From cooks and clerks to weapons analysts and air mechanics, generations
of women have served in the Wrens (Women's Royal Naval Service or WRNS).
The Royal Navy was the first of the UK armed services to admit women
during the First World War with the purpose of freeing up a man to go to
sea by giving his job to a trained female worker. Disbanded in 1919, the
Wrens were reinstated on the outbreak of the Second World War. This book
focuses on the work and experiences of Wrens during the two world wars,
introducing the kinds of jobs they performed and the places where they
served. It contains poignant accounts from the women themselves, along
with contemporary images of the Wrens in action and modern photographs
of their uniforms, badges and insignia.