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For other persons named Elizabeth Andrews, see Elizabeth Andrews (disambiguation).
Elizabeth Andrews (1882–1960) was the first woman organiser of the Labour Party in Wales. Andrews was born into a mining family at Hirwaun in the Cynon Valley, one of eleven children (two of whom died during childhood). She was obliged to leave school at the age of twelve, in order to help at home. Ten years later, a letter she wrote to the press in support of Evan Roberts gained her some attention, and she joined the women's suffrage movement at about the same time. She was one of three women who gave evidence before the Sankey Commission in 1918. As soon as women received the vote, the Labour Party appointed four female organisers, of whom Andrews was one. She campaigned tirelessly for health and education services. One of her great successes was the opening of the first nursery school in Wales in the Rhondda in 1938.1 She retired in 1948. In 2004, she came 100th in the on-line poll to find 100 Welsh Heroes with a total of 37 votes. In 2006 her journalistic work was gathered together and published under the title 'A Woman's Work is Never Done'. Works
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