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WOMEN TRAMPS

PROBLEM IN ENGLAND COMPARATIVELY YOUNG GIRLS More than 1000 young women tramps, it is estimated, are wandering about England, spending the nights under haystacks, in barns, and in the casual wards of the work-houses. They are causing the British Ministry of Health a good deal of worry. At some work-houses the women's wards are crowded every night. Some of these women have babies—though these as a rule avoid the workhouses and manage to get a penny or two by begging each night- in order to secure a night's lodgings in a " doss house." Others are women who are married to men tramps, and they wander about the country in couples, parting for the night at the workhouse door, die man to go into one ward and the 'woman into another. Next morning, after their tasks have been completed, they ni<tf»t again at the gate and set out for the next workhouse, perhaps 20 miles awav. ' Many are comparatively young girls. Some have left home to seek employment and have failed. Others are. wayward young women who have thrown up good jobs because they did not like hard work. These are the counterpart of the Weary Willies who are to be found in male casual wards. But these women tramps do not belong to the criminal class. Any breaches of the law they commit rarely extend further than knocking at the wayside cottage and begging for a crust of bread and a cup of tea.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19330408.2.188.43

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21462, 8 April 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)

Word Count
246

WOMEN TRAMPS New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21462, 8 April 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)

WOMEN TRAMPS New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21462, 8 April 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)