Cricket Witness No 4 - Women at the WIcket
93 Workplace and Working-Class Women’s Cricket 31 Edward Cadbury, Experiments in Industrial Organisation (London, 1912), 253-4; Benjamin Rowntree, The Way to Industrial Peace and the Problem of Unemployment (London 1914), 147. 32 Cadbury Brothers, The Factory and Recreation (Birmingham, 1925), 19-22; CWM (May 1916), 145; (September 1921), 21; (July 1930), 611. 33 BWM , (September 1904), 417; (May 1906), 227; (November 1933), 369; Huntley and Palmer’s, Recreation Club Programme ; Peek Frean, Minute Book (27 April 1933); The New Civilian (April-July 1926). 34 Rowntree’s, Comparison of men and women’s salaries (Borthwick Institute, 1926); Cadbury Brothers, Bournville Works and its Institutions (Birmingham, 1939), 3. 35 New Civilian (Civil Service staff magazine) (April-July 1926); Rodney Lowe, The Official History of the British Civil Service (Oxford, 2011), 72-5. 36 WCA, Report 1934, 9, 25; Women’s Cricket (August 1938), 66; BWM (August 1933), 259. 37 Bishop, Bats, Balls and Biscuits , 112-4; Threlfall-Sykes, ‘History of Women’s Cricket’, 293-4,332-334, 423-425. 38 Ourselves (April 1933), 4; Women’s Cricket (June 1935), 24; (July 1937), 70; (July 1939), 54. 39 Beddoe, Back to Home , 51-3; Catriona Parratt, ‘“The making of a healthy and happy home”: recreation, education and the production of working-class womanhood at Rowntree Cocoa Works, York, ca. 1898-1914’, in Hill and Williams, Sport and Identity , 62-78; CWM (June, 1925) 31. 40 Charles Dellheim, ‘The Creation of a Company Culture: Cadbury’s 1861-1931’, American Historical Review 91:1 (1987), 16. 41 Cadbury, Experiments , xvii-xix, 27; Benjamin Rowntree, The Human Factor in Business (London, 1921), 79. 42 Woollacott, Munitions Workers , 71-4; Beatrice Webb, Health of Working Girls (London, 1917), 97-101. 43 Cadbury Brothers, Industrial Record 1919-1939 (London, n.d.), 64; Dellheim, ‘Company Culture: Cadbury’s’, 34. 44 Huntley and Palmer’s, Our Work , 4; The History of Huntley and Palmer’s Limited (Reading, 1927); My Town and My Job (Museum of English Rural Life, Reading, 1946), 11-13; CWM (July 1937), 1. 45 McKibbin, Classes and Cultures , 142-7. 46 Cadbury Brothers, Bournville 1926: Work and Play (Birmingham, 1926), 4, 32; BWM (March 1912), 94; (November 1937), 383. 47 Quoted in Woollacott, Munitions Workers , 160; Zweiniger-Bargielowska, Managing the Body , 169-175. 48 CWM (March 1902), 2. 49 Lowe, British Civil Service , 72; Rowntree’s, Labour Manager’s Report (1924), 131. 50 Dellheim, ‘Company Culture: Cadbury’s’, 39-41; Robert Fitzgerald, Rowntree and the Marketing Revolution 1862-1969 (Cambridge, 1995), 273; Corley, Quaker Enterprise , 215; Glucksmann, Women Assemble , 96-7. 51 Williams, History of Women’s Sport , 12; Stephen Jones, Sport, Politics, and the Working Class: Organised Labour and Sport in Interwar Britain (Manchester, 1988), 75-87. 52 CWS, Ourselves (April 1931), 17; (June 1931), 11; (August 1932), 34; (August 1936), 358. 53 Nicole Robertson, ‘“A Union of Forces Marching in the Same Direction”? The relationship between the Co-operative and Labour parties, 1918-1939’, in Matthew Worley (ed.), The Foundations of the British Labour Party (Surrey, 2009), 216-7; Jones, Organised Labour and Sport , 109; CWS, Ourselves (February 1929), 20; (April 1930), 34; (February 1931), 29; (February 1932), 31. 54 CWS, Ourselves (July 1932), 1; (January 1935), 19; (July 1937), 290-291. 55 Ibid , (October 1931), 40; (March 1934), 12; (January 1936), 14; (July 1937), 290.
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