
-second and third confinements were very bad, but I
-was able to get about at the end of the month. It is
-always a mystery how some poor mothers get about so
-soon, but of course some women are much stronger
-than others. Here let me add that through getting
-about too soon a great deal of suffering is stored up for
-later years. My old doctor once said to me that if
-women would only realise that a certain amount of rest
-was absolutely necessary after confinement, it would add
-several years to their life. I cannot speak too strongly
-about the evils of miscarriages. One miscarriage
-brought about unlawfully ruins a woman’s constitution
-more than half a dozen children. I have suffered from
-varicose veins since my first child was born, and during
-pregnancy.</p>
-
-<p>My husband’s wages during child-bearing period have
-been never more than 24s.; being a piece-worker, <i>has</i>
-been as low as 9s. The wages I received when my last
-child was born (the same week, I mean) were 11s. I
-was glad to avail myself of a free doctor from the hospital.
-I may say I had a black doctor, and was never
-better attended in my life. I do not believe in large
-families. It does not give either the mother or the
-children a chance. Here again, I think, much education
-is needed. Fathers ought to control their bodies
-for the sake of the mother and child. I could quote<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-several instances where a mother’s life has become
-intolerable through the husband’s lack of control. I
-do trust that the new Maternity Scheme will soon be
-a fact. I feel that, when put into working order,
-thousands of poor mothers will be saved unnecessary
-suffering.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 9s. to 24s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">38. “<span class="smcap">Other Children with Measles.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I think the earlier stages of pregnancy are the worst,
-but a woman needs most attention when she gets up.
-I have had to nurse my other children with measles
-when my baby was only four days old. I could never
-employ a proper nurse. I had six children when my
-husband was getting £1 a week. I am so glad to see
-the improvements in the lot of women to-day, but in
-some ways it is worse now to bring up a family. I am
-so glad to see anything being done to help the mother.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £1 and upwards; eight children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">39. <span class="smcap">Benefit from Hearts of Oak.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am afraid I have not much to tell from my experience.
-I have always been able to look after myself,
-with the help of a good husband. I have had nine
-children; eight are living.</p>
-
-<p>When I tell you my husband is a member of the Hearts
-of Oak Benefit Society, you will know I have benefited
-by it.<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Nine children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">40. <span class="smcap">Neglect by Doctors.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I might say that I have had two children. The first
-one was still-born, but it was owing to the doctor not
-paying proper attention to me, as, when he came, he said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-he would not be needed until the morning after. However,
-I got to be worse, and he was fetched again, but
-refused to come, so we had to get a midwife, and she
-said if I had had proper attention the child would have
-been born then. Consequently, the child was suffocated
-in the birth. When all was over, my husband went to
-tell him, and he said he was very glad, as he wanted
-his rest. Then when I was going to have my second, I
-ordered another doctor, and when he was wanted, he
-was drinking, and sent another midwife; so you see I
-have not had it all straightforward. But when I was
-carrying them, I can say that I was very well during the
-time of pregnancy, only for sickness in the morning and
-after food, until about seven months gone, when I was
-all right.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 21s. to 23s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">41. <span class="smcap">Over-Child-Bearing.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My feelings during pregnancy were just like those of
-Mary in Hall Caine (“The Woman Thou Gavest Me”).
-My mind was full of love and my time of preparation for
-the coming life within me. I worked very hard during
-the time of six children, knitting stockings and making
-clothes for those I already had, so my little one could
-be well nursed. Three are suffering from consumption,
-and one from curvature. When I had had six I never
-murmured, never once said I had enough, and did not
-want more, but after the birth of my last one I changed,
-because I could not nurse it and never carried it about. I
-do not blame my husband for this birth. He had waited
-patiently for ten months because I was ill, and thinking
-the time was safe, I submitted as a duty, knowing there
-is much unfaithfulness on the part of the husband where
-families are limited.</p>
-
-<p>What is necessary for mothers is State aid for every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-child she gives birth to. If this is necessary for the aged,
-it is more so for the mother with the children.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite time this question of maternity was taken up,
-and we must let the men know we are human beings with
-ideals, and aspire to something higher than to be mere
-objects on which they can satisfy themselves. Near
-my home are two sisters with ten months and eight days
-between their ages. Two doors from my own are four
-sisters, all living, and they all came in two years and
-fifteen days&mdash;the second born eleven months after
-the first, and thirteen months after twins came, and since
-then three more have been added to their number. None
-of them are old enough to work, and you will understand
-the position of the parents, who are good, deserving, well-meaning
-people, when the father, being out of work
-through the war (painter), has had to go labouring.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s.; seven children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">42. “<span class="smcap">Constant Care and Help.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I take a strong personal interest in the matter, and
-will state a case that came under my notice, where a poor
-but respectable mother was practically ill the whole
-time of pregnancy, gave birth to a healthy baby, herself
-left very weak, and a month later taken to hospital, as
-a last resource, from no particular disease whatever.
-The doctors themselves could not give it a name. I
-myself should say that all her strength and vitality went
-to the nourishment of the baby, and she herself was left
-with scarce enough to live at all. I did all I could.
-She had another little one, one year and ten months old,
-at the time. I had him most of the time before her last
-illness, and entirely during the time she was in hospital
-(about three months, I think). This happened last year.
-The baby is now thirteen months old, and a fine, healthy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-child. The mother is still weak and ailing at times,
-certainly not fit to attend properly to her home duties
-and two small children. She had, previously to the
-two living, two other children, both still-born. In fact,
-I think both were dead some days previous to birth.
-This was before I knew her. I am confident, if more
-help had been forthcoming before and after confinement,
-she would and could have been saved much suffering.</p>
-
-<p>My own personal experience is small, having had only
-three and a half years of married life. My one confinement
-and its results was enough almost for a lifetime.
-I was not well for many days together the whole time
-of pregnancy, suffering from sickness, faints, and severe
-headaches the whole time. A long and severe confinement
-followed, and a tedious recovery, and I can honestly
-say that, though it is over two years ago, I can feel the
-effects of it still, though up till marriage I did not know
-what illness was. My age was twenty-eight when baby
-was born. Had I been a poor mother, struggling along
-on a bare living wage as many are, I do not think I
-should have been alive now. But constant care and a
-good, kind husband, and help with the heavy housework
-when necessary (though I did practically all the work
-from day to day myself), gave me a far better chance of
-life and recovery than many, many of our poorer, though
-equally respectable members have. For they have
-neither time nor the means, many of them, to take the
-necessary care of themselves that they should do.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>One child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">43. <span class="smcap">Bad Experiences.</span></h3>
-
-<p>When I was married, I left my home and went to a
-distant town, out of reach of my mother and all my
-friends, and in due time I became pregnant, and as time<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-rolled on, I began to feel the symptom which I thought
-was right to feel and bear.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in a strange town, and no particular friends, and,
-shall I say, mock modest, I was almost afraid to go to
-a doctor for advice, in case he would think I was a
-coward, and did not try to bear what I thought was
-right. At last, I ordered the doctor and midwife, then
-I awaited the arrival of the baby. The time came. I
-was in labour thirty-six hours, and after all that suffering
-had to be delivered by instruments, and was ruptured
-too badly to have anything done to help me. I
-am suffering from the ill-effects to-day. This is thirty-one
-years ago.</p>
-
-<p>I had two children after that, but all the time I was
-carrying them I was quite unable to get about. When
-the last baby was about to arrive, the last month I was
-not able to go upstairs, unless I got up backwards, and
-to come down I had to slip from step to step. Going
-back to the first birth, I was unable to sit down for three
-months. If I wanted to rest, I had to lie down.</p>
-
-<p>Now, after that experience, my feeling is that if it
-were possible to get Maternity Centres or schools for
-expectant mothers, it would be a godsend to many a
-woman; and also to get some little help in nourishing
-the body, such as a small quantity of fresh milk. I
-hope I have enlightened you in some little way; if I
-have, it is worth the time I have spent in writing.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s. to 28s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">44. “<span class="smcap">An Indomitable Will.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>My health during pregnancy was very good. I took
-no intoxicants, good, simple food, and through adverse
-circumstances worked hard in my own home.</p>
-
-<p>I was married in 1887. My husband had just left the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-Army; he got work as a porter in a bedding warehouse.
-This firm failed, and he and the book-keeper joined
-forces and began in the bedding trade in a small way,
-and we were married. I went every day except Saturday
-to the shop to cut out and sew. My husband’s
-wages were £1 per week; we did our own housework at
-night, and I baked and ironed on Saturday morning.
-When my boy was born, twelve months after marriage,
-my husband’s wages were 25s.; of course, I could earn
-nothing. In another twelve months my second baby
-(a girl) was born. We removed to &mdash;&mdash;, where rents
-were cheap, and I was a stranger. I took in plain
-sewing and washing, and cut up my clothes for my
-babies. I had a good stock of clothes, I may say.</p>
-
-<p>About this time we were involved in a lawsuit which
-was quite unnecessary, and our income was reduced to
-19s. 6d. per week. I still took what work I could get,
-minded a child whose mother worked in the mill, etc.
-I had no assistance from my own family, as I was too
-proud to let them know. This lasted three years,
-when we had a change for the better. The cost of this
-lawsuit I mentioned was, to us, £55 12s. 4d. I then
-had another daughter, and three years later another
-girl. I could then obtain one dozen pounds of sugar
-for 1s. 9d., now it is 4s., and this applies to many things.
-When my last baby was born my housekeeping money
-was £2 10s.</p>
-
-<p>The first six years of my married life was one perpetual
-struggle, often wanting necessaries, but God’s
-hand has been over it all, and I thank Him to-day for
-the faith and perseverance with which I was enabled to
-go through this struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Our circumstances are improved, and my three
-daughters are all teachers&mdash;one certificated, and one
-college-trained, the youngest a student teacher, enter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>ing
-College in September next. Two of my girls are
-accomplished musicians, and can do anything menial
-or otherwise in a home. I think if the mothers of to-day
-were not so idle it would be better for them; also, if they
-would make their own food, and not buy ready-made
-food, we should have a better class of children and
-healthy mothers. I am fifty-three next month, do my
-own washing, baking, and cleaning with a little help
-from my girls. My house has nine rooms and three
-cellars. I still make time to do my secretarial duties,
-and take a great interest therein. I was an extremely
-delicate girl, and suffered from heart disease as a child,
-but my doctor says I have a most indomitable will.
-Lest you should think I am of a boasting nature, I beg
-to submit that God has been very merciful and kind
-to me.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £1 to over £2 10s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">45. “<span class="smcap">Mock Modesty.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I had no mother to talk to me, or for me to ask
-questions, and both my husband and myself being of a
-reserved nature, I suffered, perhaps, more than I need
-have done. I needed chloroform and instruments in
-each case, and after the birth of my second child, I was
-a cripple for nearly twelve months, but having a good
-husband, I tried to bear patiently. I cannot say much
-else, except that now I can call it mock modesty on my
-part.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 28s. to 36s.; three children, one still-born.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">46. <span class="smcap">A Healthy Mill-Worker.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I myself have had five children, all living. I had the
-five in seven years and two months, so you see for yourself
-I had them all very little, and no Maternity benefit
-to help me, and only a small wage coming in&mdash;say 25s. a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-week&mdash;so I had to go back to the mill when fit for work,
-to help to keep home right, which I don’t think did me
-or the children any harm, for I have not paid 10s. to a
-doctor in all the bringing up of the five children, nor for
-myself. No still-born nor any miscarriages.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s.; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak"><a id="a47_I_Think_a_Lot"></a>47. “<span class="smcap">I Think a Lot.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>Oh, for the time when the Maternity Scheme becomes
-law, and the Divorce Reform. No one will welcome it
-more than I, for the sake of those who have not got true
-companionship in life. I am afraid I cannot tell you
-much about myself during pregnancy, as I have only
-had one child and no miscarriage. Perhaps my husband
-and myself have taken a different view from most
-people. You see, we both belong to a large family of
-brothers and sisters, and both had a drunken father,
-who did not care for their wife and offspring as much
-as the beast of the field.</p>
-
-<p>My mother, whom I loved with all my heart, brought
-fifteen little lives into the world; twelve are still living.
-I remember many a time she has gone without food
-before and after confinement, and without fire in winter.
-I have gone round the house many a time to try and
-find a few rags to sell for food. I have seen my father
-strike my mother just before confinement, and known
-her be up again at four days’ end to look after us. You
-see, my mother had no education, and had been brought
-up to obey her husband. But, poor dear, she left the
-cares of this world some years ago now, at the age of
-fifty-nine. My father has always been in business for
-himself, and used to have plenty of money, but spent
-it on himself, and is still living at the age of seventy-four.
-When I got married to the man I loved, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-who loves me, he said I should never suffer as our dear
-mothers had done, and that we would only have what
-little lives we could make happy, and give a chance in
-life. My son will be eighteen years of age in June, and
-is still at Technical College, for which he won a scholarship.
-I get no grant-in-aid, and my husband is only a
-working man, so I go out to work for two hours every
-morning to help to keep him, as he is a good lad.</p>
-
-<p>Please excuse my ramble, as I only wish I was better
-educated. I think a lot, but cannot express it, as I
-had to leave school at the age of ten years, to go into
-farm service. I have found the Guild a great help.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">48. “<span class="smcap">A Time of Horror.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>My two last babies came to me in troublous times,
-the boy, four years since, when my husband (through
-being too prosperous and false friends) gave way to
-drink, although he never tried to strike me, or any of the
-outward cruelty that I know many wives have to contend
-with; but it was so different to what I had been
-used to, and three months before the baby came, I was
-practically an invalid. Up till dinner I could manage
-to get about, but after dinner I had to lie or sit as best I
-could. I could not get on nine in men’s shoes, my feet
-swelled up so, and every night my hands were in agonies;
-the only relief I got was when I used to hammer them on
-the wall, to try and take the awful dumb pain out of
-them. Then when I started in labour, I was in it from
-eleven o’clock on the night of Thursday, the 17th of February
-till Saturday, the 19th, at 10 a.m. The waters
-broke at eleven o’clock on Thursday night, and baby came
-at ten o’clock on Saturday. The doctor had to put it
-back, as it was not coming naturally. Of course, I had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-chloroform; indeed, I had it with all my seven children,
-except two, as I have always such long and terrible
-labours, although I am a big woman&mdash;5 feet 8 inches, and
-I weigh over 13&frac12; stone. I flooded with two. By the
-way, I am never able to get up under three weeks
-after confinement, as I always start to flood directly
-I make any movement, and I have to keep my nurse
-from five to seven weeks after. I always have terribly
-sore breasts, although the doctor treats them three months
-beforehand, but it makes no difference. My last confinement
-was worst, as I found, five months before baby
-was born, that my husband was having an immoral
-going-on. The shock was so great, I could not speak
-when first I heard it. A cold shiver went over me, and
-my body seemed to go together in a hard lump. I was
-never right after, till she came. Indeed, I was never
-right till my operation last October. I always had a
-weary bearing-down pain in my body all the time I was
-carrying babies, and suffer a great deal in my back. I
-never had morning sickness with any of them, and not
-one varicose vein, I am so thankful to say. And yet I
-know many women who can go right up to a few hours
-before, and then tell me they think nothing about it,
-while to me it is like a time of horror from beginning to
-end. I suppose we are differently made, somehow.</p>
-
-<p>My husband earned 6d. an hour, and some of the
-summer months he worked overtime at the same rate of
-wages. What he earned overtime we always put in the
-Post Office, and what else we could spare towards the
-long winter months, as many times we started short
-time in August, which did not bring in very much. Then
-we were very lucky if we were getting 10s. a week at
-Christmas-time, but it used to be oftener <i>nothing</i> for
-weeks before Christmas. But we never went into debt.
-What we could not pay for we did without, and I can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-assure you I have told my husband many times that I
-had had my dinner before he came in, so as there should
-be plenty to go round for the children and himself, but
-he found me out somehow, and so that was stopped,
-although I had been many times only half filled, and I
-am glad to say during the worst of the pinch time I was
-not pregnant.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Seven children and three miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">49. <span class="smcap">Very Hard Times.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I seem to have had a very hard time all through.
-Well, my first baby was born twenty-three years last
-February, and my husband was working just about
-one or two days in a week at 3s. 4d. a day. My second
-baby was born sixteen months after, being still-born.
-My husband was out of work for three months then. I
-did nothing but cry. I could not get what I ought to
-have. The doctor wanted to know if I had been in
-any trouble. My mother told him how long we had been
-out of work, and I had cried a good deal. The doctor
-said that would be the cause of my baby being dead.
-When I got better, I went to work (and to tell you the
-truth, I have worked hard ever since). Twelve months
-after that I had another baby. I was very ill. When
-I got better, I took in plain sewing; then two years
-after I had another baby, but my husband was in
-better employment, earning 18s. per week, and I thought
-I was a lady. But it was not for long. My husband’s
-work finished, and we moved to &mdash;&mdash;, where I had fresh
-troubles, my next baby being dead born, and my next
-only lived five months. When I was laid up again we
-were very hard up. I had to let the young person who
-looked after me go before her time was up. After I paid
-her and my rent and coals we had no dinner the Sunday,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-simply because we could not afford any. I always tried
-to get on and keep us all respectable, but it was hard work.
-I also managed to get the doctor paid before I wanted
-him again. Two and a half years after I had another
-baby, and she has taken more to rear her than all the
-rest; she cannot go to school. She takes such a lot of
-fits, both night and day. My next baby was born about
-eighteen months after, and when she was five I had the
-misfortune to go to bed again; I had a very bad time,
-although it was my tenth child. I was chloroformed,
-and the baby lived half an hour. I am sure you will be
-tired reading all my troubles, but I assure you I had to
-work hard in my home and out of it to keep us all together.
-I used to buy extra every week, it did not
-matter how small, so that I could be better able to pay
-for someone to look after me. I have a good husband,
-and he helps me all he can. Three of my daughters is
-under the doctor now, and I am of the candid opinion
-it is through me working so hard and not getting plenty
-of food and attention during that period. I hope I have
-not wearied you. I many a time feel I could write a
-book of my troubles; I seem to have had so many.
-When we look back, we wonder however we have got
-along, but every cloud has a silver lining, and I am looking
-forward to see my children better provided than I
-have been. With all good wishes for a brighter future.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 18s. to 22s.; eight children, two still-births.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">50. <span class="smcap">A Farm-Worker’s Wife.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have had four children; the oldest is now twenty-three,
-the next twenty-two, the next twenty-one, and
-the youngest fourteen. I might say that at the time
-my three eldest were born, my husband was working
-on a farm, and earning 18s. a week. When the last was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-born he had moved into rather better work, and earned
-25s. a week. You may be sure after I had paid 3s. for
-a small cottage of two rooms and scullery, I had not
-much to spare, and of course doctors had to be paid.
-As for nursing, well, I did not get much of it, and I feel
-very deeply always the need of good nursing at these
-times. For years I suffered from what I feel was the
-want of proper nursing and nourishment. In fact I
-wonder sometimes even now if I have ever really got
-over it. When I think of it I feel I would do anything
-to support any measure that would help to secure that
-our daughters now shall not suffer as their mothers did
-before them.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 18s. to 25s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">51. <span class="smcap">Shun Patent Foods.</span></h3>
-
-<p>As you will see (from my having lost six children in
-succession before I reared one), I was very unfortunate
-in my early married life, and at one time thought I was
-not going to rear any children. Congenital weakness
-may have had something to do with the failure to rear,
-through falling down a flight of stairs as a girl and dislocating
-my neck. This fall would have cost me my
-life but for the presence of mind of a young woman who
-picked me up. Using her hands and knees, she pulled
-my neck in, and undoubtedly saved my life. The doctor
-said I would suffer as a woman, for every organ internally
-was put out of place. My first set of children were
-weakly, and being unable to nurse them, I resorted to
-patent foods, which I am now firmly convinced did harm
-and not good, and in my opinion contributed to the convulsions.
-I found later that weakened milk, afterwards
-strengthened as the baby got older, was the best and
-safest food for infants brought up by hand. Undoubtedly
-the remaining ones progressed all right, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-are sound and healthy. The fact that one girl put ten
-and a half years’ perfect attendance in at an elementary
-school speaks well for the change. The one I lost at
-seven weeks was easily accounted for, from the fact
-that at the time of birth I was suffering from the bloody
-flux, a very severe form of dysentery. In fact, the
-doctor said that if I had had Asiatic cholera I could
-not have been worse. You will readily see that that
-child had a very poor start in life, and waned away from
-birth. As a result of my experience, my advice is that
-mothers unable to suckle their children should shun all
-patent foods, rusks, etc., as they would shun the devil
-himself, for an infant will have to be born with a digestion
-like a horse if it is to digest solid food in the early
-stages. Thousands of infants are killed with mistaken
-kindness, and I am convinced that milk and milk only&mdash;human,
-if possible, and animal, if human fails&mdash;in a
-diluted state, is the only safe food for infants. I sincerely
-hope you will sound a note of warning against
-patent foods that cake to a solid lump in the infant’s
-stomach, the result being convulsions and death. This
-is my sincere belief resulting from bitter experience.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 24s. to 30s.; ten children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">52. “<span class="smcap">Get Very Little Pity.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I am the mother of a large family, but I am glad to
-say they are fast growing up, as their ages range from
-twenty-eight down to five years, so that I feel I can speak
-from experience, if anyone can. I must say that although
-it is a time that women suffer terribly, yet it is
-a time when they get very little pity, as it is looked upon
-as quite a natural state of things. I have myself got up
-in the morning, unable to partake of any breakfast,
-and tried to get about my work, and had to sit down in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-every chair I have got to with my brush in my hand.
-Then after confinement, as soon as I could sit up in bed,
-having such a large family, I have had to sit with my
-needle in my hand. But all this does no good, but only
-tends to keep a woman’s health down. When I had my
-first miscarriage&mdash;it happened in October&mdash;and I crawled
-about all the winter, and well on into the next summer,
-like a person in consumption; in fact, it was generally
-thought that I was. And, of course, all those months we
-were obliged to have a woman in, as I could do nothing.
-So I think if anything could be done to lessen the sufferings
-of the coming generations, I for one should be in
-great favour of it, as of course, if it is too late for me to
-benefit by it, I have daughters growing up, and sons’
-wives to think of. Suffering as I have done, it is really
-a time when extra funds are needed, so that one could
-pay a little to have anything done, instead of having to
-do it themselves.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 17s. 8d.; nine children, six miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">53. <span class="smcap">Work in the Mill.</span></h3>
-
-<p>When I have been pregnant I have suffered very
-much with bad legs. You see, I had to go to work in
-the mill, and so I had not the chance to give them the
-rest they needed. I think it is a great hardship for a
-woman to have to do so. However, when I have got
-over the confinement, I seemed to pull up after my
-first baby. But after my second one was born I was
-in bed nearly a month, and my husband (who, thank
-God, is one of the best) had to lift me in and out of bed,
-and put my legs on a level with my body while he made
-my bed. After the third I was something the same,
-only not quite so bad.</p>
-
-<p>My babies have been very strong and healthy, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-they have not always had the best of health since. But
-I have tried to do my duty to them as well as I could.</p>
-
-<p>I might say that I think ignorance has more to do
-with suffering than anything, and I think if our Guilds
-would get the doctors to lecture to them on this subject
-it might help our members, and also other people, to
-take more care of themselves.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">54. <span class="smcap">In Favour of Breast-Feeding.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have not had children as fast as some, for which I am
-thankful, not because I do not love them, but because if I
-had more I do not think I could have done my duty to
-them under the circumstances. I may say I have had a
-very good partner in life, and that has made it better
-for me. But seeing my husband is only a weaver, I
-have not had a lot of money to go on with. I have
-been compelled to go out to work. I have worked
-when I have been pregnant, but I have always given
-up when I have been about six months, and then I have
-done all my own work up to the very last, and I can tell
-you it has been very hard work. Then when it has been
-over I have had to begin to do my housework at the
-fortnight end, and I think that is too soon, but what can
-women do when they have not the means to do it with?
-Of course, I am not half so bad as some. I have never
-carried a baby out to nurse. I have always managed
-to stop at home one year and get them walking. But
-I think if we as women had our right, we should not
-have to work at all during pregnancy, because I think
-that both the mother and baby would be better. I
-never knew so many bottle-fed babies as there is now.
-Nearly all the young married women cannot give breast.
-How is it? Now, I think because they work so hard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-before, do not get enough rest, therefore have no milk.
-And, then, some will not begin with their own milk, because
-they know they have to go out to work. Hence
-the baby has to suffer. Mother’s milk is the best food
-for baby. I heard a young mother with her first baby
-say the other day her husband’s mother had told her
-not to bother with her breasts, it made a young woman
-look old giving her baby breast. What a mother! I
-think it is one of the grandest sights to see. So you see
-we have a lot of educating to do yet when we hear such
-things as these.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 16s. to 30s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">55. <span class="smcap">Mixed Experiences.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have three girls. Over my first child the only ailments
-I had were sickness during the first five months,
-and at childbirth I had a very good time. And over
-the second a much similar time, with the exception of
-colds in my face. Over my third baby I had a much
-harder time, as during the whole of the nine months I
-was unable to do anything, as I had such terrible pains
-in my back and legs&mdash;could not bear to be on my feet for
-more than a few minutes at a time.</p>
-
-<p>During all this illness of mine I had my husband at
-home ill sixteen weeks, which of course made it worse
-for me, as the extra worry went against me; and then at
-the same time I had an abscess in my breast, which I can
-assure you was most painful, as I can tell you I had my
-hands pretty well full at that time.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 14s. to £2; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">56. <span class="smcap">Twelve Children.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have had a large family (twelve) and a miscarriage.
-I had a hard struggle at the beginning, my husband not
-being in very good work. But for the last five children<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-I was able to pay for someone to wash, and that made a
-lot of difference.</p>
-
-<p>But as far as the confinement went, I always had
-pretty fair times, and got up fairly well.</p>
-
-<p>I have had two bad attacks of the heart since I had
-the last child, which is six years old, and the doctor told
-me it was with having so many children, and so quick.
-But I am getting better. And the doctor said I should
-get better if nothing else happened.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £1; twelve children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">57. <span class="smcap">Dreadful Sufferings.</span></h3>
-
-<p>In my case all my pregnancy times have been rather
-bad. Had I been less fortunate in finding a good husband,
-and one who was able to keep at home, one thinks,
-I should never have been living to-day. I have cost
-pounds and pounds besides the care and anxiety in
-bringing my two into the world. My first was a miscarriage
-owing to a fall while hanging a picture. Was
-in bed over a fortnight, and almost drained bloodless.
-My second, a fine bouncing girl&mdash;unfortunately too fine.
-I had to be stitched twice, the first at confinement, the
-second three weeks later, caused by the agony of a
-gathered breast. I was eight weeks ill at that time.
-My third, I could scarcely walk about for six weeks
-before confinement owing to strain on weak parts, and
-only short of eighteen months of previous confinement.
-I had to be stitched again, but managed to ward off the
-breast trouble to a great extent; incapable for five weeks.
-My last was the worst; we had removed away to a strange
-place, and I happened to get a woman who did not know
-her work. I was very ill at the time, but everything
-was favourable until the third day I developed childbed
-fever. I went blind, sometimes unconscious, my breasts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-in slings, so large I could not see over the top, inflammation
-of the bowels, and blood-poisoning; I was almost
-beyond hope, and was seriously ill three weeks. Then
-took a turn for the better. We had to get a thoroughly
-efficient person in, the cost of which was £1 per week
-for seven weeks, and, God bless her, she deserved every
-farthing she got, although it was hard. We had to pay
-again for other housework to be done. I feel I owe
-much of my recovery to her. My husband was seriously
-reduced in means, but he would have sold anything to
-do good. When I got sufficiently well I had to go to
-hospital; was a patient there a month, was fetched home,
-carried to bed, and stayed there six weeks, owing to
-abscesses from the stitching being delayed so long and
-bad condition of my system. I am not a strong person
-now, but I am now in my forty-sixth year, and seem
-to be improving in a good many respects.</p>
-
-<p>The highest wage my husband earned was 45s., the
-lowest, and at the worst time, being £1&mdash;just the amount
-the nurse required, besides all else&mdash;washing, cooking
-food, and everything a home needs.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. to 45s.; three children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">58. <span class="smcap">Inefficient Doctor.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My first baby was born fifteen months after marriage.
-During the first four or five months I suffered very
-much from sickness, not morning sickness only, but
-many times during the whole day, and nearly all the
-way through severe toothache.... As a result of inattention
-by the doctor attending me I was badly torn
-during the birth, and after three days my husband dismissed
-him and called in another doctor, who said
-though this could not always be avoided it might have
-been in my case. I ought to have been stitched at the
-time, instead of which it was done four days after.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was four years and six months later when my
-second baby came. I was much better during pregnancy&mdash;occasional
-morning sickness. There was the
-fear all through of the tear reopening, but with having
-a good period between the births the parts were strong
-enough to resist, and all went well. Six years afterwards,
-I had a miscarriage about three months. Don’t
-know how to account for it, excepting that there is so
-little rest in the married working woman’s life. From
-early morning until late at night she is on her feet. I
-was more fortunately placed than most women; I was
-able to go to bed and be attended to, and to stay there
-until I was better.</p>
-
-<p>Four years after my third baby was born (still-born).
-This was the worst time I had, the sickness being most
-distressing, so bad that could not describe it, and one
-was always afraid of a miscarriage owing to everything
-being forced down through straining. At these times
-it was impossible to hold one’s water. At seven months,
-as a result of this bearing-down, I had a flooding bout,
-and was in bed several days. I had no labour pains,
-though weak and poorly, and so did not send for the
-doctor. I know now that I ought to have done so at
-once, as my life was in danger. However, I got up
-again and did my ordinary duties until the day of the
-birth, which was harder than usual, as a live baby helps
-in its own way. The baby had gradually died after
-the flooding, and had been dead more than a week at
-birth. I was in a very low condition for the first three
-days, the doctor being uncertain how things would go.
-There is always the danger of blood-poisoning, and it
-takes one much longer to get their health back in cases
-of this kind. Where there is a large family or a thoughtless
-husband the woman pays with her life.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s. to £2; two children, one still-birth, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">59. <span class="smcap">Household Help Needed.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I may say that during pregnancy I suffered considerably
-the whole time from sickness and severe pains.
-This was not due to any traceable cause, as I took every
-precaution to see that I did not exert myself and do
-harm. I did all my own work all the while. I had little
-appetite, and was not able to sleep well. During confinement
-I had a very hard time, and was a long time
-in recovering, and have always, since my first child,
-suffered from falling of the womb, although I had a
-doctor and midwife in the house three weeks. It is
-owing to working women having to take on household
-duties too soon after confinement that is responsible for
-the greatest part of the sufferings which we are subject
-to. What is really wanted is a supply of real good midwives
-who could be got for a month to see to all requirements
-of the patient and the home while the woman has
-a fair chance of recovering. It is the system of midwives
-attending too many cases at the same time that is
-responsible for a lot of the trouble, as the woman gets
-neglected and are forced to get about before they are fit.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s. to 35s.; three children, one still-born.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">60. <span class="smcap">Miscarriages.</span></h3>
-
-<p>After my first little one I went out too soon, with the
-result that I got cold in the ovaries, which caused me the
-most acute pain, and for quite a month every few steps
-I walked I would sit down. I have had several miscarriages&mdash;one
-caused through carelessness in jumping up
-to take some clothes off the line when it commenced to
-rain, instead of getting a chair to stand on, another
-through taking some pills which were delivered as
-samples at the door, and a third through a fright by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-cow whilst on holidays. So you will see I realise to the
-full the care and thought a woman requires. I may say
-that to me the after-effects of the miscarriages have been
-worse than confinements, for it takes months to get over
-the weakness.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s. to 30s.; two children, three miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">61. <span class="smcap">A Very Sad Case.</span></h3>
-
-<p>The man and woman I know, who are very steady
-people, have six children. The three elder ones are quite
-normal. After the birth of the third the father had a
-very serious illness&mdash;double pneumonia followed by
-typhoid fever&mdash;and for weeks he lay at death’s door.
-The expense of all this so reduced them that they had
-to sell the best of their furniture to pay doctor’s bills,
-over £20, and to keep going until he could start work
-again. Then the doctor said he must not go back to
-his work as a mason, and he had to take a job at labouring
-work. This and short time brought his income
-down to 14s. per week, and to make ends meet the wife
-had to go out cleaning. She had been parlourmaid.
-She continued to do so until near the birth of her fourth
-child, who was very delicate and suffered from abscesses.
-The mother told me she did not know how to get sufficient
-food for them. When her fifth child was born she
-had a bad time and the child appeared very backward,
-but it was not until it was two years old that they knew
-its brain was affected. He is in his sixth year, and can
-only say a few words, and has never come downstairs,
-always had to be carried, and at times is violent; if
-thwarted in what he wants to do will go into violent
-tempers and throw anything he may have in his hand.
-He will also put a rope round the neck of the younger
-child to play horses, and has no control over bowels. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-sad case indeed. The youngest child is in his fourth
-year, and can only walk two or three yards without help.
-He cannot say a word yet. I am beginning to be afraid
-he may be dumb. Both his hands are deformed, and
-he has no control over bowels, and has been ruptured
-from birth. Doctors say they cannot perform any
-operation until he is stronger. When the mother asked
-the doctor how it was her children were so delicate, he
-turned to her and said in the kindest possible manner,
-“Ask the mother,” showing that it was due, in his
-opinion, to the weak state she was in previous to their
-birth. I do not think the two youngest will ever be
-able to work for themselves. The mother looks almost
-distracted at times. I have known her from girlhood,
-and pity her most sincerely.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Six children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">62. <span class="smcap">State Maternity Homes Wanted.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My husband is a non-smoker and total abstainer, so
-you will know no money was spent in waste. But I
-feel sure my first baby was still-born through hard work
-and lifting. The money brought in not being sufficient
-to keep us all, I went out to work, and looked after my
-husband and step-children as well.</p>
-
-<p>I feel sure it is not so much lack of knowledge as lack
-of means that entails so much suffering. I endured
-agonies when carrying my second child, through bad
-varicose veins in legs and body, but of course still had
-to plod on and look after the rest. I had knowledge of
-what to eat to produce milk, etc., but could only confine
-myself to cocoa and oatmeal, which I often felt sick at
-the sight of, but could afford nothing else, as I made these
-things for the rest of the family also. I at the second
-confinement produced a fine boy, 9&frac12; pounds in weight.
-He is now eight, and is still a very fine boy. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-medical officer, when examining him, passed a very
-pointed remark, saying: “He is, of course, an only
-child,” and I often feel thankful he is. We live in quite
-a poor house, 7s. 6d. weekly rent, but to do justice to
-my grown-up step-children, so that they may live up
-to standard required of by their work, I cannot afford to
-have any more children, also I cannot face the awful
-agonies a woman has to go through in looking after a
-family (there are five of us in the home now) whilst
-child-bearing. When I had my boy I had to do the
-family washing in the third week after confinement.
-As to taking care, no working woman can do that unless
-absolutely obliged to. The best thing that could happen
-would be a system of State Maternity Homes, where
-working women could go for a reasonable fee and be
-confined, and stay for convalescence (not a workhouse
-system). There is no peace for the wife at home. She
-is still the head and chancellor of the exchequer. If
-she were confined on Friday, she would still have to plan
-and lay out the Saturday money, and if it did not stretch
-far enough, she would be the one to go short or do the
-worrying. I am sure if we, as a Guild, could bring this
-about, a lot of women’s worry would be over. At the
-same time it would be a recognition of the importance of
-our women as race-bearers, and lift her to a higher plane
-than at present.</p>
-
-<p>My husband’s highest wages during the time you ask
-were 36s., lowest 24s., but in his trade wet weather and
-frosty weather means no work, and in addition no pay
-during slack times.</p>
-
-<p>There is one thing&mdash;as to mechanical prevention of
-family. I know it is a delicate subject, but it is an
-urgent one, as it is due to low-paid wages and the unearthly
-struggle to live respectably. All the beautiful
-in motherhood is very nice if one has plenty to bring up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-a family on, but what real mother is going to bring a
-life into the world to be pushed into the drudgery of the
-world at the earliest possible moment because of the
-strain on the family exchequer.</p>
-
-<p>I was much struck with the remarks of “Kitchener’s”
-boys who have been billeted on me, about my boy. He
-is only nine, and they said he was as big as the general
-run of lads in the North when they are thirteen&mdash;“But
-then, ma, you’ve only one to keep which is different to
-seven or eight.”</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing that is done can ever be too much
-if we are to have going a race in the future worthy of
-England, but it will not be until the nation wakes up to
-the needs of the mothers of that future race.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 24s. to 36s.; one child, one still-birth, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak"><a id="a63_A_Miserable_Experience"></a>63. “<span class="smcap">A Miserable Experience.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I am really not a delicate woman, but having a large
-family, and so fast, pulled me down very much. I used
-to suffer very much with bad legs; and my husband
-was laid out of work most winters, so I had a great deal
-of poverty to deal with.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly all my children were delicate, and being badly
-off, very often I could not get or do what I would like
-to for them. I lost four out of the ten, and had a very
-great difficulty in rearing some of the others. They
-were nearly all two years before they ran; my eldest
-girl was three years before she ran; I never thought she
-could live, but, thank God, she has lived, and is nearly
-twenty-two. If something could be done for poor
-women with large families, I think it would be a good
-thing; for a woman’s life is not much when she is in
-poverty and got sickly children, and never knows what
-an hour’s liberty is. It is keep on work with no rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-days, and not much nights very often. Of course,
-during pregnancy one never feels well, what with one
-thing and the other. That was my experience; and
-after confinement I used to be so weak, and by the time
-I began to regain my strength a little I was in trouble
-again. So you can’t wonder poor delicate women break
-down and very often die. It would be good if something
-could be done for them, so as to give them a change
-and a little rest. And when you have got an unkind
-husband it is a terrible life. I very often think that
-is why my poor children have to suffer so much now
-they are grown up, as they are not any of them strong,
-and very often ailing with one thing or the other. You
-may depend on it there is a good many women got unkind
-husbands that make it a great deal worse for women.</p>
-
-<p>My husband used to lose his work through drink. I
-couldn’t tell you exactly what my wages were, but I feel
-almost sure, to take the years through, they never
-amounted to £1 a week. I was in hopes, as soon as my
-boys started work, I should have got on better, but the
-more I got off my boys the less I got off my husband,
-for mine has been a miserable experience.</p>
-
-<p>For a good many years I kept account of what he
-gave me, and to take the year through it used to amount
-to about 15s. a week.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages unknown, wife’s allowance 15s. to £1; ten children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">64. “<span class="smcap">Best of Times are Bad.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have been most fortunate, and have had very good
-times, so they tell me, but the best of times are bad
-enough. I have had four healthy children, and had
-them all before I was twenty-seven years of age.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">65. <span class="smcap">Every Attention.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During the whole time I was pregnant I had every
-care and attention, and a good doctor and nurse at my
-confinement.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">66. <span class="smcap">Very Good Health.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am by nature very active, and during pregnancy
-had very good health, and was able to look after my
-home and family up to the time of confinement. My
-confinements have not been what would be called bad
-times.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s. to 36s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">67. “<span class="smcap">A Steady and Regular Income.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>Having fairly good health, my experiences were only
-the perfectly natural ones, though at the time I thought
-it was hard to bear. I was fortunate enough to have
-a steady and regular income, and consequently put
-myself in my doctor’s hands at the earliest possible
-moment, and had all the care and nursing that is every
-woman’s right to have.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">68. “<span class="smcap">Read, Studied, and Took Care.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I am not, nor have ever been, a very robust woman,
-so naturally felt the strain of pregnancy perhaps more
-than some women feel it, but coming away from home
-as I did, over two hundred miles, when I was married,
-when I found out my condition, I put myself in the
-hands of a good doctor, and that helped me a good
-deal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>With neither of my children was I troubled with sickness,
-but was troubled a great deal with inflammation
-and heartburn, with which I had to be very careful,
-and it prevented me getting about much, especially the
-last three months. I had splendid times at confinement,
-but have not been able to nurse either of my
-children. I tried for four months with the last one,
-but the baby did not get on, and myself came down
-very low. I was obliged to resort to artificial feeding,
-and the baby never looked back after. I do not think
-any of my troubles came at these times through ignorance.
-I am one that has always taken great interest
-in these subjects, and read and studied all I could about
-them, and naturally took great care of myself at these
-times. But having at all times weak digestive organs,
-the extra strain on them during pregnancy brought
-forth the troubles I had to fight with both before and
-after confinement.</p>
-
-<p>I do not think any women expect to go through these
-times without some small amount of&mdash;shall I say?&mdash;trouble,
-for which she is fully recompensed when she
-can take her dear child in her arms.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 45s. to 47s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">69. <span class="smcap">Preventives.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was married before I was twenty, and eleven months
-afterwards my first baby was born. During pregnancy
-I suffered dreadfully from nervousness, very bad legs,
-occasional neuralgia, and the usual miserable sickness.
-Indeed, before baby came I felt very bad indeed.</p>
-
-<p>I had a stiff but quite straightforward confinement.
-My husband worked on the water, and only came home
-once a week, or how I could have shown a cheerful face
-every day, and got through my work, I don’t know.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>For some months after baby was born I was weak
-and ill. I nursed her myself, and when she was a year
-old, I weaned her. When she was a year and nine
-months old, my second baby was born. I had been
-through the usual sickness, bad legs, neuralgia, etc., but
-I had a good confinement. I hoped to get up well;
-but I can assure you I had the most miserable six months
-of my life. No physical pain, but extreme weakness,
-frightened of my own shadow, faintings, feelings that I
-would die. Indeed, I was almost tired of life. I had
-continually to go to bed, my head felt a tremendous
-size, and I felt as though I were floating away.</p>
-
-<p>When this baby was two years and three months old,
-my first boy was born; I had had a miserable nine
-months, legs worse than ever, bad cough, sickness, etc.,
-but a good time.</p>
-
-<p>After this, I said to a friend one day, “If only I could
-feel that this was my last, I would be quite happy.”
-“Well,” she said, “why don’t you make it your last?”
-and she gave me advice.</p>
-
-<p>As a result of this knowledge, I had no more babies
-for four and a half years. In carrying this one, I certainly
-had the bad legs, which I am likely to keep, but
-my general health and nerves were much better. My
-health improved, and people said I looked years younger,
-and I found life a happy place. I sometimes think that
-the Great Almighty has heard the poor woman in travail,
-and shows her a way of rest. I had a fight with my
-conscience before using a preventative. But I have no
-qualms now. I feel I have better health to serve my
-husband and children, and more advantages to give
-them; while if another comes along, we will hail it with
-pleasure, as we did our last, instead of looking on it as
-a burden.</p>
-
-<p>I do think that a great deal of misery is caused by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-taking drugs. The poor woman feels she will do anything
-to keep herself “all right.” If only she and her
-husband also could be taught how to prevent, much good
-might be done.</p>
-
-<p>I had never resorted to drugs; I was just a simple girl,
-and my young husband was as simple as myself.</p>
-
-<p>I often feel, too, how hard it is that when a woman
-is carrying and needs extra nourishment and rest she
-has to stint herself, to provide for the expensive time
-coming, or try and add to her household linen by taking
-in work, or taking lodgers or boarders.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s. to 35s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">70. <span class="smcap">The Teaching of Experience.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am in fairly comfortable circumstances for a working-class
-woman, and have a good, considerate husband.
-I have had six children. You will see by the enclosed
-particulars that there is not much difference between
-the ages of my first three children&mdash;as a matter of fact,
-not nearly enough&mdash;and this through ignorance. At
-the birth of my second child “flooding” occurred,
-leaving me very anæmic as a consequence. I could not
-nurse the child, and was an out-patient at the hospital
-for five months.</p>
-
-<p>Then I became pregnant with third child, and at the
-seventh month a miscarriage was threatened, but was
-averted for a few weeks, when the baby was born an
-eight-months child. It was a delicate child, and required
-a great deal of care and attention; although
-ailing myself for months, I managed to rear him to a
-fairly healthy child, but, oh, it was such a strain!</p>
-
-<p>I am so glad the Guild is taking up the question of
-Maternity, and also “Moral Hygiene,” as I feel sure if
-only young people were advised, both before and after<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-marriage&mdash;a great deal of suffering caused to mother
-and child might be avoided.</p>
-
-<p>My husband and I are quite determined not to allow
-any of our children to marry without first explaining
-to them the great responsibilities of creating a new life
-that is to be pure and healthy.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s.; six children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak"><a id="a71_But_it_is_too_Late"></a>71. “<span class="smcap">But it is too Late.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I am sending you my experiences as near as I can.
-I was married at twenty-one years. I am now forty-five.
-I have had no children this last eight years. I can
-safely say I am suffering now for my ignorance in my
-young days, during pregnancy and confinement. It
-was after my second baby was born; I was living a piece
-away from my mother. I could not afford to pay someone
-to look after the house and me, and pay a midwife
-too, so my mother came and did what she could for me in
-the morning, and then left me till my husband came from
-work. Of course, I got up sooner than I should have
-done. It was in January, and snow was about. I
-went in the back place, and started to put things right,
-when I had a cold shake, and I was put to bed. It
-stopped all the courses, and I was many weeks before
-I was right. Since then I have suffered with varicose
-veins in my legs before and after confinement.</p>
-
-<p>I have been in bed four and five weeks, the longest
-nine weeks, with my legs, after baby was born. At the
-present time of writing I am in bed now, and have been
-nearly three weeks with the same thing. Now the
-change has come. It is three years since I had an attack.</p>
-
-<p>I think I was getting about 26s. off my husband.</p>
-
-<p>Thank God, my husband has been very good in all
-my sickness. If he had not, I could not have lived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-through it. I feel sure I should not be suffering now, if
-I could have had money to pay to be looked after then.
-Of course, I am better off now, but it is too late.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wife’s allowance 26s.; nine children and one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">72. <span class="smcap">Loss of Strength.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was married at the age of nineteen years. My boy
-was born when I was twenty-one years. Although
-during pregnancy I realised I was to become a mother, I
-had never been taught what I should do or should not
-do during that time. One of my sufferings during
-pregnancy was due to over-sensitiveness. I have
-thought, especially since hearing Mrs. &mdash;&mdash;’s address on
-“Moral Hygiene,” what a comfort and help it would
-have been to me, had the above subject been taught
-when we were young by school-teachers, or had our
-mothers realised the need of explaining nature as a
-necessary form of education. I do hope that the community
-will soon realise how necessary it is for boys
-and girls to have knowledge of this important subject.</p>
-
-<p>When I was confined, the doctor and monthly nurse
-were both with me. A few hours after the birth of my
-boy, when the nurse brought me some gruel, I sat up
-in bed to eat, but was soon told to lie down again. I
-do not know whether it was due to that act of ignorance,
-but I suffered with my back for a long time. My boy
-when born was a big and lovely baby; he is now eleven
-years old, a picture of health, standing 5 feet and &frac12; inch
-in his stockings.</p>
-
-<p>I felt very well while lying in bed after my boy was
-born. It was when I got up and dressed the tenth day
-I realised my weakness. I was glad to lie on my back
-in less than an hour after.</p>
-
-<p>My husband had been out of work for six weeks during<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-the time of pregnancy, and again another six weeks
-when baby was four and a half months old. I have
-mentioned the above fact, for I am sure it was partly
-due to that that I did not regain my strength for years
-after. I fed the baby on the breast for thirteen months.
-By that time I felt so low that it was an effort to walk
-upstairs, and was glad to sit on the top stair to pull myself
-together; so I went on until I got really ill. I was
-under the doctor’s care for three months. Meanwhile
-I had had several attacks of inflammation inwardly,
-but the last attack was so severe I myself was frightened.
-The doctor then told me it would be some time before
-I regained my strength. I certainly gained strength
-after that illness; part of it, I feel, was due to rest.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 21s. to 31s. 6d.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">73. <span class="smcap">Suffering and Hard Work.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During the early stages of pregnancy, with first baby,
-I was very much subject to a fainting condition, which
-I was informed was a perfectly natural condition during
-such a period, and could not be avoided. Whether
-such be the case or not, I cannot say. Otherwise my
-health generally was very good, being at that particular
-time blessed with an excellent robust constitution. My
-first baby was one year and eleven months old when
-the second one arrived. During the first four months
-of pregnancy with second child, except suffering violently
-from morning sickness (another thing I am told
-cannot be dispensed with), I maintained my usual state
-of health. After four months had elapsed a pain
-developed in my right side (I can compare it only to a
-gnawing toothache), which caused me a great deal of
-annoyance through the day, and most restless nights.
-This continued until my baby was born. I recovered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-splendidly from my confinement, but owing to circumstances
-had to be about performing household duties
-much earlier than I ought to have been. My third baby
-was born two years and eight months after second one.
-Whilst carrying this baby, from very early stage, I
-was distracted with an almost unbearable itching in
-the exterior part of the abdomen. In fact, I thought I
-should have gone mad with it, and had I then had the
-means at my disposal to consult my medical adviser (but
-2s. 6d. was a great consideration to me at that time, for
-one visit, out of a small income), I could have been spared
-a great amount of agony.... During pregnancy with
-my third and fourth babies, I had to contend with the
-pain in my side, as with the second one. I attribute
-this pain to having to carry one child about so much
-whilst in a state of pregnancy with another, and not
-being able to employ anyone to assist me in the more
-laborious duties, such as washing, scrubbing, etc., to
-give me the necessary rest which my condition demanded.
-When my third baby arrived, I regret to say
-it was disfigured with a hare-lip, from which cause it
-could not take its food properly, which caused it to cry
-almost incessantly, and after a trying period of eleven
-weeks, she, poor little mite, succumbed. Owing to the
-worry connected with this misfortune, also having to be
-up again too soon after confinement, and for want of
-rest, I felt my health giving way, and being in a weak
-condition, I became an easy prey to sexual intercourse,
-and thus once more I became a mother in fourteen
-months. My health was very moderate whilst in pregnancy
-with my fourth and last baby, now seven years
-of age, which I attribute solely to having children too
-quickly in succession, and in not procuring, as I said
-before, the necessary rest and nourishment which is
-essential to a mother at these periods.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Since the birth of my last child I have suffered from
-a falling womb, which my doctor informs me has been
-caused by getting out of bed too soon after confinements,
-which was due entirely to not having the wherewithal
-to provide for adequate attention.</p>
-
-<p>I feel very keen concerning this problem, and do hope
-something will be done in the very near future to
-alleviate the unnecessary suffering of working mothers.</p>
-
-<p>During the time I was having my children, my husband’s
-average weekly earnings were 25s. When working overtime
-he may have earned 30s. or even 32s., but on the
-other hand, when on short time or holidays (which are
-equivalent to short time&mdash;no work, no pay), I have
-known him to receive as low as 15s. or 12s. To give you
-an instance. Christmas week of last year his wages
-amounted to 12s., and New Year week this year, 10s.
-My husband, along with myself, considered his wages
-were not adequate to maintain a family, provide proper
-attention, etc., during confinement, and solely for this
-reason we do not feel justified in having any more
-children if it can possibly be avoided. I love children
-dearly, another reason why I do not wish to create them
-to be badly fed, clothed badly, uneducated, etc., on a
-mere pittance. I could say much more, but my sincere
-desire is that a better time is dawning for working-class
-mothers and their babies.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 15s. to 32s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">74. “<span class="smcap">Heavy Wash-Days.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I think a great deal of suffering might be spared
-especially over the first child, if the mother could only
-have had a little more knowledge how to go on, <i>re</i> the
-suffering. I have been prostrated for days with violent
-sickness and pain in the head. The case of miscarriage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-was a very bad one, resulting in having to attend the
-hospital nearly two years. The doctor says the miscarriage
-was caused by heavy wash-days, one of the
-things I think the expectant mother ought not to have
-to do; but it is one of the most important things in the
-home. I think if the mother could only be allowed to
-take care of herself the first three months of the time,
-many both deformed and deficient children might be
-avoided. I do not mean for a mother to lead an idle
-life for three months, because exercise is most necessary
-in a proper way; but such work as washing, paper-hanging,
-whitewashing, and hanging clothes up to dry,
-is the work that has serious results with the mother.
-My results after confinement can, I think, be traced to
-the lack of good nursing and good support&mdash;in such
-cases when one neighbour will nurse another one, having
-had no experience herself.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 28s. 3d. to 37s. 6d.; five children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">75. <span class="smcap">Bad Effects of Hard Work.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I think your Maternity Scheme just splendid. You
-will see by accompanying form I have lost two of my
-four babies, and had a miscarriage. If I had taken
-more care before birth, I quite believe those children
-would have lived.</p>
-
-<p>I have always had good health, and quite able to do
-my work up to the last, but I think now it is quite wrong
-for the mother to try to do <i>hard</i> work a month or six
-weeks before or after. That means she wants three
-months real care.</p>
-
-<p>In my case before those two were born, I had to work
-harder than usual, and the consequences were they were
-born delicate.</p>
-
-<p>My two children that I have reared are strong and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-healthy, and I had no troubles or worries or hard work
-before they were born. I could also take things easy
-until they were six weeks old.</p>
-
-<p>There is one other point; the mother who works and
-worries generally loses the milk which is so necessary
-for the baby. If only mothers could take it easy during
-that time, I am certain we could rear a much better race.
-I often feel I shall be able to help my own daughter,
-should she need it, for the mothers of the past were
-ignorant.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s. to 32s.; four children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">76. <span class="smcap">Amongst Strangers.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I think many of us have suffered (and do so now)
-through lack of care during pregnancy, especially over
-a first child. If something could be done to help the
-expectant mother to understand how best to care for
-herself, then much suffering would be saved afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>I went to live many miles away from my home and
-friends when I married, amongst strangers, and was too
-shy to ask anyone what I should or should not do (when
-I knew I should become a mother), and was so ill, tired,
-and depressed that I felt I did not want to do anything.
-A dear old woman, one of the neighbours, came to me
-one day, and asked me if I had been to a doctor; I said
-“No; I was going to speak to one nearer the time.”
-She said, “My dear girl, go to him now. Tell him how
-you are. I am sure he will be able to give you something
-to ease that excessive sickness, etc., and advise
-you how best to take care of yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>I did not go to him for some time, but eventually did
-so, and felt much better for his advice and care during
-that trying time.</p>
-
-<p>I had rather hard times at the birth of my little ones,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-and can quite realise that it is most necessary that a
-woman should have the greatest care and attention
-possible. Still, I feel that if more could be done to
-teach them how to care for their own health before the
-birth of the little ones we should have healthier and
-stronger children. How it can be done without hurting
-the mothers’ feelings is a very difficult problem, but
-I suffered so much before my first baby was born
-that perhaps I feel most strongly on the need of
-our sisters knowing how best to care for themselves.
-I am so glad the Maternity Scheme is being taken up
-so much more by Health Committees now since the
-Guild have worked for it.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s. to 30s.; three children, one still-birth, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">77. <span class="smcap">Care and Attention.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am afraid the information I can give you about
-myself is not much, as I have been able to have the care
-and attention not attainable for many working-women.
-My first baby was still-born. This was really brought
-about by ignorance during pregnancy in trying to open
-a very stiff window, causing a strain, and also causing
-the cord to become twisted round the baby’s neck.
-Fortunately, I was able at once to receive medical attention,
-and when the child was born I had to have two
-doctors and nurse, chloroform, etc. Doctors both say I
-should have lost my life also if I had not had the attention
-I was able to have. The other two children were
-born under quite normal conditions&mdash;the symptoms of
-sickness, cholic pains, etc.&mdash;but I am glad to say I have
-never suffered from varicose veins, perhaps due to the
-fact that I have always been able to take rest during
-pregnancy.</p>
-
-<p>My mother had thirteen children, and, as far as I can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-gather, suffered terribly at these times, because when
-a woman brings up ten children to full age she has not
-much time to rest. I may say one of hers was still-born,
-the other two dying, one at the age of nine months
-from vaccination, the other at three years and a half
-from concussion of the brain.</p>
-
-<p>Mother died at the age of fifty-two years from Bright’s
-disease, brought on, I believe, from excessive child-bearing,
-and the doctor said every organ in her body
-was completely worn out. My mother had, perhaps,
-the care most women would not get, as my father was
-always in a good position earning a good salary&mdash;I may
-say £150 a year at that time. But with all those advantages,
-she could not have the care she ought, or the
-rest, and, of course, no trained nurses, as we have at
-the present time.</p>
-
-<p>I often wonder when I read of the deaths of women,
-at from forty years of age upward, if, when they should
-be having the best of their lives, that their early deaths
-are due to lack of care and rest during the times they
-are having their babies.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">78. <span class="smcap">Weakness following Pregnancy.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I suffered very much in pregnancy, was violently sick
-quite a dozen times a day every day for the first six
-months, with occasional fainting attacks. I was better
-towards the end, but had bad nights, so had to rest a lot
-in the day. The baby was born all right, and I got on
-well, but was weak. When she was twelve months old (I
-nursed her myself) I had a goitre in my neck, which
-lasted two years. At one time I was very ill in hospital
-seven weeks, and away in country six. The doctor
-said it was weakness following pregnancy that caused it.
-I was not able to do my home duties, and if I had been a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-woman who had to go out to work&mdash;well, I could not have
-done so for nearly all the three years. My husband did
-not want any more children, as I suffered so much with
-the first. He is eleven years now, and I am very well.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">79. <span class="smcap">Frequent Pregnancies.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During pregnancy I was fairly well in health, but
-during my confinements I was very ill. I never had a
-natural birth.... I think what caused my miscarriages
-was with having children so quickly, and having to work
-rather hard at the same time.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wife’s allowance 24s.; five children and three miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">80. <span class="smcap">Husband on Short Time.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During pregnancy with my first child, after about
-three months, I started with inflammation of the
-bladder. I happened to be with my mother at the
-time, but had it been otherwise I could not have got
-anyone to look after me, as my husband was only working
-two and three days a week. Of course, my friends
-would have looked after me, but everyone is not so
-fortunate as that. I would have freely died, the pain
-was so severe. And whatever maternity benefit a wife
-and mother receives, she gets nothing more than she
-deserves, and I believe they will get the money as easy
-as they get the old age pensions, and they will have less
-to waste.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 17s. 6d. to £2; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">81. <span class="smcap">Convulsions.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I very nearly lost my life over my first confinement,
-through being ignorant of how to take care of myself
-beforehand. I had lived about eighty miles away from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-home for some years, and was away from my mother at
-the time, also too shy and reticent to ever mention my
-condition to neighbours. I had always been strong and
-healthy, and never took medicine or aperients in any
-shape or form, in fact, never thought about it, and acted
-just the same when pregnant, although dreadfully constipated
-all the time. I thought it was a result of my
-condition. At confinement, after twenty-four hours’
-pain and suffering I was seized with convulsions just as
-the baby was at the point of being born, and knew no
-more for about twelve hours. Another doctor was
-fetched, and the child was got away somehow, also my
-friends telegraphed for, as they expected me to die.
-However, that did not happen. But the doctors said
-it was the only case of convulsions at confinement that
-they had ever heard of the patient living after, and they
-blamed it to the clogged condition of the bowels. I
-was quite normal over the second confinement. There
-may perhaps not be much in this, except, perhaps, if I
-had known a bit more about such things, it would have
-been a lot better for me. My girl is nineteen now.</p>
-
-<p>It seems almost incredible that I was so ignorant,
-but I had lived quietly a long time with a strictly particular
-widow lady, and had hardly ever heard such
-things discussed.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 10s. to 30s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">82. “<span class="smcap">Every Care on Every Occasion.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have eight children and one miscarriage from
-ptomaine poisoning. And never can I say I have not
-had every care on every occasion. My husband from
-the first saw that I had the necessary requirements.
-During the pregnancy of the last four I suffered from
-varicose veins, and there were days when I could not
-get about so well, but on the whole I am pleased to say<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-I have always been able to do ordinary housework, with,
-of course, rests between.</p>
-
-<p>After confinement, I always had the month out
-before commencing my house work, but I took the
-management of my baby as soon as possible, say from
-two weeks old.</p>
-
-<p>I have all my children, never buried any.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £2 to £3; eight children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">83. <span class="smcap">A Wage-Earning Mother.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I myself had some very hard times, as I had to go out
-to work in the mill. I was a weaver, and we had a lot
-of lifting to do. My first baby was born before its time,
-from me lifting my piece off the loom on to my shoulder,
-as two of us had them to lift, and then carry them from
-the shed across the yard to be weighed. If I had been
-able to take care of myself I should not have had to
-suffer as I did for seven weeks before that baby was
-born and for three months after; and then there was the
-baby suffering as well, as he was a weak little thing for
-a long time, and cost pounds that could have been saved
-had I been able to stay at home and look after myself.
-But I could not do so, as my husband was short of
-work; and when I had my second baby I had to work
-all through again, as my husband was short of work
-and ill at the time. So there was another poorly baby.
-While I was carrying this one he only worked three
-months out of the nine. I could not get any support
-at all then. I had to go out to work again at the month-end,
-and put the baby out to nurse. I had to get up
-by four in the morning, and get my baby out of bed,
-wash and dress it, and then leave home by five, as I
-had half an hour walk to take my baby to my mother’s,
-and then go to my work and stand all day till half-past<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-five at night, and then the walk home again with my
-baby. I had to do this with three of them. I think
-you will understand I have had my share; and all
-my children have had to be brought with instruments.
-I have had six living children and one miscarriage. I
-lost two from injury at birth; and when I had the last,
-the doctor told me he did not know how I had kept one,
-the times that I had had, and the way they had to use
-the baby before birth. And now I am suffering myself,
-all from not being able to take care of myself during
-pregnancy. My baby that I lost died from hæmorrhage
-when he was eight days old; then the second, when she
-was four months old, died from an injury to the spine,
-both done at birth. I think it would have been a good
-thing for me if all these reforms had been in force, as I
-should have both been better in health and saved a lot
-of suffering to myself and my children.</p>
-
-<p>It was from no fault of my husband that I had to
-suffer: it was from shortness of work. I know I should
-have had the best of everything if he had been able to
-get it for me. He had 28s. a week and all holidays off.
-Then there was out of work, many a time playing for
-six weeks at a time.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 28s.; six children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">84. “<span class="smcap">Two Children under the Year.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have had seven children, and three have died. I
-certainly have had very hard, long labours, but I don’t
-know that it could have been avoided; the doctor always
-said it was in my favour&mdash;I am not very strong. But I
-think what I suffered during my pregnancy most women
-have to suffer. Although my husband and myself were
-very ignorant on such matters when we were married,
-or some of it might have been avoided. That is why I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-am so pleased it is being made a public question, so that
-the people will be more enlightened on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>You will see I had my first two children under the
-year, all due to ignorance. It nearly sent me in a
-decline. My husband and myself were very young, and
-no one had ever talked to me. I am pleased it is different
-nowadays. I had a daughter married a year last
-Christmas; her husband and her is as pure yet as the
-day they married. She is twenty-seven, and her husband
-thirty years old. They are as happy as two children.
-They are both well read, and understand things
-better than I did when I married. They are passionately
-fond of children, and will go in for one presently.</p>
-
-<p>It is my three last babies I have buried. The doctor
-says I must not have any more; it will be fatal to me
-if I do.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 22s. to 26s.; seven children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">85. <span class="smcap">Effects of Worry.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Having suffered with rheumatic fever at the age of
-five, through going to live in a new damp house, perhaps
-explains the reason I suffered more than most women
-during pregnancy and confinement, as I was left with
-a weak heart all my life. I may also say I have had the
-same fever three times altogether. I married most
-happily, and my first miscarriage occurred when I had
-been married two years, through lack of strength, as I
-was anæmic. Two years afterwards my little girl was
-born, strong and healthy, although for nine months I
-was unable to walk or do my housework, and she has
-thrived up to the present age of six years. I never
-recovered my usual health, as I could not afford to rest
-after my confinement, as I had to work to help pay the
-debt incurred through my long illness. After one year<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-I was again pregnant, and as I had overworked myself
-I was again too weak to carry; and thus occurred the
-second miscarriage, due entirely to having no rest. I
-suffered two months with hæmorrhage that threatened
-to end my life, but I revived and continued in a weakly
-state for three years, being just able to do my housework,
-when my little son was born, strong and healthy,
-weighing at birth 12 pounds, and has remained healthy
-up to two years, the present time; and I have fed both
-children by breast up to two years each, without the aid
-of stout or intoxicants, milk being my chief diet. Thus
-you will see that I have had two miscarriages and two
-lovely babies. If you can understand this jumble of
-events, you will notice that while I was worried by circumstances
-I could not bear children, while during both
-times when I was obliged to rest I was successful, showing
-that homes of rest for women in pregnancy and
-confinement would result in a great saving of life, and
-also result in children being healthy born. Also, the
-grant advocated would relieve the mother of the necessity
-to overwork herself.</p>
-
-<p>In reference to my husband’s earnings, during the time
-they varied from 16s. 6d. to 25s. per week. But of
-course I never received more than the small amount in
-the winter, and the largest amount in the summer, for
-housekeeping, as my husband had to lose short time in
-winter.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 16s. 6d. to 25s.; two children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a href="images/zill_t110a_h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t110a.jpg" width="550" height="327" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>FIFTEEN CHILDREN, FOUR LIVING. FATHER AN IRON MOULDER.</p>
-
-<p>The family is not connected with the Women’s Co-operative Guild.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>Reproduced by kind permission of the Medical Officer of Health for Liverpool.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">86. “<span class="smcap">Not Much Strength Left.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I am afraid I cannot tell you very much, because I
-worked too hard to think about how we lived. When
-my second baby came, I did not know how I was going
-to keep it. When the last one came, I had to do my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-own washing and baking before the week-end. Before
-three weeks I had to go out working, washing, and
-cleaning, and so lost my milk and began with the bottle.
-Twice I worked to within two or three days of my confinement.
-I was a particularly strong woman when I
-married. There is not much strength left. But, thanks
-be to God, I have not lost one. I have two girls and
-three boys, every one strong and healthy.</p>
-
-<p>The firm my husband worked for failed; then for the
-most times he did not work; but I can truly say that
-for the most part of twenty-five years 17s. per week was
-the most I received from him.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wife’s allowance 17s.; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">87. <span class="smcap">Struggles of a Miner’s Wife.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I dare say I could write a book on my early struggles
-with my seven children, and a miner’s home to contend
-with; and many a week my husband has not had a
-penny of wage to bring home, besides the experience of
-three big strikes and many small ones.</p>
-
-<p>I may say we were married nineteen years before we
-lost one, and then I lost my baby first, a grand little girl
-of two. Then, a year and a half after, I lost a fine lad
-of fourteen in the fever hospital, of scarlet fever and
-diphtheria. Two years after that we lost a girl of twelve
-from tubercular disease of the kidneys from cow’s milk.
-The doctor was treating her for eight years for Bright’s
-disease of the kidneys. I brought them up breast-fed,
-so she must have contracted it after she was weaned.
-Such a clever child she was. So you will see we have
-had our troubles.</p>
-
-<p>I may say I had very good times at confinements,
-except the first and the last. The youngest was born
-feet first, which was an awful experience, and her heart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-was nearly stopped beating; so I think that left her
-heart weak, and she cut her teeth with bronchitis. I
-used to get up always by the ninth day until the last.
-I was between forty-one and forty-two when she was
-born, so had to rest a bit longer, but had to see to
-household duties as soon as possible.</p>
-
-<p>I am firmly of opinion that if the State wants strong,
-healthy, useful citizens, they should provide the mothers
-in the homes with sufficient wages where the husband’s
-wage is inadequate. Nor should married women be
-allowed to work outside the homes for some stated
-period before and after childbirth. The men should
-demand a decent living wage to provide for them at
-home.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Seven children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">88. “<span class="smcap">Did not Like to say Anything.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I can safely say that had there been a centre to which
-I could have gone before my first boy was born I should
-have been saved the terrible torture I suffered both before
-and after confinement. I was very ignorant before
-marriage, and went away among strangers; and when I
-became pregnant I did not like to say anything to a
-strange doctor, and I had no lady friends whom I felt
-I could confide in. So I went about with an ulcerated
-stomach, sick after every attempt to take food; and
-when my baby came, I nearly lost my life. He was
-also very delicate for five years after birth, wholly due,
-I am convinced, to the state I was in whilst pregnant.</p>
-
-<p>With the other two boys, I have always had to get
-about too soon. The month I have always had to have
-a woman in the house, during which time I have been
-absolutely helpless, being a terrific expense.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor has ordered me to lie down for two hours
-each day, but that is absolutely impossible for a working<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-man’s wife when she has two or three children around
-her, meals to provide, and the washing and cleaning, etc.,
-to do in the home.</p>
-
-<p>I speak from my own experience, and I know that
-there are thousands of women who are a million times
-worse off than I am, for I have the best husband in the
-world; but his nor any other working man’s wages won’t
-pay for help in the home at a cost of at least 12s. a week
-and food. On the very day my first baby was born my
-husband was thrown out of work. This was kept from
-my knowledge for five weeks, and I am sure you will
-guess all the scheming he used to keep me in ignorance.
-He had his club money for the period he was out of
-employment, which amounted to 9s. a week.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s. to 30s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">89. <span class="smcap">A Brutal Husband.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have just heard of the following case: A poor woman,
-only twenty-eight years of age, was confined last Wednesday
-with her seventh child, all living. She has been
-allowed to live until this affair is over in a deplorable
-cottage that is condemned. She has been living quite
-near for about four months, but I and my neighbours
-have never seen her nor the two youngest children, aged
-two and a half years and fifteen months, and we are
-now told they have no clothes to come out in. These
-two children were born in the workhouse infirmary.
-We hear that the father, a hay-carter, only did six
-weeks’ work in a twelvemonth. He must be a most
-brutal man. He was fighting the poor wife only a fortnight
-ago, as if she were another man. The poor thing
-lies there with only an old sheet and quilt for covering,
-and a poor woman who is attending to the other children
-has taken the blanket from her own baby to lend her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-The very night the baby was born the midwife had to
-send for a policeman, the husband was carrying on in
-such a dreadful manner, and was worse afterwards,
-because they would not let him have the Insurance
-paper that had just been filled in by the midwife for
-the Insurance.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">90. “<span class="smcap">I Overdid Myself.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>Judging from my own experience, a fair amount of
-knowledge at the commencement of pregnancy would
-do a lot of good. One may have a good mother who
-would be willing to give needed information, but to
-people like myself your mother is the last person you
-would talk to about yourself or your state. Although
-mother nursed me with my first child, I never said one
-word to her about it coming, except the bare date I
-expected. I felt I couldn’t, and outside people only tell
-you what garments you need, and just the barest information.
-I have learned the most useful things since
-my children have grown up. The youngest is nine.
-The idea that you impress the child all through the time
-with your own habits and ways, or that its health is to
-a great extent hindered or helped by your own well-being,
-was quite unknown to me.</p>
-
-<p>At the time I fell with my second child we were in
-very bad circumstances, and feeding my first with a
-bottle, I stinted myself all I could to give him plenty;
-and having moved from one house to another two
-months before the second one was born, I overdid myself,
-with the result that I was bad for a week before he was
-born; and then, the birth being such a long time about,
-a clot of blood got down into my ankle, and before I
-got far over the confinement I was laid up with a bad
-leg, which the doctor said was due to the child being so
-long coming into the world. I should say I had a midwife<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-this time, as I could not afford the doctor’s fee.
-Had the midwife called in the doctor, as she should have
-done, I might have been saved a lot, for my back has
-never been right since. Whenever I get very tired or
-not very well, I always feel it in the place where he
-seemed fixed. So I feel that if young mothers knew
-more of the need for care of themselves, and what should
-be done for them at the time of childbirth, much suffering
-could be saved.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 18s. to 32s.; three children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">91. “<span class="smcap">Better to have a Small Family.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have only had the three children, and have been
-married thirty-two years. In the first place, I was only
-twenty years old when I had my first baby, and must
-confess that I suffered a great deal through ignorance,
-but am pleased to say that I always had all that was really
-necessary, as regards doctors and nursing. I may say
-that my husband and myself were quite agreed on the
-point of restricting our family to our means. If we
-had not done so, I could not possibly have reared my
-eldest girl. I was able to have good medical advice
-and give her plenty of attention day and night.</p>
-
-<p>I may say that I have disgusted some of our Guild
-members by advocating restrictions. I think that it is
-better to have a small family and give them good food
-and everything hygienic than to let them take “pot-luck.”</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £2 to £3; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">92. <span class="smcap">Ignorance.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I feel very keenly myself on the ignorance of young
-girls getting married and having babies, because I am
-quite sure some of my sufferings and the death of my
-babies need not have been.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When my first baby was brought into the world,
-within a few days of my twenty-first birthday, after
-three days’ labour and agony, the baby was nearly dead.
-I can hear now the slaps from that doctor on the child
-to bring life into him, and my own cry of “Let it die;
-do not beat it so.” He lived, a lovely boy but a cripple,
-for nine and a half months, admitted by the doctor to
-be through the long hours of labour.</p>
-
-<p>A strong point has always been mine that doctors do
-not give sufficient advice to young mothers. I had to
-go through the same suffering with my second child,
-born an epileptic, living three months. My next three
-girls are alive to-day, spared, I honestly believe, through
-my own experience, and the fact of having more humane
-doctors with instruments. My last baby was literally
-torn from me. The doctor told my husband he could
-not save both. They dare not chloroform me, and so
-I had to bear it. The doctor said I must never have
-another child. I never have, but why should I have
-suffered? My first doctor could have said that I was
-not fitted. I had a good husband, a fairly good income,
-but when I think of poor women with probably indifferent
-or bad husbands, how do they live? If our scheme
-could be brought forward, what a help to know that a
-woman after a bad time could have a longer rest! Oh,
-the feeling of knowing that the nurse has gone, and you
-must wash and dress your own baby! Whereas if the
-mother could be helped&mdash;and the money could do this&mdash;how
-nice she would feel, as she could rest with her little
-one, after having made it comfortable, by having some
-help with the housework!</p>
-
-<p>We want all our mothers to teach their daughters,
-not to keep everything from them, as it was kept from
-me. If we can only get expecting mothers to attend
-maternity homes&mdash;to see they get a good nurse, not a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-tippler: they should be banished from the profession....
-I thank God that a band of good women are working on
-the maternity scheme for women.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 32s.; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">93. <span class="smcap">Out-of-Door Exercise Every Day.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I had a very natural confinement with both, and a
-short, sharp time of labour with the first, rather more
-lingering with the second. My first was what they call
-a dry labour, and a very sick one&mdash;the worst the doctor
-had had&mdash;and it was very exhausting to me. The best
-times are bad enough, but I was told by the nurse that
-mine were good times. With the first she stayed a
-month, and the second three weeks, being called to
-another case. I think I was very fortunate in having
-a good mother, who always taught us from childhood
-how to live to be healthy, and both my sister and I had
-natural confinements through following her advice when
-young; that is what makes me so keen on “Moral
-Hygiene.” Young women do not take care or have
-proper exercise enough. Ordinary work does not do
-the harm. I did all my housework and the washing
-right up to the time of confinement both times, but I
-did not whitewash or do papering, as I know some do,
-and then wonder why they miscarry. Another one I
-know of insisted on the doctor giving chloroform, as she
-was sure she would never get through it without. Of
-course, I am very active, while some are indolent, and
-that has a great deal to do with it; and I made a practice
-of getting outdoor exercise every day, if not too far
-towards the end of the time, and at great inconvenience,
-as with the boy I had piles very bad, and often had to
-stop a moment or two before I could go on, but of course
-it was at night when I went out. I also had heartburn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-with both a short time, and a bad attack of indigestion,
-which I never suffer from at other times, but which the
-doctor soon relieved.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">94. “<span class="smcap">Given Anything to have a Good Sleep.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>There is a great deal of unnecessary suffering entailed
-on the woman during pregnancy by lack of not knowing
-what to do, or how to do it, such as having all her
-own washing and work to do, especially in the latter
-stages. When a man is only bringing home about £1
-a week, and has two or three children, it is impossible
-for the mother to get proper help or even food. I think
-it would be a very good thing if something could be
-done to lighten that burden. I am not speaking as one
-that does not know. I have had it to do myself, in my
-early married life, but, thank God, my lot is changed
-now. I have had eleven children, two still-born, and
-one miscarriage, so have gone through it. I also think
-we should try and do something for the mothers after
-childbed, as many have to be about so soon after, and
-no doubt that tends to weakening the mother, so that
-she cannot give her child proper support, and cannot
-recover her own strength. I do not think any woman
-ought to attempt anything like hard work until she has
-had at least a month’s good nursing and support after
-confinement, but it is impossible to do it on a man’s
-pay at £1 or 25s. per week. I have always felt if I could
-only have another week or so of rest I should feel a
-different woman, and I am sure most of my poor sisters
-feel the same. I also think that if children were naturally
-fed it would be all the better for them. When I
-was pregnant I would have given anything to have had
-a good sleep during the day. I used to think it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-idleness, and try to shake it off, but I do not think so
-now, and would give every poor woman all the rest she
-really needed.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages about £1; nine children, two still-born, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">95. “<span class="smcap">Husband who was Nurse and Mother.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I was brought up in the country with a cat and a dog
-for playmates, so when I went among other young
-people, I was very shy, and never made girl friends.
-That may account for my ignorance in the things that
-mattered at the time of my marriage, at the age of
-twenty-one and a half. My husband was just as ignorant,
-and we had to pay very dearly for our ignorance.
-I was married about eight weeks when I became ill; I
-went to the doctor and took a lot of physic, but was no
-better, then I would not have any more from the doctor,
-and tried to doctor myself, but I was very ill the whole
-of the seven and a half months that I was pregnant.
-The birth was a forced one. I was taken very ill, and
-knowing baby should not come for six weeks longer, I
-was bearing the pain as well as I could, just cheering
-myself that it would be less to go through when the time
-came, when my husband came in and would insist on
-getting a doctor. We tried a new one this time, who
-lived quite near. He had just left the infirmary, and
-we had heard he was very clever in maternity. When
-he saw me and questioned me, he sent for the nurse.
-The rest of that night is too terrible to go through even
-now after twenty-eight years. Suffice it to say that
-next morning there was a poor little baby boy with a
-very large swollen head dreadfully cut, and a young
-mother dreadfully cut also. One would have thought
-the trouble was over now&mdash;anyhow, we thought so, but
-we found it had only begun. A week or two after the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-pains began. I thought it was all right, that I had not
-got quite well. At last I had to go to the doctor again.
-He told me I was going on all right. At the end of six
-weeks the nurse called. I told her just how I felt, and
-that the doctor said it was through the bad confinement
-I had gone through. She told me to tell him to
-come and examine me thoroughly, that there was something
-growing there. He came, and when my husband
-saw him afterwards, he said, “Oh, there is really nothing.
-There is a little hardness there, that is all. Your wife
-is very nervous.” My husband told him that I was anything
-except nervous. However, I went on for eighteen
-months, never knowing what moment those terrible
-pains were going to take me. Many times it was in the
-street. I was in bed about eight months out of the
-eighteen. Then came a very terrible time, and my
-husband called another doctor in, and I was ordered into
-the B. Infirmary at once. I got better. I was home three
-months, when I was carried in again. They said it was
-ovarian trouble. They wanted to operate. My husband
-asked them how long I might live as I was. They said
-I might live for years, but I would always be subject to
-these attacks. He told them he would rather keep me
-as I was than risk an operation. On inquiring the cause
-of the trouble, I was told by the nurse it was confinement.
-I went on in much the same way until my boy
-was ten years old. Then I had to be operated on. It
-was a case of life or death then. But if I went into the
-Infirmary I could not choose my doctor, so Dr. &mdash;&mdash;
-offered to do the operation free, but I would have
-to go into a private hospital, which meant a good deal
-to us, who hardly knew which way to turn for an extra
-shilling then. However, my husband insisted that
-Dr. &mdash;&mdash; was to do the operation, and by letting everything
-else go he managed to get the money together<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-by the time I came out, which was three weeks at
-£3 3s. per week and £1 7s. 6d. for the second nurse.
-The trouble was a multiple tumour; it had grown round
-about the intestines. They had to tear the one from
-the other. After leaving the hospital I was in bed for
-three months, but it was a complete cure, though no
-one except my husband expected me to get over it.
-Dr. &mdash;&mdash; told me I could not have gone through a more
-serious operation unless I had had my head taken off,
-and then there was no hope at all.</p>
-
-<p>Now I maintain that if we had understood things relating
-to married life, all this could have been saved. I would
-not have starved myself and child before birth for one
-thing, and I would have been more careful on washing
-days not to lift tubs or jump to reach lines, neither would
-I have cleaned windows and a hundred and one other
-things that a pregnant woman should not do, and, above
-all, we would not have had an inexperienced doctor.</p>
-
-<p>I must just tell you that my husband has always
-been husband, nurse, and mother. The pain was never
-quite so bad when he was near, and no one ever made
-my bed like him.</p>
-
-<p>Our income, until baby was six months old, was
-£1 6s. per week. Then my husband got out of employment&mdash;was
-out four months. He took up an agency,
-and did a very little with it, but with that little and
-about £2 12s. 6d. we had managed to save, and pawning,
-we got through without going into debt until he got
-another job. This lasted about eighteen months, averaging
-about 30s. per week. Then for about twenty months
-he averaged about 10s. per week. Our home went then a
-thing at a time, but we got through at the expense of
-our insides and outsides, without help or debt, except
-doctor’s bills. Then we came to this town on £1 7s.;
-after a few years £1 9s. The rise came just two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-years before I underwent the operation. We had our
-home to get out of that, and had to get it on the hire
-system (or borrow from friends, and we both objected
-to borrowing). Some people say drink is the cause of
-poverty, but I think you will agree with me when I say
-we had not enough to drink. Our rent would work out
-at about 6s. per week. I think this is what you want.
-Of course, things are very much better with us now,
-and have been for the last twelve years, both in health
-and finance. I just want to add that although the first
-half of my married life was so hard and painful, I would
-not have missed one bit of it, because it has all helped
-to make me understand things that matter from a
-practical point of view. If there is anything more I
-can help in I shall be pleased to do so.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 26s. to 30s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">96. <span class="smcap">Injury at Confinement.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I rather shrink from talking about myself on the
-subject, but if my remarks would help any young
-mother, I don’t so much mind. My husband’s average
-wage was about 24s. a week.... I helped in the work,
-as his earnings were not nearly enough as the children
-came. I had four children at intervals of about two
-years, whom I was able to nurse, but although I had no
-illness during pregnancy, with my fifth baby I had a
-very long illness through the doctor hurrying the birth,
-instead of giving nature a chance, and he was rough in
-handling me. Now, the result was a three months’ illness,
-and my baby had to be brought up by bottle.</p>
-
-<p>What was still more serious, I was so injured that for
-nearly ten years I was an invalid. During that period
-I had two premature confinements, and several slight
-miscarriages. Then I got a little stronger, and finally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-my sixth baby was born without the help of a doctor,
-because I was so afraid of a repetition of what I had
-suffered. I am glad to say I gradually recovered, although
-all my friends thought I would never get well.</p>
-
-<p>I think every expectant mother should have a duly
-qualified nurse to attend her. I had several miscarriages.
-There is a better chance now than when I was
-having my family. Good nursing is necessary. I
-rejoice to know that the Guild is pressing forward on
-this matter.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages about 24s.; six children, one still-born, several miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">97. <span class="smcap">Childless.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have had four children, and all were born one year
-and a half after each other. My two eldest died in one
-week from whooping-cough, age five and three. Two
-of my children were still-born. I was very young at
-the time, and only wish this Maternity Scheme had
-come out years ago. I have a good husband, but we
-are childless, I am sorry to say. I am on many committees,
-and take a great interest where children are
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 18s. to 27s.; two children, two still-births, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">98. “<span class="smcap">I Simply Struggled On.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have had two children. I never was so well in my
-life as I was during pregnancy over my first. A bearing-down
-caused hæmorrhoids. However, I was not troubled
-greatly with them then. My second child was born one
-year and seven months afterwards. Now all the time
-during pregnancy over him I was thoroughly ill. My
-work was a trouble, and altogether I <i>was</i> ill. But as
-pregnancy is never thought a sufficient cause for even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-having a holiday, I simply struggled on for fear of being
-held up to ridicule. You see, I was only twenty-two
-years old then, and thought that the only way to do
-was to show a brave front, even though I felt almost
-too ill to do anything. Well, I had to have chloroform,
-and again I had to have instruments; and my children
-would never be born naturally, for my womb is in the
-wrong place, the doctor says. I had also a trained nurse
-who despaired again of my life.</p>
-
-<p>I was in bed one month for maternity and was unable
-to do my work even when I did get up. I could not
-mother either of my children, for I never had any milk.
-That was a grief to me. I had hæmorrhoids again through
-bearing down, brought on through pregnancy, and from
-these I suffered for three years and doctored for them.
-Then I had an operation and had them removed. I
-have not had more children, neither do I want them,
-as the doctor fears my life will pay the forfeit. I had a
-serious operation for tumour in the womb four years ago,
-and have been much better in health ever since.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">99. <span class="smcap">Story of a Confinement.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My first child was born ten months after my marriage.
-My husband’s age at marriage was twenty-eight years,
-and my own age twenty-five years, and we are both
-Londoners, residing all our life in the city of London,
-until my first-born attained the age of eleven months.</p>
-
-<p>My children have been born quite healthy, and the
-doctors have said fine babies. But I am pleased to say
-I am a mother who has had no terrible sufferings to
-relate as to the sufferings of a long period of labour.
-Two hours and a half has been the time from the very
-first stage of labour, until the appearance into this world<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-of each of my children. And I would say, personally,
-women were never created to suffer as many a one does.
-I made this remark to my first nurse, and she said,
-“You are right.” I had been told such experiences by
-women who had had families. It is nature, and nature
-does or should do its own work, she said. Take, for
-instance, the apple. When it is fully ripe, it falls from
-the tree. So the child, when the time has arrived for its
-appearance, I say it should come as naturally, not to
-look upon the little creature distorted and bruised
-through having to be brought into the world.</p>
-
-<p>My strong conviction is, as soon as a woman feels the
-slightest pain she should have immediate attention.
-You are strong at the commencement, and able to give
-the help in bringing your baby, but if allowed to go on
-for hours your strength is exhausted, you have lost
-that power and vitality which you require, that
-after hours of suffering artificial means have to be
-resorted to.</p>
-
-<p>My second child was born at N&mdash;&mdash;. The doctor did
-his own work and the nurse’s too, arriving and leaving
-the house in half an hour, my mother just taking the
-baby until the nurse had time to get in the room.</p>
-
-<p>Now, by my third child I will try to show where I
-think much is at fault by not having immediate attention.
-My little daughter was born in D&mdash;&mdash;. My
-husband had at four o’clock to fetch the doctor and
-nurse (a qualified midwife) nearly two miles away; no
-other reliable nearer.</p>
-
-<p>They resided a stone’s-throw from each other. But
-on bringing the nurse and explaining while she dressed
-she was to call the doctor, she would not hear of it, and
-fairly repudiated the idea of such a quick confinement,
-sarcastically saying, never in her experience. Well,
-the doctor was not informed. Previously on engaging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-them I made it quite clear how my boys had been born&mdash;so
-quickly. In D&mdash;&mdash;, I may say in passing, indiarubber
-gloves are worn by the nurse on receiving the child,
-and like all rubber things in these cases have to be boiled
-before using. Nurse arrived. Every single thing was
-ready for her. There was a bright fire, and every
-possible article to lay her hands on, baby’s clothes on
-the horse airing and warming.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me in my agony, and said: “Oh, not
-likely to come off yet, ma” (to my mother), and sent the
-old soul out for a saucepan to boil the new gloves in.
-Well, it went on for a time, until I felt my pains were
-leaving me, and I would not trouble any longer; I was
-tired. But I thought, no. Why should I suffer?
-I called to my husband, and he came to the bedroom
-door, and I said: “Fetch the doctor, I want attention.”
-He went. The nurse said: “Well, I know you have the
-whole day to go by the look of things. Doctor will be
-very cross. He is very busy, and does not like being
-brought out of bed. He knows everything is right when
-I am on the case.” I felt another little pain, and I made
-another effort, my breath almost gone. I called to
-her, boiling her gloves: “If you do not leave those
-blessed things, the child will be here.” She flew to me,
-laughing at an unnecessary fuss, but my child was entering
-the world, two minutes after my husband had left
-the house, but, being certified, she did the doctor’s work.
-But she could not get the afterbirth, and pushed and
-fairly punched my stomach most unmercifully to get it,
-and I said: “Well, nurse, I really cannot stand this any
-longer. My two previous doctors had said, never be in
-a hurry for this. Let nature have its course; it will
-come in time. The doctor will be here soon, and he will
-soon get it.” The doctor had heard and come in, and
-told the nurse to see to the baby, who was bitterly cold,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-and he would see to me. In a very few minutes I was
-quite comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor was very cross at not having been notified
-by the nurse that she was on her way to me, knowing
-the statement I had given when engaging them.</p>
-
-<p>If there is truth in it or not, I was told later that if
-all was over and done with before the arrival of the
-doctor, the nurse was given something out of the fee.</p>
-
-<p>I might say, having my mother with me, I only required
-the nurse night and morning, and this nurse only
-went out like that, because she had so many cases she
-preferred them so. But it happened I did not see her
-one evening during the time, and on the third day she
-did not put in an appearance at all, and on the Sunday,
-two o’clock; other days the times ranged from twelve
-till three o’clock when she came.</p>
-
-<p>My confinements have been splendid ones, but for all
-that I feel it is almost, if not quite, three months before
-a mother feels her strength the same as before. What
-women feel like who have to turn out shortly after to
-work hard, I would not like to imagine.</p>
-
-<p>I personally have always felt, besides not having the
-usual amount of strength, I have been very forgetful;
-for instance, I would go to the cupboard and quite forget
-what I had gone for, and have to stand and think for a
-little time, and then very likely not know. During
-pregnancy, my health was always very good, and I was
-able to do all household duties and washing right up to
-the time of my confinement. But towards evening I
-would be tired all over, and be thankful to go to bed.
-But I usually took a glass of hot milk at bedtime. I
-found it not only soothed the nerves, but induced sleep.
-I took a dose of castor oil once a fortnight.</p>
-
-<p>I have nursed all my children for ten months, not
-allowing a particle of any kind to pass their lips in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-way of foods but my own milk until nine months old,
-and then gradually weaned them off.</p>
-
-<p>I have stated above feelings to show what a woman
-feels who does not endure great sufferings in childbirth.</p>
-
-<p>My strong conviction is that unless there is anything
-wrong internally, and a woman takes a bit of care as to
-what she eats and drinks during pregnancy, and has, as
-I say, immediate attention, much suffering would be
-alleviated.</p>
-
-<p>I am the average working man’s wife, who spends most
-of her time looking to the needs of an old mother, husband,
-children, and home, cutting and contriving to
-make the weekly income go as far as one possibly can,
-attending the Guild as quite a change, and seeking to
-obtain as much knowledge of the Women’s Movement
-on to Progress; and where, here and there, I may be
-able to pass an opinion, I do; and try to live, that when
-I have passed away the world will be none the worse
-for my being in it.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £1 15s. to £2 5s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">100. <span class="smcap">A Wreck at Thirty.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I had seven children and one miscarriage in ten years
-and three months. This left me at the age of thirty a
-complete wreck. My great difficulty was during pregnancy,
-suffering very severely from sickness, so much
-so, indeed, that on two occasions I was under the doctor
-the whole of the time. The doctor gave me his services
-free.</p>
-
-<p>I tremble even now to think what my life would have
-been but for his kindness to me. I could not have paid
-for a doctor, as wages were only £36 a year, and I had
-to pay £10 a year rent out of that. When I look back
-upon those days I wonder how we did live.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>My last child was born a delicate, weak child, who
-suffered from malnutrition until she was eleven months
-old, and at her birth the doctor told me I should never
-have another strong and healthy baby, and that women
-should only have a child every three years, and rest at
-least a month after confinement. He knew I could not
-give myself the rest I needed, for I could not afford to
-pay anyone to look after my home and children. I
-had to rely upon some child of thirteen who was able
-to leave school, and whose parents were glad of the
-2s. 6d. a week I could ill afford to pay. I have been
-forced on many occasions to do things no woman lying-in
-should have done. I have left my bed on the tenth
-day, and have had to do the family washing as early as
-a fortnight.</p>
-
-<p>I do feel most strongly that women should be able
-to get advice and help during pregnancy. Our children
-are a valuable asset to the nation, and the health of the
-woman who is doing her duty in rearing the future race
-should have a claim upon the national purse. Ample
-provision should be made so that she could give of her
-best.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 10s. to 14s. and husband’s food; seven children and one<br />
-miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">101. <span class="smcap">Two Children in Eighteen Months.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have only had two children. I was married at the
-age of twenty-three. My husband was twenty-five. I
-had been married just eleven months when my first
-baby was born. Now, as soon as ever I knew I was
-pregnant, I set about (with the help of a considerate
-and helpful husband) taking the greatest care of myself
-for the sake of the babe unborn, in such things as diet,
-exercise, fresh air, etc. I did no very heavy work. My<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-husband and I did the washing in the evening, he did
-all the dollying and wringing, and helped me in many
-ways. The result was I had a fine and healthy baby, and
-during pregnancy I was so well myself, and I had everything
-a working man’s wife could have to make things
-as easy as possible. I had no worry of any kind, and
-that I consider a great comfort to a woman.</p>
-
-<p>At my confinement I had a doctor and a nurse, and
-if I had not had what I believe is called a dry labour, I
-should have had the easiest of times (and they are bad
-enough), but the water broke at 6 a.m., and my baby
-was not born till 4.30 p.m.</p>
-
-<p>My baby was never the slightest trouble. I had been
-in the nursery before I was married, both as nurse and
-nursery governess, so my baby had all the care and
-attention I had been taught to bestow on babies. I
-was sorry to find, when my baby was a year old, that I
-was again pregnant. I had breast-fed my baby up till
-then, for she had cut no teeth till she was eleven months
-old, although she was strong and well and running about
-at nine months old; of course, I weaned her at once.
-We were very disappointed to find I was going to have
-another baby so soon after the first. We had not
-intended this to happen. However, I made the best
-of it, and had a son when the daughter was eighteen
-months old. I was not so well carrying the second
-baby, and he was as great a handful when a baby as
-my first baby was no trouble, and by the time he was
-six months old I was very weak and ill. I think having
-the two children so quickly, and nursing my first baby
-so long, had been a great strain. The second child was
-not so strong a baby as the first. He suffered from teething
-eczema, and I lost a great deal of rest. My second
-confinement was fairly good, although I had thought the
-baby was coming two or three times before he came,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-labour pains came on and went away; and when my boy
-was born the doctor said if he had been another half-hour
-in the birth, he would have been dead. I should
-have sent for a doctor a week previously, but not knowing
-the exact time to expect my baby, I did not want
-to send for the doctor until it was really necessary.</p>
-
-<p>I never had any more children. I was ill and weak
-for a long time while having to nurse my second baby,
-and having them so quickly. How women, and poor
-women, can have children year after year, is a marvel
-to me. I know of cases here close to where I live,
-where a consumptive mother is having babies nearly
-every year. To me it seems terrible, bringing such
-children into the world, a burden to their parents, to
-themselves, and to the nation, for they are only wrecks,
-and fill our hospitals, mental deficiency schools, and
-prisons. But the cases are so common. Where they
-are poorest, where they have not enough to live on and
-keep their present family decently, they still have more
-children.</p>
-
-<p>I am sure there is great need for thought and care
-being given to the mother previous to childbirth and
-afterwards, and I do feel that a scheme as is suggested
-is a good one, and that the public health authority
-should deal with all maternity cases. It would mean
-untold happiness to the coming generations. It will be
-grand to get a maternity benefit such as you suggest,
-and it is most necessary. We have some women in the
-Guild who feel we should be more independent than
-take such sums as maternity benefit. They do not
-realise that we pay rates and taxes just as property
-owners do, though indirectly.</p>
-
-<p>How some of our poorest women exist year after
-year, bearing all, I cannot understand. For, if having
-two children, as I did, in eighteen months wrecked my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-health, which it did for a long time&mdash;and only through
-having one of the best of husbands was I helped to pull
-through&mdash;I wonder what so many other less fortunate
-women suffer. It is just slavery and drudgery.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 28s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">102. <span class="smcap">Need for Nourishment after Confinement.</span></h3>
-
-<p>For what I can see of others, I came off fairly well;
-but, in the first instance, my first child was a girl. I
-was very well during pregnancy, but being such a strong
-child the doctor told me to give it the bottle; but, on
-the other hand, the nurse persuaded me to keep it to
-the breast. The result was as soon as I got about, by
-keeping the child to the breast, I had two gathered
-breasts. I had the two breasts in slings till they broke.
-The next two being boys&mdash;two years between&mdash;I was
-right well during pregnancy. But as soon as a mother is
-able to get up and have to work, that is the time her
-health fails her, for she finds she has to feed the rest of
-her little family, and goes without her own food, and
-then, through lack of nourishment, often mothers have
-to go to their bed again.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, when we were married my husband
-was a fireman. We ran along smoothly, and up to the
-time my first and second child was born his standing
-wage was 30s. a week and overtime. The time went on,
-and in two years the second was born. Now, just before
-it came it was my husband’s turn to go to pass for
-engine driver. The result was he failed to pass the eyesight
-test. It was a great shock to us both, more so
-to my husband. It was then the dots they had to count
-at a distance. They then reduced him to 21s. a week
-to work in the shed, so we thought it was cruel to run
-the risk of more family on such a wage. To keep my home<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-up and keep the children respectable I had to take in
-two young men lodgers, which we have done till I
-started the children to business. Of course, I take it
-you don’t want to know the ups and downs of life between
-these times. I must say I have had the best of
-husbands, or else I should not have been alive now.</p>
-
-<p>If there could be such a thing as a Maternity Club
-started it would be a benefit to all married women,
-because the majority of us have to screw and save for
-confinement, where we ought to be able to have good
-food and more nourishing food while we are carrying
-the child, but often have to go with less.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 21s. to 30s.; three children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">103. <span class="smcap">Her “Lot.”</span></h3>
-
-<p>Your letter to hand reminding me of my promise to
-let you have a few details of my neighbour’s life. At
-first she hesitated about telling anything, as she said it
-was all past and done with, and at times felt ashamed at
-having had thirteen children, especially to a man like
-her husband (who is a drunkard). She looks back on
-her past life at the age of forty-eight with different feelings
-to what she had at thirty. Then she thought it
-was her “lot,” as she terms it, to have so many children,
-and so many sickly ones, but now she feels she has been
-to blame for many things&mdash;for instance, for the number
-of children she has had; for the dulness and lack of
-energy in two of them; for the feeble-mindedness in a
-third; deafness and sore eyes in a fourth. She blames
-the conditions under which she bore those children
-during pregnancy. She was married at nineteen, and
-a mother before she was twenty, with no knowledge
-whatever of the duties of motherhood. Her first five
-children came in rapid succession. While she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-pregnant of her sixth child her husband fell out of
-work, and was out of work six months. During this
-time they had 10s. a week to live on (from the husband’s
-trade union). She went out washing and cleaning-up
-to the last week of her confinement. While cleaning
-windows at one of the houses she slipped and fell, hurting
-her side. Three days later the child was born,
-apparently all right, but as time went on the mother
-noticed there was something wrong, but nobody seemed
-to know what. This child did not cut its teeth till two
-years old, nor walk without help till it was seven, and
-now, at the age of eighteen, you can hardly make out a
-word he says. He is not exactly an imbecile, but he is
-feeble-minded, and all this could have been avoided
-could the mother have had proper nourishment during
-pregnancy, and less work. The mother had to work
-hard all day, and got little rest at night, as the fifth
-child was weakly and ailing, and the neighbour who
-looked after the child during the day used to put gin
-in its milk to stop its crying, which it did till the effects
-of the gin had passed off. The poor mother, not knowing
-that gin was given to the child, would often, after a
-hard day’s work, spend most of the night pacing the
-bedroom floor, trying to soothe the fretful child, and
-often had to go downstairs because the crying disturbed
-her husband. It was not until her sixth child came,
-the feeble-minded one, that the neighbour admitted
-giving it gin. Consequently the lad has grown up dull,
-never made any headway at school. He is a labourer,
-and twenty years of age, and will never be anything
-else but a labourer, because, as his mother says, he
-has no “head-piece,” and cannot do a simple sum in
-arithmetic to save his life. The mother firmly believes
-her children would have been as bright as anybody’s
-could she have had proper nourishment during preg<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>nancy,
-and herself cared for them after they were born.
-Her girl of sixteen is deaf in one ear, and has weak eyes,
-the after-effects of measles when a child. The mother
-nursed this child a fortnight, then was obliged to leave
-her with a neighbour while she went out to work. The
-neighbour neglected the child in letting her run out too
-soon, etc., and as there were no school clinics when her
-children went to school, some of them are suffering
-to-day from diseases which might have been cured,
-could they have had attention at the proper time. Now
-that they are grown up they seem fairly healthy, though
-undersized, but when one considers their childhood, the
-want of sufficient food, lack of fresh air (the younger
-ones always slept four in bed, two at the top and two
-at the bottom), one wonders they are as healthy as they
-appear to be. They seem to be fairly good workers,
-but not one good scholar among them. And to add to
-the above discomforts, they had a drunken, brutal
-father. He was never a real father, a surly, gloomy
-man, never a kind word for his children, and not one
-of them remembers a caress from him. I can quite
-understand the woman being ashamed of bearing
-thirteen children to a man like him, and having to rear
-them in surroundings and conditions which she has
-reared hers. It takes it out of the mother mentally
-and physically.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 16s. to 30s.; thirteen children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">104. <span class="smcap">Need of Rest.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am perfectly well aware of the urgent necessity of
-both mother and child receiving proper nourishment
-and attention. With regard to myself, the one great
-drawback to me was the fact that I was not able to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-suckle any of my children, owing to my breasts not being
-properly developed, so that the child could not draw the
-nipple. In consequence of this my children had to be
-fed by the bottle, although I am pleased to say they
-have thriven and are quite healthy children. Also,
-prior to confinement, I suffered very much with varicose
-veins, and felt the need of not being able to have rest,
-as I had got to be about my work. Also, after confinement,
-I have been about again in a fortnight, which I
-should not advise young mothers now to do. I may
-say that I do think that getting up so soon is the cause
-of all the misplacements that we hear so much about.
-However, I am pleased to tell you that I am fortunate
-in having a considerate husband, which of course
-is something to be thankful for. My heart aches when
-I think of women who have brutes to contend with. In
-my opinion, women should have every kindness shown
-to them during pregnancy; also means to obtain advice
-and everything to insure that the unborn child shall have
-a good start from birth.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 28s. to 40s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">105. “<span class="smcap">Never Lost a Moment’s Sleep.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I am a very busy body, and have not been blessed
-with a great deal of this world’s goods, having had an
-ailing husband, whom I lost when the youngest was
-not two years old. But at those times mentioned in
-your circular I always enjoyed good health. No sickness,
-as so many women have; of course, days when not
-feeling quite well. But I do think many women do
-not give themselves a chance. They seem to give way
-too much to feelings, and lie about instead of interesting
-themselves in their work and always keeping hands and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-minds employed. I had heavy labour times, but did
-not keep to my bed any longer than I could help, generally
-feeling able to be up after the fourth day for a little
-while; then each day a little longer. I often think
-lying in bed weakens very much, and if able to rise, it
-is much better to do so, both for baby and self. Of
-course, not to work as though you had not been through
-a trying time, and needed to be careful, but at the end
-of ten days I was always able to do my own work all right,
-at the same time being able to take good plain food, and
-making an abundance of milk for the baby. They were
-such well fed, fat, healthy, happy, contented children,
-and I never lost a moment’s sleep in my life with them.
-I never used myself to take stout and beer to make milk,
-as many of the mothers in the North believe in. In
-the North here, the working class mothers have to work
-very hard, and they all seem (or in a general way) not to
-make a trouble of child-bearing. They do not coddle
-themselves, but just work a not-up-to-the-mark feeling
-off, which is certainly by far the best way. And about
-the care of baby, cleanliness is the first care. Then
-mother’s milk if possible, and with perseverance, most
-mothers could manage to diet themselves to make plenty
-of milk, but the bottle is the laziest way. Then, of
-course, baby can be left in another’s care, whereas if on
-the breast, you must take baby with you. I have never
-had an afterpain after any of them, and soon pulled up
-again. Once the instruments were used after a weary
-wait, but I think the women who work have the easiest
-time. With my last baby I had what made me think
-of labour pains, every night for a fortnight, and when
-she came I had only about three pains, and she was born
-before I could rap for help, and no pain whatever. Do
-you not think I have been one of the lucky ones? But
-really many in this condition are like children. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-do not want overmuch sympathy or they reckon themselves
-martyrs straight away, instead of bracing themselves
-to go through a time of weariness. I have not
-come across in my experience any who have suffered so
-acutely, unless in one case, where two of her babies grew
-to her womb, and had to be brought away by force.
-Another woman had a big, broad-shouldered husband,
-and was herself a very small woman, and it was a case
-of force every time, and she has had fourteen children,
-and the same to go through every time, but was able to
-be up soon, as she soon mended and regained her strength.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">106. “<span class="smcap">I was locked up in a Morning.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have been a very healthy woman, and pregnancy
-never upset me very much, but I think if the Maternity
-Scheme had been in force when I was having children
-it would have been a great benefit to me. Being very
-poor, I had to get up on the third day, three or four
-times, not being able to pay for someone to look after
-me. My first baby I was locked up in a morning at
-half-past four, food put so that I could reach it until
-my husband came home at four in the afternoon, to
-help myself with everything with regard to the baby.
-My second was just the same. After that we removed
-a bit nearer the works, and I did better. We were a
-very comfortable lot of neighbours, and we always did
-for one another. I don’t say that it was not very hard,
-because it was, and a little money help would have been
-a great boon to some of us more than others. With
-regard to wages, it is rather a sore point. My husband
-has earned a very good wage nearly all our married life,
-but he is a born gambler. I never had £1 a week, and
-a great many times I had nothing, so that when my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-children began to work, it took years to pay for what they
-had to have to be brought up. I have had ten children;
-nine alive at the present time; six married; three
-have received the Maternity Benefit and have found
-it a great help, and feel that it is a credit to everyone
-who helped to bring so great a scheme about for the
-benefit of the working man’s wife.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wife’s allowance less than £1; ten children, one still-birth.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<a id="Facsimile_of_Extract_from_Letter_106"></a>
-<img src="images/zill_t139.jpg" width="600" height="422" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Facsimile of Extract from Letter 106.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">107. “<span class="smcap">Felt Like Giving in Altogether.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have had two children. I might say I felt better
-during pregnancy with the first one than I had ever
-felt in my life, but I had a very bad time at the birth
-with instruments, and after three years, when I had the
-second one, I never felt well, and did not seem to have
-strength enough to drag through day after day. But
-I, like a good many more, could not afford to go to the
-doctor; and with the second baby I had to have instruments
-again to bring the baby into the world, after
-which for about eight months I never seemed to regain
-my strength, and life was a weary existence. Also,
-I am sorry to say, I had not one of the most careful of
-husbands, and have always had to make my own provision
-for the time on £1 a week, and very often nothing,
-as at that time he would think nothing of staying out
-all night, and gambling away all his week’s earnings.
-I have always struggled and managed to keep his club
-paid, so that I had the 30s. from the club to pay the
-nurse and doctor. For the rest, I have happened to
-have two good sisters near to me, who always did
-whatever they could for me, but as to nourishment, I
-have never been able to get much of that, and have
-always thought that was what kept me back. I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-fortunately been very handy with my needle, and have
-been able to earn a good bit at times by taking in needlework,
-or I don’t know whatever I should have done.
-But I am pleased to say, that since I had a breakdown
-last year, about this time, and was sent away for one
-month through our Guild Convalescent Fund, my husband
-has been very much better. I think he had time
-to find he missed me. Of one thing I am quite sure.
-I have had as big a struggle as a good many of my
-womenfolk, but where some have no friends and no
-talent for earning, I have been more fortunate in being
-able to do so. I may tell you that when I joined the
-Guild, nearly five years ago, I had very nearly lost all
-my spirit, and felt like giving in altogether, but the
-Guild has done a lot for me in that sense, as I have felt
-that I must go on doing my duty, and fighting for the
-right, although sometimes it is very hard. Still, I have
-always the Guild to look forward to, and have found
-amongst our members some real good friends, and I
-shall never forget the great benefit I have felt from the
-thorough rest and change of the month at the Rest
-Home. I feel a different woman. Although I am not
-over-strong, still, I have regained my strength, and a
-little more energy. I had one miscarriage five years
-ago, at ten weeks, and my husband was out of work, so I
-did not have any doctor, but had to keep about and do the
-best I could, taking just whatever rest I could get. I
-was months and months getting strong again.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 24s. to 26s.; two children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">108. <span class="smcap">Extra Well.</span></h3>
-
-<p>As regards myself during pregnancy, I have always
-been extra well, which I daresay is due to the fact of
-having been in a position to be able to have all that is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-required&mdash;rest and help in the home, and good nourishing
-food. Others who are not in the same position have
-my heartfelt sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Four children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">109. <span class="smcap">Work in a Brickyard.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am very pleased to say that, having one of the best
-of husbands, I suffered nothing during pregnancy, only
-ailments of my own caused through my mother having
-to work in the brickyard during her pregnancy with me.
-That, I am sorry to say, is the cause of my own and
-sister’s illness&mdash;working hard, knocked about, and poorly
-fed, a good mother, but a rogue of a father; and that
-thing will go on until women give up hard work during
-pregnancy.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">110. <span class="smcap">Husband with Typhoid Fever.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During the first three months of pregnancy with my
-first baby I suffered fearfully with my head. Then, as
-time went on, I gradually got better, and able to do my
-work, and felt quite strong until about the sixth month.
-Then water began to trouble me; my feet and legs were
-very much swollen, so much that I could not get any
-boots on, and had to remain indoors the rest of the time.
-On the day of the birth I commenced with pains at
-six o’clock in the morning, and I went on all day, until
-a quarter to seven at night, and I was getting so weak
-that the doctor asked me if he might use the instruments.
-I was glad to have them, but they gave me a fine putting
-up. The doctor said that my baby could not have been
-born without them. No doubt it relieved me at the
-time, but I suffered afterwards, as I was all torn with
-the instruments, and had to be stitched. I was so weak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-afterwards that I could not get up on to my elbows,
-and it took me a considerable time to get my strength
-up again. At the same time my husband was in bed
-with an attack of typhoid fever. We had no hospital
-in our district then. My doctor was very much afraid
-that I would contract the disease, but I am thankful to
-say that I escaped. With my second boy I was in good
-health all the time, and had a quick birth, and without
-instruments. That was two years and two months
-after. About four years after the birth of my second
-boy I had a miscarriage, which I reckon are worse than
-having a baby, as they nearly drain your system and
-you suffer severe pain, and it makes you very weak. I
-always blamed the miscarriage for an attack of nervous
-debility I had. I first commenced to lose flesh, then
-my nerves were affected, and I got so weak that I used
-to faint away several times in the day. My doctor
-ordered me away for a change, and to get into company,
-as I was getting so low, but it took me a long time to
-pick up. About nine years after the birth of my second
-boy I had a girl, which I am pleased to say put new
-life into me; it seemed to renew my whole system. She
-is now eleven years old, and quite strong and healthy.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 27s. 6d. to 42s.; three children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">111. “<span class="smcap">Too Exhausted to Eat.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have been one of the more fortunate women; being
-fairly strong, my sufferings have not been so heavy as a
-lot of poor women. At the same time, I was often so
-poorly that if I had had means to get a little help at times
-it would have been a blessing. My husband has never
-earned more than from 23s. to 25s. a week, and many a
-time I have had to go without many a thing that would
-have done me good. When I was expecting my last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-baby, I think it was with going such a long time, and
-the others, some of them at work, and coming in to
-meals. I know I used to get the dinner cooked and
-struggle through the serving, then I was done, and was
-obliged to lie down a bit, often without my dinner, as I
-was too exhausted to eat, and the pleasure of the rest
-was partly spoiled by the thought of the dinner-table
-still laid. A bit of help then would have been a boon.
-But having a good husband smoothed many things over.
-But this shows that many a woman is unable to do her
-work, and if the husband is a thoughtless man, or even
-a bad one, her lot is a hard one indeed. Then, after
-confinement, women should not be obliged to work, in
-my opinion, for three weeks, but most working women
-have to do. I never could possibly keep a woman more
-than a fortnight&mdash;and the struggle during pregnancy of
-saving up 30s., which was the sum we always aimed for,
-and it was a big job. Some weeks I have had to be
-content with putting 3d. away, with the hope of 9d.
-next week to make it into a shilling. To my mind, this
-is one of the hardest tasks a working woman has.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 18s. to 25s.; seven children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">112. <span class="smcap">Thirteen Births and Four Miscarriages.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am afraid many mothers, like myself, will find it
-almost impossible to explain our sufferings. During
-pregnancy we do not all suffer alike, but to me it was
-nine months of misery. But I had to work all the time.
-My husband’s wages were only £1 a week, and he had
-to lose all wet weather. With my fourth child he was
-out of work twelve weeks in the bitter winter. I worked
-as dressmaker with a machine nearly night and day,
-and when the baby was brought into the world with
-instruments, I nearly lost my life, and could not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-moved for nearly a fortnight. My ninth son, I was
-working at a lady’s house when near my confinement,
-and in putting down a carpet I hurt myself very much,
-and was very ill until my baby was born, and then he
-was born a cripple&mdash;would have always walked on
-his ankles, with the soles of his feet together. But I
-used to take him to the hospital for a long time, and he
-is able to get his own living now. So you will see it
-takes all energy and hope and joy out of a woman’s life,
-when they have to work the whole time through no
-fault of their own or their husbands, but just to keep
-the home together.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £1; twelve children, one still-birth, four miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">113. <span class="smcap">An Agricultural Labourer’s Daughter.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have only had one child, a daughter, who is now
-six years. I had been married eight years when she
-was born, but have had no miscarriages. I was very
-well when I was pregnant. The mothers in the Guild
-were most kind in advising me during pregnancy, at
-the time and after. I weaned her at nine months, and
-she is one of the bonniest girls one can see.</p>
-
-<p>My husband, <i>when in work</i>, earns a good wage. It
-has been his experience to be out of work many times,
-for varying lengths of time&mdash;once for fourteen weeks&mdash;that
-soon after our child was born.</p>
-
-<p>In an agricultural district, large families and small
-wages predominate. I am the second child of a family
-of twelve, and as my father’s earnings were very small
-it always meant my mother working too&mdash;hop-tying,
-gathering fruit, harvesting, and even picking stones off
-fields. As soon as each of us was old enough we had to
-work very hard; at ten and eleven years of age I worked
-in the fields, and did shaving poles, etc. My mother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-had to pay 9d. and 11d. per week school money, out of
-her little, for us, and I am thankful to her for educating
-us as she did, never keeping us away to mind babies, as
-a great many did in those days. I am nearly thirty-nine
-now, and free education had not come in then.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 24s. to 40s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">114. “<span class="smcap">No Rest for Mothers, Night or Day.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I remember it was a very big struggle to get all that
-was quite necessary for ourselves and the expected baby.
-Although my experience was far before thousands of
-others&mdash;should I say, women, when I was only just
-turned eighteen?</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, I felt a doctor would be too expensive,
-so only had a midwife. Things were not just
-right with baby, so I had to call in a doctor and pay
-£1 5s. My nurse I only engaged for a fortnight,
-then thought I could manage, but I took cold, and had
-a most awful gathered breast, and had to go back to
-bed again for another week or two. When my baby
-was five months old I began to turn against my food;
-was nursing baby at the time, so did not think for one
-moment I could be pregnant again, but it was so. When
-the second one came, the first was unable to walk, I can
-assure you. You need not wonder at women doing all
-they can to prevent having big families, for there is
-certainly no rest for mothers night or day.</p>
-
-<p>I can tell you I saw but very little pleasure the first
-part of my married life. I married in 1884. I had two
-children, lost one, and lost my husband by consumption
-in June, 1887. He needed the best of everything. It
-used to cost nearly 5s. per week for one sort of medicine
-he felt did him good, so you see there was very little to
-do with. I was only twenty-two when he died. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-believe now, when I think about it, my baby could have
-been spared had I had more experience; although I did
-my best and was a good mother, as far as lay in my
-power, but there was no one to advise me. So you can
-imagine ours was one continual struggle from beginning
-to end, and then not so bad as many others. When I
-look back on that time I feel very sad. I believe my
-husband was in receipt of £1 5s. per week, but I am
-not quite sure; he was a policeman, so it was regular,
-and of course not many clothes to buy. Living in a
-village, our rent was small. This will, I am afraid, be
-little to assist you, but it is all I can tell you. It would
-not be possible to tell you all one feels with one baby
-and the expected one, and all work to do. No one
-could imagine who has never been through it.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 25s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">115. <span class="smcap">Proper Care.</span></h3>
-
-<p>With regard to myself, fortunately I have always had
-the proper care, with the result that I had normal times.</p>
-
-<p>My first child (a boy) died when he was eight months
-old. My health broke down, and he had to be taken
-from the breast, no food agreed with him, convulsions
-set in, and my loved one died. I was three years, then
-had another (a girl). Two years and nine months after
-that I had another girl. Both these are now fine young
-women. The proposed scheme to “link up the State
-with the home and the municipality under one authority”
-is just what is wanted in all towns and cities.
-Much suffering would be saved and many lives spared.</p>
-
-<p>From the advice that mothers have been able to get
-at the “Baby Welcome” here, many babies’ lives have
-been saved. But this is voluntary, and a fortnight ago
-a week was set apart to go from house to house for sub<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>scriptions
-in every district, as the work could not go on
-without funds.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 27s. 6d. to 35s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">116. <span class="smcap">Eight Miscarriages.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have not had any children to bring up, but I have
-had the misfortune to have had eight miscarriages, the
-last one as far back as 1898, when I had to go to the
-infirmary for an operation, and I have not had any
-since. But you must understand they have not been
-brought on by neglect or ill use, but by my having a
-severe attack of influenza in 1891 before I was married,
-which left me with weakness of the womb. I had to be
-attended by the doctor every time.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>No child, eight miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">117. <span class="smcap">Need for Municipal Midwives.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have had two average children&mdash;one a boy aged
-nine years, the other a girl aged four years. As regards
-pregnancy, I had general good health&mdash;though I felt
-rather faint at times in the first and second month&mdash;up
-to the seventh month, and then I used to feel rather
-bad some days&mdash;cramp in my legs, etc. I have been
-able to keep my house going up to the time of confinement
-(my husband being a mechanic, I had to do the
-housework and washing and cooking). I must tell
-you I am a teetotaler, and during pregnancy I used every
-morning to take fine groats with plenty of milk. I
-still took them every morning and evening after my
-babies were born, and I had sufficient milk for them
-until I weaned them, starting from ten months and
-finishing them altogether at one year. Neither of them
-had any fits or convulsions, my boy’s first illness being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-at the age of five and half years, and my little girl
-has not had an illness yet. At the present time they are
-both well in health. I think I should dearly like to see
-State maternity nurses, for this way there is the greatest
-difficulty in securing a nurse. I know from one or
-two of my friends and from my own experience we were
-all greatly worried at not being able to secure good
-nurses. As you are aware, many of them drink, and
-others don’t care to come when there are other children
-to look after. I had a doctor, and had to pay 14s. a
-week for a nurse. I think expectant mothers should
-not be allowed to work in factories, etc., when they are
-pregnant, for you want as much fresh air as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Taking an average year, with all holidays, I think
-my husband’s wages would amount to 35s. weekly.
-He is in the black line and a Socialist, and we both cannot
-think how working people, especially Co-operators,
-can be otherwise.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 35s.; two children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">118. <span class="smcap">Easy Circumstances.</span></h3>
-
-<p>As you will see on the attached form, I am not able,
-as a mother, to give my experience of suffering during
-pregnancy or after childbirth. I was able to have
-good attention both before and after the birth of my
-boy, so that any special information other than the
-ordinary childbirth pains I cannot give.</p>
-
-<p>I suppose my experience will go to prove that proper attention
-to health, such as you wish expectant mothers to
-have, would do away with a good deal of the suffering and
-pain connected with maternity. The opinion of myself
-and my husband is that none but skilled doctors and
-nurses should attend at childbirth. I have known
-many cases in our district where the ordinary midwife<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-has had mothers in pain for hours, only to send for a
-doctor in the end.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>One child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">119. <span class="smcap">Nothing Unusual.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Nothing unnatural or unusual seemed to happen in
-my case.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 35s. to £2 5s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">120. <span class="smcap">Sock-making at Twopence a Pair.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I will give you the following concerning my married
-life. First let me tell you I was in the place I was
-married from just five years as children’s maid. I was
-twenty-five, my husband twenty-six the day we married.
-Many, including my relatives, thought I ought to have
-married better. I had been engaged previously, but
-he turned out to be not the God-fearing man I thought.
-Then our married gardener asked me to tea, and I met
-my husband that is now, a true follower of Christ. And
-I must tell you, the two years we courted we only missed
-Church twice. I soon saw he had won my heart, but
-his wages was then poor, but I remembered my dear
-mother’s words&mdash;money does not bring happiness;
-and so we were married against the wishes of my friends,
-and took two rooms and furnished them. But, oh! I
-soon found out how hard it was to keep our little home
-on 24s. a week, 7s. for our two rooms. Then I got a
-night now and again waiting at table with the lady I
-had lived with and her friends. How I pleaded to be
-kept all right, as I could not see our way clear to have a
-baby in the home, and I would not, could not, let any
-of our friends know the hard struggle I had. I have a
-dear, loving husband, who agreed we would like a baby,
-but had no means of providing for it. I must tell you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-I had bad health (bloodlessness) before I was married,
-which cost me a lot of money. Then when we had been
-married two years I found I was in a certain condition.
-I hid my condition, and went still waiting at table, until
-after a big dinner I fainted, and had to own I was so.
-Then came the shortage of money. I began to stint
-myself in order to provide for my little one. Many a
-time I have had bread and dripping for my dinner before
-my husband came home, and said I had my dinner, as I
-would not wait. Then I was ill, and had to have the
-doctor. He said I was run down, and away went some
-of the little store I had been able to get together. I
-would not let my friends know how we stood, remembering
-what they said before I was married. Then
-came headache after headache, as I worried to know
-wherever was all the money to come from to provide
-the funds for doctor and nurse. My sister, who was
-very proud, and unmarried, engaged me a nurse at
-14s. a week for three weeks. She thought she was helping
-me by seeing that I had a good nurse, but this only
-added to my worry. Then my husband, thinking to
-help me get the money, had a knitting machine on the
-hire system, and made socks and stockings. I had to sew
-up the toes and press them into shape. I could not get
-them right for a long time, and this added another worry,
-as we had to pay each month for the machine, which
-was a failure. I worked hard at them right up to the
-time my boy was born. Oh, my poor head, how it
-ached, as I tried and tried to do them right; and we only
-got 2d. a pair for making them, and my husband used
-to walk to the city to the shop with them. (They found
-the wool.) I had a very bad confinement, and the baby
-was almost gone when it came into the world. I had no
-strength to go through. The doctor would not allow
-me to see anyone for nine days. This was twelve years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-ago. My boy, although fat, suffers so much with his
-head. He had a brain and nerve breakdown two years
-ago, and was ill eleven months. One day the doctor
-said: “How were you when you carried this child?”
-Painful though it was, I told him all. “Ah,” he said,
-“now we know the cause of all this trouble.” I have
-suffered with my head ever since. His heart also is
-slightly affected. If only I could have gone to someone
-who would have understood, not my relatives, and
-got some nourishment. All this that he now suffers,
-I am sure, is the result of my having to work and worry
-so much while I was carrying. I might say the nurse
-was very extravagant, and the second week I lay so ill
-I missed a photo machine my husband had, and learnt&mdash;oh,
-it is almost too painful to write&mdash;that he had
-pawned it for 7s. 6d. to help get me nourishment. He
-said: “Never again will you go through this. You are
-too dear to me.” Well, six years ago, my boy being six
-years old, my husband had got on, and his wages increased.
-We had a little girl, which we had always
-longed for, only to lose it as soon as it came into the
-world, for I have no strength in my inside (the doctor
-said) to bring a child into the world. All this weakness,
-you see, the result of the first confinement. Of course,
-now, the doctor says it would not be safe for me to have
-another child. I have a dear loving husband who does
-all in his power to keep me right. But it is hard to
-think if I had another it would go or be delicate. Now
-is there not great need for a place where a young mother
-could go and get advice and, if necessary, nourishment?
-I was one who thought I could do a lot on a little a week,
-and when I found out my mistake would do anything
-rather than let my friends know their words had come
-true. I remember when carrying my baby to have to
-wait for a loaf of bread until my husband came home<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-at five with his money, as I always paid down for all we
-had. I must tell you we have been married fifteen years
-and are <i>very, very</i> happy.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 24s.; one child, one still-birth.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">121. <span class="smcap">Natural Times.</span></h3>
-
-<p>During these times I have been well looked after, and
-had quite natural times.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 23s. to 45s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">122. <span class="smcap">Ironing and Kneading in Bed.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was married one year and five months before my
-first boy was born. I nearly lost my life. I was in
-labour from 1 o’clock in the morning until 7.5 at night.
-Then the doctor used instruments. He stated I had
-worked too hard, and not rested sufficiently, but I could
-not afford a girl. My husband then was only getting
-£1 1s. per week, and 5s. rent had to be paid out of it.
-The second baby came fifteen months after.... I had
-no milk for either. I was in labour with the second
-from Monday dinner-time until Tuesday night. Then
-the doctor gave me an injection of warm water; as I
-was torn so badly before, he did not want to use the
-instruments. Two years after I had a miscarriage....
-I then had to lie in bed for a whole month. I kept a
-small girl, and I used to do my own ironing and knead
-my bread in bed unknown to the doctor. I had a bed
-put down in the small parlour to save the girl and
-children running upstairs. I feel sure that if I had had
-a maternity benefit then to help me, I should not be
-suffering now inwardly. No mother can stay in bed
-very comfortably knowing things are going on anyhow
-while she is in bed. Then, again, during the time she is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-carrying the child, her mind is troubled, and she becomes
-fretful, hence a fretful, delicate child. The mother, when
-funds are low, goes without much food, pleading headache,
-etc., so as to try and blind her husband. I think
-an expectant mother should rest at least half an hour
-every day, and especially towards the last should have
-no heavy work to do, such as washing and ironing. The
-extra weight she is carrying naturally throws the
-humours into her legs, the veins standing out like thick
-cords, and at night she cannot sleep for cramps and
-aches. The child is the asset of the nation, and the
-mother the backbone. Therefore, I think the nation
-should help to feed and keep that mother, and so help
-to strengthen the nation by her giving birth to strong
-boys and girls. She does not require weaklings, and
-insufficient food and overwork and worry is the root
-of this weakness, both in the case of mother and child.
-I only hope that sick visitors should see that it is the
-mothers that are getting the benefit of the maternity
-benefit, and not the husband, and often the landlord.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. to 23s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">123. <span class="smcap">Tea and Sugar put away.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My experience of child-bearing has been very painful,
-owing to an inward growth. Each confinement was a
-very critical time&mdash;in fact, with the last one I nearly
-lost my life, and was told by my doctor never to run
-the risk again. Fortunately for us all, I have a thoughtful
-husband, or, of course, it would have made the home
-very unhappy. During the time of pregnancy I used to
-put a little away every week, perhaps one week tea,
-another sugar, and so on, as my husband’s wages were
-small, and I could not go out to work, not being strong.
-I am sure the 30s. the mothers get now would have been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-a great boon in my case. It would have saved a lot of
-worry as to ways and means. No one knows what it
-means to a mother at such times, what contrivances she
-has to make things eke out. I think myself half the
-suffering in after-life is brought about by worrying to
-make ends meet at such times. In my own case, how
-much I have to be thankful for with a good, steady
-husband! I honestly think no woman should have less
-than £1 per week for housekeeping purposes, and how
-many thousands have far less! I should like to see all
-workers receiving a living wage, as then I think most
-of the trouble would be met.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. to 30s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">124. <span class="smcap">Six to Feed on Sixteen Shillings.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have only had four children, but I am pleased to
-say I have had what we call comfortable times. But I
-must tell you, since I had my second one, my husband
-has only earned 16s. a week. I have had a very hard
-struggle to get through, but, thank the Lord, I have done
-it. If the Maternity Benefit had been in force, then
-it would have made it much better. I think the scheme
-is a beautiful thing, and I think the women should have
-it. But we have not all got the same kind of husbands.
-Mine is a very good husband. I was very queer after
-my last was born, but what could you wonder at&mdash;that
-money to keep six of us? But we are getting over the
-hardest place, I hope. My eldest is thirteen.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 16s. to 22s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">125. “<span class="smcap">Worked Too Hard as a Girl.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have been married seventeen years, and have had
-four children. My first, a boy, was born two years after
-marriage. The second was twin boys, born two years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-and six months after the first. One of these was still-born.
-During the whole time of second pregnancy
-I was very ill and unable either to work or walk about
-without great pain, the result of trying to do just the
-necessary housework. At my confinement, the after-birth
-came first, then the still-birth, and the living child
-came last. This was very dangerous to me, and I was
-unable to leave my bed for three weeks, and I was at
-least three months before I was in my usual health.
-My third child was born nine years after second (a girl)
-the after-birth again coming first, the baby being born
-nine hours after. She lived six hours, and was convulsed
-from birth. The doctor’s opinion was that I had
-worked too hard as a girl lifting heavy weights, therefore
-weakening the whole system. It is high time that
-something was done by the Government to lessen the
-sufferings of mothers, which has always been hidden as
-something not to be talked about.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 36s.; three children, one still-birth.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">126. <span class="smcap">A Strong Woman.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have not a word to say against any of my child-bearing
-or pregnancy times, as I have been a strong
-woman, and have a very good husband. But I always
-provide for such times. I always had a doctor and midwife,
-and someone to look after my home, and always
-stop in bed a long time. I have not had any use for
-instruments or chloroform. But one thing, I am a life
-abstainer, and my mother before me, and my husband
-is also, and I think this has a great deal to do with the
-difficulties of pregnancy. I have always been able to
-do my home duties, with the exception of washing, and
-I have not always done that. I was twenty-two years
-when my first baby was born. My youngest is now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-eleven years, and I am in my fifty-second year, and am
-enjoying splendid health, and am a busy woman.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 24s. to 40s.; seven children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">127. <span class="smcap">Wine Lodges should be Closed.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have not had or gone through so much pain and
-suffering as many poor mothers have to go through.</p>
-
-<p>It was during pregnancy I did suffer through my own
-ignorance. I had a most devoted mother, and was carefully
-brought up, but on this subject she failed. I was
-the youngest of three girls, and not even my sisters,
-who were both married before me, did I ever hear any
-mention of this.... I was in my twenty-fourth year,
-so I was not too young to be instructed. It would
-have been very much better for my health if I had
-received some knowledge of this. I feel so glad you
-have given me this opportunity to just say something
-on the subject. I have recently visited one of our
-prisons, and find that the greatest number of women
-and girls who have fallen through drink have commenced
-to form this habit with it being given to them
-when young girls, and again when they become mothers.
-Of course, we know it is a weakness, but when a mother,
-nurse, or doctor could just as well give them many
-things which would do far more good for them, and
-save them from this. If we could only rise up in a
-body, we Guildwomen, and close the wine lodges, we
-could save our young women! It is there where the
-White Slave traffic often starts, and these women will
-tell you. I could give you several accounts of these
-poor downcast creatures, but I am afraid I would be
-going away from the subject you are anxious to gain all
-information. I was in Mrs. R.’s Home for Infants<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-yesterday, and I saw there quite enough to know what
-kind of mothers and fathers those babies must belong
-to. They do not get enough food or rest before these
-mites come into the world. If we could have afternoon
-classes for our young married women, and give them
-good instruction and knowledge for them to be able to
-be quite prepared to carry out when the time comes!
-We have had in our Guild this session some splendid
-evening lectures from doctors and nurses; but when I
-call round before we have these lectures and ask the
-young mothers to come to the meetings, they are busy
-with the home duties or children, so I think afternoon
-classes for a short time would do a great amount of
-good.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 45s. 6d. to 60s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">128. “<span class="smcap">Often went Short of Food.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>It is so long ago since I had all these babies, that I
-almost forget, but I was married young, and was always
-delicate on the chest, as I am still. I had children very
-fast, seven one after another, not more than a year and
-nine months between them, and in one case only one
-year and two months. Then I lost a sweet little girl,
-aged four years and eight months. She was ill a fortnight,
-and I nursed her night and day. I was so done
-up with attending her and the grief, that I had a dreadful
-miscarriage which nearly cost me my life. I had to
-work very hard to do everything for my little family,
-and after that I never had any more children to live.
-I either miscarried, or they were still-born. I have had
-two miscarriages in a year, one in January and one in
-August. My husband’s standing wage was 28s., but
-he made a little overtime sometimes, which I always
-tried to put by for doctor and nurse. The doctor’s
-fee was £1 1s., and I had no nurse under 1s. a day&mdash;viz.,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-7s. or 8s. per week, and their food, etc. I looked after
-my husband and children well, but I often went short
-of food myself, although my husband did not know it.
-He used to think my appetite was bad, and that I could
-not eat. I never worried him. He was steady, and
-gave me all he could. You may guess I was always
-scheming and planning to make ends meet, which was
-not good for me or the unborn baby. But I always
-tried to keep a bright face, and made the best of things,
-and all my doctors have called me plucky. I wish I
-had had the 30s. the mothers have now; it would have
-taken a load off anyhow....</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 28s.; seven children, three still-births, four miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">129. <span class="smcap">An Agricultural Labourer’s Wife.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was married twenty-five years ago. My husband
-is an agricultural labourer, and was then earning 10s.
-per week, an extra shilling because he was the milkman,
-and went twice on Sundays. Could you afford
-more children on that? <i>NO.</i> His wages are now 15s.
-per week, but we are now forty-seven years old. I
-wish I could have had 30s. In my case it was one
-year’s illness, nine months before and three months
-after. With my last I had dropsy, and was quite unable
-to walk for three months before baby was born.
-There was no money coming in, only barely enough to
-get bread and a small piece of butter or dripping for the
-four of us. You will perhaps understand we did not
-want any more family. We could not afford it. We
-love children, both of us, and often say we wish we had
-a larger grown-up family now we are getting into years.
-Our silver wedding is next Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>I am by trade a leather-glove maker, my earnings
-helped to keep the home. The labourer of to-day is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-not so well off as we were, although they now get 16s.,
-as food is so much dearer.</p>
-
-<p>With all good wishes for our nation’s welfare.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 10s. to 15s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">130. <span class="smcap">Ten Shillings coming in for Twelve Weeks.</span></h3>
-
-<p>After my first-born, everything went on all right, but
-after my second, I was very ill with my breasts, but, of
-course, I put that down to my husband’s lack of work.
-He was thrown out for twelve weeks just as baby was
-born, and, of course, it was a dreadful worry to me.
-Fancy 10s. coming in for twelve weeks, 5s. 9d. for rent
-out of it, and a new baby. I am not the only one, but
-I felt I could never have any more, as much as I love
-children, and now, after eleven years, the thought of it
-makes me feel ill. During the time of pregnancy I
-suffered dreadfully, and my heart goes out to all my poorer
-sisters, and if there is anything I can do to help in any
-way, I am at your service. Of course, I am far from
-strong, but as long as I can, I am quite willing to help.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 34s. to 38s.; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">131. <span class="smcap">Consoled Herself with an Orphan Boy.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have been married thirteen years and have no children.
-I have had seven miscarriages, all under six
-months. My own opinion is that the first was brought
-on by an unqualified midwife that I had to call in to
-see me at a moment’s notice, for instead of letting me
-lie quiet, she acted with me as though it was a full-time
-child. And all the other miscarriages have followed
-as the result of the first. My mother is a qualified
-midwife, but was too far away at the time. I have
-suffered untold agonies through these miscarriages.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-My health is all undermined. The doctor has told me
-that I would probably give birth to a full-time child,
-but I should have to stay in bed for the first six months.
-I am glad our Guild is taking up these things, for the
-woman’s sake, for there is many a childless woman to-day
-through neglect. I have consoled myself by adopting
-an orphan boy, who is the sunshine of my life.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 23s. to 28s.; no child, seven miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">132. “<span class="smcap">The Terrible Suffering I endured.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>The first part of my life I spent in a screw factory from
-six in the morning till five at night; and after tea used
-to do my washing and cleaning. I only left two weeks
-and three weeks before my first children were born.
-After that I took in lodgers and washing, and always
-worked up till an hour or so before baby was born. The
-results are that three of my girls suffer with their insides.
-None are able to have a baby. One dear boy was born
-ruptured on account of my previous hard work. Two
-of my lads, one married is a chronic sufferer, and has
-three children; another, the one that was ruptured, has
-outgrown that, but he is far from a robust lad. I can
-only look back now on the terrible suffering I endured,
-that tells a tale now upon my health. I could never
-afford a nurse, and so was a day or two after my confinements
-obliged to sit up and wash and dress the
-others.</p>
-
-<p>My husband’s wages varied owing to either hot
-weather or some of the other men not working. I have
-known him come home with £3 or £4, and I have seen
-him come home with <i>nothing</i>; and when earning good
-money, as much as 30s. has been paid away in drink.
-I had three little ones in two years and five months,
-and he was out of work two years, and during that time<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-I took in washing and sewing, and have not been near
-a bed for night after night. I was either at my sewing-machine
-or ironing after the little ones had gone to
-bed. After being confined five days I have had to do all
-for my little ones. I worked sometimes up till a few
-moments before they were born. I do hope I have
-not done wrong in relating so much of my past, and
-that it may be of some use in the furthering of our
-scheme.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages £3 or £4 to nothing; ten children, two miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">133. <span class="smcap">Maternity Benefit “intended for
-Themselves.”</span></h3>
-
-<p>I was married when nineteen years of age, and my
-first baby was born just nine months after, and that
-was before I was twenty. My second was born two
-years afterwards, and, owing to ignorance, I got up too
-soon after confinement, and it has left me with a weakness
-that I suffer from now. I think that a woman is
-anxious to get about too soon, but now that the Maternity
-Benefit provides for proper nursing, women should be
-made to understand that the money is intended for
-themselves. It is more knowledge and help that women
-need.</p>
-
-<p>I hope that you will get a great amount of information
-on this important subject.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. and house; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">134. <span class="smcap">An Awful Struggle.</span></h3>
-
-<p>First child, very sick early period, and when labour
-set in kept it to myself; baby born before doctor arrived.
-Got on well.</p>
-
-<p>Second, through reaching high shelf, child had to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-turned, causing good deal of suffering. Child died at
-three months, undergoing operation for nerves. Doctor
-said caused by rick or strain at birth. Miscarriage
-caused by fright. Did not understand it; got up next
-day, went about usual duties.</p>
-
-<p>Third child, usual symptoms. Fourth ditto. Second
-miscarriage, hard work and lifting bath of water, being
-very weak. Doctor said would have been twins. Fifth
-child born on stairs, no ill-effects. Third miscarriage,
-very ill. Sixth child very ill, caused by lifting out of
-bed sick child. The bladder obstructing the way, and
-child could not be born only by replacing it. Labour
-lasting from Thursday morn until Saturday noon.
-Seventh and eighth child quite natural.</p>
-
-<p>When we were married, thirty-one years ago, my
-husband was a framework knitter. Having learnt his
-trade thoroughly, he was capable of earning from £2 to
-£3 weekly, but we had only been married a fortnight
-when, through the introduction of machinery, he was
-out of work. In less than two years his earnings was
-11s. to 16s. weekly. Our rent was 5s. 3d., but I let the
-two front rooms. The third year he was out twelve
-weeks, only earning 2s. 6d. the whole time. No one
-would employ him; he looked pale, and his hands, owing
-to using silk and cotton, were soft and clean. One man
-told him he was not the sort of man for field-work.
-However, he got a job as rural postman, earning 15s.
-a week, leaving home 5 a.m., returning 7 p.m. In order
-to supplement his earnings, he hired a room and mended
-boots, but some people did not pay him, and he had to
-give it up. Then a manufacturer found he could still
-do with a little hand-work, but alas! things were no
-better; some weeks he earned 20s., some weeks less.</p>
-
-<p>There were five of us to keep, so I got some work from
-the factory, and if I worked hard I could sometimes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-earn 8s. I would rise at 6 a.m., get my housework done
-by 10 a.m., sending the two little ones to school, and,
-except for meals or attending to my little ones, worked
-till 12 p.m. I was then within a few weeks’ birth of my
-little one, but&mdash;oh, how can I tell you!&mdash;one night on
-looking up from my work, my husband was looking
-ghastly. But that looking up saved my life; he told me
-after he was anticipating taking my life and my little
-ones’ and his own. But he feared his courage would fail
-him before he finished. I reached my Bible from the
-shelf (it was my custom to read every night) and went
-to bed. But think of it!&mdash;a kinder, better man it would
-be difficult to find.</p>
-
-<p>When I could not get shirt-finishing, I used to seam
-hose&mdash;2¾d. for twelve pairs&mdash;and when my baby was
-born I had 5s.; I gave it to the midwife. My husband
-had influenza, and we were both in bed ill. He had
-earned 8s., and I gave that to nurse and dismissed her.
-The ninth day I was downstairs doing some washing&mdash;sitting,
-of course&mdash;and I sent for some work, but could
-not do much, my eyes were so weak. I never thought
-to appeal to our friends to help us, but I wrote and told
-of the birth and said work was very bad.</p>
-
-<p>A builder wanted a handyman, and sent for my
-husband, and gave him work&mdash;20s. a week. My
-husband was so handy he kept him on as carpenter,
-and he attended continuation classes with our elder son,
-and from that he went to the Technical Institute, and
-about eight years after we came to &mdash;&mdash;, he had learned
-the second trade of carpenter, and gets the rate because
-he is trade unionist, and has been ever since he started
-as carpenter. It was he who tried to instil co-operative
-principles into me, but I think it was the “divi” had
-the greatest influence, and the rest I learnt in the Guild
-room; and I say, God speed co-operation, the greatest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-blessing possible for the people. We seldom ever refer
-to our dark days, we are so happy now with our children.
-The baby No. 8&mdash;it was all right. I could draw a £2 divi&mdash;the
-most I ever had for confinement.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 11s. to £1; eight children, three miscarriages.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">135. <span class="smcap">Rag-Sorting.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Her husband was a bricklayer’s labourer, and the
-woman did rag-sorting to help with the living, and used
-to wheel sacks full of rags on a sack-barrow to the warehouse.
-The wonder to me was that the babies were
-born alive, though it was never stated that it was through
-this that the children died soon after. My own impression
-was that it had something to do with it. As a
-mother myself I would not have dared to have attempted
-to do what that poor woman had to do, and I am thankful
-to know that something is being done to try and
-alleviate these poor women. As a Bible woman who
-visits in and out of the homes of the poor, my heart
-aches as I see how some of these poor women have to
-work during pregnancy, and how little comfort they
-have at the time, and how soon they have to begin work
-again, before they are fit, and I believe many poor women
-suffer for life through having to get about too soon.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 23s.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">136. “<span class="smcap">I Wonder how I Lived.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I do not know that my experience of child-bearing
-has differed much from the women of my class. I was
-a factory girl, and an only child. I was married at
-twenty, and the mother of three children by the time I
-was twenty-three. I was totally ignorant of the needs
-of my children or how to look after myself as I should do,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-and now I look back, I wonder how I muddled through,
-for that is really what it was, a muddle all the time, and
-it was more by fortune than wit that I have reared my
-first two children to maturity.</p>
-
-<p>When I look back to that first three years of my married
-life, I wonder how I lived through it. I was weak
-and ill, could not suckle my second baby. And then
-a third baby coming along made my life a continual
-drudgery, and to crown my misfortune my husband fell
-out of work, and I had to do shirt work at home in order
-to keep a roof over our heads. My third baby was
-very tiny and thin when born. I put this down to the
-worry and the shortness of food which I had to put up
-with, and though he lived till he was three years old
-and died from diphtheria. It was a happy release to
-me, as he was an epileptic, and I thanked God, much as I
-loved him, that he was taken from this life, where even
-sound people have a difficulty to exist.</p>
-
-<p>I do not think I was very different in my pregnancies
-to others. I always prepared myself to die, and I think
-this awful depression is common to most at this time.
-And when bothered by several other children, and
-not knowing how to make ends meet, death in some
-cases would be welcome if it were not the dread of the
-children. “How would they get on without their
-mother?”</p>
-
-<p>My husband was fortunate enough, just after the loss
-of my third child, to get regular work, and I never bore
-another child under such awful conditions. But I
-believe that I felt the effects of it in all my other pregnancies.</p>
-
-<p>After the first three living children, I had three still-born
-children. I was six months advanced when I fell
-downstairs over a stair-rod, which killed the child, which
-was born after forty-eight hours’ labour, and perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-it seems wicked to you, but I was glad, because it left
-my hands free for a time to look after the other two,
-for I was fearfully weak and ill. After a lapse of two
-years I had another seven-months baby born dead, and
-again, after another two years, a five-months still-born
-child, all three still-born children being boys. I had a
-miscarriage after this of two months, and when I was
-thirty-five years old had my last baby, who is now living,
-nine years old.</p>
-
-<p>I do hope you will not feel that this letter is morbid,
-and that I delight in writing horrors, for I do not, and
-had you not asked for information I should never have
-written this all down. It is strictly true, and when I
-look back to my early married life I could cry for the
-girl who endured so much for life that was wasted. I
-am fairly healthy now myself and have much to thank
-God for&mdash;a loving helpmeet and dutiful children&mdash;so
-please do not think I am miserable, for I am not, for I
-believe&mdash;in fact, I know&mdash;that there is a brighter day
-dawning for the mother and child of the future.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 21s. to 30s.; four children, three still-births, one<br />
-miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">137. <span class="smcap">Five Still-Births.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Mine is rather an exceptional case. Through being
-left without a mother when a baby&mdash;father was a very
-large farmer and girls were expected to do men’s work&mdash;I,
-at the age of sixteen, lifted weights that deformed
-the pelvis bones, therefore making confinement a very
-difficult case. I have five fine healthy girls, but the boys
-have all had to have the skull-bones taken away to get
-them past the pelvis. Always a case for two or three
-doctors, so you will know I have suffered something.
-I wish more could be done to train young girls to be more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-careful. Over my first baby I was eleven months before I
-could walk again. A woman ought, in my opinion, to be
-treated more or less as an invalid during pregnancy. I
-suffered most with sickness and swollen legs, terrible
-bad carryings. You cannot follow up with work as you
-ought to do. I suffered with a terrible bearing-down
-pain all through carrying. I often wonder how some
-poor women do that have such very fast confinements
-every twelve months and no care at all bestowed
-on them.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. to 22s. 6d.; five children and five still-births.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">138. <span class="smcap">A Weaver.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My first baby was born before I was twenty. I was
-a weaver, and worked hard until after the eighth month.
-I had a very hard labour, and cannot tell you very
-much, as I was unconscious before the baby was born.
-The first thing I knew was my mother standing over
-me trying to keep me awake. The doctor said I was
-not to go to sleep for two hours, or I should not waken
-again. The child was a big boy, and was crushed with
-being born and obstruction. Then inflammation took
-place, and he only lived four days. I was soon downstairs
-again and at work. I was seven years before I
-had another&mdash;a girl; then I had another boy. The two
-are now grown up, and I have said good-bye to weaving.
-I hope my two children will have a better time than I
-have had.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 19s. to 23s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">139. <span class="smcap">Drugs.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I know personally of many mothers who have had very
-dreadful times of sickness all through the time, and
-others who have not been able to have the necessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-food to strengthen them&mdash;some through having bad or
-careless husbands, others through shortness of work;
-and, I am sorry to say, those who have felt they would
-not carry children, some because of bad husbands, others
-because they felt they could not properly feed and clothe
-those they had. There are three who lost their lives,
-and another who has already had seven. These all
-took some kind of drug, and of course did the work they
-wanted it to do. The doctor felt sorry for this woman
-and could not blame her. She has had difficulty in
-rearing these seven. When she was able to get out, I
-saw her and talked seriously to her, but she said:
-“Mrs. &mdash;&mdash;, I will not have any more by him, and I should
-not have cared if I had died.” She loved her children,
-and has had months of sleepless nights with each of
-the seven. It seems to me, had Government awakened
-to its duty years ago, seeing to it that the mothers and
-children should have what was necessary, mothers would
-not have minded having the children, had they known
-each little one would be provided for. We should now
-have a stronger and healthier race of men and women.
-One does not wonder at the sickly boys and girls one
-meets in the streets, especially when one knows under
-what circumstances they were born, and how and what
-their mothers had to bear before they came.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">140. <span class="smcap">Got up the Fifth Day.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I feel that we women ought to discuss this question,
-because working women often suffer terribly at these
-times with having to get up soon after confinement: I
-myself being a great sufferer with bad legs through
-getting up on the fifth day, although I had a doctor and
-midwife to attend me. But I lived in a place where
-the women and girls went to work in the mills, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-could not get a woman to stay in the home, and I was
-often left without for many hours. When the midwife
-came, she advised me to have a bottle of stout and
-biscuits beside the bed; but I refused, because I had
-never taken stout, and I thought no food better than
-that. And I have trouble to this day with my legs.
-Although well cared for during the last two confinements,
-it has never remedied the unfortunate position
-of the first confinement.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 30s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">141. <span class="smcap">A Family of Fifteen.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have had a very large family (fifteen). Out of all
-these confinements I have only had my husband in work
-at the time twice. Several times he was sick, and other
-times it was hard winters, and as he was in the building
-trade, he could not work if very frosty or very wet, so
-you will see that I have known what it was to be often
-very short. With this result, that when my sixth child
-was born, my health failed, which would not have been
-the case if I had not had to go short. I also had so
-much worry, and was unable at the time of carrying
-the child to have any help, however poorly I felt. For
-a number of years I was in a very weak state of health,
-which the doctor said was the result of not being properly
-looked after.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 24s. and upwards; fifteen children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">142. “<span class="smcap">Much Depends on the Husband.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I had my children several years apart. I must say
-that I was much better in health during pregnancy, and
-up to the time of the birth of the child was able to do
-most of my work. Kneeling, I found, was the worst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-thing, which I was careful to avoid, but a certain amount
-of exercise did me good. But it was after confinement
-that I had to be very careful. I could never sit up in
-bed for a fortnight, and it was a month or five weeks
-before I could come downstairs. That was the time I
-wanted all the nourishment I could get. Of course,
-there is a difference amongst women, as I know of some
-that suffer for months before with dropsy and various
-other things, then as a rule they are much better afterwards.
-Much depends on what kind of a husband the
-wife has. Worry must be a great drawback to a woman
-in that state. I am thankful to say my experience
-has not been a bad one, as all my children were
-healthy and strong. A woman cannot possibly get
-on if she has a bad, worrying husband. I think that
-makes a lot of difference.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 36s.; four children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">143. <span class="smcap">Problem of Housework.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am bound to say that I have never had bad times,
-neither before nor after birth. Of course, I have tried
-to obey the laws of Nature, taking plenty of exercise,
-good plain food, avoiding constipation&mdash;all three very
-essential things in such cases. Also, I have had home
-comforts, a husband who has studied me in every respect
-during the time. Some women are dreadfully sick all
-the way through, which is much against both the child
-and herself. I am never sick from beginning to end.
-The most difficult thing at the time is securing a woman
-who is able and willing to do housework, and look after
-the woman at the same time; that to me is one of the
-greatest problems in the Maternity Scheme to-day. If
-something could be done to organise such women, then
-it would mean much. A midwife simply goes and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-washes the baby and sees to the mother once a day for
-a week, but when the mother gets up, she often has more
-loss, and therefore feels her weakness.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wife’s allowance 18s. to 30s.; six children, one still-born.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>P.S.&mdash;I could give you many very wretched cases, as
-I am on the Guild of Help Committee, also the N.S.P.C.C.,
-so come across a lot of sad cases&mdash;in fact, I have a case
-on my list just now where the woman has had thirteen
-children under fourteen years. Twelve are living, the
-last two being born this week. I visited her before the
-children were born, to see if she was having sufficient
-food for herself and family, as her husband was unable
-to work, suffering from nystagmus. She said she had
-only been able to eat dry toast for weeks, her throat
-and chest were so bad. The woman at this time is very
-ill, and has two babies to consider. Her husband has
-done nothing for ten weeks. These are the cases we
-want to fight for.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">144. <span class="smcap">Bad Medical Attendance.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have had three children. There was one year
-between the first and second, two years between the
-second and third. I have had no miscarriage, and no
-still-births. But I have been very ill at times ever
-since my children were born. I can assure you that
-some doctors are very neglectful at these times. This
-you will see when I tell you about myself at these times.
-My first child was a boy, and I nearly lost my life because
-the doctor did not bring his bag containing the necessary
-instruments for use at these times, and his home was
-five miles away. So I can assure you I was nearly gone
-when the child was born. Then, when I had the second
-one&mdash;which was a girl&mdash;the very same doctor (there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-was only one doctor within miles then) came nearly
-drunk, and I had a frightful time. What is called the
-after-birth had grown to my side, and he never got it
-all away. I had milk fever first, and then childbed
-fever. I lost all reason, never knew a soul for just
-three months. Then I had to go under an operation
-to have the substance got away, which left me in a very
-bad way, the child being eight months old when I was
-able to get up. And, still worse, I had nearly the same
-thing to go through over the third, through not being
-able to get a doctor, and had a midwife who was not
-very experienced. I had to be taken to the hospital,
-and the doctors told me there I should never have any
-more children through the way I had been treated at
-the last childbirth, and I was very pleased to hear it, I
-can assure you, after what I had gone through. My
-youngest child is just twenty years old, and I have
-never had any since, but I love children, and I think
-they are a blessing to every good mother. I know I
-shall have to suffer while I live through being neglected
-at childbirth. The Maternity Benefit would have been
-a godsend to me while I was having children.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 14s. to 20s.; three children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">145. <span class="smcap">Illness Costing nearly £20.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have only had one child, a girl, and I had a most
-fearful time, which nearly cost me my life. I got up
-and tried to get about, as I had only engaged my nurse
-for three weeks, and I thought I must try, as time was
-going on, and I was in agonies all the time. The doctor
-had left me, and the nurse I had assured me it would
-pass off as I got stronger, and instead I grew worse and
-worse, until my husband would call in the doctor again.
-I had a fearful time. The womb had got twisted, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-was lying on the back passage, and inflammation set in.
-It was worse than a confinement. What I went through!
-I was in bed ten weeks, and it was more than three
-months before I could even lift my baby or do anything.
-I had to be sat with day and night, and have nourishment
-every fifteen minutes. The woman I had to nurse
-me, who was recommended to me by the doctor, swarmed
-me with vermin, and there I was helpless. Only my
-husband and a neighbour to attend to my head, until
-the doctor sent the district nurse, and she saved my life.
-She was so good, and kind, and clever, one of Queen
-Alexandra’s Nurses she was. I am so glad the Certificated
-Midwives are doing such grand work. We have
-one here in the town, and I may say she has all the cases
-now, and is always very busy, and is so good, and clean,
-and careful in the home. What we working women
-want to-day is a friend in the time of need, not a
-nuisance, the same as I had. It cost me nearly £20, my
-illness. Had it not been for our little nest-egg invested
-in our Co-operative Society, where should I have been?
-What a blessing this Maternity Benefit is! I trust I
-shall never require it.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 27s.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">146. <span class="smcap">Specialist’s Advice Needed.</span></h3>
-
-<p>My case was rather an extraordinary one, and emphasises
-that the National Care of Maternity ought to
-be brought into force at once. Through no fault of my
-own, I suffered from St. Vitus’s dance, caused through
-pregnancy, and was under three local doctors, and also
-engaged a trained nurse, but at the last moment they
-decided I must go into hospital, as my case was so bad.
-The physician said that in a case like mine local doctors
-were not worth six a penny, and if I had gone to hospital<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-at the commencement, I would never have got to the
-state in which I unfortunately was. The local doctors
-told me I could not be cured until the child was born,
-but the physician in hospital said it was ridiculous. If
-I had gone four months earlier, I could have been cured,
-and come home for the child to be born. I had no
-mother to give me advice, and the same makes me very
-strongly in favour of Moral Hygiene being taught in
-schools, so as not to leave girls ignorant of the functions
-of pregnancy and motherhood. Cases like mine should
-be brought to light in order that some poor souls in the
-future will be saved from going through the same as
-I did.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 27s. 6d.; one child.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">147. <span class="smcap">A Small Private Income.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I really did not suffer much during that time, and
-always had good confinements. I am one of the few
-working men’s wives who have a small private income,
-so I am thankful to say I have never felt the pinch.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">148. “<span class="smcap">Nine Months of Misery.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I wish to give you a little on the sufferings of mothers
-in pregnancy. I myself might say it is a matter of nine
-months misery for me while I am in that condition. I
-might say I was married twelve months when I had my
-first&mdash;a little girl&mdash;and four years after we got a little
-boy, a fine child, born. But I had contracted a severe
-chill, and it was all on my chest; and having baby on
-the breast, it drew the cold from me, and with that took
-ill of catarrh of the stomach, and died at four months.
-Being in a weak state myself, I again found myself
-pregnant; but at the eight months the child was born
-dead, it being the second boy. Two years after I had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-another girl, but it was when work was slack, and my
-husband could get very little work, and it became so
-bad that we had to sell part of our home to keep ourselves,
-and the time I should have had extras and somebody
-in to look after me this was out of the question.
-Now, two years after, again I had another girl (my last,
-I hope). I might say that, although sick and ill all the
-time I was pregnant, I soon got over it when the time
-was up. I have known some poor souls go days and
-weeks in their labour, and then have to have instruments
-and chloroform, and after nearly coming to
-death’s door have had to be stitched and syringed and
-doctored for months.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. to 22s. 6d.; five children, one still-born.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">149. <span class="smcap">Every Help.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have been in the fortunate position of being able
-to have every help at those times, added to which my
-youngest child is turned twenty-six years, and time has
-obliterated much that I suffered at those times. My
-husband was earning 9d. an hour. We afterwards
-started in business for ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Two children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">150. “<span class="smcap">Should never have had Children.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I have not got one healthy child among my five, not
-because I did not get well looked after, but they are
-suffering through the past generation. My first child is
-now a man of twenty-seven, married, but has had a
-paralysed arm from two years old (a milder form of
-which was a family trouble). The second one died.
-My third, a daughter, is almost an invalid, through
-nerves, and has developed a state of “catalepsy” when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>ever
-she is overdone. She was trained to be a shorthand
-typist, but is unable to follow out same, as it
-excites her nerves. She is now a waitress, half time,
-and teaches music, to enable her to keep herself. The
-fourth suffers from congenital heart, and is always
-ailing more or less. She is a dressmaker. The fifth is
-now nine years old, and suffers from malnutrition, and
-is always ailing, but a clever child for her years. We
-have always been able to provide everything required
-to keep them in good health. But in the light of the
-knowledge I have got since I was able to grasp what
-things are, I have often said I was one of the women
-who should never have had children, as from a girl I
-was always ill, right through my married life till now.
-I have done child-bearing, and am now in better health
-than I can remember. I was married when I was
-twenty.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 35s. to 45s.; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">151. <span class="smcap">Systematic Preparation.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I am glad you are trying to emphasise the need for
-<i>knowledge</i> on the part of the mother, as my own experience
-has proved that, given knowledge as to health
-and the care of the body generally before childbirth,
-much of the evil which now accompanies this perfectly
-natural thing might be avoided. In my own case,
-having always suffered considerably at every monthly
-period, and not being of a particularly robust type, I
-made up my mind to go into training before bringing
-children into the world, in order not to have to pass
-out at the same time, and leave them to the tender
-mercies of others. Accordingly, I adopted a vigorous
-system in order to harden the body, and soften the hip
-and abdomen muscles, etc. This consisted of cold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-sponge baths, followed by certain exercises while lying
-flat on a mattress. Then a rubbing of the body in
-sweet oil. The whole was done in ten or fifteen minutes
-every morning. Vegetarian diet was strictly adhered
-to, as this produces a cleaner, healthier child. My
-nurse, who laughed at all my “fads,” remarked on the
-fact that the child had not the grease, etc., on it at
-birth which most babies have. A month before the
-time of birth, I left off all bone-making food such as
-bread, so that the birth should be easier, through the
-absence of very hard bones in the child. As I did not
-do my own housework, for exercise I walked twelve
-miles every day in rain, snow, etc. The baby was born
-in January, and the day before I took a ten-mile walk,
-had my cold bath, etc., and that day fortnight was out
-walking again, testifying plainly to the fact that a little
-care and attention and knowledge will work wonders,
-and the birth was a perfectly natural one.</p>
-
-<p>Women make a great mistake in feeding overmuch
-at this time, and bringing fat big babies into the world.
-Mine were designedly small, but they made up for it
-after birth, and will compare favourably with any now.
-From the first month after birth they had cold baths,
-sun baths, wore one garment, only wear two coverings
-even in winter, sleep winter and summer in the open,
-never wear hats or stockings. Shoes are only worn
-occasionally, as they are barefooted in house and school.
-The eldest is in her tenth year, and neither have had
-anything but whooping-cough and measles when there
-was an epidemic of these, and they had them lightly.</p>
-
-<p>Women should be taught to give up corsets, which,
-besides all the other evils laid to their charge, damage
-the nipples. I nursed both my children, and my doctor
-remarked on the splendid nipples I had for the purpose.
-This was due to the absence of corsets, and to washing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-them every morning in cold water, and then rubbing
-the breasts with oil. I have seen women with scarcely
-any nipples trying to feed babies, and have pitied both.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages of husband and wife £3 10s. to £4; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">152. “<span class="smcap">Had to go out to Clean and Paper.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>My husband’s wages have been as high as £5 a week
-and as low as 7s. in the winter, as they cannot work
-either in the rain, frost, or snow. So it means saving
-in summer to tide over winter. My hardest time of
-child-bearing was when my last one was born, it being
-the sixth child, all living. My husband had been out
-of work for eighteen weeks when there was such depression.
-I had to go out to clean and paper when I was
-six months pregnant, and I am suffering with varicose
-veins to-day as the result.</p>
-
-<p>In reference to myself during pregnancy and confinements,
-I suffered mostly with morning sickness, swollen,
-aching legs, and a dragging at the left side, which has
-always resulted in the after-birth growing to my side,
-and has brought on a flooding before it could be removed,
-but in all my confinements I have had a qualified doctor,
-or I am afraid my life would have been lost.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 7s. to £5; six children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">153. “<span class="smcap">A Troublesome Life.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>When I was married some forty to forty-five years ago,
-there was no consideration as to the future conditions
-of wifehood and motherhood.</p>
-
-<p>In business myself, after the death of my dear father,
-I married a business man, widower with four children.
-I told him when I married I would not come into the
-business; however, he gave me no rest until I came back.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-I had to care for an invalid mother, that was why I longed
-for a home again. I soon found out what a mistake
-I had made. I had my children fast. One year and
-five months between, and one year and seven months,
-and much about the same with five children. My
-husband was exacting as regards his children, but careless
-of me. I had a very happy childhood; my father
-was a good man, my mother a gentle creature. I lost
-her, and then nervous debility set in through overstrain
-and persecution. I lost a little girl from consumption
-of the bowels. I was then a wreck. I began to recover
-for my children’s sake, but I separated from my husband,
-and took my four children with me, and began
-to make a living for myself. He provided 5s. a week
-for each child whilst he remained in England. He
-went abroad, made money, left me to struggle, and
-when he died, left me nothing; the money was willed
-to each of his and my children. By that time there were
-only two of mine left out of five, and four of his who
-received their full share. I have had a troublesome
-life.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>In business; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">154. <span class="smcap">Cases of Labourers’ Wives.</span></h3>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Husband, labourer, but when at work spends most
-of his earnings in drink. Now four children under six
-years. The last one born died, aged five months, of
-consumption. Mother consumptive. I should say all
-the children are consumptive. Mother is, and I should
-say always has been, in a starved condition. A woman
-that would give the food to the children and starve
-herself, having always practically two babies in arms,
-and unable to go out to work, if she could obtain it, to
-bring a little money in the home. It would also be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-wrong to give her work, even her home duties being too
-much for her strength. No help wanted for the man
-in this case. He’s too artful to starve, but wicked
-enough to live to continue a cause for anxiety. Nothing
-but food or death of husband or wife will alter this case.
-A sad case; a hard problem to solve.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Husband, builder’s labourer. Wife employed at
-laundry. Five children under eleven years of age.
-Husband out of work ten weeks previous to wife’s confinement.
-During the time the home depending solely
-upon the wife’s earnings. Wife, owing to lack of
-nourishment, in a very low, weak condition, and suffering
-much from varicose veins. Fourteen days prior to
-birth of child, being practically unable to stand, gave up
-her duties at laundry. The following day a vein burst;
-a very serious case. None of the previous children
-are very strong; but what about the last one, with the
-mother practically starved prior to its birth?</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) A very similar case. Husband a labourer; work
-uncertain. All money he earned goes into the home.
-Eight children under eleven years. Woman always
-much underfed, owing to insufficient money coming into
-the home. She is never well.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">155. <span class="smcap">Forty-seven Nieces and Nephews.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I may say that I have been fortunate in being able to
-have good care and a good doctor. Had I not been
-able to have it, I should have certainly lost my life when
-my still-born child was born. I was very ill for six
-weeks after, and I know what an expensive time it was.
-When I tell you that I am aunt to forty-seven nieces
-and nephews, all of the poor working class, you will
-understand that I have seen something of the struggle
-with poverty at such times, some having to get out and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-attend to the home before the child was eight days old.
-Knowing all this, I am out to help do all I can to hasten
-the day when every man, woman, and child shall have
-all the good things of life which is theirs by right.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages average £1; three children, one still-born.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">156. “<span class="smcap">A Law to Stay in Bed Ten Days.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I think there is a good deal of room for improving a
-mother’s condition during pregnancy and after childbirth.
-I myself have had nothing to complain of, only
-ignorance in things which made me suffer more than
-I had any need to while I was carrying my children,
-being young and away from all my friends; and my
-mother, being one of the “old school,” thought it wrong
-to talk to her girls of such things, and it always made
-us feel shy of asking her anything. But my youngest
-is now in his twelfth year. But I must say I have got
-a good husband, and we made that condition years
-ago, that as the boy grew up he would enlighten him,
-and I was to do the same by our girl, who is now fourteen
-years old. And one thing I think should be imposed
-on mothers is to have a doctor at confinements, and not
-to trust to midwives. I have seen a lot of neglect here
-with different people I have been with at those times.
-Certainly the midwife washes the mother after the birth
-of the child, but not again is the mother washed until
-she can do it herself. I think, myself, if there could be
-a law to make every mother have a doctor, and to stay
-in bed for at least ten days, and to be treated as an
-invalid for another fourteen days, it would save a lot of
-suffering. The women would get stronger, and not so
-liable to have children so quickly. A case in point only
-two doors away from me; the mother was confined on
-the 21st; on the 26th she was getting about her work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-as usual. Would a doctor have allowed that? The
-person is only about twenty-three years of age, and her
-last baby is only thirteen months old. Another case I
-was called in to some years ago. I did not know the
-person, only by sight. Her husband came and called
-me in the middle of the night. When I got there the
-child was born. No preparation had been made for
-either mother or child. From what I gathered, both
-parents had gone to bed drunk overnight. Isn’t it
-awful, a woman getting in that state, knowing at any
-time she might give birth to an innocent little baby?
-It was not poverty that had brought them to that state,
-as the man’s earnings were £2 a week, but all the man
-and woman had thought of was drink.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 36s. to £1; two children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">157. “<span class="smcap">Thought we must put up with it.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>I must say I have been more fortunate than some of
-our dear sisters. My husband always saw that I was
-attended to and did not want for anything. I had very
-bad times before and after, and was obliged to have
-help in for several months, and after each turn it left
-me with something or other. Once I lost the use of one
-of my hands, and the doctor said it would never get
-better, but however, I went to another doctor, and he
-cured me in a few weeks. He said it was the nerves.
-Our savings in the Stores have been a blessing to us,
-and helped us over the stile more than once. I often
-wondered how women could go out to work at those
-times, when I could not do my own. I firmly believe
-that if we could get better medical advice beforehand,
-there would not be so much suffering, and no doubt if
-I could have got better advice, it would have been better
-for me. But, of course, I thought we must put up with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-it, and they would only laugh at me. But however,
-times have altered, but too late for me.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 20s. and upwards; seven children, one miscarriage.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">158. <span class="smcap">Strikes, Out-of-Work, Short Time.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have had nine children. I was two years between
-my first three babies. I suffered least from these
-three, but for about six weeks before birth, and six
-after, I could scarcely get about&mdash;pains all over, with a
-very bad back, and very much swollen legs and feet.
-Being a little, light-made woman, my confinements
-were very severe.</p>
-
-<p>My fourth baby died when six weeks old&mdash;a cross-birth.
-Was much torn in consequence, so had to be
-stitched a good deal; was bad, and could scarcely get
-about at two months after. Neither before for weeks,
-nor after, could I have offered to have washed, baked,
-or done any work of any moment. Every confinement
-after this I got worse and worse. The same thing happened.
-Very sick for three or four months before
-confinement, pains all over, very bad back, legs and
-feet very much swollen; could not lie in bed long at a
-time, could get very little rest or sleep; impossible to
-wash, bake, or do much housework. But had a very
-good husband, who helped me all he could, and some
-sisters who came in turn and did as much as they could
-in my home for me. My husband’s wages were very
-small at times, sometimes only 18s. a week, other
-times £1 a week, and up to 30s. In my husband’s
-trade wages is very much up and down. Then we had
-a strike of eleven weeks, then short time for five months,
-then out of work fifteen weeks; and when one of my
-children was born three weeks, then over two years
-working four days per week. So you see there was not
-much money to get nourishment with. That all hap<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>pened
-during the time I was having my children, so of
-course I was pretty put to sometimes. I could not
-have afforded to get anyone in the house if I had had
-to pay them all the time that I needed them, but had
-to prepare for a nurse each time, as I had to have one
-for a month at least, and after that month my sisters
-help. We had to do the best we could.</p>
-
-<p>My last two confinements I was not able to come
-downstairs for about three and four months&mdash;no strength
-to walk, no appetite, and with being so much torn had
-then to come downstairs for a long time on my hips
-(slide down, as it were). When able to get about, could
-scarcely walk owing to my condition.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 18s. to 30s.; nine children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">159. <span class="smcap">Rest and Good Food.</span></h3>
-
-<p>I have been one of those fortunate individuals who,
-during pregnancy, have very good health. My greatest
-suffering was caused by varicose veins, which, of course,
-are very painful at such times.</p>
-
-<p>I was blessed with a good mother, who gave me
-good advice on the necessity of taking care of myself
-during this period, and having also the best of attention
-at confinement, and plenty of rest and good food,
-neither of these being lacking. I can only imagine a
-woman’s feelings under different conditions.</p>
-
-<p>My confinements (five) were, however, hard, bad
-times, brought about by some obstruction. This I
-have always put down to the fact that at the age of
-thirteen I began to learn dressmaking, which entailed
-sitting long hours at a stretch, at a time when the bones
-were in rather a soft state. A midwife whom I had
-engaged as nurse during my last confinement quite
-agreed that this was most likely. I could not say
-whether this is common among dressmakers or not.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After confinement always seemed to me to be one’s
-weak time, and especially with nursing mothers with
-fine, healthy babies. I nursed four, the last being still-born,
-and always found that about three months after
-their birth my strength failed, and doctor’s advice had
-to be sought, when with tonics he managed to bring me
-right.</p>
-
-<p>You see my experience will not be of much use to
-you, but this is exactly how I have felt during these
-times; in fact, during pregnancy it was much harder
-for me to be still than to work hard physical work.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages just under £2; four children, one still-born.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">160. “<span class="smcap">Eight to Keep on Eleven Shillings
-and Threepence.</span>”</h3>
-
-<p>In the first place, being short of money is one cause of
-suffering. I am the mother of five children, three girls
-and two boys. I have not had a doctor to any of my
-confinements, but nearly lost my life and child’s through
-the first one. The midwife was a qualified woman, but
-addicted to drink (which I found out afterwards). I
-was confined on a Thursday at 2.30 p.m., after many
-hours of suffering, and she never came near me again
-until late on Saturday night. Fancy me! Oh, the
-horror of it makes me shiver when I think about it.
-We were almost strangers where we were living. I
-had my mother staying with me, but the night before
-baby was born, she chopped the end of her finger right
-off, which made her feel very bad. She was in pain herself,
-and I was ignorant of the danger I was in, not being
-properly attended to. Mother was afraid of blood-poisoning.
-My husband was working nights at the
-time. We, like many more, had not got a very good
-start. He fell out of work about two months after we
-were married, and was out for a long time. I had to go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-to my home and he his, for from the first months of
-pregnancy I suffered greatly. When he started and
-worked again, I had to part with my machine (which I
-had paid for before I was married) to pay for rent; it was
-hard lines. Then he got work back, so we had to move
-back again&mdash;another expense. So you will see we had our
-trouble when baby was born. I had hardly got enough
-of anything, let alone doctor’s money. I paid the nurse
-7s. 6d. I had only been confined barely three weeks
-when my husband was out of work again. The first
-Saturday night I went out shopping after baby was
-born, I had 1s. 7½d. to get meat, grocery, and all else
-to live on till some kind friend came along, which was
-my mother, her home being near. She brought me a
-little rent, and a few shillings to carry us on for a week
-or two. I was afraid to spend any till my husband got
-work, which was after many tramps from place to place.
-I managed to get some work to do, but caught a cold
-and chill, which caused me to have a gathered breast,
-which nearly killed me. I did not know my own for
-days. They took me over from &mdash;&mdash; to &mdash;&mdash;, and
-thought I should die on the way there. My father
-soon had a doctor to see me. He told them it would be
-a struggle to pull me through, but after a time I gained
-strength to go back to &mdash;&mdash;, and as my husband had
-got work again, he needed me at home. Then after a
-year and ten months, my baby girl was born. I should
-tell you I was twenty-eight years old when I was married,
-and I had been married eleven months when my first
-baby was born, and I can truthfully say I was ignorant
-of anything concerning married life or motherhood when
-I was married. In fact, when the midwife came to me
-when I was in such pain, I had not the slightest idea
-where or how the child would come into the world.
-And another thing, I was not even told what to expect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-when I was leaving girlhood&mdash;I mean the monthly
-courses. I often wonder I got along as well as I have.
-I will say here that I do not intend my daughters to be
-so innocent of natural courses. I feel it is unkind of
-parents to leave girls to find these things out. It causes
-unnecessary suffering. I often wonder, when I hear some
-of our women grumbling about the trouble and bother
-of signing and getting the papers filled in for the 30s.,
-how they would have been in my place, and how thankful
-I should have been for it.</p>
-
-<p>When my girlie was eighteen months, I had a baby boy.
-I did think I had a handful; they seemed three babies.
-A friend of mine had the little girl till I got up again,
-which was generally ten days. Oh, what rest is there
-for a woman when money is so scarce? They say,
-“Don’t worry.” Well, what can you do? Well, I got
-over No. 3 fairly well, as I had a young woman to
-look after me for <i>one</i> week. I forgot to tell you, the
-day after No. 2 was born, my husband was sent away
-to work, so I did not see him again till she was ten days
-old, and I had to borrow money to get along with till
-he did come back. When No. 4 was born, I had a trying
-time. Six weeks before she was born, my three
-children were down with scarlet fever; two had it very
-badly, but the one only very slightly; they came downstairs
-on the Sunday for the first time. Then my baby
-was born the following Tuesday. The children were
-not allowed to see me, but the father had to look after
-them a good deal, as I had his young sister to look after
-me. I got up on the tenth day, and then my husband
-had the fever. We were both ill in bed together. Then
-I had another gathered breast. The doctor lanced it,
-and it ran for fourteen weeks after. Then I had a
-whitlow on my right thumb. During the time my husband
-was ill, my young sister, though she was married,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-came to help to look after us all. I only had 11s. 3d. a
-week to keep eight of us on; can you wonder a woman’s
-strength gives way? I must also say my husband was
-not in a doctor’s club, so we had a bill to pay for him.
-I and the children are in a friendly sisters’ club, but the
-doctor does not attend confinements; that is a separate
-item. So you see I have known a bit of trouble. When
-No. 5 was born my oldest girl and boy had to look
-after me. The other two were sent away, one to &mdash;&mdash;,
-the other to &mdash;&mdash;. I had 26s. a week to keep and
-clothe, pay rent, fire and light, and clubs for seven of
-us, till my oldest started work.</p>
-
-<p>I think if I had been able to have a doctor at the
-first I might not have suffered as I have, and do at
-present, as I had occasion to be examined once, and my
-doctor told me I had been neglected at my confinement.
-Oh, I do feel sometimes, if I could only tell
-some of the young girls things they ought to know,
-how much better some might be; but we have got such
-a class to deal with. The young girls who have babies,
-they only laugh at us if we say anything. I do feel one
-cannot be too careful about one’s thoughts and actions
-during pregnancy; therefore, if one has not enough to
-live on, and get necessary life comforts, it naturally
-tells on the child and mother’s life, as child-bearing is
-such a strain, especially when they come so close to
-one another. What can a woman do but worry, when
-she knows there is so little to live on. I hope you do
-not think ill of my husband through me complaining.
-He has given me all the money he earned, and I have
-done my best&mdash;at least, I think so. I have had to fare
-hard and work hard; I don’t know what the reward
-will be. &mdash;&mdash; is not like a town. There is nothing
-here but the pits for the boys, and the girls have to go
-away from home to earn a living.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I think if it had not been for the Women’s Guild I
-should have been in the asylum. It has helped me along.
-I was the first member made after the Committee was
-formed. I was secretary for over four years. Home
-duties were the cause of my resigning, but I never
-miss a meeting. I have only missed four times since I
-joined. I would not miss my Guild for anything but
-illness. I am pleased we are to have Moral Hygiene
-Classes. We are having a speaker on the subject a
-fortnight to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>I hope I have not taken too much of your valuable
-time in reading this. I am suffering to-day through
-my first being not properly attended to&mdash;at least, I
-think so; but that was because I had no means of
-paying a doctor, as they expect their fee, whether
-anything else is paid or not. I thank Lloyd George
-for maternity benefit, but I do wish the wife and mother
-could have been insured. Who works harder than us
-mothers? I often say we work twenty out of twenty-four
-hours very often. Some days I don’t sit down
-hardly to snatch a mouthful of food. There seems no
-time for women, but the men make time. If we did,
-we should have to be a day behind, and we don’t get
-much Sunday rest. I am forty-eight now, so I hope
-I’ll have no more.</p>
-
-<p class="situation">
-<i>Wages 17s. to 25s.; five children.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<a href="images/zill_t190a_h.jpg">
-<img src="images/zill_t190a.jpg" width="550" height="355" alt="" />
-</a>
-<div class="caption"><p>BRADFORD MUNICIPAL INFANT HOSPITAL.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>Reproduced by kind permission of the Bradford Health Committee.</i>)</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">METHOD OF INQUIRY</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The following questions, with a short letter, were sent
-to about 600 members who were, or had been, officials
-of the Women’s Co-operative Guild, of whose family
-histories nothing was previously known. The letter asked
-these members to bring out in their replies what they
-“have felt about the difficulty of taking care, the ignorance
-that has prevailed on the conditions of pregnancy,
-and how these conditions result in lack of health and
-energy, meaning that a woman cannot do justice to herself
-or give her best to her husband and children.”</p>
-
-<p>The questions asked were:</p>
-
-<p>1. How many children have you had?</p>
-
-<p>2. How soon after each other were they born?</p>
-
-<p>3. Did any die under five years old, and if so, at what
-ages and from what causes?</p>
-
-<p>4. Were any still-born, and if so how many?</p>
-
-<p>5. Have you had any miscarriages, and if so how
-many?</p>
-
-<p>Replies were received from 386 Guild members,
-covering 400 cases, a few of which were not those of
-members of the Guild.</p>
-
-<p>A second letter was sent later, asking for particulars
-of wages and the occupation of the husband. The
-wages given at the end of the letters represent as far
-as possible the actual amount received, not the rate of
-wages.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Of these letters, 160 are published. The remainder
-describe similar conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Out of the total number of the cases, at least two-thirds
-indicate conditions of maternity which are not
-normal and healthy.</p>
-
-
-<h3>OCCUPATIONS OF HUSBANDS</h3>
-
-
-<ul><li>Agricultural labourer.</li>
-<li>Asylum attendant.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Baker.</li>
-<li>Blacksmith.</li>
-<li>Boat-builder.</li>
-<li>Boiler-maker.</li>
-<li>Boot operative.</li>
-<li>Blast-furnace man.</li>
-<li>Brass finisher.</li>
-<li>Bricklayer.</li>
-<li>Brush finisher.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cabinet-maker.</li>
-<li>Carpenter and joiner.</li>
-<li>Carpet weaver.</li>
-<li>Cartwright.</li>
-<li>Carriage-maker.</li>
-<li>Chef.</li>
-<li>Civil servant.</li>
-<li>Clerk.</li>
-<li>Cloth puller.</li>
-<li>Coachman.</li>
-<li>Colliery workers:
-<ul><li> Banksman.</li>
-<li> Coal-tipper.</li>
-<li> Engineer.</li>
-<li> Joiner.</li>
-<li> Machine clerk.</li>
-<li> Miner.</li>
-<li> Official.</li></ul></li>
-
-<li>Cooper.</li>
-<li>Cotton-spinner.</li>
-<li>Cycle-maker.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Diamond worker.</li>
-<li>Dyeing and cleaning worker.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Electrician.</li>
-<li>Electro-plate worker.</li>
-<li>Engineer.</li>
-<li>Engineer’s fitter.</li>
-<li>Engine-fitter.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Foundry worker.</li>
-<li>Framework-knitter.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Gardener.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Insurance agent.</li>
-<li>Iron-miner.</li>
-<li>Iron-moulder.</li>
-<li>Iron worker.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Jewel-case maker.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>Labourer.</li>
-<li>Laundry manager.</li>
-<li>Leather worker.</li>
-<li>Lift-man.</li>
-<li>Lithographer.</li>
-<li>Loom-mender.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Machine-fitter.</li>
-<li>Motor mechanic.</li>
-<li>Municipal fireman.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Naval artificer.</li>
-<li>Naval schoolmaster.</li>
-<li>Naval seaman.</li>
-<li>Navvy.</li>
-<li>Nurseryman.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Painter.</li>
-<li>Paperhanger.</li>
-<li>Plasterer.</li>
-<li>Plumber.</li>
-<li>Plumber’s labourer.</li>
-<li>Policeman.</li>
-<li>Postal employé.</li>
-<li>Potter.</li>
-<li>Printer.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Quarryman.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Railway workers:
-<ul><li> Engine-driver.</li>
-<li> Porter.</li>
-<li> Signalman.</li>
-<li> Telegraph clerk.</li></ul></li>
-
-<li>Road foreman.</li>
-<li>Rope-maker.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sailor.</li>
-<li>Scientific instrument-maker.</li>
-<li>Screw-maker.</li>
-<li>Shaper.</li>
-<li>Sheet-metal worker.</li>
-<li>Shipwright.</li>
-<li>Shipyard-plater.</li>
-<li>Shop assistant.</li>
-<li>Shopkeeper.</li>
-<li>Silk worker.</li>
-<li>Silversmith.</li>
-<li>Stoker.</li>
-<li>Stonemason.</li>
-<li>Stonemason’s labourer.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tailor.</li>
-<li>Tape-sizer.</li>
-<li>Teacher.</li>
-<li>Telegraph labourer.</li>
-<li>Timberyard worker.</li>
-<li>Tin-box maker.</li>
-<li>Tinplate worker.</li>
-<li>Tool-maker.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Waggon-builder.</li>
-<li>Warehouseman.</li>
-<li>Watchmaker.</li>
-<li>Weaver.</li>
-<li>Whitesmith.</li>
-<li>Wood-cutting machinist.</li>
-<li>Wood-turner.</li></ul>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FIGURES BEARING ON INFANT MORTALITY</h2>
-
-
-<h3><i>Still-births and Miscarriages.</i></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>In collecting the letters, the object was not to obtain
-accurate statistics, but a general picture of the conditions
-of life during the period of maternity. It is,
-however, possible to give fairly accurate figures showing
-the proportions of the number of still-births, miscarriages,
-and deaths from pre-natal causes and injuries
-at birth, to the number of live births.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 400 cases, 26 were childless, and 26 did not
-give definite figures. The number of families to which
-the following figures refer is therefore 348.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Total number of live births, 1,396.</p>
-
-<p>Number of miscarriages, 218 (15·6 per 100 live
-births).</p>
-
-<p>Number of still-births, 83 (5·9 per 100 live births).</p>
-
-<p>Total of still-births and miscarriages, 301 (21·5 per
-100 live births).</p></div>
-
-<p>Of the 348 mothers, 148 (42·4 per cent.) had still-births
-or miscarriages. Twenty-two had both still-births
-and miscarriages, 37 had still-births, 89 had
-miscarriages. Of the 111 women who had miscarriages
-(including 22 who had still-births <span class="lock">also)&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-2 women had 10 miscarriages each.<br />
-1 woman had 8 miscarriages.<br />
-1 woman had 7 miscarriages.<br />
-3 women had 6 miscarriages each.<br />
-2 women had 5 miscarriages each.<br />
-6 women had 4 miscarriages each.<br />
-9 women had 3 miscarriages each.<br />
-17 women had 2 miscarriages each.<br />
-70 women had 1 miscarriage each.
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>Of the 52 women who had still-births (including 22
-who had miscarriages <span class="lock">also)&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-1 woman had 5 still-births.<br />
-1 woman had 4 still-births.<br />
-3 women had 3 still-births each.<br />
-9 women had 2 still-births each.<br />
-45 women had 1 still-birth each.
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h3><i>Infant Deaths.</i></h3>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Total number of live births, 1,396.</p>
-
-<p>Total number of deaths under 1 year, 122 (8·7
-per 100 live births).</p></div>
-
-<p>Of the 122 deaths, 26 took place in the first week of
-life, 12 between the first week and first month, and 23
-later, owing to ante-natal causes or injury at birth.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, 50 per cent. of the deaths occurred either within
-the first month or from ante-natal or natal causes after
-the first month.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 348 mothers, 86 (24·7 per cent.) lost children
-in the first year of life.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOARD MEMORANDUM<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">MATERNITY AND CHILD WELFARE</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A complete scheme would comprise the following
-elements, each of which will, in this connection, be
-organised in its direct bearing on infantile health:</p>
-
-<p>1. Arrangements for the local supervision of Midwives.</p>
-
-<p>2. Arrangements <span class="lock">for&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<ul><li><i>Ante-Natal.</i>
-<ul><li>(1) An ante-natal clinic for expectant mothers.</li>
-<li>(2) The home visiting of expectant mothers.</li>
-<li>(3) A maternity hospital or beds at a hospital, in which complicated cases of pregnancy can receive treatment.</li>
-</ul></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-
-<p>3. Arrangements <span class="lock">for&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-
-<ul><li><i>Natal.</i>
-<ul><li>(1) Such assistance as may be needed to ensure the mother having skilled and prompt attendance during confinement at home.</li>
-<li>(2) The confinement of sick women, including women having contracted pelvis or suffering from any other condition involving danger to the mother or infant, at a hospital.</li>
-</ul></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>4. Arrangements <span class="lock">for&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<ul><li><i>Post-Natal.</i>
-<ul><li>(1) The treatment in a hospital of complications arising after parturition, whether in the mother or in the infant.</li>
-<li>(2) The provision of systematic advice and treatment for infants at a baby clinic or infant dispensary.</li>
-<li>(3) The continuance of these clinics and dispensaries, so as to be available for children up to the age when they are entered on a school register&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the register of a public elementary school, nursery school, crèche, day nursery, school for mothers or other school.</li>
-<li>(4) The systematic home visitation of infants and of children not on a school register as above defined.</li>
-</ul></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="smcap">Local Government Board, Whitehall, S.W</span>.<br />
-
-<i>July, 1914.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">SUMMARY OF
-THE NOTIFICATION OF BIRTHS
-(EXTENSION) ACT, 1915</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The main provisions of the Act having reference to
-England and Wales are:</p>
-
-<p>1. That the notification of births and still-births is
-made compulsory in all cases.</p>
-
-<p>2. That the powers of Sanitary Authorities for dealing
-with maternity and infancy are extended to County
-Councils.</p>
-
-<p>3. That a Committee or Committees may be set up
-for exercising these powers, which must include women
-and may include other than members of the Authority.</p>
-
-<p>The clause referring to this committee reads as follows:
-“Any such powers may be exercised in such
-manner as the Authority direct by a committee or committees,
-which shall include women, and may comprise,
-if it is thought fit, persons who are not members of the
-Authority. Any such committee may be empowered
-by the Authority by which it is appointed to incur expenses
-up to a limit for the time being fixed by the
-Authority, and, if so empowered, shall report any expenditure
-by them to the Authority in such manner and
-at such times as the Authority may direct. A committee
-appointed for the purposes of this section shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-hold office for such period, not exceeding three years, as
-the Authority by which it is appointed may determine.”</p>
-
-<p>As regards Scotland and Ireland, the powers conferred
-are considerably larger, as the Local Authority
-“within the meaning of the principal Act may make
-such arrangements as they think fit, and as may be
-sanctioned by the Local Government Board for Scotland
-(or Ireland), for attending to the health of expectant
-mothers and nursing mothers, and of children
-under five years of age within the meaning of Section 7
-of the Education (Scotland) Act, 1908.”</p>
-
-<p>The clause as regards administration by committees
-including women applies also to Scotland and Ireland.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">NOTIFICATION OF BIRTHS (EXTENSION) ACT, 1915</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="letterhead">
-<span class="smcap">Local Government Board,<br />
-Whitehall, S.W.</span><br />
-<i>July 29, 1915.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,</p>
-
-<p>I am directed by the Local Government Board
-to bring to the notice of the Council the provisions of
-the Notification of Births (Extension) Act, 1915, which
-has recently been passed.</p>
-
-<p>The objects of this Act are to make universal throughout
-the country the system of the Notification of Births
-Act, 1907, under which early information concerning all
-births is required to be given to the medical officer of
-health, and also to enable local authorities to make
-arrangements for the care of mothers, including expectant
-mothers, and young children.</p>
-
-<p>At a time like the present the urgent need for taking
-all possible steps to secure the health of mothers and
-children and to diminish ante-natal and post-natal infant
-mortality is obvious, and the Board are confident that
-they can rely upon local authorities making the fullest
-use of the powers conferred on them.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Notification of Births Act, 1907, to extend to every
-District.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The Act provides that on and after the first of September
-next the Notification of Births Act, 1907, described
-as the principal Act, shall extend to and take
-effect in every area in which it is not already in force.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the case of a county district the principal Act will
-come into operation as if it had been adopted by the
-Council of the urban or rural district.</p>
-
-<p>The principal Act provides that in the case of every
-child born within the district it is the duty of the father
-of the child, if he is actually residing in the house where
-the birth takes place at the time of its occurrence, and
-of any person in attendance upon the mother at the
-time of, or within six hours after, the birth, to give
-notice in writing of the birth to the medical officer of
-health of the district. This notice must be given in the
-case of every child which has issued forth from its mother
-after the expiration of the twenty-eighth week of pregnancy
-whether alive or dead.</p>
-
-<p>The notice is to be given by prepaid letter or postcard
-addressed to the medical officer of health, giving the
-necessary information of the birth within thirty-six
-hours after the birth, or by delivering a written notice
-of the birth at the office or residence of the medical officer
-within the same time. The local authority is required
-to supply without charge addressed and stamped postcards
-containing the form of notice to any medical
-practitioner or midwife residing or practising in their
-area who applies for the same.</p>
-
-<p>The Act also provides for penalties for failure to
-notify a birth in accordance with the Act.</p>
-
-<p>It will be the duty of every local authority in whose
-area the principal Act comes into force by virtue of the
-new Act to bring the provisions of the principal Act
-to the attention of all medical practitioners and midwives
-practising in the area [Section 1 (3)].</p>
-
-<p>The Board wish especially to call attention to Section
-1 (2) of the new Act, under which the medical officer
-of a county district, for which the principal Act had
-not previously been adopted, will be required to send<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-duplicates of any notices of birth he receives to the
-county medical officer of health as soon as may be after
-they are received. The early receipt of these duplicate
-notices is important, particularly in facilitating the
-inspection of midwives, and the Board trust that arrangements
-will be made under which the duplicates
-are as a matter of routine immediately transmitted to
-the county medical officer.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Administrative Arrangements under the Act.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Section 2 of the Act provides that for the purpose of
-following up the information obtained under the powers
-of the principal Act and for facilitating arrangements
-for the care of expectant mothers, nursing mothers and
-young children, all the powers of the Public Health Acts
-may be exercised. These powers will be available not
-only to all sanitary authorities, but also to all County
-Councils other than the London County Council. In
-London the powers of the Public Health (London) Act,
-1891, will be available for work undertaken in regard
-to the care of mothers and young children by Metropolitan
-Borough Councils.</p>
-
-<p>It will be seen, therefore, that the Act definitely contemplates
-that the powers of sanitary authorities will
-be used to promote the care of mothers and young
-children.</p>
-
-<p>The Board are anxious to insist on the importance of
-linking up this work with the other medical and sanitary
-services provided by local authorities under the Public
-Health and other Acts. They have already in their
-circular letter of the 30th July, 1914, on the subject of
-Maternity and Infant Welfare, indicated generally the
-scope of the work which they consider should be
-undertaken, and an additional copy of that letter is
-enclosed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As indicated above, the Act contemplates that arrangements
-for attending to mothers and young children
-may be made either by County Councils or by sanitary
-authorities. The Board recognise that the organisation
-must vary to some extent with local conditions, and that
-a considerable degree of elasticity is necessary. They
-are, however, of opinion that it will generally be desirable
-to formulate comprehensive schemes for counties and
-county boroughs, although in some cases portions of
-the services may be undertaken by the larger District
-Councils with advantage. The councils of counties and
-county boroughs are the local supervising authorities
-under the Midwives Act, 1902, and they are also entrusted
-with the initiation and execution of schemes for
-the treatment of tuberculosis; if the organisation of a
-maternity and infant welfare scheme is also undertaken
-by them, it will be practicable to secure the unification
-of home visiting for a number of different purposes.</p>
-
-<p>In all cases, however, in which a general scheme is
-organised for the county, the work should be carried
-on in close co-operation with the sanitary authority,
-and any insanitary conditions found by health visitors
-should at once be reported to the sanitary authority.
-Although the Board consider that general schemes
-should be organised for the county as a whole, and that
-the County Council should, as a general rule, provide for
-health visiting, they are prepared, in suitable cases, to recognise
-the sanitary district as a proper area for a scheme.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Co-operation with Medical Practitioners and Voluntary
-Agencies.</i></h3>
-
-<p>In the development of general schemes the Board
-desire that the services of hospitals and other efficient
-voluntary agencies should be fully utilised. They are
-also anxious that the co-operation of medical practi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>tioners
-should be secured. The value of a Maternity
-Centre will be much increased by obtaining the co-operation
-of the medical practitioners in the area to be
-served by it, and in organising the arrangements it is
-desirable that they should be consulted.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>London.</i></h3>
-
-<p>In London the Act contemplates that schemes should
-be organised by the Metropolitan Borough Councils.
-Many of the services required can be provided by the
-various London hospitals and the numerous voluntary
-agencies now at work, and in some cases the chief need
-is to secure that such services are properly linked up
-with the work of the Borough Council. In other areas
-existing medical services will require supplementing and
-extending, and it will be for the Borough Councils to
-consider how this can best be done.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Grants in Aid of Local Expenditure.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The Government have agreed to provide, by means of
-annual grants to be distributed by the Board, one-half
-the cost of the whole or any part of schemes for maternity
-and child welfare approved by the Board. The regulations
-under which these grants will be paid, together
-with forms of application for grants, have already been
-distributed to local authorities. A further copy of the
-regulations is enclosed.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Interim Schemes.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Many local authorities have already prepared and submitted
-to the Board schemes for Maternity and Infant
-Welfare, embracing some or all of the items included
-in the Board’s memorandum of 30th July, 1914. The
-initiation of a complete scheme, however, involves time,
-and the Board do not desire that work should be delayed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-until a complete scheme can be formulated. They trust
-that those local authorities who have not already taken
-steps in this matter will do so before the onset of the
-hot weather, which brings with it special dangers to
-infants and children. The Board are of opinion that the
-local authority should in the first instance carefully
-consider whether the existing arrangements for home
-visitation are adequate. After the provision of health
-visitors the next step should be to arrange in populous
-centres for a Maternity Centre at which medical advice
-and treatment may be provided for mothers, including
-expectant mothers, and for children, whether ailing or
-not. Arrangements should also be made for defraying
-in necessitous cases the cost of providing the services of
-a midwife and of a doctor. The Board will be prepared
-to sanction such provision under Section 133 of the
-Public Health Act, 1875.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Present Need for Maternity and Infant Welfare Work.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The importance of conserving the infant life of the
-population makes it desirable that steps should be taken
-in the directions indicated even at the present time
-when strict economy is required in the expenditure both
-of public bodies and of private individuals. It is not,
-however, intended that any large outlay should be
-involved in the provision of the services mentioned. No
-capital expenditure is needed, and the maintenance
-expenditure need not be heavy. The health visitors
-and many of the doctors required to work such a scheme
-will be women, and no labour need be employed which is
-required for the more direct purposes of the war.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Committees.</i></h3>
-
-<p>The Act provides that the powers of a local authority
-may be exercised in such manner as the authority direct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-by a committee or committees, which shall include
-women, and may comprise, if it is thought fit, persons
-who are not members of the authority.</p>
-
-<p>In any such committee it will be desirable to include
-working women, who might with advantage be representative
-of women’s organisations. Where no local
-women’s organisation exists, some central organisation
-might possibly assist by suggesting suitable women.</p>
-
-<p>The Board consider that on any committee appointed
-for the purposes of the Act there should be a majority
-of direct representatives of the Council.</p>
-
-<p class="sig">
-I am, Sir,<br />
-Your obedient Servant,<br />
-H. C. MONRO,<br />
-<i>Secretary</i>.
-</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ADMINISTRATIVE POWERS OF LOCAL AUTHORITIES</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The powers of County Councils<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> and Sanitary Authorities&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
-County Borough and Borough Councils, Urban
-and Rural District Councils&mdash;for maternity and infancy
-work are derived from the following Acts:</p>
-
-<p>
-1. Public Health Acts, 1875&ndash;1907.<br />
-2. Midwives Act, 1902.<br />
-3. Notification of Births Acts, 1907&ndash;1915.<a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a><br />
-4. The Milk and Dairies (Consolidation) Act, 1915. (This Act will not come into force till after the war.)<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>The following Maternity and Infancy work (with the
-exception of the supervision of midwives) may be carried
-out by special Maternity Sub-Committees (which must
-include women) of the above <span class="lock">authorities:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<h3 title="Notification of Births."><i>Notification of Births.</i><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a></h3>
-
-<p>Every birth has to be notified in every area to the
-Medical Officer of Health for that area by the father of
-the child or the medical practitioner or midwife within
-thirty-six hours of the birth.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Women Sanitary Inspectors and Health Visitors.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Properly trained and qualified women may be appointed
-to visit the homes and give advice on the care of
-mothers and infants.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-<h3><i>Maternity Centres.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Skilled advice and minor treatment for the preservation
-of health may be given at Maternity Centres to
-expectant and nursing mothers and children up to school
-age.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Supervision of Midwives.</i></h3>
-
-<p>County Councils and County Borough Councils alone
-carry out the supervision of midwives, through the
-Medical Officer of Health, who almost invariably has
-under him a fully qualified woman.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Professional Attendance at Confinements.</i></h3>
-
-<p>A doctor or midwife may be provided to attend necessitous
-cases. The fee of a doctor called in under the
-Midwives Act may be paid.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Maternity Hospitals for Complicated Cases and Infant
-Hospitals.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Hospitals may be maintained or beds paid for in
-existing hospitals or wards.</p>
-
-
-<h3><i>Milk Depots.</i></h3>
-
-<p>After the war, depots may be set up by Sanitary
-Authorities (only) for the sale of milk for infants at cost
-price. (The Government grant is not available for these
-depots.)</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Government Grants.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Government grants for maternity and child welfare
-work are now made, and half the cost of the whole or
-any part of schemes, approved by the Local Government
-Board, is now paid.</p>
-
-<p>A sum of £50,000 has been voted this year (1915) for
-England and Wales, and no doubt corresponding sums
-will be available for Scotland and Ireland.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">NATIONAL SCHEME<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">PROPOSED BY THE WOMEN’S CO-OPERATIVE GUILD</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To insure effective care of Maternity and Infancy, it
-would be necessary to combine the administration of
-benefits under the Insurance Act with the services
-organised by the Public Health Authority.</p>
-
-<p><i>Maternity and Pregnancy Sickness Benefits.</i>&mdash;These
-should be taken out of the Insurance Act, extended to
-all women (under the income-tax limit), and increased
-in amount. In addition to the 30s. maternity benefit,
-every mother should receive £3 10s. in weekly payments
-of 10s. for three weeks before and four weeks after confinement
-(or for longer periods if she prefers smaller
-weekly payments). During pregnancy she should be
-entitled to benefit varying according to her condition,
-from 2s. 6d. to 7s. 6d. a week, if her health requires it,
-subject to the recommendation of a maternity centre or
-a doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Public Health Authorities should be empowered to
-administer these benefits through women health officers
-and maternity centres.</p>
-
-<p><i>Notification of Births.</i>&mdash;Notification of births and
-still-births is now compulsory throughout the country,
-and in order to make it effective, an adequate number
-of Health Visitors should be appointed in every area.</p>
-
-<p><i>Women Health Officers.</i>&mdash;The status of Health Visitors
-should be raised, their salaries being increased, and three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-qualifications being required&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, midwifery, sanitary,
-and nursing certificates.</p>
-
-<p><i>Midwifery and Nursing.</i>&mdash;These services should be
-organised by the Public Health Authorities, which
-already supervise midwives. Longer training for midwives
-should be required, and an adequate salary
-secured to them by the Public Health Authorities. A
-charge of 10s. might be made to mothers employing
-them, to be remitted if the circumstances require it.
-This is the only method of meeting the present shortage
-of midwives, which is particularly serious in rural districts.
-It is also the only way of securing skilled attention
-for the women at a charge within their reach, and at the
-same time of securing adequate payment for midwives.
-Municipal midwives could be employed with a doctor.</p>
-
-<p>The administration of the Treasury grant for nursing
-should also be placed under the Public Health Authority.</p>
-
-<p><i>Maternity and Infant Centres.</i>&mdash;These centres should
-be places where expectant and nursing mothers and
-children up to school age can come for advice and treatment,
-so that they may be kept well and made well.
-Their organisation will depend on local circumstances,
-but it will be found desirable in most cases to open
-several centres, so that they may be near the people’s
-homes and serve the different classes of women in different
-localities.</p>
-
-<p>Advice to expectant mothers might be given either
-at local maternity centres or at centres at hospitals.</p>
-
-<p>It is important that treatment of a simple nature
-should be given with advice at maternity centres.
-Nourishment being often the treatment mothers most
-need, provision should be made for dinners for expectant
-and nursing mothers when ordered by the doctor.
-Simple talks on personal hygiene, infants’ clothing, etc.,
-should be arranged, and saving-clubs organised.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>Medical Service.</i>&mdash;It is desirable to appoint women
-doctors as municipal officers of the centres, but local
-practitioners may in some cases be advantageously
-worked into a municipal scheme. The provision of a
-doctor called in under the Midwives Act should be part
-of the scheme.</p>
-
-<p><i>Maternity Hospitals or Beds.</i>&mdash;The dearth of such hospitals
-for abnormal cases is calamitous. The need for
-their existence is also pressing from the point of view
-of research, and they could be used as training schools
-for doctors and midwives.</p>
-
-<p><i>Maternity Homes.</i>&mdash;These are required for normal
-cases. The few voluntary homes in existence in England
-are most valuable, and the experience of New
-Zealand shows that municipal homes could be made
-self-supporting. Private doctors might attend their
-patients in the homes.</p>
-
-<p><i>Milk Depots.</i>&mdash;The difficulties of securing pure milk
-make it desirable to establish municipal depots for the
-supply of milk to expectant and nursing mothers and
-children. While every precaution should be taken not
-to undermine the practice of breast-feeding, there are
-cases where specially prescribed bottles would be useful.</p>
-
-<p><i>Household Helps.</i>&mdash;The need for help in the home
-before, at, and after confinement is urgent, but in order
-to prevent untrained women doing midwifery work,
-careful supervision and an organised service under the
-public health authority are necessary. The experiments
-made by relief committees show the value of such a
-service.</p>
-
-<p><i>Women as Councillors.</i>&mdash;Working women should be
-elected on to councils and serve on public health committees.</p>
-
-<p><i>Public Health Maternity Sub-Committees.</i>&mdash;These committees
-should be largely composed of representatives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-of the women concerned. Such representation should
-be secured whenever possible through the following
-industrial women’s organisations: the Women’s Co-operative
-Guild, Women’s Trade Unions, the Women’s
-Labour League, and the Railway Women’s Guild.</p>
-
-<p>Any parts of this scheme not at first taken over by
-Public Health Committees&mdash;<i>e.g.</i>, Dinners, Household
-Helps&mdash;might be organised experimentally by the sub-committees
-with a view to ultimate inclusion in a
-municipal scheme.</p>
-
-<p><i>Ministry of Health.</i>&mdash;In the future it will probably be
-advantageous to establish a Ministry of Health, with a
-Maternity and Infant Life Department, partly staffed
-by women.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is essential that Government departments and
-Public Health Committees should be in constant communication
-with organised working-women, and be
-ready to welcome their co-operation, so that their needs
-and wishes may be freely consulted. It is by a partnership
-between the women who are themselves concerned,
-the medical profession, and the State that the best
-results of democratic government can be secured for the
-mothers and infants of the country.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>To be obtained from the Women’s Co-operative Guild,
-28, Church Row, Hampstead, London, N.W.:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>The National Care of Maternity</i> (leaflets for town and country),
-½d. each, or 3s. a hundred.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hints to Expectant Mothers</i>, by Dr. J. W. Ballantyne, price 1d.,
-or 6s. a hundred.</p>
-
-<p><i>Household Helps</i>, ½d. each, or 3s. a hundred.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="p2 center small">BILLING AND SONS, LTD., PRINTERS, GUILDFORD, ENGLAND</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="footnotes chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> <i>I.e.</i>, an enforced holiday.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> The Hearts of Oak gives a benefit of 30s. at child-birth.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> See summary of the Notification of Births (Extension) Act,
-1915, on p. <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</p></div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Transcriber's Note</h2>
-
-
-<p>The following apparent errors have been corrected:</p>
-
-<ul><li>p. 27 "condiditions" changed to "conditions"</li>
-
-<li>p. 163 "on stairs" changed to "on stairs,"</li>
-
-<li>p. 185 "nine children" changed to "nine children."</li>
-
-<li>p. 197 "infan s" changed to "infants"</li>
-
-<li>p. 210 "etc," changed to "etc.,"</li></ul>
-
-
-
-<p>Punctuation in the list of Occupations of Husbands has been regularised.</p>
-
-<p>On pages 194 and 195, dittos have been replaced with the relevant words.</p>
-
-
-<p>The following are used inconsistently in the text:</p>
-
-<ul><li>afterbirth and after-birth</li>
-
-<li>afterpain and after-pain</li>
-
-<li>childbearing and child-bearing</li>
-
-<li>childbirth and child-birth</li></ul>
-
-
-<p>Illustrations have been moved and may not match the locations given in the List of Illustrations and Facsimiles.</p>
-
-
-<p>The following possible error has been left as printed:</p>
-
-<ul><li>p. 2 husband’s trades</li></ul>
-
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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