Let’s take look more closely at where those 80,000-odd people were employed and who they were. In particular, looking at how many of them were women. Starting with hourly-paid workers.
Employment in the brewing industry in 1907 | ||||
Wage-earners. Average No. and age class. | ||||
Males. | Females | |||
Trades. | Under 18. | Over 18. | Under 18. | Over 18. |
Brewing & Malting | 4,148 | 63,069 | 175 | 1,604 |
Spirit Distilling | 125 | 5,378 | 5 | 124 |
Spirit Compounding, Rectifying, &c | 23 | 633 | 7 | 27 |
Bottling | 3,115 | 9,793 | 697 | 3,148 |
Aerated Waters, British Wines, &C | 3,063 | 16,354 | 449 | 4,804 |
10,474 | 95,227 | 1,333 | 9,707 | |
Source: | ||||
Brewers' Almanack 1915, page 222. |
In brewing, male employees vastly outnumbered women. Only about 2.5% were women. Most of those would have worked in bottling. While in specialist bottlers, around 30% of the hourly-paid workers were women. Though there would have been the occasional female brewer amongst the thousands of publican brewers.
Let’s have a look now at salaried staff. Which would mostly be the office staff.
Employment in the brewing industry in 1907 | ||||
Salaried persons. Average No. and age class. | ||||
Males. | Females. | |||
Trades. | Under 18. | Over 18. | Under 18. | Over 18 |
Brewing & Malting | 978 | 14,786 | 14 | 195 |
Spirit Distilling | 60 | 812 | 2 | 19 |
Spirit Compounding, Rectifying, &c | 23 | 412 | 4 | 6 |
Bottling | 278 | 2,989 | 20 | 225 |
Aerated Waters, British Wines, &C | 261 | 3,399 | 30 | 297 |
1,600 | 22,398 | 70 | 742 | |
Source: | ||||
Brewers' Almanack 1915, page 222. |
The proportion of women in salaried positions was even lower. Just 1.3%. Lumping both categories together, it averaged out to only about half a woman per brewery.
The whole economic structure was different then. It was quite common for women to stop working on marriage. It was also a status symbol not to need to work.
ReplyDeleteTwo of my maternal grandparents worked when the marriage bar was still in place.
DeleteOscar
I'm curious what work, specifically, women were doing. In some industries there would be tasks that required a special level of concentration or fine motor skills which men were considered too crude to perform. I'd be curious if there was something in brewing where women were preferred.
ReplyDelete