VIDEO & 360 PHOTO: Sheffield's Women of Steel dance in street as statue is unveiled

Women Of Steel survivors with their statue in Barker's Pool outside Sheffield City HallWomen Of Steel survivors with their statue in Barker's Pool outside Sheffield City Hall
Women Of Steel survivors with their statue in Barker's Pool outside Sheffield City Hall

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Sheffield''s brave Women Of Steel celebrated the unveiling of a statue in their honour after a lifetime wait by again showing their mettle - dancing and singing in the street.

Many others, most of them now in their nineties, held back tears of joy as their life-long wish came true.

For more than 70-years the so-called Women Of Steel, who kept the munitions factories working to help win two world wars, were all but forgotten.

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Hundreds of them, back then mainly in their teens and twenties, helped to make the bullets, bombs, Spitfires and warships which won the fight for freedom and a better tomorrow.

But unlike the Land Army Girls, their effort went unnoticed or publicly thanked as if they had been airbrushed out of the history books.

Until now.

A bronze statue, with a silver sheen,has been unveiled in Barker's Pool, poignantly outside their favourite tea-dance venue back then, the still blitz-marked Sheffield City Hall..

It shows two slightly larger than life women steel-workers, arm in arm, wearing caps, men's overalls and dungarees to shield their hair and bodies from the extreme heat of the molten metal.