Ethel Sykes or Ethel Rosalie Sykes (30 October 1864 – 8 March 1945) was a British teacher and writer. She managed the thousands of women who worked at Lloyds Bank during the first world war. She was retained when many of them were laid off as the soldiers returned.
She had enough money that she did not need to work, but in 1910 she got a job teaching for Mary Western at the recently renamed Queen Mary College in Lahore. She would be there until 1912.[6]
In 1915 she published Readings from Indian History for Boys and Girls in two volumes.[7] In 1917 she was appointed by Lloyds Bank to be their "supervisor of women". This was a time of change as the pre-war small number of women employees was swelled during the war as 3,300 women took on the jobs made available by men being recruited into the forces. At the end of the war the situation was reversed and women would no longer be recruited as clerks. By 1920 there was about 1,500 women employees and they were generally filing and typing.[6] She did charity work at what was St Mary Abbots Hospital and she represented Lady Margaret Hall on the University Women's Club in London - where women could have a "gentleman's club".[6]
Sykes died in a nursing home in Hurstpierpoint and she left a substantial legacy to the sisterhood at Oxford Mission Church in what is now Bangladesh.[6]
References
^ abTwo Hundred Years of the S.P.G.: An Historical Account of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, 1701-1900, Based on a Digest of the Society's Records, vol. I, Charles Frederick Pascoe, 1901, p. 929
^Burke's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage, 2003, vol. 2, p. 2720
^Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, fortieth edition, Sir Bernard Burke, Harrison, Pall Mall, 1878, p. 835