In 1916, Parsons worked with suffragette and women's rights campaigner
Norah Balls to set up
Girl Guides in Northumberland. Famed for her robust character and exceptional organisational skills, during the First World War Lady Parsons was closely involved in managing the female workforces in
Tyneside converted armaments factories. It was for this war work that Lady Parsons was made the first Honorary Fellow of the North-East Coast Institution of Engineers and Ship-builders in 1919. Having seen the highly effective deployment of women in engineering work during the Great War, Lady Parsons was robustly critical of the removal of many women from such work under the terms of the
Restoration of Pre-War Practices Act 1919 that restored many returning male combatants to their pre-war responsibilities. In a widely publicised speech on July 9, 1919: 'Women's Work and Shipbuilding during the War' she deplored the way that women had been required to produce the 'implements of war and destruction' but then be denied 'the privilege of fashioning the munitions of peace.' == The Women's Engineering Society ==