Choosing to Challenge

The theme of International Women’s Day 2021 is #ChooseToChallenge so today we are highlighting the stories of women we have researched and written about during the course of our Born in Birmingham project over the last couple of years. Some of them were well-known in their field or still remembered here in Birmingham; others have been long forgotten or only remembered by their families. But all of them in their own way chose to challenge the role of women and what may have been expected from them, and in so doing helped pave the way for those who followed in their footsteps.

We’ve featured several women from the medical professions which is not surprising given part of our research has been into maternity services in Birmingham during the 1914-1924 period. These included the stories of two contrasting midwives : Hannah Armishaw, an old school midwife with little or no formal training who was allowed to join the new Central Register of Midwives in 1904 on the basis of, what we would now call, her accredited prior learning having been in practice for a number of years; and Lizzie Keeping, one of the new breed of qualified midwives who had qualifications in nursing and midwifery and moved to Birmingham to further a career. She lived in Balsall Heath for many years with Claire Bement, an Inspector of midwives. Just good friends and colleagues? Or were they choosing to challenge in other ways too?

Dame Hilda Lloyd is remembered for her pioneering work in the field of obstetrics, including establishing Birmingham’s first emergency obstetrical service: the flying squad. Much of her career has been well-documented as she climbed the medical ladder; becoming a lecturer in 1934, professor in 1944 (the first female to achieve a professorship at UoB), and chair of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in 1946. She received  national recognition in 1949 when she was elected as the first female President of a Royal Medical College at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) serving a three year term.  In 1951 she was knighted Dame of the British Empire ‘for her services to her Speciality, College and her University’. Our blog covers some of her lesser known activities in promoting family planning services against much opposition so definitely choosing to challenge!

Several of our volunteer researchers concentrated on infant welfare including the establishment and expansion of Infant Welfare Centres and the role of health visitors.

Profile of an Infant Welfare Lady Superintendent looked at the life and career of Miriam Shewell, a Quaker from Yorkshire who after training as a nurse and midwife was appointed Lady Superintendent of Sparkhill and Greet Maternity and Infant Welfare Centre in 1919. She involved local women in decision making at the Centre, recognising their localised knowledge and experiences. She was well respected in her field and wrote a series of standardised health talks used in welfare centres nationwide.

The Carnegie Infant Welfare Centre was opened in 1923 and considered a centre of excellence. Its first matron was Elizabeth Exell who during WW1 had been a nursing sister with the Women’s Hospital Corps, established by former militant suffragists Flora Murray and Louisa Garrett Anderson. The WHC established two women-run military hospitals in France: the first in Claridge’s Hotel in Paris with the support of the French Red Cross and the second in Wimereux near Boulogne which was sanctioned by the British War Office. Elizabeth continued work with the WHC back in London at the Endell Street Hospital from 1917 before moving to Birmingham to take up work at Pype Hayes Convalescent Hospital and thence to the Carnegie.

The newly established role of infant health visitor was crucial to the tackling high rates of infant mortality in the City alongside that of the IWCs. Their Superintendent Blanche Gardiner in 1914 oversaw the work of responsible for 19 Health Visitors, 5 Infant Health Visitors, 10 TB Visitors, 1 Inspector of Midwives and 2 Inspectors under the Factory and Workshop Act. By 1924 her role focused entirely on maternity and child welfare and she had responsibility for 61 Health Visitors and Infant Health Visitors who dealt only with infants or still births occurring outside the Infant Welfare Centre boundaries.

This highlights just a few of the women in Birmingham who deserve commemoration as “Choosing to Challenge” on International Women’s Day. Each in their own way helped provide crucial maternity and infant welfare services to hundreds of women and were pioneers in their fields, constantly challenging the status quo and seeking improvements in the way services were developed and delivered. #ChoosetoChallenge

Liz Palmer

Project Co-ordinator

Dame Hilda Lloyd – Birmingham pioneer

Blue Plaque at University of Birmingham

Although much of the Born in Birmingham project has focused on the activities of midwives and health visitors, and their role in improving maternal and infant welfare, we would be very remiss if we didn’t also look at the work of any of Birmingham’s obstetricians and gynaecologists. And one of the leading lights in these fields, both locally and nationally was Dame Hilda Lloyd.

Hilda Lloyd, was born Hilda Nora Shufflebotham on 11 August 1891, the third daughter of high-class grocer John Shufflebotham and his second wife, Emma. The family were living at 170 Moseley Road in Balsall Heath but shortly afterwards moved to Chantry Road, Moseley and then to ‘The Firs’ at Moor Green. Hilda attended King Edward VI High School for Girls in Edgbaston and from there opted to remain in Birmingham to begin medical training at the University of Birmingham from 1910  graduating with a BSc and then MB, CHB by 1916. Hilda would undoubtedly have been a high achiever in any circumstances but with the absence of many male doctors and surgeons on war duties her gender was less of an impediment that it may have been. She became resident Surgical Officer at the Maternity & Women’s Hospital immediately after graduation and obtained her Fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1920. Subsequently she was appointed to the consultant staff as the Women’s Hospital.

Much has been written about Hilda’s pioneering work in her field including establishing Birmingham’s first emergency obstetrical service: the flying squad. And much of her career is well-documented too, as she climbed the medical ladder becoming a lecturer in 1934, professor in 1944 (the first female to achieve a professorship at UoB), and chair of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in 1946. She received  national recognition when, in 1949, she was elected as the first female President of a Royal Medical College, at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) serving a three year term.  In 1951 she was knighted Dame of the British Empire ‘for her services to her Speciality, College and her University’.

Less well documented are her involvement from the 1920s with the promotion of birth control and family planning in Birmingham. She was a member of the committee formed to set up the Birmingham Women’s Welfare Centre along with Elizabeth Cadbury and Sir  John Sumner. This first centre opened in Castle Street with the slogan  ‘CHILDREN BY CHOICE, NOT CHANCE’.

Birmingham Daily Gazette - Saturday 17 November 1928
Birmingham Daily Gazette – Saturday 17 November 1928

Hilda continued with her involvement with the Centre and arranged to see women presenting at the Centre with unusual gynaecological conditions at Maternity and Women‟s Hospital.  In 1931 she was a signatory on an open letter to the Gazette protesting against the Maternity & Child Welfare Committee’s decision to take no action to provide birth control advice in cases where further births could be detrimental to a mother’s health although this was to be allowed under the Ministry of Healths Memorandum 153. And the following year she was part of a deputation of women doctors to the Birmingham Public Health Committee to once again urge that birth-control knowledge should be made available at the municipal maternity and child welfare centres.

In March 1938 the Birmingham Daily Gazette’s includes mention of Hilda’s presence at a meeting of the Women’s Welfare Centre held at the home of Edward Mason in Highfield Road, Edgbaston. The speaker was Mrs [Margery?] Spring Rice on the topic of “Birth Control and Race” and she was thanked by Mrs Sargant Florence [Lella Florence – a founder of the Birmingham Family Planning Association]. Both of these women were members of the Eugenics Society and the history of family planning is inextricably linked with this movement. But there are no suggestions that Hilda shared eugenicist views.

Image Copyright: Research and Cultural Collections, University of Birmingham. Permission Sought

In 1930 Hilda had married Bernard Lloyd, a fellow surgeon, and they lived in Edgbaston at 40 Harborne Road. Following Bernard’s sudden death in 1948 she married another surgeon and neighbour, Baron Theodore Rose.

The School of Medicine commissioned a bronze bust of Dame Hilda and its unveiling she was reported as saying:

“What else is there ? By the time one’s been painted in oils, had a bust fashioned, and been made an Emeritus Professor, there’s only one thing to do—slide gracefully away.”

Dame Hilda and her second husband moved to Ross on Wye following their retirements in the early 1950s and indulged their passions for walking and travel. Baron died in 1978 and Hilda spent the last couple of years of her life in Stourbridge where she died 18th July 1982 at the age of ninety.

Liz Palmer

Giving birth at the Workhouse Infirmary

Last week’s blog looked at an article in the Birmingham Gazette of 9th March 1920 linking the problems of overcrowding and poor housing to the fear faced by many young women at the prospect of having to give birth at one of Birmingham’s Workhouses. In a follow up article a couple of days later the Gazette looked at the reality of the maternity ward within one of the workhouse infirmaries.

The Infirmary at the Kings Norton Union Workhouse was opened in 1897 and in addition to general wards there was separate provision for maternity cases. Although operated by the Guardians of the Poor the infirmary was separated from the Workhouse itself by a dividing wall and they were run as separate establishments.  This Gazette article of Thursday 11 March 1920 provides a detailed description of the Maternity wards and is transcribed here in full:

CARE OF MOTHERS AT INFIRMARY.

Ideal Conditions for Maternity Cases.

They speak of the need for a municipal hospital, but what, after all, is this infirmary but a municipal hospital? Why people should think it less derogatory to go to a hospital supported by voluntary contributions, where they are really receiving charity, than to come to the Selly Oak Infirmary, which they themselves have been helping, to support by the rates they have paid for years. I cannot imagine,” said Dr. Martin, the infirmary’s chief medical officer, when I talked over with him yesterday the question of the housing shortage and the consequent need of more maternity hospital accommodation.

There can be no doubt that many of the expectant mothers, much as they resent the idea of being sent on to the Infirmary after having arranged to go to the Loveday-street hospital. settled down in a wonderful way when they find what the Infirmary is really like, and express their appreciation of the care and attention they receive from the trained staff there.

Restful beauty.

I have never seen a more beautiful part of any hospital than the large maternity ward at Selly Oak, which I was privileged to visit yesterday. The bright outlook, the windows arranged to catch every gleam of sunshine, the mothers’ beds and babies’ cots, with their dainty white drapery, the banks of flowers arranged on tables down the middle of the room, combined to give a sense of restful beauty. There were polished floors, the walls were painted in soothing tones of green and fawn. Nurses in their pretty uniforms moved up and down the ward., and happy looking young mothers lay in bed, with their babies in the cots by their sides. In a second ward I saw a group of expectant mothers, sitting round a table making swabs and dressings of cotton wool.

“Any work of that sort that they do is quite voluntary.” said the doctor. “but most of those who come in a few days before the birth of their baby prefer to occupy themselves in some quiet way during their waiting time.

Paying Patients.

There was a balcony outside each large ward overlooking the beautiful garden where masses of flowering currant were bursting into bloom. Even on a cold March day the air was pleasant in these sheltered nooks, with their south aspect, and I found one or two expectant mothers resting contentedly there. ” I very much prefer having my bed out here to being indoors,” said one of these, who chatted with me very cheerfully and told me she had been a tram conductress during the war. Of the forty cases in hospital this week almost all are paying patients.

“Their payments vary, of course,” the matron informed me, “but no distinction whatever is made. The nursing, the food, and the dress are the same for all.” Every patient, when she enters the hospital, has to change her own dress for the pink uniform of the infirmary. The dresses are a pretty shade of pale pink, and look fresh and clean, but it seemed to me rather a pity that they should be insisted on. To see one patient after another dressed exactly alike spelt “institution” more than anything I came across.

” Daddy Longlegs ” type.

The small separate room where each birth actually takes place is fitted up almost like an operating theatre—the white tiles, ample hot water supply, and special lighting and heating arrangements giving all the comfort and safety possible. I was introduced to the well-stocked library of clean, nicely bound novels. “These are kept entirely for the maternity wards.” the matron told me. “and we buy just what we think our patients would like to read. You see we have quite a number by Charles Garvice and Ethel M. Dell, and they like Rider Haggard and the ‘Freckles’ series ` and books of the ‘Daddy Longlegs’ type. I don’t accept presentation volumes for this library of ours. Spurgeon’s sermons? No, thank you!”

Each floor had its own bathrooms and linen storerooms, and it’s own small supplementary kitchen, where tea could be made or milk heated at a moment’s notice. All the maternity wards are shortly to be moved to the top floor of the hospital, where an entire reconstruction is taking place, and every room is being made as perfect and up to date as it can possibly be.

Met by Proud Husbands.

The food supplied to the patients is excellent. Never have I tasted more delicious bread than that which is made in the infirmary’s own bakery. Most of the mothers and babies, I found, were able to leave at the end of a fortnight when a proud husband and father probably arrives to escort them home. I left with the impression of having spent the afternoon in a hospital of an ideal description. And yet I felt that, as the old deep-rooted prejudice against going into a Poor Law institution can never be eradicated, it would solve the problem if we could change the name of the infirmary, and, instead of patients having to apply to the relieving officer for admission. have it run as a municipal hospital under the Ministry of Health.

C. H. C.

 

 

 

Two contrasting midwives

Following on from last week’s blog by Maggie about the changing role of midwives during the 1914-24 period here she looks at the lives of two midwives of the period. 

Kelly’s directories found in the Library of Birmingham covering the period we are examining gives listings of all the Midwives who were permitted to practice in Birmingham year by year and can be used with the information on the Central Midwives Register and other genealogical records to trace the lives and career of some of these women who often remained in practice in Birmingham for many years.

Firstly a quick look at one of the old school – Hannah ARMISHAW.

The Central Midwives Register provides name and address of the women but also details when the midwife was enrolled on the register – and also the qualification they held. And other genealogical sources such as the 1911 Census can give us information about age and family circumstances.

The CMB Register for 1915 shows Hannah living at 77 Victoria Road Harborne and gives us the additional information that she was first registered in 24 November 1904 and her qualification was that she had been in practice prior to July 1901.  The symbol before her name means that she had indicated to the Board that she intended to practice during 1915.  Further searches in the annual Registers show that she was listed from 1905 until 1926.

Hannah ARMISHAW - 1911 Census Extract

From the 1911 census we can find Hannah Armishaw living with her husband William Illsley Armishaw, an Army Pensioner.  Hannah was 61 years old – and according to the CMB Registers was to practise for a further 15 years until the age of 76! The census enumerator has added in red ink the word ‘Certificated’ next to her self-recorded occupation of midwife.  The census also reveals that she was no stranger to childbirth herself having given birth to fourteen children of whom 12 were still living. Three of her daughters were still living at home – all working in the chocolate business (no doubt at nearby Cadbury factory at Bournville).

We have been lucky to discover that a descendant of Hannah ARMISHAW has posted this wonderful family image of the ARMISHAW family online – and very pleased to have been granted permission to use it. It is one of the only images we have found locally of a midwife in uniform.

.

In contrast, Lizzie Keeping was one of the new breed of qualified midwives.

Unlike Hannah Lizzie was not a local girl and appears to have moved in pursuit of her career. She was born in Reading in 1866 and the 1901 census shows her working as a staff nurse at Brentford Union Workhouse Infirmary Isleworth Middlesex. She was on the UK and Ireland Nursing Register from 1902 registration number 295.

Lizzie KEEPING - 1910 CMB Register

Lizzie obtained her midwife qualification from the London Obstetrical Society in July 1903 and enrolled on the Midwives Roll on 24/11/1904 registration number 9472 whilst working at Lambeth Workhouse Infirmary.

Sometime prior to 1910 she moved to Birmingham – to Mary Street, Balsall Heath and practised from that address for a quarter of a century.

The 1911 census shows her living at 262 Mary Street Balsall Heath Birmingham with her occupation listed as trained nurse and midwife. Also in the house were her sister in law and children and also listed as Joint head of the household a Clare Bement, described as Trained Nurse & Midwife acting as Inspector of Midwives at City Health Department. Both of these women lived together on Mary Street until Clare’s death in 1938 and appear to have been working as midwives till this date. Both would have been in their late 60s.

Lizzie KEEPING - Extract from 1911 Census

Following Clare’s death Lizzie Keeping left Balsall Heath and retired to Devon – to Whitpot Mill, Kingskerswell, where she died aged 76 on 27/01/1942 leaving effects worth £1825.

Maggie Brownlie

Midwives in Birmingham 1914-24

A key topic in our project has of course been Midwives. Here project volunteer Maggie outlines the impact of the Midwives Acts on the increasing professionalisation of midwifery in Birmingham. 

100 Years ago the majority of Births in Birmingham took place in the home with the assistance of a local Midwife. The Midwives who were working at that time had little training unless they had been formally working as nurses and many were untrained, known as a local handywomen  “the woman you called for “ when your baby was coming. She would often be involved in helping the sick and the dying and sometimes would offer home help service washing and assisting with childcare

The period we are looking at,1914-1924, was a period of much change in Midwifery and maternity . There was much worry over paying for health care . Childbirth was not seen as a medical process and in working class areas doctors were rarely called except in severe emergencies as people could not afford to pay the fees.

“the work of a busy midwife is very hard, holidays and off duty times are difficult to secure the responsibility is exceptionally grave, the remuneration comparatively small. Midwifery, more than any other branch of nursing, unquestionably taxes to the utmost professional skill and judgment, physical capacity and endurance, patience and sympathy.” From {  Dr Janet Campbell Senior Medical officer at The  Ministry of Health through throughout the 1920’s in a report on the Physical welfare of mothers and Children in England and Wales 1923}

Midwives Bag - Image Science Museum
Midwifery bag complete with contents, bag by Arnold and Sons, London, 1925-1955. Science Museum

The first Midwives act of 1902 was an Act to secure the better training of Midwives and to regulate their practice and  introduced the Central Midwives board {CMB} The board formulated restrictive practice requirements , a supervisory requirement and a disciplinary system which were apparently designed to make it impossible for working class midwives to continue  practising . Midwives who had a recognised qualification in Midwifery either from The London Obstetrical Society or from certain lying in hospitals could apply to enrol on the register of qualified midwives . There were several training centres for midwives in Birmingham:

  • Birmingham Aston Union Workhouse Gravelly Hill
  • Birmingham Union Infirmary at Selly Oak;
  •  Birmingham Maternity Hospital Loveday Street
  •  Birmingham Workhouse  infirmary  Dudley Road

The 1902 Midwives Act which came into operation on 1st April 1903  required newly registered Midwives to undertake 3 months training which was increased to 6 months in 1916 and subsequently to 12 months by 1926.

Women who had been in practice for at least 12 months and who could show they were of good character { usually by a reference from a clergyman} could also apply . They were known as bona  fides . Any other women who wished to take up the practice of Midwifery had to pass an examination in competence to obtain a certificate . In order to be admitted on the Midwife Roll candidates had to satisfy the Central Midwives Board the they had reached

  1.  A sufficient standard of general Education
  2.  A birth certificate showing the candidate is not under 21
  3.  Certificate to the effect that the candidate had undergone training
  4.  A certificate of   good moral character
  5.  Must pass an examination  

 From 1905 only women certified under the Act would be entitled to use the title of “Midwife” and to recover any fee for attendance as a midwife .

Certified Midwife Badge c.1918
Early Badge for Certified Midwife

 Training

The cost of the training which usually took place away from  home. The use of medical  latin in the examination  would have been prohibitive to  many working class women . A pupil midwife would attend and watch the progress of no less than 20 labours  including  making abdominal and vaginal examinations  and delivering the baby. She would be required to nurse 20 lying in women during the 10 days following labour. (lying in is an old child birth  term involving a woman resting in bed for a period after giving birth) She would have to attend  a course of instruction which should be no less than 3 months  with an oral practical and written examination .

The course included :

  • elementary anatomy of the female pelvis pregnancy and its complications including abortion
  • the symptoms mechanism course and management of natural labour
  •  the signs of of abnormal labour
  • haemorrhage treatment
  •  use of a clinical thermometer and catheter antiseptics- the way to prepare and use them
  • management of the puerperal patient ( the period of around 6 weeks after childbirth when the mother’s reproductive organs return to their non pregnant condition.
  • management (including feeding) of infants and the signs of important diseases which may develop with the first 10 days after birth.
  • Obstetric emergencies and how to deal with them until a doctor arrives ( to include the knowledge of drugs needed in such cases
  • House sanitation & disinfection of the person their clothing and appliances

Midwives were subject to regulation concerning equipment and clothing and it was noted back in 1905 in the Journal of Midwives that the cost then of required equipment and a lined midwifery bag would be one guinea – prohibitive to many handywomen who were so often paid in kind .

Rules affecting Midwives

The rules laid down in the Midwives act were enforced by strict supervision undertaken by often local dignitaries many of whom were not trained in midwifery or nursing  and the midwives had their homes investigated which was intrusive. After 1910 no person could “habitually and for gain “ attend a woman in childbirth  except under the direction of a doctor. Any woman acting without being certified was liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding £10. County boroughs were to be the local supervising authority over midwives within the area. they were to provide general supervision, investigate charges of malpractice negligence or misconduct and report to the CMB . They were also responsible for suspending any midwife from practice in accordance with the rules under the act During the month of January each year the supervising authority would supply  the CMB with the names and addresses of all midwives who, during the preceding year, had notified their intention to practice in the area .The requirement was that every woman certified under the act would give notice in writing of her intention to practice . If any woman omits to give the said notice shall by summary conviction be fined up to £5. The penalty for obtaining a certificate by false representation was a misdemeanour and the woman would be liable to imprisonment  with or without hard labour for a term not exceeding 12 months.

Group of Midwives in uniform
Group of Midwives in uniform

Increasing professionalisation of midwives

The Medical Officer of Health Reports for Birmingham provide many statistics relating to the employment of midwives in Birmingham and can be used to show the impact of the Midwives Act over our period of study. 

In 1914 253 midwives were registered to practise. 174 were admitted by reason of their having been bona fide prior to the passing of the Midwives Act (1902) and the remaining 79 held recognised certificates of training in Midwifery. They attended 15,664 births during the year which was almost 70% of the total number of recorded births in Birmingham. .

16 attended over 200 births but most attended around 50 births each. 

The reports also give details of suspensions and actions taken against midwives who did not comply with desired practice. In this year alone 62 midwives were suspended for poor practise. 53 for cases involving puerperal fever and 5 for cases of Pemphigus Neonatorum (see glossary) 

Ten years later the proportion of certified to uncertified midwives had greatly increased. In 1924 here were 231 midwives of whom 170 were certified and 61 were bona fide. Between them they attended 11459 births – 62 % of the total.

The reports also reveal the pay which depended on the status of the midwife:

Bona fide midwives earned about £16 per year while trained midwives could command higher fees and earned £42 per year. In our next blog we will look at two different Birmngham midwives. 

Maggie Brownlie

Tracing Brummie Midwives

100 years ago the majority of births took place at home – with the assistance of a local midwife. Concern over the competency of many untrained midwives the 1902 Midwives Act aimed to regulate the profession by requiring certification of midwives and fines for anyone practising without certification. In addition the Act established the Central Midwives Board to regulate the training courses and to maintain the register of certified midwives.

Useful sources for tracing midwives and their careers are the Central Midwives Register (available to view on Ancestry) combined with local trade directories. The 1913 Kelly’s Directory of Birmingham lists nearly 200 registered midwives and gives their home addresses. It should be remembered that most midwives were effectively self-employed at this time and only relatively few worked in the local Maternity Hospitals. Hence the need to be listed in such directories.  The Central Midwives Register provides name and address of the women but also details when the midwife was enrolled on the register – and also the qualification they held. And other genealogical sources such as the 1911 Census can give us information about age and family circumstances.

Thus from the 1913 Directory we can see that a Mrs Hannah Armishaw was a registered midwife living at 77 Victoria Road, Harborne.

m0525-01062 reduced
Extract from 1913 Kelly’s Directory of Birmingham showing list of Registered Midwives

The Central Midwives Board Register for 1915 confirms this address and gives us the additional information that she was first registered in 24 November 1904 and her qualification was that she had been in practice prior to July 1901. The blurb at the start of the Register suggests that at this date about half of registered midwives had undergone training and passed the Examination of the Central Midwives Board and the other half, as with Hannah Armishaw, were registered on the basis of their prior experience. The symbol before her name means that she had indicated to the Board that she intended to practice during 1915.  Further searches in the annual Registers show that she was listed from 1905 until 1926.

Armishaw CMB Register 1915
1915 Central Midwives Board Register

Turning to the 1911 census we can find Hannah Armishaw at the same address living with her husband William Illsley Armishaw, an Army Pensioner.  Hannah was 61 years old – and according to the CMB Registers was to practise for a further 15 years until the age of 76! The census enumerator has added in red ink the word ‘Certificated’ next to her self-recorded occupation of midwife.  The census also reveals that she was no stranger to childbirth herself having given birth to fourteen children of whom 12 were still living. Three of her daughters were still living at home – all working in the chocolate business (no doubt at nearby Cadbury factory at Bournville)

Extract from 1911 Census showing Hannah Armishaw, midwife
Extract from 1911 Census showing Hannah Armishaw, midwife

We are hopeful that during the project at least one volunteer will be interested in examining the records such as these in more detail to give us a better understanding of who these early registered midwives were, how long they stayed in the profession and the proportions of them that had passed the relatively new qualifications. Newspaper searches may discover stories related to some of the midwives especially if any were struck off for practising whilst unregistered or were involved in cases of malpractice.

Come along to our project launch on Saturday 21st September at the Library of Birmingham to find out more about the archival records we will be using during the project – and how you can get involved.

Liz Palmer, Project Co-ordinator

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Midwives Chronicle: The Heritage Blog of the Royal College of Midwives

Midwifery history from the Royal College of Midwives

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