I think the series started in around 55, so had sister Monica Jone might have only been in her 70s then so maybe only 87 during this series
Things were so very different back then, it wasn't so long before that a married woman was not able to work in many jobs, my father's cousin had to remain Miss X all her working life to keep her good office job. Starting work in the civil service in the late 70s/early 80s there was the occasional 'single mother', one elderly lady abandoned by her husband had had her baby and been allowed to stay on but there was little maternity leave, she just had had to put up with it as few other places would have taken her on.
I like to think that many midwives were kind and woman-centred, and I'm sure that many of them were, but there were those who were real bitches, maybe they were the ones who ended up in mother and baby homes as they were hard enough to rip babies out of their mothers' arms.
It was extremely shameful to be an unmarried mother, and I'm afraid that probably Sister Julienne's remarks were pretty much of the period.
I remember hearing, many years later, when some old pictures and newspaper cuttings emerged, of the wedding of the daughter of some friends of my parents. I'd not known, but mum said that she had told her parents after the wedding, literally just afterwards, that she was pregnant, and they went ballistic, everyone would know when the baby was born that she had been pregnant when she married
There were people who campaigned for lots of things we now take for granted, things like contraception for all women, not just married women, homosexuality to be made legal, maternity rights, etc there must have been some who were more liberal underneath, yet had to comply with the law, but many people were dead against such things.
The 60s were not that swinging for many people.
I don't think people would enjoy the series so much were things portrayed as they really were
The first series or 2 were based on Jennifer worth's books, so we know that those were true to life
It's raising a lot of awareness of issues that young folk nowadays know little about.