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Land Girls Strawberry Picking, 1944, Image Courtesy of the Museum of Englisg Rural Life 

The Land Girls: Cinderellas of the Soil 

Brighton Museum & Art Gallery

3 October 2009 to 14 March 2010

Free admission

The forgotten army of the land girls tell their story in this new exhibition.

During World War II, over 200,000 women joined the Women’s Land Army. The heroic image of the land girl standing tall in her corduroy breeches, green jumper and brown felt hat, fork resting over her shoulder, has become an iconic symbol of the triumph of wartime agriculture.

The exhibition highlights personal stories, propaganda, paintings, posters and photographs. It reveals the experiences of women as they leave their pre-war lives to learn milking, rat catching, threshing and tractor driving. At the heart of this story are the surviving items of their distinctive uniform – where it was made, who wore it, what they did, how women felt about wearing it and the reactions they encountered.

The Land Girls also focuses on the contribution in Sussex. Their headquarters were at Balcombe Place; land girls were trained at Plumpton Agricultural College, and lived and worked on the Sussex Downs.

Try on a land girl uniform, listen to the voices of land girls as they tell their stories and take away resources to help you collect wartime memories from your own families.

Supported by Lloyd Loom
BBC Sussex

Brighton Museum & Art Gallery

Brighton Museum & Art Gallery

Set in the heart of the city’s cultural quarter, Brighton Museum is located in the Royal Pavilion gardens. Its rich collections and exciting exhibits are dynamically displayed in stimulating surroundings. Entrance is free.

 
 
 

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