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Collection description
The Women's Library Folder
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The ABC of pensions : a standard guide in simple language to every pension problem for sailors; soldiers and airmen; widows and dependants; officers of all services; nurses an women's services; mercantile marine

Personal author: Gerds, D. Niven.

Publisher: London : Comrades of the Great War
Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference at LSE Library Search indicated in Finding aids field.

Tenth International Congress for the Suppression of Traffic in Women and Children : Salle des Ingenieurs des Arts and Metiers; Paris; November 9th to November 12th 1937

Corporate author: International Congress for the Suppression of Traffic in Women and Children Paris
Publisher: Manchester : Imprimerie des Fontaines
Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference at LSE Library Search indicated in Finding aids field.

Tanya Myers interviewed by Alice Robinson

This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and a photograph of Tanya.
Tanya is based in Nottingham and has been a theatre maker since her early twenties. At that age she also arrived at Greenham, already a politically minded person. She came to mostly spend her time at Green Gate in the forest, and at the 'London House' in Petherton Road, a sort of halfway house run by Greenham Women, with no heating or electricity. She spent time at Greenham as a pregnant woman and with an infant, and she speaks about what this meant to her. Tanya also speaks with great passion and detail about the creativity and spiritual experience of the actions, including the raising of the dragon, and keening. She focusses on her particular story, while reflecting on the wider consciousness of the group of women, and the shedding and sharing of values.
Tanya was interviewed by Alice Robinson in 2019.

Tamsin Clayton interviewed by Sarah Learmonth

This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
Tamsin answered a call for women to go to Greenham Peace Camp. She arrived in 1983 with her 2-year-old daughter and although she started at Blue Gate, she and others with children decided to re-establish Red Gate. Tamsin talks about how she went to Greenham to save herself, to discover her people and how amazing it felt to be able to be herself and discuss any issues without being judged. Tamsin's story is one of great personal discovery, a legacy that she has taken into the rest of her life: 'I went to Greenham and I wasn't mad anymore, I was normal'.
Tamsin was interviewed by Sarah Learmonth in 2019.

Results 5209 to 5236 of 13079