Perhaps marking the first British Type-In (held in London with Rob Bowker) and the return to England of Richard Polt, the BBC has broadcast a typewriter story.
Titled "The Arrival of Women in the Office", a piece based on an edited transcript of the program, broadcast on Thursday (appropriately, the day of the first London Type-in) appeared on BBC Magazine's website here.
The typewriter story was written by Lucy Kellaway, an author and Financial Times columnist. It was part of Kellaway's History of Office Life series for Radio 4. Here it is:
The typewriter is almost obsolete in the modern office. But it played a
crucial role in women's arrival in the workplace.
In 1887, Rudyard Kipling met one of the new breed of typewriting girls
while visiting San Francisco.
They aroused in him a mixture of fear and fascination, insisting that their
work was enjoyable and their "natural fate" - that was until Kipling questioned
further.
"Well, and after?" said I. "What happens?"
"We work for our bread."
"Till you die?"
"Ye-es, unless," said the partner in the firm audaciously, "sometimes we
marry our employers - at least that's what the newspapers say."
The hand banged on half a dozen of the keys of the machine at once. "Yes, I
don't care. I hate it, I hate it, I hate it!"
In offices today almost all the most boring tasks are done by women. At the
photocopier, at the filing cabinet (or its digital equivalent) and on the
reception desk - it's females only. So much so that when a few years ago I came
across my first male PA I was almost as shocked as Kipling.
This feminisation of office work happened incredibly fast. Until the late
19th Century there were no women in offices at all. In 1870, there were barely a
thousand of them. By 1911 there were 125,000 and by 1961 there were 1.8 million,
in 2001 there were 2.5 million female clerks.
But how did it all begin?
A photograph taken in 1899 shows a young woman sitting on a desk, legs
crossed with one foot on her chair. She's wearing a nice pair of shoes and
there's a bike leaning against her desk. On the desk a half-eaten apple, a
glass, a desk calendar, some files and ... a Remington Standard 2
typewriter.
It's a pretty racy picture for the time - you might even be able to see a
hint of her upper shin, never mind ankle.
But what it does show is a new type of working woman with the twin
instruments of emancipation - the bicycle and, more importantly, the
typewriter.
As the American Journal noted in 1898: "No expert can manage either the
typewriter or the bicycle while she is held in a close-fitting cage of whalebone
and steel."
The typewriter girl, like the typewriter itself, was an American
export.
One photo shows the first Remington typewriter made in 1873. The second
image is of a secretary modelling the earliest typewriter in about 1950.
The first machines with the Qwerty keyboard were triumphantly brought on to
the market by the US gun-maker E. Remington and Sons in 1873 [actually it was 1874]. But far from being
popular they were a total flop and probably would have stayed that way, had not
some bright spark in the marketing department had the great idea of flogging
them to women - to the daughters of middle-class businessmen.
"The typewriter is especially adapted to feminine fingers. They seem to be
made for typewriting. The typewriting involves no hard labour and no more skill
than playing the piano," wrote John Harrison, in his 1888 Manual of the
Typewriter.
In the stores at the Museum of London are some early typewriters, including
a very early Hammond model, which looks like a mahogany toilet seat.
"The major brand was the Remington," says Alex Werner, head of collections
at the museum.
"They produced beautiful adverts with attractive women typing away."
The keys were made for dainty figures. My fingers, clad in plastic gloves,
are too clumsy.
The typical typist was a liberated woman. Novelists and playwrights -
George Gissing and J.M. Barrie - were fascinated by her, creating heroines who
wore no-nonsense clothes, rode a bicycle, took up smoking and hung out with
anarchists in the English countryside.
George Gissing, left, and J.M.Barrie from the turn of the 20th
century. The two writers were inspired by typical typists, who
they saw as liberated women, often incorporating them into their work as
heroines.
A real life version of these pioneers was Janet Hogarth [better known by her married name, as Janet Elizabeth Courtney], who became the
Bank of England's first ever female clerk in 1893.
She was a high flier in her day. She had achieved first-class honours in
philosophy from Oxford and was a skilled linguist. But her job was a boring
one.
"It was monotonous, essentially dealing with cancelling bank notes, sorting
them and crossing them off in the ledgers," says John Keyworth, curator of the
Bank of England's museum.
Women were cheaper than men, and took over the jobs that were previously
filled by young boys, who would have been supervised by an older man because it
was so mindbendingly boring.
"They gave her six months to learn the job," adds Keyworth. "She mastered
it in a very short time."
Hogarth writes of it in her autobiography. "It was almost unbelievably
soothing to sit in the quiet upper room with nothing to do but lay out banknotes
in patterns like patience cards," she wrote.
"Learning all about the little marks on them, crossing them up in piles
like card houses, sorting them in sixties and finally entering their numbers in
beautiful ledgers made of the very best paper, as if intended to last out all
ages."
In the late 19th Century it was inconceivable to have men working alongside
typewriter girls, for fear of damage to their morals. Precisely how the damage
was meant to occur, no-one was quite clear, but it was thought best to keep the
sexes entirely separate.
So men and women had different entrances, different working hours,
different dining rooms and often worked behind screens or in attics so that no
man could see them.
"These intrepid typewriter pounders ...
should fill in their spare time
washing out
the offices and dusting same, which you
will no doubt agree is more
suited to their sex." -
Liverpool Echo, 1911
An autobiography by a male employee at the Bank of England recalls how
ridiculous it all was.
"The streets it was held were safe enough, but once she the woman clerk
entered this forbidding fortress every imaginable horror was predicted," wrote
the author.
But that wasn't all. So as to avoid the danger of typewriter girls on the
loose, many employers refused to let them out during their lunch break. Women at
the Post Office were not allowed a midday breath of fresh air until 1911 - and
that was only after a kicking up a huge row and making personal appeals to the
postmaster general.
The answer - predictably - was that they weren't happy at all. Part of the
hostility was fair enough. The women were an endless source of cheap competition. A
particularly patronising piece was published in the Liverpool Echo in
1911:
"These intrepid typewriter pounders, instead of being allowed to gloat over
love novels or do fancy crocheting during the time they are not 'pounding',
should fill in their spare time washing out the offices and dusting same, which
you will no doubt agree is more suited to their sex and maybe would give them a
little practice and insight into the work they will be called up to do should
they so far demean themselves as to marry one of the poor male clerks whose
living they are doing their utmost to take out of his hands at the present
time."
But actually the arrival of women in the office wasn't altogether bad for
men. If they had working daughters - as many did - their households were better
off. And as women were given the most tedious things to do, men's chances of
promotion were higher. And then, of course, the women were easy on the eye and
possible candidates for future wives and mistresses.
Meanwhile, at the Bank of England, the chief accountant, a Mr Stuchbury,
was hard at work with his stopwatch calculating whether employing women was such
a good idea after all.
He studied a question that has always interested me - are women more
conscientious than men. His answer was much as I'd figured out for myself -
yes.
He found that 37 women had counted as many notes as 47 men, and with fewer
mistakes. But he also noted that women were off sick more often than boys (which
is still pretty much the case).
Stuchbury thought this was a clincher, but the secretary managed to head
him off, pointing out that long-term, women worked out a lot cheaper. There was,
he argued, "a considerable future saving of expense … when it is borne in mind
that women clerks would not attain higher pay than £85 against £300 earned by
all other clerks."
In other words, the great thing about women was that you didn't have to
promote them. The glass ceiling was in evidence (only then it was set at roughly
ankle height) from the very start.
"The girls show a zest and zeal
which no boy thinks of emulating"
- Janet Hogarth
There was another good thing. Thanks to the marriage bar (which,
extraordinarily, stayed in place until the 1960s), the supply of women was
constantly replenished - as they married and left, new girls took their
place.
But what of the women who didn't get married? Well they got promoted - but
only a little. It was their job to look after the younger typists.
This was the plight of Hogarth. She wrote with some bitterness: "The girls
show a zeal and zest which no boy thinks of emulating. But the trouble comes
when they grow to be middle-aged women and are still kept at work only fit for
beginners. They have become mere machines."
Hogarth left the bank in 1905 for a job as principal of Cheltenham College
- possibly more fitting to a woman of her intelligence.
It would be a while before a woman had a crack at the interesting stuff at
the Bank of England.
More than 100 years later, we've had four women on the monetary policy
committee, though still no female governor.
Other BBC Magazine stories about typewriters:
2 comments:
It's true - in my workplace, an office of a worldwide construction management company - women continue to be the primary occupants of the traditionally feminine positions - receptionist and word processors. But the copy center contains more men that women.
That is a curious photo in the BBC Magazine article, the one with women and typewriters squeezed into both sides of a long table. The crowding would make it impossible to perform real work. That they still have their coats on suggests that the ladies have responded to a "help wanted" ad, and their typing skills are being tested. I wonder who got the job of setting up all of those typewriters, and then lugging the heavy machines back to their homes.
Interesting stuff. I suppose by the time today's generation of women typists discovered the PC, they'd had enough of correction fluid and carbon paper and seized the new tech without once looking back. And maybe that explains the predominance of male typewriter enthusiast, at least in my experience.
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