47:, 80% of the herring catch at East Anglia had been exported to Russia, and the collapse of the Russian and German markets meant hardship for the herring industry during the 1920s and 1930s. It was still mostly Scottish, but the Scots were withdrawing. In 1925, they had 757 boats and 4,000 fisher women. By 1936 the numbers were about 460 and 2,000 respectively. In 1936, the fisher women went on strike, and succeeded in obtaining an increase in wages. By 1938, it was clear that many steam
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over their pay and conditions. This strike was over the same issues as the strike two years before, plus their protest was directed against the general decline of the industry. This strike in 1938 was also in support of the men who operated the herring
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which caught the herring. English boats were engaged in Sunday fishing, which the
Scottish women said gave an unfair advantage to the English over the Scottish fishermen, as the Scottish fishermen did not fish on Sundays.
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Davies, S., "'A whirling vortex of women': the strikes of Scots herring women in East Anglia in the 1930s and 1940s",
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In the autumn of 1938, the Scots herring women who traveled each year to the ports of
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18:Scots Herring Lassies' Strike in East Anglia 1938
114:"Sunday Fishing Stirs Strike by Scot Girls",
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51:were not earning enough to cover expenses.
36:). "Lassie" is the word for "girl" in the
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62:in East Anglia to gut herring went on
141:Labour disputes in the United Kingdom
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92:(Norfolk Museums Service, 1988).
151:1938 labor disputes and strikes
24:from Scotland who traveled to
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90:The Yarmouth Herring Industry
28:in the United Kingdom to gut
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121:Christian Science Monitor
20:was a strike by female
103:Labour History Review
32:(which is a step in
161:Fishing in England
156:History of Norfolk
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146:Maritime strikes
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116:Associated Press
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43:Before the
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135:Categories
88:C. Lewis.
76:References
60:Lowestoft
69:drifters
49:drifters
30:herring
64:strike
118:via
58:and
16:The
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